Sermons on Various Important Subjects eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 348 pages of information about Sermons on Various Important Subjects.

Sermons on Various Important Subjects eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 348 pages of information about Sermons on Various Important Subjects.

* Vid.  Concordance, under BLOT.

Docr.  S. Clark expresseth his sense of the passage to nearly the same effect.

Did Moses then ask to be made an expiatory sacrifice for the sin of Israel!  Or did he solemnly ask of God what he knew to be so unreasonable that it could not be granted!

There is no hint in the account given of this affair, that Moses entertained a thought of being accepted in Israel’s stead.  He did not ask to suffer that they might escape—­he prayed to be blotted out of God’s book, if his people could not be forgiven—­If thou wilt, forgive their sin; and if not, blot me, I pray thee, out of thy book which thou hast written.

Mr. Pool considers Moses as praying to be annihilated that Israel might be pardoned!  “Blot me out of the book of life—­out of the catalogue, or number of those that shall be saved.  I suppose Moses doth not wish his eternal damnation, because that state would imply both wickedness in himself and dishonor to God; but his annihilation, or utter lose of this life, and that to come, and all the happiness of both of them.  Nor doth Moses simply desire this, but only comparatively expresseth his singular zeal for God’s glory, and charity to his people; suggesting that the very thoughts of the destruction of God’s people, and the reproach and blasphemy which would be cast upon God by means thereof, were so intolerable to him, that he rather wished, if it were possible, that God would accept him as a sacrifice in their stead, and by his utter destruction prevent so great a mischief.” *

* Vid.  Pool in locum.

Could the learned and judicious Mr. Pool seriously believe that inspired Moses prayed for annihilation!  Or consider him as entertaining a suspicion that a soul could cease to exist!  Or could he conceive him as deliberately asking of God to make him an expiatory sacrifice!  Or harboring a thought that the sin of his people might be atoned by his being blotted out from among God’s works!—­Strange!

Mr. Henry considers Moses as praying to die with Israel, if they must die in the wilderness.—­“If they must be cut off, let me be cut off with them—­let not the land of promise be mine by survivorship.  God had told Moses, that if he would not interpose, he would make him a great nation—­No said Moses, I am so far from desiring to see my name and family, built on the ruins of Israel, that I choose rather to die with them.” *

* Vid.  Henry in loc.

If such is the spirit of this prayer, Moses does not appear resigned to the divine order, but rather peevish and fretful at the disappointment of his hope, which he had till then entertained.  He had expected to lead Israel to the land of promise; if not indulged, seems not to have cared what became of himself or his family; and is thought here to address his maker, offering distinguishing favors to him, as Daniel did Belthazzar—­“thy gifts be to thyself,

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Sermons on Various Important Subjects from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.