was serving, would have been to “rule over him
with” peculiar “rigor.” “Thou
shalt not compel him to serve as a bond-servant,”
or literally, thou shalt not serve thyself with
him, with the service of a servant, guaranties
his political privileges, and a kind and grade of
service, comporting with his character and relations
as an Israelite. And “as a hired
servant, and as a sojourner shall he be with thee,”
secures to him his family organization, the respect
and authority due to its head, and the general consideration
resulting from such a station. Being already
in possession of his inheritance, and the head of
a household, the law so arranged the conditions of
his service as to alleviate as much as possible
the calamity, which had reduced him from independence
and authority, to penury and subjection. The
import of the command which concludes this topic in
the forty-third verse, ("Thou shalt not rule over
him with rigor,”) is manifestly this, you shall
not disregard those differences in previous associations,
station, authority, and political privileges, upon
which this regulation is based; for to hold this class
of servants irrespective of these distinctions,
and annihilating them, is to “rule with rigor.”
The same command is repeated in the forty-sixth verse,
and applied to the distinction between servants of
Jewish, and those of Gentile extraction, and forbids
the overlooking of distinctive Jewish peculiarities,
the disregard of which would be rigorous in
the extreme[B]. The construction commonly put
upon the phrase “rule with rigor,” and
the inference drawn from it, have an air vastly oracular.
It is interpreted to mean, “you shall not make
him a chattel, and strip him of legal protection,
nor force him to work without pay.” The
inference is like unto it, viz., since the command
forbade such outrages upon the Israelites, it permitted
and commissioned their infliction upon the Strangers.
Such impious and shallow smattering captivates scoffers
and libertines; its flippancy and blasphemy, and the
strong scent of its loose-reined license works like
a charm upon them. What boots it to reason against
such rampant affinities! In Ex. i. 13, it is said
that the Egyptians “made the children of Israel
to serve with rigor.” This rigor
is affirmed of the amount of labor extorted
and the mode of the exaction. The expression,
“serve with rigor,” is never applied to
the service of servants under the Mosaic system.
The phrase, “thou shalt not RULE over him with
rigor,” does not prohibit unreasonable exactions
of labor, nor inflictions of cruelty. Such were
provided against otherwise. But it forbids confounding
the distinctions between a Jew and a Stranger, by
assigning the former to the same grade of service,
for the same term of time, and under the same political
disabilities as the latter.