And the children of Israel went into the midst of the sea
upon
the dry ground
Some Jewish writers say F3, that the tribe of Judah went in
first, and then the other tribes followed; but it is most likely,
what Josephus says F4, that Moses first entered in, and
then the Israelites, encouraged by his example, went in after
him; and a very adventurous action it was, and nothing but strong
faith in the almighty power and promise of God could have engaged
them in it, to which the apostle ascribes it, ( Hebrews
11:29 ) . It is the opinion of Aben Ezra, and some other
Jewish writers, that the Israelites did not pass through the Red
sea to the opposite shore, only went some way into it, and took a
compass in a semicircle, and came out on the same shore again,
and which has been espoused by some Christian writers; and
chiefly because they were in the wilderness of Etham before, and
from whence they went into it, and when they came out of it, it
was still the wilderness of Etham they came into, and went three
days' journey into it seeking water; see ( Exodus 13:20
) ( Numbers
33:8 ) . Though it is possible the wilderness on the opposite
shore might bear the same name, because of its likeness to it;
and if it was the same wilderness that went round the Arabic
gulf, or Red sea, and reached on to the other side of it, and so
the wilderness of Etham lay on both sides, the difficulty is
removed; for it seems most agreeable to the expressions of
Scripture, that the Israelites passed through it from shore to
shore. Others, in order to lessen the miracle, would have it that
Moses, well knowing the country, and observing the tide, took the
advantage of low water, and led the Israelites through it; and
this story is told by the Egyptian priests of Memphis, as
Artapanus F5 relates; but were the Egyptians less
knowing of their country, and of the tide of the Red sea? and
could Moses be sure of the exact time when they would come up to
him, and the tide would serve him? Besides, the Egyptian priests
at Heliopolis own the miracle, and relate it much as Moses has
done; which must proceed from a conviction of the truth of it.
And the above historian reports that the king (of Egypt) with a
great army, and consecrated animals, pursued the Jews because of
the substance they had borrowed of the Egyptians, which they took
with them; but Moses being bid by a divine voice (or the voice of
God, of Jehovah) to smite the sea with a rod, and hearkening to
it, he touched the water with the rod, and so it divided, and his
forces passed through a dry path, and the Egyptians attempting
the same and pursuing, fire or lightning flashed out against
them; and the sea shutting up the path again, partly by fire, and
partly by the flow of the water, they all perished: and that this
affair was miraculous, and could not be owing to any advantage
taken from the tide, the following things have been observed; it
is owned that the Red sea ebbs and flows like other seas that
have a communication with the ocean, that is, the waters rise
towards the shore during six hours, and having continued about a
quarter of an hour at high water, ebb down again during another
six hours; and it is observed by those who have examined it, that
the greatest distance it falls from the place of high water is
about three hundred yards; and that during the time of low water,
one may safely travel it, as some have actually done; so that
those three hundred paces, which the sea leaves uncovered during
the time of low water, can continue so but for the space of half
an hour at most; for during the first six hours, the sea retires
only by degrees, and in less than half an hour it begins again to
flow towards the shore. The most therefore that can be allowed,
both of time and space of passable ground, in a moderate
computation, is about two hundred paces, during six hours, or one
hundred and fifty paces, during eight hours. Now it is further
observed, that it is plain that a multitude consisting of upwards
of two millions and a half of men, women, children, and slaves,
encumbered besides with great quantities of cattle, household
stuff, and the spoils of the Egyptians, could never perform such
a march within so short a time; we may say within even double
that space, though we should allow them also double the breadth
of ground to do it on. This argument, it is added, will hold good
