4. fashioned it with a graving tool,
after he had made it a molten calf—The words are transposed,
and the rendering should be, "he framed with a graving tool the
image to be made, and having poured the liquid gold into the mould,
he made it a molten calf." It is not said whether it was of life
size, whether it was of solid gold or merely a wooden frame covered
with plates of gold. This idol seems to have been the god Apis, the
chief deity of the Egyptians, worshipped at Memphis under the form of
a live ox, three years old. It was distinguished by a triangular
white spot on its forehead and other peculiar marks. Images of it in
the form of a whole ox, or of a calf's head on the end of a pole,
were very common; and it makes a great figure on the monuments where
it is represented in the van of all processions, as borne aloft on
men's shoulders.
they said, These be thy gods,
O Israel, which brought thee up out of the land of Egypt—It is
inconceivable that they, who but a few weeks before had witnessed
such amazing demonstrations of the true God, could have suddenly sunk
to such a pitch of infatuation and brutish stupidity, as to imagine
that human art or hands could make a god that should go before them.
But it must be borne in mind, that though by election and in name
they were the people of God, they were as yet, in feelings and
associations, in habits and tastes, little, if at all different, from
Egyptians. They meant the calf to be an image, a visible sign or
symbol of Jehovah, so that their sin consisted not in a breach of the
FIRST [], but of the SECOND
commandment [Exodus 20:4-6].