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Text -- Deuteronomy 11:17-32 (NET)
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Names, People and Places, Dictionary Themes and Topics
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collapse allCommentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per phrase)
Wesley: Deu 11:17 - -- Which is compared sometimes to a great store-house wherein God lays up his treasures of rain, Job 38:22, the doors whereof God is said to open when he...
Which is compared sometimes to a great store-house wherein God lays up his treasures of rain, Job 38:22, the doors whereof God is said to open when he gives rain, and to shut when he witholds it.
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Wesley: Deu 11:18 - -- Let us all observe these three rules, Let our hearts be filled with the word of God. Lay up these words in your hearts, as in a store-house, to be use...
Let us all observe these three rules, Let our hearts be filled with the word of God. Lay up these words in your hearts, as in a store-house, to be used upon all occasions. Let our eyes be fixed upon the word of God: Bind them for a sign upon your hand, which is always in view, and as frontlets between your eyes, which you cannot avoid the sight of. Let our tongues be employed about the word of God, especially with our children, who must be taught this, as far more needful than the rules of decency, or the calling they are to live by.
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Wesley: Deu 11:21 - -- As long as the heaven keeps its place and continues its influences upon earth.
As long as the heaven keeps its place and continues its influences upon earth.
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Wesley: Deu 11:24 - -- Not absolutely, as the Rabbins fondly conceit, but in the promised land, as it is restrained in the following words; either by possession, or by domin...
Not absolutely, as the Rabbins fondly conceit, but in the promised land, as it is restrained in the following words; either by possession, or by dominion, namely, upon condition of your obedience.
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Wesley: Deu 11:24 - -- On the east. So far the right of dominion extended, but that their sins cut them short: and so far Solomon extended his dominion.
On the east. So far the right of dominion extended, but that their sins cut them short: and so far Solomon extended his dominion.
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Wesley: Deu 11:28 - -- Which you have no acquaintance with, nor experience of their power, or wisdom, or goodness, as you have had of mine.
Which you have no acquaintance with, nor experience of their power, or wisdom, or goodness, as you have had of mine.
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Wesley: Deu 11:29 - -- Heb. Thou shalt give, that is, speak or pronounce, or cause to be pronounced. So the word to give is used, Deu 13:1-2; Job 36:3; Pro 9:9. This is, mor...
Heb. Thou shalt give, that is, speak or pronounce, or cause to be pronounced. So the word to give is used, Deu 13:1-2; Job 36:3; Pro 9:9. This is, more particularly expressed, Deu 27:12-13.
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Looking toward Gilgal, tho' at some considerable distance from it.
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Wesley: Deu 11:30 - -- This was one of the first places that Abram came to in Canaan. So that in sending them thither to hear the blessing and the curse, they were minded of...
This was one of the first places that Abram came to in Canaan. So that in sending them thither to hear the blessing and the curse, they were minded of the promise made to Abram in that very place, Gen 12:6-7.
JFB -> Deu 11:15-17; Deu 11:18-25; Deu 11:24; Deu 11:24; Deu 11:24; Deu 11:24; Deu 11:24; Deu 11:26-32
JFB: Deu 11:15-17 - -- Undoubtedly the special blessing of the former and the latter rain [Deu 11:14] was one principal cause of the extraordinary fertility of Canaan in anc...
Undoubtedly the special blessing of the former and the latter rain [Deu 11:14] was one principal cause of the extraordinary fertility of Canaan in ancient times. That blessing was promised to the Israelites as a temporal reward for their fidelity to the national covenant [Deu 11:13]. It was threatened to be withdrawn on their disobedience or apostasy; and most signally is the execution of that threatening seen in the present sterility of Palestine. MR. LOWTHIAN, an English farmer, who was struck during his journey from Joppa to Jerusalem by not seeing a blade of grass, where even in the poorest localities of Britain some wild vegetation is found, directed his attention particularly to the subject, and pursued the inquiry during a month's residence in Jerusalem, where he learned that a miserably small quantity of milk is daily sold to the inhabitants at a dear rate, and that chiefly asses' milk. "Most clearly," says he, "did I perceive that the barrenness of large portions of the country was owing to the cessation of the early and latter rain, and that the absence of grass and flowers made it no longer the land (Deu 11:9) flowing with milk and honey."
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JFB: Deu 11:24 - -- Not as if the Jews should be lords of the world, but of every place within the promised land. It should be granted to them and possessed by them, on c...
Not as if the Jews should be lords of the world, but of every place within the promised land. It should be granted to them and possessed by them, on conditions of obedience:
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JFB: Deu 11:24 - -- Their boundary on the east. Their grant of dominion extended so far, and the right was fulfilled to Solomon.
Their boundary on the east. Their grant of dominion extended so far, and the right was fulfilled to Solomon.
Clarke: Deu 11:18 - -- Therefore shall ye lay up these my words - See Deu 6:4-8 (note), and Exo 13:9 (note).
