Exodus 9:10-11

a boil.

De 28:27

7:11,12; 8:18,19; Isa 47:12-14; 2Ti 3:8,9; Re 16:2

Exodus 12:29

at midnight.

12; 11:4; 13:15; Job 34:20; 1Th 5:2,3

the Lord smote.The infliction of this judgment on the Egyptians was most equitable; because, after their nation had been preserved by one of the Israelitish family, they had, contrary to all right, and in defiance of original stipulation, enslaved the people to whom they had been so much indebted, had murdered their offspring, and made their bondage intolerable. See Bryant, p. 160.

Nu 3:13; 8:17; 33:4; Ps 78:51; 105:36; 135:8; 136:10; Heb 11:28

Heb 12:23

the first-born of Pharaoh.

4:23; 11:5

dungeon. Heb. house of the pit.

Isa 24:22; 51:14; Jer 38:6,13; Zec 9:11

Deuteronomy 7:15

will put none.The Israelites, if obedient, would have been subject to no maladies but those common to fallen man, and generally very healthy and long lived; being exempted from pestilential diseases, which have often most tremendously scourged guilty nations; and from such maladies in particular, as they had witnessed in Egypt, by which God afflicted their cruel oppressors, (Ex 15:26.) This must be referred to the national covenant; for though godliness often secures the most solid temporal advantages, yet temporal blessings were not, even among them, uniformly dispensed to individuals according to their obedience; but they were to the nation, with an exactness which is not observed towards any other people.

Le 26:3,4

will put none.

28:27,60; Ex 9:11; 15:26; Ps 105:36,37

Deuteronomy 28:27

the botch.

35; Ex 9:9,11; 15:26

emerods.

1Sa 5:6,9,12; Ps 78:66

scab.

Le 13:2-8; 21:20; Isa 3:17

Deuteronomy 28:60

7:15; Ex 15:26
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