The confrontation escalates from words to wonders. God commissions Moses and Aaron as His prophetic representatives before Pharaoh, predicting the king's refusal and promising to multiply signs and judgments throughout Egypt. When Aaron's staff becomes a serpent and swallows the magicians' staffs, Pharaoh remains unmoved. The first plague follows: the Nile turns to blood, killing fish and making water undrinkable, yet Pharaoh's heart stays hardened even as Egypt suffers.
The passage opens with a divine commissioning formula—"Yahweh said to Moses"—that establishes the authority structure for the entire confrontation with Pharaoh. The metaphor in verse 1 is arresting: Moses is made "as God" (ʾĕlōhîm) to Pharaoh, with Aaron functioning as his prophet. This is not deification but delegation; Moses embodies Yahweh's judicial authority in the same way a judge embodies the king's authority in a courtroom. The relational chain is explicit: Yahweh speaks to Moses, Moses commands Aaron, Aaron addresses Pharaoh. This hierarchical structure mirrors ancient Near Eastern diplomatic protocol, where messages from a superior king were delivered through intermediaries, each level preserving the authority of the one above.
Verse 3 introduces the theological crux of the narrative: "I will harden Pharaoh's heart." The verb qāšāh in the Hiphil stem is unambiguous—Yahweh is the active agent. Yet this divine hardening is not arbitrary; it serves a revelatory purpose articulated in the purpose clause: "that I may multiply My signs and My wonders in the land of Egypt." The multiplication (hirbêtî) is intentional escalation, a progressive unveiling of Yahweh's power. Each plague is a pedagogical act, designed to dismantle Egyptian theology piece by piece. The hardening ensures that the full curriculum is delivered, that Egypt experiences not just defeat but comprehensive theological education.
Verses 4-5 shift to the outcome: when Pharaoh refuses to listen, Yahweh will "lay My hand on Egypt" and bring out His hosts "by great judgments." The imagery is forensic and military simultaneously. Yahweh's outstretched hand is both the judge's gavel and the warrior's sword. The goal is explicitly stated: "the Egyptians shall know that I am Yahweh." This knowledge is not mere intellectual acknowledgment but coerced recognition, the kind of knowing that comes through defeat. The verb yādəʿû (they shall know) is a covenant term, often used for intimate relational knowledge, but here it denotes the forced acknowledgment of a conquered enemy.
Verse 6 provides the narrative hinge: "Moses and Aaron did it; as Yahweh commanded them, thus they did." The redundancy is emphatic—perfect obedience is highlighted by the doubled verb (wayyaʿaś... ʿāśû). This obedience contrasts sharply with Pharaoh's coming disobedience and sets the pattern for Israel's covenant relationship. Verse 7 closes with a chronological note that underscores the improbability of the mission: Moses is eighty, Aaron eighty-three. By ancient Near Eastern standards, these are elderly men, well past the age of heroic exploits. Yet Yahweh's power is not constrained by human frailty; indeed, the advanced age of His agents magnifies the glory due to Him alone.
God's hardening of Pharaoh is not capricious cruelty but pedagogical sovereignty—each plague a lesson in the curriculum of divine self-disclosure. When human pride becomes the instrument of divine revelation, judgment itself becomes a form of mercy to those who will learn to fear the Name.
The commissioning of Moses "as God to Pharaoh" echoes the earlier revelation in Exodus 4:22-23, where Yahweh declares Israel "My son, My firstborn" and threatens Pharaoh's firstborn if he refuses to release Yahweh's son. The judicial confrontation is thus framed as a family dispute elevated to cosmic proportions—Pharaoh has kidnapped the divine Heir, and the Father comes to execute judgment and effect rescue. The hardening of Pharaoh's heart, announced here and executed throughout the plague cycle, becomes the central theological puzzle that Paul wrestles with in Romans 9:14-18, where he quotes Exodus 9:16 to defend God's sovereign right to show mercy and to harden whom He wills.