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Clarke: Deu 11:24 - -- From the river - Euphrates, which was on the east, to the uttermost sea - the Mediterranean, which lay westward of the promised land. This promise, ...
From the river - Euphrates, which was on the east, to the uttermost sea - the Mediterranean, which lay westward of the promised land. This promise, notwithstanding the many provocations of the Israelites, was fulfilled in the time of Solomon, for "he reigned over all the kings from the river (Euphrates) even unto the land of the Philistines, and to the border of Egypt."See 2Ch 9:26, and the note, Num 34:12 (note).
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Clarke: Deu 11:26 - -- Behold, I set before you - a blessing and a curse - If God had not put it in the power of this people either to obey or disobey; if they had not had...
Behold, I set before you - a blessing and a curse - If God had not put it in the power of this people either to obey or disobey; if they had not had a free will, over which they had complete authority, to use it either in the way of willing or nilling; could God, with any propriety, have given such precepts as these, sanctioned with such promises and threatenings? If they were not free agents, they could not be punished for disobedience, nor could they, in any sense of the word, have been rewardable for obedience. A Stone is not rewardable because, in obedience to the laws of gravitation, it always tends to the center; nor is it punishable be cause, in being removed from that center, in its tending or falling towards it again it takes away the life of a man
That God has given man a free, self-determining Will, which cannot be forced by any power but that which is omnipotent, and which God himself never will force, is declared in the most formal manner through the whole of the sacred writings. No argument can affect this, while the Bible is considered as a Divine revelation; no sophistry can explain away its evidence, as long as the accountableness of man for his conduct is admitted, and as long as the eternal bounds of moral good and evil remain, and the essential distinctions between vice and virtue exist. If ye will obey, (for God is ever ready to assist), ye shall live; if ye will disobey and refuse that help, ye shall die. So hath Jehovah spoken, and man cannot reverse it.
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Clarke: Deu 11:29 - -- Thou shalt put the blessing upon Mount Gerizim, and the curse upon Mount Ebal - The etymology of these names may be supposed to cast some light on t...
Thou shalt put the blessing upon Mount Gerizim, and the curse upon Mount Ebal - The etymology of these names may be supposed to cast some light on this institution.
That the land of Judea was naturally very fertile, can scarcely be supposed by any who considers the accounts given of it by travelers; with the exception of a few districts, the whole land is dry, stony, and barren, and particularly all the southern parts of Judea, and all the environs of Jerusalem, most of which are represented as absolutely incapable of cultivation. How then could it ever support its vast number of inhabitants? By the especial providence of God. While God kept that people under his continual protection, their land was a paradise; they lent to all nations and borrowed from none. What has it been since? A demi-solitude, because that especial blessing no longer descends upon it. No land, says Calmet, was more fertile while under the benediction of God; none more barren when under his curse. Its present state is a proof of the declaration of Moses, Deu 28:23 : "The heaven over their head is brass; the earth under their feet, iron."The land itself, in its present state is an ample proof of the authenticity of the Pentateuch. Should facts of this kind be lost sight of by any who read the sacred writings?
Calvin: Deu 11:18 - -- 18.Therefore shall ye lay up these my words He again demands their serious attention, lest if the doctrine he propounds should be only lightly and ca...
18.Therefore shall ye lay up these my words He again demands their serious attention, lest if the doctrine he propounds should be only lightly and carelessly received, it should speedily be let slip; for to lay up in, or on, the heart, is the same as to hide deeply in it; although, where the word “soul” is added, the “heart” refers to the mind, or the intellectual faculties. In fine, he commands them to have the Law not only impressed on the mind, but embraced with sincere affection. In the next place, he commands that aid to the memory which we have just considered, viz., that they should wear the precepts on the arms and foreheads; as if God should constantly meet them, to arouse their senses. For (as has been said) God had no regard to the bands themselves, but would have them seen on their arms and foreheads for another object, viz., 236 to suggest and renew their care for religion. Again, He appointed them to occupy the place of ornaments, in order to accustom the people to take their chief delight in meditating on the Law. Thus that foolish ambition is sufficiently refuted, when hypocrites sought after a reputation for holiness by their fringes and other fopperies, as well as that gross error of the whole people, in thinking that they discharged their duty to God by their outward dress. What follows afterwards, that the precepts should be written on the gates of their cities, and on their private houses, tends to the same thing; for we have said, that since men’s minds are prone to vanity, and are easily distracted by innumerable allurements, they have need of such stays to hold them back. And this object is plainly expressed, when He commands them severally to speak of the precepts of the Law, whether they are sitting at home, or going abroad, or lying down, or rising up; because without diligent exercise, it usually happens that whatever men have once learnt is soon lost. He adds, also, another effect of this diligence, viz., that not only should each of them consult their own individual advantage, but also teach their children, whereby God’s Law would ever be maintained in rigor by perpetual succession.
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Calvin: Deu 11:26 - -- 26.Behold, I set before you this day. He now embraces the two points at once, viz., that they would be blessed if they earnestly apply themselves to ...