against those who suppose they only coasted along some part of
the sea, and those who maintain that they crossed the small arm
or point of it which is toward the further end, near the isthmus
of Suez; seeing that six or eight hours could not have sufficed
for the passage of so immense a multitude, allow them what
breadth of room you will; much less for Pharaoh to have entered
it with his whole host F6: and for the confirmation of the
Mosaic account of this affair, and as miraculous, may be observed
the testimony of Diodorus Siculus, who reports F7 that it
is a tradition among the Ichthyophagi, who inhabit near the Red
sea, or Arabic gulf, which they have received from the report of
their ancestors, and is still preserved with them, that upon a
great recess of the sea, every place of the gulf became dry, the
sea falling to the opposite parts, the bottom appeared green, and
returning back with a mighty force, was restored to its place
again; which can have reference to nothing else but to this
transaction in the time of Moses. And Strabo F8 relates
a very wonderful thing, and such as rarely happens, that on the
shore between Tyre and Ptolemais, when they of Ptolemais had a
battle with the Emperor Sarpedon at that place, and there being
put to flight, a flow of the sea like an inundation covered those
that fled, and some were carried into the sea and perished, and
others were left dead in hollow places; after a reflux followed,
and discovered and showed the bodies of those that lay among the
dead fishes. Now learned men have observed F9, that
what is here said of the sea of Tyre is to be understood of the
Red sea, and that Sarpedon is not a proper name, but the same
with (Nwdp rv) ,
"Sarphadon", the prince of deliverance, or of the delivered, as
Moses was:
and the waters were a wall to them on their right hand and
on their
left;
some of the Jewish Rabbins from ( Exodus 15:8 ) have
supposed that the waters were frozen as they were drove back by
the east wind, and so stood up firm while the Israelites passed
through, and then another wind thawed them, which brought them
upon the Egyptians; but no doubt this was done by the wonderful
interposition of divine power, and perhaps the ministry of angels
was made use of, to detain and continue them in this position,
until the end was answered. Adrichomius says {k}, the breadth of
the sea was six miles at the passage of the Israelites; but a
late traveller F12 tells us, that the channel between
Sdur (or Shur, on the opposite side) and Gibbel Gewoubee, and
Attackah (which he supposes was the place of their passage), was
nine or ten miles over. Thevenot says F13, that
during the space of five days he kept along the coast of the Red
sea, in going to Mount Sinai, he could not observe it to be
anywhere above eight or nine miles over. A later traveller
F14 tells us, that from the fountains
of Moses may be plainly seen a wonderful aperture (Pihahiroth;
see ( Exodus
14:2 ) ) in the mountains on the other side of the Red sea,
through and from which the children of Israel entered into it,
when Pharaoh and his host were drowned; which aperture is
situated west-southwest from these fountains of Moses, and the
breadth of the sea hereabouts, where the children of Israel
passed it, is about four or five hours' journey. The Arabic
geographer F15 calls the place Jethren, where
Pharaoh and his host were drowned; and represents it as a
dangerous place to sail in, and where many ships are lost, and
that this rough place is about the space of six miles. A
countryman F16 of ours, who had been in these
parts, guesses that the breadth of the place (called by the
Mahometans, Kilt el Pharown, the well or pit of Pharaoh) where
the Israelites are said to pass through is about six or seven
leagues; the difference between these writers may be accounted
for by the different places where they suppose this passage was.
F3 Pirke Elizer, c. 42.
F4 Antiqu. l. 2. c. 16. sect. 2.
F5 Apud Euseb. Praepar. Evangel. l. 9. c. 27. p. 436.
F6 Universal History, vol. 3. p. 392, 393. marg.
F7 Bibliothec. l. 3. p. 174.
F8 Geograph. l. 16. p. 521, 522.
F9 Vid. Scheuchzer. Physic. Sacr. vol. 1. p. 167.
F11 Theatrum Terrae, p. 123, 124.
F12 Dr. Shaw's Travels, p. 314. Edit. 2.
F13 Travels into the Levant, B. 2. ch. 33. p. 175.
F14 A Journal from Grand Cairo in 1722. p. 13. Edit. 2.
F15 Climat. 3. par. 3.
F16 Pitts's Account of the Mahometans, p. 77.