John Trapp Complete Commentary - Genesis 50:2 - 50:2

Online Resource Library

Commentary Index | Return to PrayerRequest.com | Download

John Trapp Complete Commentary - Genesis 50:2 - 50:2


(Show All Books | Show All Chapters)

This Chapter Verse Commentaries:

Gen_50:2 And Joseph commanded his servants the physicians to embalm his father: and the physicians embalmed Israel.

Ver. 2. And Joseph commanded his servants the physicians.] Physicians, {a} it seems, were formerly of no great esteem; perhaps it was because, through ignorance, they many times officiously killed their patients. We know who it was that cried out upon his death bed, Many physicians have killed the emperor. {b} And it is grown to a proverb, No physician can be his craftsmaster, till he have been the death of thirty men. {c} The Egyptians, to prevent this mischief, appointed fox every ordinary disease, a several physician; enjoining them to study the cure of that only. And till then, the fashion was to lay the sick man at his door, where every passenger was bound to inquire the nature of his disease; that if either himself or any within his knowledge had recovered of the like, he might tell by what means, or stay to make trial of that skill he had upon the patient. {d} Physic is, without question, the ordinance of God. {Exo_21:19} He styles himself, "Jehovah Rophe," {Exo_15:26} the Lord the physician. And a physician is more worth than many others, saith the heathen poet. {e} Use them we must, when there is need, {Mar_2:17 1Ti_4:4} but not idolise them, as 2Ch_16:12.



And the physicians embalmed Israel.
] According to the custom of that country; concerning which, he that will see more, may read in Herodotus and Pliny. {f} This custom continued also in after ages, as well among Jews as Gentiles. But the devil turned it, in time, into most vain superstition, both among the Greeks, whom Lucian frequently jeers for it, and among the Latins; witness that of Ennius, Tavquinii corpus bona faemina lavit, et unxit. Joseph embalmed his father’s corpse, partly to honour {2Ch_16:14; 2Ch_21:19} him with this solemnity; and partly to preserve him for so long a journey; but principally to testify his faith of the resurrection, and that incorruption he hoped for at the last day. Some think the apostle hath relation to this, in that 1Co_15:29, and they read it thus; "Why do they then wash - âáðôéæïíôáé , voce media - over the dead?" Compare Act_9:37.



{a} Yåñáðåõù , famulor, curo, remedium morbo adhibeo.

{b} ðïëëïé éáôñïé êáôåêôåéíáí ôïí âáóéëåá . - Adrian Imp.

{c} Tritum est, nullum medicum esse peritum, nisi triginta homines Orco demiserit. "Farewell, Physic," was Chaucer’s motto.

{d} Olim exponebatur aeger obvio cuilibet sanandus. - Plutarch. Herodot., lib. i.

{e} Iáôçñ ä áíçñ ðïëëùí áíôáîéïò áëëùí . - Hom.

{f} Herodot., Euierpe. Plin., lib. xi. cap. 27.