26.Behold, I set before you this day. He now embraces the two points at once, viz., that they would be blessed if they earnestly apply themselves to the keeping of the Law, and cursed, if they shake off its yoke and revel in their lusts. But, when he says that he here sets before them a blessing and a curse, it is as much as to declare, that he does not merely tell them what is right, but that the reward is prepared if they obey; and if not, that the punishment is also at hand. Thus we see, that the doctrine which he had hitherto delivered is sealed by hope and fear, since they would not lose their labor if they obeyed it, nor be unpunished if they rejected it. But, that they may learn surely to embrace the promises and to fear the threatenings, he repeats what we have met with before, 203 that God, who is both a faithful rewarder, and a severe judge, is the Author of the Law; yet at the same time he magnifies his own ministry, 204 since it behooved them to depend upon God, and to acquiesce in His commandments, in such a manner as still to submit themselves to His Prophet. For such is men’s pride, that they desire to fly above the clouds to listen to God; whilst He would be heard in His servants, by whose mouth He speaks. Moses, therefore, would again enforce upon them this humility, when he states that he enjoins what God has commanded, as if to call himself the organ of the Holy Spirit.
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Calvin: Deu 11:29 - -- 29.And it shall come to pass, when the Lord. I have lately expounded a similar passage, which, although it is subsequent in the order observed by Mos...
29.And it shall come to pass, when the Lord. I have lately expounded a similar passage, which, although it is subsequent in the order observed by Moses, yet, inasmuch as it sets out the matter more clearly, I have not hesitated for perspicuity’s sake to put first. I said that God’s intention was, whilst appointing the Israelites to proclaim their own condemnation, to lay them under more solemn obligation to keep the Law. If He had Himself declared His will through the Levites only, they ought indeed to have been seriously affected, and to have listened with reverence both to the blessings and the curses; but when each of them testifies with his own mouth what the Levites dictated by God’s command, the introduction of this assent, as a solemn ratification, 205 was more efficacious in awakening their zeal and attention. A more fitting season, however, for this protest was after they had entered the promised land than as if it had been made in the plain of Moab; for the sight of the land tended to its confirmation, as if they had been brought into court to make a covenant with God.
These 206 two mountains are situated opposite to each other, in such a manner that the two divisions of the people might easily stand to bless and to curse, so that they might in concert approve of the promises and threats of God.
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Calvin: Deu 11:30 - -- 30.Are they not on the other side of Jordan. Although the form of interrogation is common in Hebrew, yet in this place Moses affirms more vehemently ...
30.Are they not on the other side of Jordan. Although the form of interrogation is common in Hebrew, yet in this place Moses affirms more vehemently than as if he had only stated directly that these mountains were in the land of Canaan; for he wishes to encourage them in the confidence of entering the promised inheritance; just as he adds immediately afterwards, “Ye shall pass over Jordan.” For, although they had already experienced the miraculous power of God in the conquest of the Amorites, and in heir occupation of the land of Bashan, yet such was their incredulity, that it was necessary constantly to dissipate their fears, so that they might lay aside all hesitation, and boldly prepare to advance. Finally, he founds an exhortation upon this great goodness of God; for the actual enjoyment of the land ought to have stimulated them the more in the service of God, because they were made to inherit it for the purpose of keeping the Law.
TSK: Deu 11:17 - -- the Lord’ s : Deu 6:15, Deu 30:17, Deu 30:18
shut up : Deu 28:23, Deu 28:24; 1Ki 8:35, 1Ki 17:1; 2Ch 6:26, 2Ch 7:13; Jer 14:1-6; Amo 4:7; Hag 1:9...
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TSK: Deu 11:18 - -- ye lay up : Deu 6:6-9, Deu 32:46; Exo 13:9, Exo 13:16; Psa 119:11; Pro 3:1, Pro 6:20-23, Pro 7:2, Pro 7:3; Col 3:16; Heb 2:1; 2Pe 1:12, 2Pe 3:1, 2Pe 3...
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TSK: Deu 11:19 - -- Deu 4:9, Deu 4:10, Deu 6:7; Psa 34:11, Psa 78:5, Psa 78:6; Pro 2:1, 4:1-27; Isa 38:19
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TSK: Deu 11:21 - -- your days : Deu 4:40, Deu 5:16, Deu 6:2; Pro 3:2, Pro 3:16, Pro 4:10, Pro 9:11
as the days : Psa 72:5, Psa 89:28, Psa 89:29; Isa 65:20; Rev 20:6
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TSK: Deu 11:22 - -- if ye shall : Deu 11:13, Deu 6:17
to love : Deu 11:13; Mat 22:37; 2Ti 4:8; 1Jo 5:2, 1Jo 5:3
to cleave : Deu 10:20, Deu 30:20; Gen 2:24; Act 11:23; 2Co...
