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Text -- Deuteronomy 1:9-46 (NET)

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1:9 I also said to you at that time, “I am no longer able to sustain you by myself. 1:10 The Lord your God has increased your population to the point that you are now as numerous as the very stars of the sky. 1:11 Indeed, may the Lord, the God of your ancestors, make you a thousand times more numerous than you are now, blessing you just as he said he would! 1:12 But how can I alone bear up under the burden of your hardship and strife? 1:13 Select wise and practical men, those known among your tribes, whom I may appoint as your leaders.” 1:14 You replied to me that what I had said to you was good. 1:15 So I chose as your tribal leaders wise and well-known men, placing them over you as administrators of groups of thousands, hundreds, fifties, and tens, and also as other tribal officials. 1:16 I furthermore admonished your judges at that time that they should pay attention to issues among your fellow citizens and judge fairly, whether between one citizen and another or a citizen and a resident foreigner. 1:17 They must not discriminate in judgment, but hear the lowly and the great alike. Nor should they be intimidated by human beings, for judgment belongs to God. If the matter being adjudicated is too difficult for them, they should bring it before me for a hearing.
Instructions at Kadesh Barnea
1:18 So I instructed you at that time regarding everything you should do. 1:19 Then we left Horeb and passed through all that immense, forbidding wilderness that you saw on the way to the Amorite hill country as the Lord our God had commanded us to do, finally arriving at Kadesh Barnea. 1:20 Then I said to you, “You have come to the Amorite hill country which the Lord our God is about to give us. 1:21 Look, he has placed the land in front of you! Go up, take possession of it, just as the Lord, the God of your ancestors, said to do. Do not be afraid or discouraged!” 1:22 So all of you approached me and said, “Let’s send some men ahead of us to scout out the land and bring us back word as to how we should attack it and what the cities are like there.” 1:23 I thought this was a good idea, so I sent twelve men from among you, one from each tribe. 1:24 They left and went up to the hill country, coming to the Eshcol Valley, which they scouted out. 1:25 Then they took some of the produce of the land and carried it back down to us. They also brought a report to us, saying, “The land that the Lord our God is about to give us is good.”
Disobedience at Kadesh Barnea
1:26 You were not willing to go up, however, but instead rebelled against the Lord your God. 1:27 You complained among yourselves privately and said, “Because the Lord hates us he brought us from Egypt to deliver us over to the Amorites so they could destroy us! 1:28 What is going to happen to us? Our brothers have drained away our courage by describing people who are more numerous and taller than we are, and great cities whose defenses appear to be as high as heaven itself! Moreover, they said they saw Anakites there.” 1:29 So I responded to you, “Do not be terrified of them! 1:30 The Lord your God is about to go ahead of you; he will fight for you, just as you saw him do in Egypt 1:31 and in the desert, where you saw him carrying you along like a man carries his son. This he did everywhere you went until you came to this very place.” 1:32 However, through all this you did not have confidence in the Lord your God, 1:33 the one who was constantly going before you to find places for you to set up camp. He appeared by fire at night and cloud by day, to show you the way you ought to go.
Judgment at Kadesh Barnea
1:34 When the Lord heard you, he became angry and made this vow: 1:35 “Not a single person of this evil generation will see the good land that I promised to give to your ancestors! 1:36 The exception is Caleb son of Jephunneh; he will see it and I will give him and his descendants the territory on which he has walked, because he has wholeheartedly followed me.” 1:37 As for me, the Lord was also angry with me on your account. He said, “You also will not be able to go there. 1:38 However, Joshua son of Nun, your assistant, will go. Encourage him, because he will enable Israel to inherit the land. 1:39 Also, your infants, who you thought would die on the way, and your children, who as yet do not know good from bad, will go there; I will give them the land and they will possess it. 1:40 But as for you, turn back and head for the desert by the way to the Red Sea.”
Unsuccessful Conquest of Canaan
1:41 Then you responded to me and admitted, “We have sinned against the Lord. We will now go up and fight as the Lord our God has told us to do.” So you each put on your battle gear and prepared to go up to the hill country. 1:42 But the Lord told me: “Tell them this: ‘Do not go up and fight, because I will not be with you and you will be defeated by your enemies.’” 1:43 I spoke to you, but you did not listen. Instead you rebelled against the Lord and recklessly went up to the hill country. 1:44 The Amorite inhabitants of that area confronted you and chased you like a swarm of bees, striking you down from Seir as far as Hormah. 1:45 Then you came back and wept before the Lord, but he paid no attention to you whatsoever. 1:46 Therefore, you remained at Kadesh for a long time– indeed, for the full time.
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Names, People and Places, Dictionary Themes and Topics

