Moses
Exodus 12:49ESV·traditional attribution

There shall be one law for the native and for the stranger who sojourns among you.”

Matthew Henry Presbyterian

The whole congregation must keep it together, for all who share God's mercies owe Him thankful praise. Only the circumcised may sit at this table, just as none now approach the Lord's supper without baptism first; we must be born again by the word before we can be nourished by it.

AI summary

Commenting on Exodus 12:43-51

Jamieson-Fausset-Brown Reformed

Seven days of unleavened bread commemorates Israel's hurried departure, when they had no time to leaven their dough. The Jews searched every corner with a candle to remove leaven from their houses. One who eats leaven during those days is cut off from the community and its privileges.

AI summary

Commenting on Exodus 12:15-51

Jamieson-Fausset-Brown Reformed

One law shall be to him that is homeborn, and unto the stranger--This regulation displays the liberal spirit of the Hebrew institutions. Any foreigner might obtain admission to the privileges of the nation on complying with their sacred ordinances. In the Mosaic equally as in the Christian dispensation, privilege and duty were inseparably conjoined. Next: Exodus Chapter 13