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TSK: Deu 11:23 - -- Deu 4:38, Deu 7:1, Deu 7:2, Deu 7:22, Deu 7:23, Deu 9:1, Deu 9:5; Exo 23:27-30, Exo 34:11
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TSK: Deu 11:24 - -- Gen 15:18-21; Exo 23:31; Num 34:3-15; Jos 1:3, Jos 1:4, Jos 14:9; 1Ki 4:21, 1Ki 4:24; 2Ch 9:26
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TSK: Deu 11:25 - -- There shall : Deu 2:25, Deu 7:24; Jos 1:5, Jos 2:9, Jos 5:1
as he hath : Exo 23:27
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TSK: Deu 11:27 - -- Deu 28:1-14; Lev 26:3-13; Psa 19:11; Isa 1:19, Isa 3:10; Mat 5:3-12, 25:31-46; Luk 11:28; Joh 13:17, Joh 14:21-23; Rom 2:7; Jam 1:25; Rev 22:14
Deu 28:1-14; Lev 26:3-13; Psa 19:11; Isa 1:19, Isa 3:10; Mat 5:3-12, 25:31-46; Luk 11:28; Joh 13:17, Joh 14:21-23; Rom 2:7; Jam 1:25; Rev 22:14
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TSK: Deu 11:28 - -- Deut. 28:15-68, Deu 29:19-28; Lev. 26:14-32; Isa 1:20, Isa 3:11; Mat 25:41; Rom 2:8, Rom 2:9; Gal 3:10
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TSK: Deu 11:29 - -- put the blessing : Deu 27:12-26; Jos 8:30-35
Gerizim : Gerizim and Ebal, mountains west of Jordan, and in the tribe of Ephraim, are opposite, or paral...
put the blessing : Deu 27:12-26; Jos 8:30-35
Gerizim : Gerizim and Ebal, mountains west of Jordan, and in the tribe of Ephraim, are opposite, or parallel to each other, extending from east to west; mount Gerizim being on the south, and mount Ebal on the north. They are separated by the beautiful valley in which Shechem or Nablous is situated, which is only about 200 paces in width. Both mountains are much alike in length, height, and figure; being about a league in length, in the form of a semicircle, and so steep, on the side of Shechem, that there is scarcely any shelvingcaps1 . tcaps0 heir altitude appeared to Mr. Buckingham nearly equal, not exceeding 700 or 800 feet from the level of the valley, which is itself elevated. But though they resemble each other in these particulars, yet in another they are very dissimilar; for, says Maundrell, ""though neither of the mountains has much to boast of as to its pleasantness, yet, as one passes between them, Gerizim seems to discover a somewhat more verdant, fruitful aspect then Ebalcaps1 . tcaps0 he reason of which may be, because fronting towards the north, it is sheltered from the heat of the sun by its own shade; whereas Ebal, looking southward, and receiving the sun that comes directly upon it, must by consequence be rendered more scorched and unfruitful."
Famous Mountains | ||
Amalek | in the tribe of Ephraim | Jdg 12:15 |
Calvary | near Jerusalem | Luk 23:33 |
Carmel | near the Mediterranean | Jos 19:26 |
Ebal | near to Gerizim | Jos 8:30 |
En-gedi | near the Dead Sea | Jos 15:62 |
Gaash | in the tribe of Ephraim | Jos 24:30 |
Gilboa | south of the valley of Israel | 2Sa 1:21 |
Gilead | beyond Jordan | Gen 31:21-25 |
Gerizim | on which afterwards stood a temple of the Samaritans | Jdg 9:7 |
Hermon | beyond Jordan | Jos 11:3 |
Hor | in Idumea | Num 20:22 |
Horeb | in Arabia Petrea near Sinai | Deu 1:2 |
Lebanon | separates Syria from Palestine | Deu 3:25 |
Moriah | where the temple was built | 2Ch 3:1 |
Nebo | part of the mountains of Abarim | Num 32:3 |
Olives | east of Jerusalem divided only by brook Kidron | 1Ki 11:17; 2Ki 23:13; Act 1:12 |
Paran | in Arabia Petrea | Gen 14:6 Deu 1:1 |
Pisgah | beyond Jordan | Num 21:20 Deu 34:1 |
Seir | in Idume | Gen 14:6 |
Sinai | in Arabia Petrea | Exo 19:2 Deu 33:2 |
Sion | near to mount Moriah | 2Sa 5:7 |
Tabor | in the Lower Galilee | Jdg 4:6 |
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collapse allCommentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per Verse)
Barnes: Deu 11:21 - -- The sense is: "Keep the covenant faithfully, and so shall your own and your children’ s days be multiplied as long as the heaven covers the ear...
The sense is: "Keep the covenant faithfully, and so shall your own and your children’ s days be multiplied as long as the heaven covers the earth."The promise of Canaan to Israel was thus a perpetual promise, but also a conditional one.
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Barnes: Deu 11:29 - -- Thou shalt put the blessing upon mount Gerizim - literally, thou shalt give, i. e., "give"utterance to it. On the ceremony see Deu 27:14 ff. Mo...
Thou shalt put the blessing upon mount Gerizim - literally, thou shalt give, i. e., "give"utterance to it. On the ceremony see Deu 27:14 ff.
