Exodus and Numbers: The Exodus from Egypt
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About this ebook
Although the descendants of Jacob moved to Egypt as honored guests, in time they became despised slaves groaning under the mistreatment of Pharaoh. In response to the people's cries, God called a man named Moses to lead the Israelites out of Egypt into Canaan, but their journey took a dramatic forty-year detour when they failed to trust in God.
In this study, pastor John MacArthur will guide you through an in-depth look at the historical period beginning with God's calling of Moses, continuing through the giving of the Ten Commandments, and concluding with the Israelites' preparations to enter the Promised Land.
This study includes close-up examinations of Aaron, Caleb, Joshua, Balaam and Balak, as well as careful considerations of doctrinal themes such as "Complaints and Rebellion" and “Following God's Law."
—ABOUT THE SERIES—
The MacArthur Bible Study series is designed to help you study the Word of God with guidance from widely respected pastor and author John MacArthur. Each guide provides intriguing examinations of the whole of Scripture by examining its parts and incorporates:
- Extensive, but straight-forward commentary on the text.
- Detailed observations on overriding themes, timelines, history, and context.
- Word and phrase studies to help you unlock the broader meaning and apply it to your life.
- Probing, interactive questions with plenty of space to write down your response and thoughts.
John F. MacArthur
Widely known for his thorough, candid approach to teaching God's Word, John MacArthur is a popular author and conference speaker. He has served as pastor-teacher of Grace Community Church in Sun Valley, California, since 1969. John and his wife, Patricia, have four married children and fifteen grandchildren. John's pulpit ministry has been extended around the globe through his media ministry, Grace to You, and its satellite offices in seven countries. In addition to producing daily radio programs for nearly two thousand English and Spanish radio outlets worldwide, Grace to You distributes books, software, and digital recordings by John MacArthur. John is chancellor of The Master's University and Seminary and has written hundreds of books and study guides, each one biblical and practical. Bestselling titles include The Gospel According to Jesus, Twelve Ordinary Men, Twelve Extraordinary Women, Slave, and The MacArthur Study Bible, a 1998 ECPA Gold Medallion recipient.
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Exodus and Numbers - John F. MacArthur
INTRODUCTION
At the end of the book of Genesis, Joseph led his family to settle in the rich lands of Goshen in Egypt to escape the great famine that was plaguing all the land (see Genesis 47). The Israelites originally settled there as guests of the king, but over time their growing numbers made the Egyptians concerned that in the event of war they would rise up against them. So they made the Hebrew people their slaves.
The Israelites remained in this state for most of the 430 years they spent in Egypt. However, the Lord had promised Abraham that his descendants would one day be led out of their slavery and back into the land of Canaan. Our studies begin when that time had finally arrived. The Lord began guiding His people out of Egypt by selecting a man to lead them: Moses, one of the most humble men in Scripture.
During their travels toward Canaan, the people of Israel witnessed the power and faithfulness of God in countless ways. He went with them physically in a pillar of cloud by day and a pillar of fire by night. He met with Moses face to face on Mount Sinai. He provided food and water and delivered the people from the most deadly army on earth. Yet despite all these miracles (and many more), the people of Israel constantly grumbled and complained against God and Moses.
In these twelve studies, we will examine the biblical events depicted in the books of Exodus and Numbers. We will examine God’s calling of Moses, the ten plagues He sent against Egypt, the Ten Commandments He gave to the people, the miraculous provisions He brought in the wilderness, and much more. We will also learn some precious truths about the character of God and see His great faithfulness in keeping His promises. We will learn, in short, what it means to walk by faith.
THE BOOK OF EXODUS
The book of Exodus was so named in the Septuagint (the Greek translation of the Bible) and the Latin Vulgate of the Old Testament because the departure of Israel from Egypt is the dominant historical fact of the book. In the Hebrew Bible, the opening words, And (or now) these are the names,
served as the title of the book. The opening and or now in the Hebrew title suggests the book was to be accepted as the obvious sequel to Genesis, the first book of Moses. Hebrews 11:22 commends the faith of Joseph who, while on his deathbed (c. 1804 BC), spoke of the departure
or the exiting
of the sons of Israel, looking ahead more than 350 years to the exodus.