Deuteronomy 34:10-12 looks back on Moses' unique status: "Since then no prophet has risen in Israel like Moses, whom Yahweh knew face to face, none like him for all the signs and wonders which Yahweh sent him to perform in the land of Egypt." The signs and wonders (ʾōtōt ûmôpətîm) predicted in Exodus 7:3 become the defining credential of Moses' unparalleled prophetic office. The typological thread runs forward to the Prophet like Moses promised in Deuteronomy 18:15-18, ultimately fulfilled in Jesus, who also performs signs and wonders that reveal the Father and whose confrontation with the powers of this age recapitulates the exodus pattern on a cosmic scale.
"Yahweh" throughout—The LSB preserves the divine name rather than substituting "LORD," making explicit that this is not a generic deity but the covenant God of Israel who is about to vindicate His name before the nations. The repeated "I am Yahweh" (ʾănî yhwh) in verse 5 becomes a refrain throughout the plague narrative, emphasizing that the exodus is fundamentally about the revelation of the Name.
The passage unfolds in three movements: divine instruction (vv. 8-9), obedient execution (v. 10), and rival imitation followed by decisive victory (vv. 11-13). The structure is tightly chiastic at the micro level: Yahweh speaks (v. 8), commanding a response to Pharaoh's demand (v. 9); Moses and Aaron obey exactly "as Yahweh had commanded" (v. 10); Pharaoh summons his magicians who replicate the sign (v. 11); yet Aaron's staff swallows theirs (v. 12), and Pharaoh's heart hardens "as Yahweh had said" (v. 13). The repetition of "as Yahweh had said/commanded" forms an inclusio, framing human action within divine sovereignty. Pharaoh's demand for a môpēt is ironic—he seeks proof but refuses to be persuaded, setting the pattern for the entire plague cycle.
The verb sequence in verses 10-12 is rapid and paratactic, linked by consecutive waw-forms that drive the action forward without pause: "they came... they did... Aaron threw... it became... Pharaoh called... they did... they threw... they became... Aaron's staff swallowed." This staccato rhythm mirrors the swift unfolding of events and heightens dramatic tension. The narrator offers no psychological interiority, no explanation of how the magicians achieved their imitation—only the bare fact that they did, followed immediately by the more significant fact that Aaron's serpent devoured theirs. The syntax privileges action over reflection, forcing the reader to focus on outcomes rather than mechanisms.
The term tannîn (serpent) carries symbolic weight beyond its zoological reference. In Egyptian iconography, the cobra (uraeus) symbolized royal power and divine protection, worn on Pharaoh's crown as a sign of sovereignty. By transforming Aaron's staff into a tannîn that consumes the Egyptian serpents, Yahweh is not merely performing a wonder but enacting a parable: the God of the Hebrews will swallow up the power of Egypt. The verb bālaʿ (swallow) anticipates Exodus 15:12, where the earth "swallows" Pharaoh's army, and Isaiah 25:8, where Yahweh will "swallow up death forever." The magicians' ability to replicate the sign paradoxically serves Yahweh's purpose—it demonstrates that the contest is real, not a mismatch between genuine power and fraud, making Aaron's victory all the more theologically significant.
Verse 13 introduces the leitmotif that will dominate the plague narrative: the hardening of Pharaoh's heart. The phrase "as Yahweh had said" (kaʾăšer dibbēr yhwh) echoes 4:21 and 7:3-4, establishing that Pharaoh's obstinacy, while morally culpable, is also within the scope of divine foreknowledge and purpose. The narrator does not yet specify whether Yahweh actively hardens Pharaoh's heart or whether Pharaoh hardens his own (both will be stated explicitly in later chapters). The ambiguity is theologically intentional, preserving the tension between human responsibility and divine sovereignty. What is clear is that the hardening serves a revelatory function: "that you may know that I am Yahweh" (7:17). Pharaoh's refusal to listen becomes the occasion for an escalating series of signs that will leave no doubt about Yahweh's identity and power.
The swallowing of the magicians' staffs is not merely a superior trick but a prophetic sign: Egypt's power, however real, will be utterly consumed by the God who redeems His people. Pharaoh's hardened heart, far from thwarting God's plan, becomes the very stage on which His glory is displayed—resistance itself is conscripted into the service of revelation.