Mount Gerizim, barren like Ebal, was probably selected as the hill of benediction because it was the southernmost of the two, the south being the region, according to Hebrew ideas, of light, and so of life and blessing. The situation of the mountains is described more accurately in Deu 11:30. The words "by the way where the sun goeth down,"should run, beyond the road of the west; i. e., on the further side of the main track which ran from Syria and Damascus to Jerusalem and Egypt through the center of Palestine. This is called "the way of the west"in contrast to the ether main route from Damascus to the south which passed through the district east of Jordan. The further specifications "Gilgal"and "the plains (rather, the oaks, compare Gen 12:6 note) of Moreh,"are added to define more particularly the section of Canaanites intended.
This Gilgal is perhaps to be found in Jiljilia, a large village about twelve miles south of Gerizim.
Poole: Deu 11:17 - -- Heaven is compared sometimes to a bottle, Job 38:37 , which may be either stopped or opened; sometimes to a great storehouse, wherein God lays up hi...
Heaven is compared sometimes to a bottle, Job 38:37 , which may be either stopped or opened; sometimes to a great storehouse, wherein God lays up his treasures of rain, Job 38:22 Psa 33:7 , the doors whereof God is said to open when he gives rain, and to shut when he withholds it. See 1Ki 8:35 2Ch 6:26 7:13 .
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Poole: Deu 11:21 - -- i.e. As long as this visible world lasts, whilst the heaven keeps its place and continues its influences upon earth, until all these things be disso...
i.e. As long as this visible world lasts, whilst the heaven keeps its place and continues its influences upon earth, until all these things be dissolved. Compare Psa 72:5 81:15 89:29 Jer 33:25 .
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Poole: Deu 11:24 - -- Every place not absolutely, as if the Jews should be lords of all the world, as the rabbins fondly conceit; but in the Promised Land, as it is restra...
Every place not absolutely, as if the Jews should be lords of all the world, as the rabbins fondly conceit; but in the Promised Land, as it is restrained in the following words.
Shall be yours either by possession, or by dominion, to wit, upon condition of your obedience.
From the wilderness to wit, of Sin, on the south side.
And Lebanon ; and from Lebanon ; or, and to Lebanon , which was the northern border.
The river Euphrates on the east. So far their right of dominion extended, but that their sins cut them short; and so far Solomon extended his dominion.
Unto the uttermost sea the western or midland sea; Heb.
the hindermost sea for the eastern part of the world being generally esteemed the foremost, and the southern on the right hand, Psa 89:12 , and consequently the northern on the left hand, the western part must needs be behind. Of these bounds of the land see Gen 10:19 15:18 Exo 23:31 Jos 1:3,4 .
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I propose them to your minds and to your choice.
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Poole: Deu 11:28 - -- Which you have no acquaintance with, nor experience of their power or wisdom or goodness, as you have had of mine.
Which you have no acquaintance with, nor experience of their power or wisdom or goodness, as you have had of mine.
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Poole: Deu 11:29 - -- Thou shalt put the blessing Heb. thou shalt give , i.e. speak or pronounce, or cause to be pronounced. So the word to give is used, Deu 13:1,2 Job...
Thou shalt put the blessing Heb. thou shalt give , i.e. speak or pronounce, or cause to be pronounced. So the word to give is used, Deu 13:1,2 Job 36:3 Pro 9:9 . This is more particularly expressed Deu 27:12,13 Jos 8:33 , whither I refer the reader.
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Poole: Deu 11:30 - -- Over against Gilgal looking towards Gilgal , though at some considerable distance from it, as this particle is sometimes used.
Over against Gilgal looking towards Gilgal , though at some considerable distance from it, as this particle is sometimes used.
Haydock: Deu 11:17 - -- You. In all this discourse, Moses attributes the fertility of the promised land to the blessing of God, and indeed it seems to be naturally far from...
You. In all this discourse, Moses attributes the fertility of the promised land to the blessing of God, and indeed it seems to be naturally far from being so luxuriant as to be able to feed so many inhabitants. Travellers inform us, that a great part is incapable of cultivation. But it is no longer the object of God's complacency, ver. 12. It is under the curse, chap. xxviii. 23. (Calmet)
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Haydock: Deu 11:18 - -- Place. Hebrew, "that they may be as frontlets between your eyes," chap. vi. 9., and Exodus xiii. 9. (Haydock)
Place. Hebrew, "that they may be as frontlets between your eyes," chap. vi. 9., and Exodus xiii. 9. (Haydock)
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Haydock: Deu 11:20 - -- Posts. Upon one post the Jews hang boards, enclosing a piece of parchment, with the 13th to the 21st verse of this chapter; and from ver. 4. to the ...
Posts. Upon one post the Jews hang boards, enclosing a piece of parchment, with the 13th to the 21st verse of this chapter; and from ver. 4. to the 9th of the 6th chapter, they hang with great solemnity upon the other post.