Names, People and Places:
 · Amorites members of a pre-Israel Semitic tribe from Mesopotamia
 · Anakim descendents of Anak; an ancient people who lived around Hebron
 · Caleb son of Hezron son of Perez son of Judah
 · Egypt descendants of Mizraim
 · Eshcol brother of Mamre and Aner, Amorites who were allies of Abraham,a valley near Hebron, presumably where Eshcol once lived
 · Horeb a mountain; the place where the law was given to Moses
 · Hormah a town of Simeon about 10 km east of Beersheba
 · Israel a citizen of Israel.,a member of the nation of Israel
 · Jephunneh father of Caleb, Joshua's spy partner,a man of Asher; son of Jether
 · Joshua a son of Eliezer; the father of Er; an ancestor of Jesus,the son of Nun and successor of Moses,son of Nun of Ephraim; successor to Moses,a man: owner of the field where the ark stopped,governor of Jerusalem under King Josiah,son of Jehozadak; high priest in the time of Zerubbabel
 · Kadesh an oasis 100 km south of Gaza & 120 km NNW of Ezion-Geber, where Israel made an encampment
 · Kadesh-barnea an oasis 100 km south of Gaza & 120 km NNW of Ezion-Geber, where Israel made an encampment
 · Kadesh-Barnea an oasis 100 km south of Gaza & 120 km NNW of Ezion-Geber, where Israel made an encampment
 · Nun son of Elishama; father of Joshua (Ephraim), Moses' aide
 · Red Sea the ocean between Egypt and the Sinai Peninsula,the sea between Egypt and Arabia
 · Seir a mountain and adjoining land,a man from the highlands of Seir (OS); father-in-law of Esau


Dictionary Themes and Topics: DEUTERONOMY | Beast | Exodus | JOSHUA (2) | Reproof | Israel | Moses | Judge | Faith | Government | Amorites | Officer | MOUNT OF THE AMORITES | LAW OF MOSES | Bee | Court | God | Cowardice | Caleb | Rulers | more
Table of Contents

Verse Notes / Footnotes
NET Notes

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Commentary -- Verse Notes / Footnotes

NET Notes: Deu 1:10 Or “heavens.” The Hebrew term שָׁמַיִם (shamayim) may be translated “heaven(s)”...

NET Notes: Deu 1:11 Heb “may he bless you.”

NET Notes: Deu 1:13 The Hebrew verb נְבֹנִים (nÿvonim, from בִּין [bin]) is a Niphal re...

NET Notes: Deu 1:15 Or “selected”; Heb “took.”

NET Notes: Deu 1:16 Heb “his stranger” or “his sojourner”; NAB, NIV “an alien”; NRSV “resident alien.” The Hebrew word ...

NET Notes: Deu 1:17 Heb “the small,” but referring to social status, not physical stature.

NET Notes: Deu 1:20 The Hebrew participle has an imminent future sense here, although many English versions treat it as a present tense (“is giving us,” NAB, ...

NET Notes: Deu 1:21 Or “has given you the land” (cf. NAB, NIV, NRSV).

NET Notes: Deu 1:23 Or “selected” (so NIV, NRSV, TEV); Heb “took.”

NET Notes: Deu 1:24 The Eshcol Valley is a verdant valley near Hebron, still famous for its viticulture (cf. Num 13:22-23). The Hebrew name “Eshcol” means ...

NET Notes: Deu 1:25 The Hebrew text includes “in their hand,” which is unnecessary and somewhat redundant in English style.

NET Notes: Deu 1:26 Heb “the mouth of the Lord your God.” To include “the mouth” would make for odd English style. The mouth stands by metonymy fo...

NET Notes: Deu 1:27 Heb “in your tents,” that is, privately.

NET Notes: Deu 1:28 Anakites were giant people (Num 13:33; Deut 2:10, 21; 9:2) descended from a certain Anak whose own forefather Arba founded the city of Kiriath Arba, i...

NET Notes: Deu 1:29 Heb “do not tremble and do not be afraid.” Two synonymous commands are combined for emphasis.

NET Notes: Deu 1:30 Heb “according to all which he did for you in Egypt before your eyes.”

NET Notes: Deu 1:31 Heb “the Lord your God.” The pronoun (“him”) has been employed in the translation for stylistic reasons.

NET Notes: Deu 1:34 Heb “and swore,” i.e., made an oath or vow.

NET Notes: Deu 1:35 Heb “Not a man among these men.”

NET Notes: Deu 1:36 Heb “the Lord.” The pronoun (“me”) has been employed in the translation, since it sounds strange to an English reader for the ...

NET Notes: Deu 1:38 Heb “it”; the referent (the land) has been specified in the translation for clarity.

NET Notes: Deu 1:39 Do not know good from bad. This is a figure of speech called a merism (suggesting a whole by referring to its extreme opposites). Other examples are t...

NET Notes: Deu 1:40 Heb “the Reed Sea.” “Reed” is a better translation of the Hebrew סוּף (suf), traditionally rendered &#...

NET Notes: Deu 1:43 Heb “the mouth of the Lord.” See note at 1:26.

NET Notes: Deu 1:44 Hormah is probably Khirbet el-Meshash, 5.5 mi (9 km) west of Arad and 7.5 mi (12 km) SE of Beer Sheba. Its name is a derivative of the verb ח...

NET Notes: Deu 1:45 Heb “did not hear your voice and did not turn an ear to you.”

NET Notes: Deu 1:46 Heb “like the days which you lived.” This refers to the rest of the forty-year period in the desert before Israel arrived in Moab.

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