Exodus 8:10

10 And he said, On the morrow: he said therefore, As thou has said; that thou mayest know, that there is no other but the Lord.

Exodus 8:10 Meaning and Commentary

Exodus 8:10

And he said, tomorrow
Which according to Bishop Usher was the twenty sixth day of Adar, or February. It may seem strange that Pharaoh, and his people, being so greatly distressed with this plague, should not desire that the Lord would be entreated to do it immediately, and not put it off to another day: two reasons are usually given; one is, he might hope that it would by that time go off of itself, and then he should not be beholden to the Lord, nor to Moses; and the other is, that he thought an affair of this kind could not be done immediately, but that it required time for making the intercession, and performing rites and ceremonies, which he supposed might be used, as were by his magicians; and it might be now the evening of the day, and therefore deferred it till tomorrow:

and he said, be it according to thy word,
as if he had said, it shall be done as thou hast desired, and at the time fixed:

that thou mayest know that there is none like unto the Lord our God;
that can send plagues, and remove them at his pleasure, which the deities he worshipped, and the magicians he employed, could not do.

Exodus 8:10 In-Context

8 And Pharao called Moses and Aaron, and said, Pray for me to the Lord, and let him take away the frogs from me and from my people; and I will send them away, and they shall sacrifice to the Lord.
9 And Moses said to Pharao, Appoint me when I shall pray for thee, and for thy servants, and for thy people, to cause the frogs to disappear from thee, and from thy people, and from your houses, only in the river shall they be left behind.
10 And he said, On the morrow: he said therefore, As thou has said; that thou mayest know, that there is no other but the Lord.
11 And the frogs shall be removed away from thee, and from your houses and from the villages, and from thy servants, and from thy people, only in the river they shall be left.
12 And Moses and Aaron went forth from Pharao, and Moses cried to the Lord concerning the restriction of the frogs, as Pharao appointed him.

The Brenton translation of the Septuagint is in the public domain.