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Haydock: Deu 11:21 - -- Earth, as long as the world shall endure. The psalmist (Psalm lxxxviii. 30,) expresses the duration of the reign of the Messias nearly in the same t...
Earth, as long as the world shall endure. The psalmist (Psalm lxxxviii. 30,) expresses the duration of the reign of the Messias nearly in the same terms. See Baruch i. 2. (Calmet) ---
If the Jews had continued faithful to God, and had submitted to the Messias, they might never have been banished from their country. (Haydock)
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Haydock: Deu 11:24 - -- Yours. The nations of Chanaan, how strong soever, should fall, and their country be lawfully possessed by the Hebrews. ---
Western sea. Hebrew, "...
Yours. The nations of Chanaan, how strong soever, should fall, and their country be lawfully possessed by the Hebrews. ---
Western sea. Hebrew, "the sea of the back." The Jews speak of the different parts of the world, with respect to a man who has his face turned towards the east, Genesis xiii. 9. The countries, from the desert of Zin to the Euphrates, were never entirely occupied by the Israelites, except under the reigns of David and Solomon. (Calmet) ---
God never intended to subject the whole world to their dominion, as the Rabbins would hence infer. (Menochius)
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Haydock: Deu 11:26 - -- Curse. Their respective effects you shall experience, according to your behaviour. (Calmet) ---
God helps our free will to do good. (St. Augustin...
Curse. Their respective effects you shall experience, according to your behaviour. (Calmet) ---
God helps our free will to do good. (St. Augustine, q. 15.) (Worthington)
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Haydock: Deu 11:29 - -- Put the blessing, &c. See Deuteronomy xxvii. 12, &c., and Josue viii. 33, &c. (Challoner) ---
Six tribes were to be stationed on each of these mou...
Put the blessing, &c. See Deuteronomy xxvii. 12, &c., and Josue viii. 33, &c. (Challoner) ---
Six tribes were to be stationed on each of these mountains, chap. xxviii. ---
Garizim. Eusebius says that the Samaritans are grossly deceived, in placing this mountain in the vicinity of Sichem, instead of Jericho. But this is a mistake; for Jotham addressed the inhabitants of Sichem from that mountain, Judges ix. 7. Morizon informs us that it is of the same shape as Hebal, and separated from it only by a valley of about 200 paces, in which the town of Sichem stands. Hebal is a barren rock, while Garizim is very fertile, (Ludolf.) though an ancient poet makes both equally covered with verdure. (Ap. Eusebius, præp. ix. 22.) (Calmet)
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Haydock: Deu 11:30 - -- Far. Hebrew, "over against Galgal, beside the plains of More, or Aluni More." Samaritan reads, "the plain of More, near Sichem," as Exodus xx. 17...
Far. Hebrew, "over against Galgal, beside the plains of More, or Aluni More." Samaritan reads, "the plain of More, near Sichem," as Exodus xx. 17. (Haydock) ---
This is styled the noble vale, Genesis xii. 6. (Calmet) ---
The road from Jericho to the Mediterranean Sea, left these mountains on the north. The Chanaanite inhabited all that region, from Galgal to Sichem. How far these places were distant from each other, is not here specified; though Eusebius seems to have inferred from this text, that Garizim was near Jericho. But the plain might be very extensive or noble, and reach from Sichem as far as Galgala.
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Haydock: Deu 11:32 - -- Fulfil. How inconsistent must such exhortations be, if, as Protestants assert, the commandments be impossible, and "the law exacteth impossible thin...
Fulfil. How inconsistent must such exhortations be, if, as Protestants assert, the commandments be impossible, and "the law exacteth impossible things." (Luther in Gal. iii.) (Haydock)
Gill: Deu 11:17 - -- And then the Lord's wrath be kindled against you,.... For their idolatry, nothing being more provoking to him than that, it being contrary to his natu...
And then the Lord's wrath be kindled against you,.... For their idolatry, nothing being more provoking to him than that, it being contrary to his nature and being, as well as to his will, and to his honour and glory:
and he shut up the heaven, that there be no rain; the treasures and storehouses of it there, or the windows of it, the clouds, which when opened let it down, but when shut withhold it; the key of rain is one of the keys which the Jews say k the Lord keeps in his own hand, and with it he opens and no man shuts, and shuts and no man opens; see Deu 28:12.
and that the land yield not her fruit; which is unavoidably the case when rain is withheld:
and lest ye perish quickly from off the good land which the Lord giveth you; for if the land does not yield its fruits sufficient to support the inhabitants of it, they must in course perish.
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Gill: Deu 11:18-20 - -- Therefore shall ye lay up these my words in your heart, and in your soul,.... Treasure up the laws of God delivered to them in their minds, retain the...
Therefore shall ye lay up these my words in your heart, and in your soul,.... Treasure up the laws of God delivered to them in their minds, retain them in their memories, and cherish a cordial affection for them; which would be an antidote against apostasy, idolatry, and other sins, Psa 119:11.
and bind them for a sign upon your hand, that they may be as frontlets between your eyes; of this and the two following verses; see Gill on Deu 6:7; see Gill on Deu 6:8; see Gill on Deu 6:9.
