Exode 14:25

25 Et il ôta les roues de leurs chars, et fit qu'on les menait pesamment. Alors les Égyptiens dirent: Fuyons de devant les Israélites, car l'Éternel combat pour eux contre les Égyptiens.

Exode 14:25 Meaning and Commentary

Exodus 14:25

And took off their chariot wheels
The Targum of Jonathan renders it "cut" or "sawed them off"; perhaps they might be broken off by the hailstones. Milton F19 seems to have a notion of Pharaoh's chariot wheels being broken, when he says, "and craze" (i.e. break) "their chariot wheels"; or, as Jarchi suggests, he burnt them, through the force of the fire or lightning:

that they drave them heavily;
the wheels being off, the chariots must be dragged along by the horses by mere force, which must be heavy work; or, "and made them to go, or led them heavily", or "with heaviness" {t}; and so to be ascribed to the Lord, who looked at the Egyptians, took off the wheels of their chariots, and stopped them in the fury of their career, that they could not pursue with the swiftness they had:

so that the Egyptians said, let us flee from the face of Israel;
for by this battery and flashes of fire on them, they concluded that Israel, who they thought were fleeing before them, had turned and were facing them, and the Lord at the head of them; and therefore it was high time for them to flee, as follows:

for the Lord fighteth for them against the Egyptians;
for they rightly took the thunder and lightning, the fire and hailstones, to be the artillery of heaven turned against them, and in favour of the Israelites. Jarchi interprets it, the Lord fights for them in Egypt, even in Egypt itself; but so he had done many a time before, of which they were not insensible.


FOOTNOTES:

F19 Paradise Lost, B. 12. ver. 210.
F20 (tdbkb Mghnyw) "et deduxit eos graviter", Vatablus; "et duxit eos cum gravitate", Drusius; so Ainsworth.

Exode 14:25 In-Context

23 Et les Égyptiens les poursuivirent; et tous les chevaux de Pharaon, ses chars et ses cavaliers, entrèrent après eux au milieu de la mer.
24 Mais il arriva, sur la veille du matin, que l'Éternel, étant dans la colonne de feu et de nuée, regarda le camp des Égyptiens, et le mit en déroute.
25 Et il ôta les roues de leurs chars, et fit qu'on les menait pesamment. Alors les Égyptiens dirent: Fuyons de devant les Israélites, car l'Éternel combat pour eux contre les Égyptiens.
26 Et l'Éternel dit à Moïse: Étends ta main sur la mer, et les eaux retourneront sur les Égyptiens, sur leurs chars et sur leurs cavaliers.
27 Moïse étendit donc sa main sur la mer, et la mer retourna vers le matin dans son lit; et les Égyptiens s'enfuyant la rencontrèrent, et l'Éternel jeta les Égyptiens au milieu de la mer.
The Ostervald translation is in the public domain.