AUTHOR
Mosaic authorship of Exodus is affirmed in Scripture. Moses followed God’s instructions and wrote all the words of the LORD
(24:4), which included the record of the battle with Amalek (17:14), the Ten Commandments (34:4, 27–29), and the Book of the Covenant (20:22–23:33). Similar assertions of Mosaic writing occur elsewhere in the Pentateuch, and the Old Testament corroborates Mosaic authorship of the portions mentioned above. The New Testament concurs by (1) citing Exodus 3:6 as part of the book of Moses
(Mark 12:26), (2) assigning Exodus 13:2 to the law of Moses,
which is also referred to as the law of the Lord
(Luke 2:22–23), (3) ascribing Exodus 20:12 and 21:17 to Moses (Mark 7:10), (4) attributing the law to Moses (John 7:19; Romans 10:5), and (5) by Jesus’ specifically declaring that Moses had written of Him (John 5:46–47).
DATE
Moses wrote Exodus sometime after the Israelites’ departure from Egypt but obviously before his death on Mount Nebo. Scripture dates Solomon’s fourth year of reign (c. 965 BC) as being 480 years after the exodus (see 1 Kings 6:1), thus establishing the date of 1445 BC for the exodus. The judge Jephthah also noted that by his day, Israel had possessed Heshbon for 300 years (see Judges 11:26). Calculating backward and forward from Jephthah—and taking into account different periods of foreign oppression, judgeships and kingships, the wilderness wanderings, and the initial entry and conquest of Canaan—amounts to 480 years and confirms the date of 1445 BC.
BACKGROUND AND SETTING
Moses, born in 1525 BC, spent the first forty years of his life in the courts of Pharaohs Thutmose I and II and Queen Hatshepsut. He spent the next forty years in self-imposed exile during the reign of Thutmose III, before returning to be Israel’s leader early during the reign of Amenhotep II, the pharaoh of the exodus. God used both the educational system of Egypt and Moses’ exile in Midian to prepare him to guide the Israelites through the wilderness of the Sinai Peninsula during his final forty years. Moses died on Mount Nebo when he was 120 years old, and though he looked on the Promised Land from afar, he never entered it. Centuries later, he appeared to the disciples on the Mount of Transfiguration (see Matthew 17:3).
HISTORICAL AND THEOLOGICAL THEMES
The exodus marked the beginning of the fulfillment of God’s covenant promise to Abraham that his descendants would not only reside in the Promised Land but also multiply and become a great nation (see Genesis 12:1–3, 7). The book traces the rapid growth of Jacob’s descendants from Egypt to the establishment of the theocratic nation in their Promised Land. It also recounts how at appropriate times, such as on Mount Sinai and in the plains of Moab, God gave the Israelites a body of legislation (the Law), which they needed in order to live in Israel as His people. By this, they were distinct from other nations. Through God’s self-revelation, the Israelites were instructed in the sovereignty and majesty, the goodness and holiness, and the grace and mercy of their Lord, the one and only God of heaven and earth.
INTERPRETIVE CHALLENGES
The absence of any Egyptian record of the devastation of Egypt by the ten plagues and the major defeat of Pharaoh’s army at the Red Sea should not give rise to speculation on whether the account is authentic. Egyptian historiography did not permit records of their pharaohs’ embarrassments and ignominious defeats to be published. In addition, despite the absence of extra-biblical records of the Hebrew bondage, the plagues, the exodus, and the conquest, the archeological evidence corroborates the early date. All pharaohs of the fifteenth century left evidence of interest in building enterprises in Lower Egypt, and these projects were accessible to Moses in the region near Goshen.
The typological significance of the tabernacle has occasioned much reflection. Ingenuity in linking every item of furniture and every piece of building material to Christ may appear most intriguing; however, if New Testament statements and allusions do not support such linkage and typology, hermeneutical caution must rule. The tabernacle’s structure and ornamentation for efficiency and beauty is one thing, but finding hidden meaning and symbolism is unfounded. How the sacrificial and worship system of the tabernacle and its parts typify the redeeming work of the coming Messiah must be left to those New Testament passages that treat the subject.
THE BOOK OF NUMBERS
The English title Numbers
comes from the Septuagint and Latin Vulgate of the Old Testament. This designation is based on the numberings that constitute a major focus of some of the chapters. The most common Hebrew title comes from the fifth word in the Hebrew text of Numbers 1:1, in the wilderness [of].
This name is much more descriptive of the total contents of the book, which recount the history of Israel during almost thirty-nine years of wandering in the wilderness. Another Hebrew title, favored by some early church fathers, is based on the first word of the Hebrew text of 1:1: and He spoke.