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Gill: Deu 11:21 - -- That your days may be multiplied,.... Long life being a very desirable blessing, and which is promised to those that obey and keep the law; see Deu 30...
That your days may be multiplied,.... Long life being a very desirable blessing, and which is promised to those that obey and keep the law; see Deu 30:19.
and the days of your children; which are dear to parents, and the continuance of whose lives, next to their own, is most desirable, yea, as desirable as their own; and especially it is desirable that they might have a posterity descending from them, to enjoy for ever their estates and possessions; as it was to the people of Israel, that they might have a seed always to dwell
in the land which the Lord sware unto your fathers to give them; the land of Canaan, so often spoken of as the promise, oath, and gift of God:
as the days of heaven upon the earth; that is, as long as the heavens and the earth shall be, and the one shall be over the other, as they will be to the end of time.
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Gill: Deu 11:22 - -- For if ye shall diligently keep all these commandments which I command you to do them,.... Observe and take notice of them, even all of them, and so a...
For if ye shall diligently keep all these commandments which I command you to do them,.... Observe and take notice of them, even all of them, and so as not merely to have a theory or notional knowledge of them, but to put them in practice:
to love the Lord your God; and show it by obeying his commands, and which is the end of the commandment, and the principle from which all obedience should flow:
to walk in all his ways, and to cleave unto him; see Deu 10:12.
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Gill: Deu 11:23 - -- Then will the Lord drive out all those nations from before you,.... By little and little, even all the seven nations which then inhabited the land of ...
Then will the Lord drive out all those nations from before you,.... By little and little, even all the seven nations which then inhabited the land of Canaan; and this he would do to make room for them, that they might inherit the land; see Deu 7:1.
and ye shall possess greater nations, and mightier than yourselves; countries whose inhabitants were more in number, and greater in strength, than they; and therefore the conquest of them was not to be ascribed to themselves, but to the Lord; this is often observed; see Deu 7:1.
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Gill: Deu 11:24 - -- Every place wherein the soles of your feet shall tread,.... Meaning in the land of Canaan; though the Jews vainly apply this to every land, and countr...
Every place wherein the soles of your feet shall tread,.... Meaning in the land of Canaan; though the Jews vainly apply this to every land, and country, and place therein, where any of them come; pleasing themselves with this foolish fancy, that all shall be theirs that the foot of any of them have trod upon, or they have dwelt in; but that it respects only the land of Canaan appears by the following description of it and its boundaries:
from the wilderness; the wilderness of Paran, which lay to the south of it, where Kadesh was, from whence the spies were sent, and was the southern border of it:
and Lebanon; which was a range of mountains to the north of it; and was the northern border of the land:
from the river, the river Euphrates; which was the eastern border of it, when it was carried to its utmost extent, as in the days of Solomon, 1Ki 4:21.
even unto the uttermost sea shall your coast be: the Mediterranean sea, which was the western border of the land of Canaan, or "the hinder sea", and so it is called Zec 14:8, it lay at the back of them; for if a man stands with his face to the east, the south will be on his right hand, and the north on his left, and the west will be behind him, or at the back of him.
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Gill: Deu 11:25 - -- There shall be no man able to stand before you,.... Meaning not a single man, such an one as Og, or any of the sons of Anak, the giants; because it co...
There shall be no man able to stand before you,.... Meaning not a single man, such an one as Og, or any of the sons of Anak, the giants; because it could never be thought, imagined, or feared, that one man only should be able to stand against 600,000 fighting men, but any people or nation, though greater and mightier than they:
for the Lord your God shall lay the fear of you, and the dread of you, upon all the land that ye shall tread upon: that is, upon all the land of Canaan, and the inhabitants of it; who should hear what wonderful things had been done for them in Egypt, and at the Red sea, and in the wilderness; and what they had done to Sihon and Og, and to their countries, and which accordingly was fulfilled, Jos 2:9.
as he hath said unto you; had promised them, Deu 2:25 and which was prophesied of in the prophetic song at the Red sea; see Exo 15:14.
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Gill: Deu 11:26 - -- Behold, I set before you this day a blessing and a curse,.... Meaning the law of God, and the statutes, judgments, and commandments of it; which, if o...
Behold, I set before you this day a blessing and a curse,.... Meaning the law of God, and the statutes, judgments, and commandments of it; which, if obeyed, blessings would be bestowed upon them; but if disobeyed, they would be liable to the curses of it, as the following words explain it; see Deu 30:15 everyone of the Israelites were called upon to see and consider this matter, it being an interesting one to them all.
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Gill: Deu 11:27 - -- A blessing, if ye obey the commandments of the Lord your God,.... That is, a blessing should come upon them, even all temporal blessings they stood in...
A blessing, if ye obey the commandments of the Lord your God,.... That is, a blessing should come upon them, even all temporal blessings they stood in need of; they should be blessed in body and estate, in their families, and in their flocks, in town and country; see Deu 28:1,
which I command you this day; afresh repeated to them, and enjoined them the observation of it in the name of the Lord.
