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There was also an ungrateful
smell, and a stink arose from them, as they were born, and as they died
therein. Now, when the Egyptians were under the oppression of these miseries,
the king ordered Moses to take the Hebrews with him, and be gone. Upon which
the whole multitude of the frogs vanished away; and both the land and the river
returned to their former natures. But as soon as Pharaoh saw the land freed
from this plague, he forgot the cause of it, and retained the Hebrews; and, as
though he had a mind to try the nature of more such judgments, he would not yet
suffer Moses and his people to depart, having granted that liberty rather out
of fear than out of any good consideration. (25)
3. Accordingly, God
punished his falseness with another plague, added to the former; for there
arose out of the bodies of the Egyptians an innumerable quantity of lice, by
which, wicked as they were, they miserably perished, as not able to destroy
this sort of vermin either with washes or with ointments. At which terrible
judgment the king of Egypt was in disorder, upon the fear into which he
reasoned himself, lest his people should be destroyed, and that the manner of
this death was also reproachful, so that he was forced in part to recover
himself from his wicked temper to a sounder mind, for he gave leave for the
Hebrews themselves to depart.
But when the plague thereupon
ceased, he thought it proper to require that they should leave their children
and wives behind them, as pledges of their return; whereby he provoked God to
be more vehemently angry at him, as if he thought to impose on his providence,
and as if it were only Moses, and not God, who punished the Egyptians for the
sake of the Hebrews: for he filled that country full of various sorts of
pestilential creatures, with their various properties, such indeed as had never
come into the sight of men before, by whose means the men perished themselves,
and the land was destitute of husbandmen for its cultivation; but if any thing
escaped destruction from them, it was killed by a distemper which the men
underwent also.
4. But when Pharaoh did
not even then yield to the will of God, but, while he gave leave to the
husbands to take their wives with them, yet insisted that the children should
be left behind, God presently resolved to punish his wickedness with several
sorts of calamities, and those worse than the foregoing, which yet had so
generally afflicted them; for their bodies had terrible boils, breaking forth
with blains, while they were already inwardly consumed; and a great part of the
Egyptians perished in this manner. But when the king was not brought to reason
by this plague, hail was sent down from heaven; and such hail it was,as the
climate of Egypt had never suffered before, nor was it like to that which falls
in other climates in winter time, (26)
but was larger than that which falls in the middle of spring to those that
dwell in the northern and north-western regions. This hail broke down their
boughs laden with fruit. After this a tribe of locusts consumed the seed which
was not hurt by the hail; so that to the Egyptians all hopes of the future
fruits of the ground were entirely lost.
5. One would think the
forementioned calamities might have been sufficient for one that was only
foolish, without wickedness, to make him wise, and to make him Sensible what
was for his advantage. But Pharaoh, led not so much by his folly as by his
wickedness, even when he saw the cause of his miseries, he still contested with
God, and willfully deserted the cause of virtue; so he bid Moses take the
Hebrews away, with their wives and children, to leave their cattle behind,
since their own cattle were destroyed.
But when Moses said that what
he desired was unjust, since they were obliged to offer sacrifices to God of
those cattle, and the time being prolonged on this account, a thick darkness,
without the least light, spread itself over the Egyptians, whereby their sight
being obstructed, and their breathing hindered by the thickness of the air,
they died miserably, and under a terror lest they should be swallowed up by the
dark cloud. Besides this, when the darkness, after three days and as many
nights, was dissipated, and when Pharaoh did not still repent and let the
Hebrews go, Moses came to him and said,
"How long wilt thou
be disobedient to the command of God? for he enjoins thee to let the Hebrews
go; nor is there any other way of being freed from the calamities are under,
unless you do so."
But the king angry at what he
said, and threatened to cut off his head if he came any more to trouble him
these matters. Hereupon Moses said he not speak to him any more about them, for
he himself, together with the principal men among the Egyptians, should desire
the Hebrews away. So when Moses had said this, he his way.
6. But when God had signified, that with
one plague he would compel the Egyptians to let Hebrews go, he commanded Moses
to tell the people that they should have a sacrifice ready, and they should
prepare themselves on the tenth day of the month Xanthicus, against the
fourteenth, (which month is called by the Egyptians Pharmuth, Nisan by the
Hebrews; but the Macedonians call it Xanthicus,) and that he should carry the
Hebrews with all they had. Accordingly, he having got the Hebrews ready for
their departure, and having sorted the people into tribes, he kept them
together in one place: but when the fourteenth day was come, and all were ready
to depart they offered the sacrifice, and purified their houses with the blood,
using bunches of hyssop for that purpose; and when they had supped, they burnt
the remainder of the flesh, as just ready to depart.
Whence it is that we do still
offer this sacrifice in like manner to this day, and call this festival
Pascha which signifies the feast of the passover; because on that
day God passed us over, and sent the plague upon the Egyptians; for the
destruction of the first-born came upon the Egyptians that night, so that many
of the Egyptians who lived near the king's palace, persuaded Pharaoh to let the
Hebrews go. Accordingly he called for Moses, and bid them be gone; as
supposing, that if once the Hebrews were gone out of the country, Egypt should
be freed from its miseries. They also honored the Hebrews with gifts;
(27) some, in order to get them to
depart quickly, and others on account of their neighborhood, and the friendship
they had with them.
Footnotes
(25) Of this judicial hardening the hearts and blinding the
eyes of wicked men, or infatuating them, as a just punishment for their other
willful sins, to their own destruction, see the note on Antiq. B. VII. Ch. 9. Sect. 6.
(26) As to this winter or spring hail near Egypt and Judea,
see the like on thunder and lightning there, in the note on
Antiq. B. VI. Ch. 5. Sect. 6.
(27) These large presents made to the Israelites, of vessels
of and vessels of gold, and raiment, were, as Josephus truly calls them, gifts
really given them; not lent them, as our English falsely renders them. They
were spoils required, not of them, Genesis 15:14; Exodus 3:22; 11:2; Psalm
105:37, as the same version falsely renders the Hebrew word Exodus 12:35, 36.
God had ordered the Jews to demand these as their pay and reward, during their
long and bitter slavery in Egypt, as atonements for the lives of the Egyptians,
and as the condition of the Jews' departure, and of the Egyptians' deliverance
from these terrible judgments, which, had they not now ceased, they had soon
been all dead men, as they themselves confess, Ch. 12. 33. Nor was there any
sense in borrowing or lending, when the Israelites were finally departing out
of the land for ever.
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