This designation emphasizes that the book records the word of God to Israel.
AUTHOR
The first five books of the Bible, called the Law, are ascribed to Moses throughout Scripture (see Joshua 8:31; 2 Kings 14:6; Nehemiah 8:1; Mark 12:26; John 7:19). The book of Numbers itself refers to the writing of Moses in 33:2 and 36:13.
DATE
Moses wrote Numbers during the final year of his life, and the events from Numbers 20:1 to the end of the book occur during the fortieth year after the exodus. The account ends with Israel poised on the eastern side of the Jordan River across from Jericho, which is where the conquest of the land of Canaan began. Numbers must be dated c. 1405 BC, as it is foundational to the book of Deuteronomy, which is dated in the eleventh month of the fortieth year after the exodus (see Deuteronomy 1:3).
BACKGROUND AND SETTING
Most of the events of the book are set in the wilderness,
which refers to land that contains little vegetation or trees and, because of a lack of rainfall, cannot be cultivated. This land is best used for tending flocks of animals. In Numbers 1:1–10:10, Israel encamped in the wilderness in Sinai. It was at Sinai the Lord had entered into the Mosaic covenant with them. From 10:11–12:16, Israel traveled from Sinai to Kadesh. In 13:1–20:13, the events took place in and around Kadesh, which was located in the wilderness of Paran and the wilderness of Zin. From 20:14–22:1, Israel traveled from Kadesh to the plains of Moab. All the events of 22:2–36:13 occurred while Israel was encamped in the plain to the north of Moab. That plain was a flat and fertile piece of land in the middle of the wasteland.
The book of Numbers concentrates on events that take place in the second and fortieth years after the exodus. The incidents recorded in Numbers 1:1–14:45 all occur in 1444 BC, the year after the exodus. Everything referred to after 20:1 is dated c. 1406/1405 BC, the fortieth year after the exodus. The laws and events found in 15:1–19:22 is undated, but probably should be dated c. 1443 to 1407 BC. The lack of material devoted to this thirty-seven year period, in comparison with the other years of the journey from Egypt to Canaan, communicates how wasted those years were because of Israel’s rebellion against the Lord and His consequent judgment.
HISTORICAL AND THEOLOGICAL THEMES
Numbers chronicles the experiences of two generations of the nation of Israel. The first generation participated in the exodus from Egypt. They were numbered for the war of conquest, but when they arrived at the southern edge of Canaan, they refused to enter. Because of their rebellion against the Lord, all the adults aged twenty and older (except Caleb and Joshua) were sentenced to die in the wilderness. In Numbers 15–25, this generation dies out and the second grows to adulthood. A second numbering of the people takes place, and these Israelites do go to war and inherit the Promised Land.
Three theological themes permeate Numbers. First, the Lord Himself communicated to Israel through Moses, so the words of Moses had divine authority. Israel’s response to Moses mirrored her obedience to the Lord. Numbers contains three distinct divisions based on Israel’s response to the word of the Lord: (1) obedience (chapters 1–10), (2) disobedience (chapters 11–25), and (3) renewed obedience (chapters 26–36). The second theme is that the Lord is the God of judgment. Throughout Numbers, the anger of the Lord is aroused in response to Israel’s sin. A third theme is the faithfulness of the Lord to keep His promise to give the seed of Abraham the land of Canaan.
INTERPRETIVE CHALLENGES
Four interpretive challenges face the reader of Numbers. The first is whether Numbers is to be considered a separate book or part of a larger literary whole of the Pentateuch. The biblical books of Genesis, Exodus, Leviticus, Numbers, and Deuteronomy form the Torah, and the remainder of the Scripture always views these five books as a unit. The ultimate meaning of Numbers thus cannot be divorced from its context in the Pentateuch. However, every Hebrew manuscript divides the Pentateuch the same way as the present text, with Numbers being a well-defined unit with a structural integrity of its own. The book has its own beginning, middle, and ending, even as it functions within a larger whole. Thus, Numbers is also to be viewed with singular identity.
The second challenge is whether there is a sense of coherence in the book of Numbers. It is readily evident that Numbers contains a wide variety of literary materials and forms, including census lists, genealogies, laws, historical narratives, poetry, prophecy, and travel lists. Nevertheless, they are all blended into a cohesive whole to tell the story of Israel’s journey from Mount Sinai to the