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Text -- Deuteronomy 29:20 (NET)

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Context
29:20 The Lord will be unwilling unwilling to forgive him, and his intense anger will rage against that man; all the curses written in this scroll will fall upon him and the Lord will obliterate his name from memory.
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Names, People and Places, Dictionary Themes and Topics

Dictionary Themes and Topics: SMOKE | Presumption | Moses | Moab | Judgments | Jealousy | Israel | Infidelity | Impenitence | Imagination | Drunkeess | Covenant | Book | Backsliders | more
Table of Contents

Word/Phrase Notes
Wesley , Calvin , TSK

Word/Phrase Notes
Poole , Haydock , Gill

Verse Notes / Footnotes
NET Notes

Verse Range Notes
TSK Synopsis , MHCC , Matthew Henry , Keil-Delitzsch , Constable , Guzik

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Commentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per phrase)

Wesley: Deu 29:20 - -- Shall burn and break forth with flame and smoke as it were from a furnace.

Shall burn and break forth with flame and smoke as it were from a furnace.

Calvin: Deu 29:20 - -- 20.The Lord will not spare him. Moses here teaches us that the obstinacy in which the wicked are willfully hardened, shuts against them the door of h...

20.The Lord will not spare him. Moses here teaches us that the obstinacy in which the wicked are willfully hardened, shuts against them the door of hope, so that they will find that God is not to be appeased. And assuredly it is the climax of all sins that a wretched man, who is abandoned to vice, should extinguish the light of his own reason, and destroy the image of God within him, so as to degenerate into a beast: and not only so, but also that he should dethrone God, as if He were not the Judge of the world. And this is the insult which they put upon Him who abandon themselves to sin in the confident expectation of impunity. 273 Thus, by Isaiah, God swears that this was an inexpiable crime, that, when He called them to baldness and to mourning, the Israelites encouraged each other to gladness; and, whilst feasting luxuriously, said in ridicule, “Tomorrow we shall die.” ( Isa 22:12.) By the word, אבה , ahab, Moses altogether shuts out the grace of God. 274 Meanwhile he contrasts God’s fixed purpose, — that He will not be willing to pardon, — with the depraved pleasures of those who take too much delight in their sins. Behold, then, what poor sinners gain by their proud contempt when they endeavor to cast off God’s judgment together with His fear!

Further, in order the better to express that God will be irreconcilable to such great perversity, he declares that He will exterminate from the earth those who have so wantonly exulted in iniquity; and finally adds, that He will give them up to be accursed ( in anathemata,) so that they shall no longer hold a place among the people of Israel. Now, it is a much more grievous thing to be cut off from the elect people, and to be set apart unto evil, as it is here said, than to be deprived of natural life.

TSK: Deu 29:20 - -- will not spare : Psa 78:50; Pro 6:34; Isa 27:11; Jer 13:14; Eze 5:11, Eze 7:4, Eze 7:9, Eze 8:18, Eze 9:10; Eze 14:7, Eze 14:8, Eze 24:14; Rom 8:32, R...

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Commentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per Verse)

Poole: Deu 29:20 - -- Shall smoke i.e. shall burn and break forth with flame and smoke as it were from a furnace. Compare Psa 18:8 . Blot out his name from under heaven ...

Shall smoke i.e. shall burn and break forth with flame and smoke as it were from a furnace. Compare Psa 18:8 .

Blot out his name from under heaven i.e. destroy his person and memory from amongst men.

Haydock: Deu 29:20 - -- Enkindled, ( fumet .) Literally, "smoke." (Haydock) --- Hebrew, "the anger (literally, nose)....smoke." The Greeks and Romans adopt similar expre...

Enkindled, ( fumet .) Literally, "smoke." (Haydock) ---

Hebrew, "the anger (literally, nose)....smoke." The Greeks and Romans adopt similar expressions, to denote the wrath and eagerness with which a person is actuated. "Fierce anger always sits upon his nose." (Theocrit.) So Persius says, Disce, sed ira cadat naso, rugosaque sanna.

Gill: Deu 29:20 - -- Then the Lord will not spare him,.... Have no mercy upon him, nor forgive him, being an hardhearted, impenitent, stubborn, and obstinate sinner, as we...

Then the Lord will not spare him,.... Have no mercy upon him, nor forgive him, being an hardhearted, impenitent, stubborn, and obstinate sinner, as well as guilty of the grossest and most provoking sin, as idolatry is:

but then the anger of the Lord, and his jealousy, shall smoke against that man; or, "the nose of the Lord shall smoke" f; alluding to an angry, wrathful, furious man, whose brain being heated, and his passions inflamed, his breath steams through his nostrils like smoke; it denotes the vehement anger, the greatness of God's wrath and indignation against such a person, and his burning zeal or jealousy for his own honour and glory injured by the idolater:

and all the curses that are written in this book shall lie upon him: for as he that offends in one point is guilty of all, and especially in such a principal point as this, which concerns the being and worship of God; so he makes himself liable to all the curses of the law, which shall not only come upon him, but abide on him; and there is no person clear of them but by redemption through Christ, who, by being made a curse for his people, has redeemed them from the curse of the law:

and the Lord shall blot out his name from under heaven; he shall have no name in Israel, not in the church, and among the people of God, from whom he is to be excommunicated; shall have no name and place in the earth, being cut off from the land of the living; and shall have no name or fame after his death, his memory shall rot and perish; and he shall appear to have no name in the book of life; see Psa 69:28.

