
THE Egyptians knew very well that they would never see their jewels again; and  the people of Israel were thus, to some extent, compensated for their unpaid  toils. The Lord gave them such favor with the Egyptians that they gave them  whatever they asked; so that "they spoiled the Egyptians."
These jewels  were employed afterward in the adornment and enrichment of the Sanctuary. They  flashed in the breastplate of the High Priest, and shone in the sacred vessels.  In this they remind us of the treasures which David gathered by his conquests  from neighboring nations, and which were afterward incorporated in the Temple of  Solomon. They recall also the glowing predictions of the prophet, that the kings  of the earth shall bring their treasures into the New Jerusalem.
The  jewels of the Church, whether they stand for her graces or her choice children,  have often been obtained from the midst of Egypt. Was not Saul of Tarsus just  such a jewel? The world counted him one of her rarest sons; but God set him as a  jewel in the breastplate of Immanuel.
Let us ever seek jewels from the  land of our captivity and suffering. It will not do to come away empty. It is  not enough merely to bear what God permits to fall on us for our chastisement;  but to go further, and extract from all trials, jewels. Let every trial and  temptation enrich you with the opposite grace. There are Egyptians in your life,  which have grievously tormented you with their heavy whips, yet even these shall  yield wealth - " jewels of silver and jewels of gold"; which you shall  consecrate to holy service, and which shall shine in the fabric and worship of  the New Jerusalem.