2. When a man shall have in the skin, &c.--The fact of the
following rules for distinguishing the plague of leprosy being
incorporated with the Hebrew code of laws, proves the existence of the
odious disease among that people. But a short time, little more than a
year (if so long a period had elapsed since the exodus) when symptoms
of leprosy seem extensively to have appeared among them; and as they
could not be very liable to such a cutaneous disorder amid their active
journeyings and in the dry open air of Arabia, the seeds of the
disorder must have been laid in Egypt, where it has always been
endemic. There is every reason to believe that this was the case: that
the leprosy was not a family complaint, hereditary among the Hebrews,
but that they got it from intercourse with the Egyptians and from the
unfavorable circumstances of their condition in the house of bondage.
The great excitement and irritability of the skin in the hot and sandy
regions of the East produce a far greater predisposition to leprosy of
all kinds than in cooler temperatures; and cracks or blotches,
inflammations or even contusions of the skin, very often lead to these
in Arabia and Palestine, to some extent, but particularly in Egypt.
Besides, the subjugated and distressed state of the Hebrews in the
latter country, and the nature of their employment, must have rendered
them very liable to this as well as to various other blemishes and
misaffections of the skin; in the production of which there are no
causes more active or powerful than a depressed state of body and mind,
hard labor under a burning sun, the body constantly covered with the
excoriating dust of brick fields, and an impoverished diet--to all of
which the Israelites were exposed while under the Egyptian bondage. It
appears that, in consequence of these hardships, there was, even after
they had left Egypt, a general predisposition among the Hebrews to the
contagious forms of leprosy--so that it often occurred as a consequence
of various other affections of the skin. And hence all cutaneous
blemishes or blains--especially such as had a tendency to terminate in
leprosy--were watched with a jealous eye from the first [GOOD, Study of Medicine]. A swelling, a pimple,
or bright spot on the skin, created a strong ground of suspicion of a
man's being attacked by the dreaded disease.
then he shall be brought unto Aaron the priest, &c.--Like the
Egyptian priests, the Levites united the character of physician with
that of the sacred office; and on the appearance of any suspicious
eruptions on the skin, the person having these was brought before the
priest--not, however, to receive medical treatment, though it is not
improbable that some purifying remedies might be prescribed, but to be
examined with a view to those sanitary precautions which it belonged to
legislation to adopt.
JFB.
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