2. Then Jacob said unto his household . . . Put away the
strange gods that are among you--Hebrew, "gods of the
stranger," of foreign nations. Jacob had brought, in his service, a
number of Mesopotamian retainers, who were addicted to superstitious
practices; and there is some reason to fear that the same high
testimony as to the religious superintendence of his household could
not have been borne of him as was done of Abraham
(Ge 18:19).
He might have been too negligent hitherto in winking at these evils in
his servants; or, perhaps, it was not till his arrival in Canaan, that
he had learnt, for the first time, that one nearer and dearer to him
was secretly infected with the same corruption
(Ge 31:34).
Be that as it may, he resolved on an immediate and thorough reformation
of his household; and in commanding them to put away the strange gods,
he added,
be clean, and change your garments--as if some defilement, from
contact with idolatry, should still remain about them. In the law of
Moses, many ceremonial purifications were ordained and observed by
persons who had contracted certain defilements, and without the
observance of which, they were reckoned unclean and unfit to join in
the social worship of God. These bodily purifications were purely
figurative; and as sacrifices were offered before the law, so also were
external purifications, as appears from the words of Jacob; hence it
would seem that types and symbols were used from the fall of man,
representing and teaching the two great doctrines of revealed
truth--namely, the atonement of Christ and the sanctification of our
nature.
JFB.
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