Exode 3:5

5 Et il répondit: Me voici! Et Dieu dit: N'approche point d'ici. Ote tes souliers de tes pieds; car le lieu où tu te tiens, est une terre sainte.

Exode 3:5 Meaning and Commentary

Exodus 3:5

And he said, draw not nigh hither
Keep a proper distance: put off thy shoes from off thy feet;
dust and dirt cleaving to shoes, and these being ordered to be put off from the feet, the instrument of walking, show that those that draw nigh to God, and are worshippers of him, ought to be of pure and holy lives and conversations: for the place whereon thou standest is holy ground;
not that there was any inherent holiness in this spot of ground more than in any other, which ground is not capable of; but a relative holiness on account of the presence of God here at this time, and was not permanent, only while a pure and holy God was there: hence, in after times, the temple being the place of the divine residence, the priests there performed their services barefooted, nor might a common person enter into the temple with his shoes on F11; and to this day the Jews go to their synagogues barefooted on the day of atonement F12, to which Juvenal F13 seems to have respect; and from hence came the Nudipedalia among the Heathens, and that known symbol of Pythagoras F14, "sacrifice and worship with naked feet": in this manner the priests of Diana sacrificed to her among the Cretians and other people F15; and so the priests of Hercules did the same F16; the Brahmans among the Indians never go into their temples without plucking off their shoes F17; so the Ethiopian Christians, imitating Jews and Gentiles, never go into their places of public worship but with naked feet F18, and the same superstition the Turks and Mahometans observe F19.


FOOTNOTES:

F11 Misn. Beracot, c. 9. sect. 5.
F12 Buxtorf. Jud Synagog. c. 30. p. 571.
F13 "Observant ub. festa mero pede Sabbata reges." Satyr. 6.
F14 Jamblichus de Vita Pythagor. Symbol. 3.
F15 Solin. Polyhistor. c. 16. Strabo, l. 12. p. 370.
F16 Silius de Bello Punic, l. 3.
F17 Rogerius de Relig. Brachman. l. 2. c. 10. apud Braunium de vest. sacerdot. l. 1. c. 3. p. 66.
F18 Damianus a Goes apud Rivet. in loc.
F19 Pitts's Account of the Relig. and Manners of the Mahometans, c. 6. p. 38. 81. Georgieviz. de Turc. Moribus, c. 1. p. 11. Sionita de Urb. Oriental. & Relig. c. 7. p. 18. c. 10. p. 34.

Exode 3:5 In-Context

3 Alors Moïse dit: Je me détournerai, et je verrai cette grande vision, et pourquoi le buisson ne se consume point.
4 Et l'Éternel vit qu'il se détournait pour regarder; et Dieu l'appela du milieu du buisson, et dit: Moïse, Moïse!
5 Et il répondit: Me voici! Et Dieu dit: N'approche point d'ici. Ote tes souliers de tes pieds; car le lieu où tu te tiens, est une terre sainte.
6 Puis il dit: Je suis le Dieu de ton père, le Dieu d'Abraham, le Dieu d'Isaac, et le Dieu de Jacob. Et Moïse cacha son visage, car il craignait de regarder vers Dieu.
7 Et l'Éternel dit: J'ai bien vu l'affliction de mon peuple qui est en Égypte, et j'ai entendu le cri qu'il jette à cause de ses exacteurs; car je connais ses douleurs.
The Ostervald translation is in the public domain.