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Commentary -- Verse Notes / Footnotes

NET Notes: Deu 29:20 Heb “blot out his name from under the sky.”

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Commentary -- Verse Range Notes

TSK Synopsis: Deu 29:1-29 - --1 Moses exhorts them to obedience, by the memory of the works they had seen.10 All are presented before the Lord to enter into his covenant.18 The gre...

MHCC: Deu 29:10-21 - --The national covenant made with Israel, not only typified the covenant of grace made with true believers, but also represented the outward dispensatio...

Matthew Henry: Deu 29:10-29 - -- It appears by the length of the sentences here, and by the copiousness and pungency of the expressions, that Moses, now that he was drawing near to ...

Keil-Delitzsch: Deu 29:20-21 - -- "For the Lord will not forgive him (who thinks or speaks in this way); but then will His anger smoke (break forth in fire; vid., (Psa 74:1), and ...

Constable: Deu 29:2--31:1 - --VI. MOSES' THIRD MAJOR ADDRESS: AN EXHORTATION TO OBEDIENCE 29:2--30:20 "The rest of chapter 29 contains many re...

Constable: Deu 29:16-29 - --3. The consequences of disobedience 29:16-29 This generation needed to obey the laws of the Mosa...

Guzik: Deu 29:1-29 - --Deuteronomy 29 - Renewal of the Covenant A. God's mighty works for Israel. 1. (1) The covenant in the land of Moab. These are the words of the cov...

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Introduction / Outline

JFB: Deuteronomy (Book Introduction) DEUTERONOMY, the second law, a title which plainly shows what is the object of this book, namely, a recapitulation of the law. It was given in the for...

JFB: Deuteronomy (Outline) MOSES' SPEECH AT THE END OF THE FORTIETH YEAR. (Deu. 1:1-46) THE STORY IS CONTINUED. (Deu. 2:1-37) CONQUEST OF OG, KING OF BASHAN. (Deu. 3:1-20) AN E...

TSK: Deuteronomy (Book Introduction) The book of Deuteronomy marks the end of the Pentateuch, commonly called the Law of Moses; a work every way worthy of God its author, and only less th...

TSK: Deuteronomy 29 (Chapter Introduction) Overview Deu 29:1, Moses exhorts them to obedience, by the memory of the works they had seen; Deu 29:10, All are presented before the Lord to ente...

Poole: Deuteronomy (Book Introduction) FIFTH BOOK of MOSES, CALLED DEUTERONOMY THE ARGUMENT Moses, in the two last months of his life, rehearseth what God had done for them, and their ...

Poole: Deuteronomy 29 (Chapter Introduction) CHAPTER 29 The manifold works and mercies of God a motive to obedience, Deu 29:1-9 . Moses solemnly engageth them to keep covenant with God, Deu 29...

MHCC: Deuteronomy (Book Introduction) This book repeats much of the history and of the laws contained in the three foregoing books: Moses delivered it to Israel a little before his death, ...

MHCC: Deuteronomy 29 (Chapter Introduction) (Deu 29:1-9) Moses calls Israel's mercies to remembrance. (Deu 29:10-21) The Divine wrath on those who flatter themselves in their wickedness. (Deu ...

Matthew Henry: Deuteronomy (Book Introduction) An Exposition, with Practical Observations, of The Fifth Book of Moses, Called Deuteronomy This book is a repetition of very much both of the history ...

Matthew Henry: Deuteronomy 29 (Chapter Introduction) The first words of this chapter are the contents of it, " These are the words of the covenant" (Deu 29:1), that is, these that follow. Here is, I...

Constable: Deuteronomy (Book Introduction) Introduction Title The title of this book in the Hebrew Bible was its first two words,...

Constable: Deuteronomy (Outline) Outline I. Introduction: the covenant setting 1:1-5 II. Moses' first major address: a review...

Constable: Deuteronomy Deuteronomy Bibliography Adams, Jay. Marriage, Divorce and Remarriage in the Bible. Phillipsburg, N.J.: Presbyt...

Haydock: Deuteronomy (Book Introduction) INTRODUCTION. THE BOOK OF DEUTERONOMY. This Book is called Deuteronomy, which signifies a second law , because it repeats and inculcates the ...

Gill: Deuteronomy (Book Introduction) INTRODUCTION TO DEUTERONOMY This book is sometimes called "Elleh hadebarim", from the words with which it begins; and sometimes by the Jews "Mishne...

Gill: Deuteronomy 29 (Chapter Introduction) INTRODUCTION TO DEUTERONOMY 29 This chapter begins with an intimation of another covenant the Lord was about to make with the people of Israel, Deu...

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