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Gill: Deu 11:28 - -- And a curse, if ye will not obey the commandments of the Lord your God,.... Accursed in body and estate, in basket and store; in their families, flock...
And a curse, if ye will not obey the commandments of the Lord your God,.... Accursed in body and estate, in basket and store; in their families, flocks, and herds; within doors and without; in city, and country; going out, or coming in; in this world, and that to come, if divine goodness prevent not; see Deu 28:15.
but turn aside out of the way which I command you this day; which the law he gave them, and repeated to them, directed them to walk in:
to go after other gods, which ye have not known; to serve and worship the gods of other nations, strange gods, which neither they nor their fathers knew anything of, or ever received any good thing from; and which indeed are no gods, and nothing in the world, as an idol is.
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Gill: Deu 11:29 - -- And it shall come to pass, when the Lord thy God hath bought thee into the land whither thou goest to possess it,.... Which is often observed, as bein...
And it shall come to pass, when the Lord thy God hath bought thee into the land whither thou goest to possess it,.... Which is often observed, as being near at hand; and when and where many things were to be done, which could not be done in the place and circumstances they now were, particularly what follows:
that thou shall put the blessing on Mount Gerizim, and the curse upon Mount Ebal; that is, pronounce the one on one mountain, and the other on the other mountain, or at least towards them, or over against them. The Targum of Jonathan is"ye shall set six tribes on Mount Gerizim, and six tribes on Mount Ebal; (#De 27:12,13) blessing they shall turn their faces against Mount Gerizim, and cursing they shall turn their faces against Mount Ebal;''with which agrees the account given in the Misnah;"six tribes went to the top of Mount Gerizim, and six to the top of Mount Ebal; and the priests and the Levites, and the ark, stood below in the middle; the priests surrounded the ark, and the Levites the priests, and all Israel were on this and on that side of the ark, as in Jos 8:33 then they turned their faces against Gerizim, they opened with the blessing, blessed is he that maketh not any graven or molten image, and both answered "Amen"; then they turned their faces against Mount Ebal, and opened with the curse, Deu 27:15 and both answered Amen s;''see the performance of this command in Jos 8:33.
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Gill: Deu 11:30 - -- Are they not on the other side Jordan,.... Opposite to that where Moses now was in the plains of Moab, even in Samaria; so in the Misnah t it is said,...
Are they not on the other side Jordan,.... Opposite to that where Moses now was in the plains of Moab, even in Samaria; so in the Misnah t it is said,"as soon as Israel passed over Jordan, they came to Mount Gerizim and Mount Ebal, which are in Samaria;''but those mountains were not near Jordan nor Jericho, to which the people of Israel came first, but sixty miles from thence; though they were, as Moses says, on the other side from the place they now were:
by the way wherewith the sun goeth down; or, as the Targum of Jonathan,"after the way of the sun setting;''following that, or taking their direction from thence, signifying that they lay to the west of Jordan:
in the land of the Canaanites; of that particular tribe or nation which were eminently called Canaanites, for these dwelt by the sea by the coast of Jordan, Num 13:29 or as further described:
that dwell in the champaign over against Gilgal; in the plain open champaign country opposite to Gilgal; not that Gilgal Joshua encamped at before he came to Jericho, which in Moses's time was not known by that name, but another, as Dr. Lightfoot u observes, and he thinks Galilee is meant:
beside the plains of Moreh; near to Shechem, Gen 12:6 and that Gerizim, one of these mountains, was not far from Shechem, is evident from Jdg 9:6 and so in the Misnah w it is said, that these mountains were on the side of Shechem, which is in the plains of Moreh, as in Deu 11:30 as the plains of Moreh here denote Shechem, so there: Benjamin of Tudela says x there is a valley between them, in which lies Shechem; and in his time there were on Mount Gerizim fountains and orchards, but Mount Ebal was dry like stones and rocks. The Targum of Jonathan here, instead of Moreh, reads Mamre; see Gen 13:18.
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Gill: Deu 11:31 - -- For ye shall pass over Jordan, to go in to possess the land Which the Lord your God giveth you,.... They were now near it, and by this they are assure...
For ye shall pass over Jordan, to go in to possess the land Which the Lord your God giveth you,.... They were now near it, and by this they are assured they should pass over it, in order to take possession of the land God had given them, and which gift of his was a sufficient title to it:
and ye shall possess it, and dwell therein: should not only take possession of it, but make their abode in it; they are assured hereby of continuance in it, on condition they obeyed the laws of God, as follows.
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Gill: Deu 11:32 - -- And ye shall observe to do all the statutes and judgments,.... Take notice of them, and heed unto them, so as to practise them:
which I set before ...
And ye shall observe to do all the statutes and judgments,.... Take notice of them, and heed unto them, so as to practise them:
which I set before you this day; repeated in order to them, on the observance of which depended their continuance in the land of Canaan; and therefore this is so often repeated and urged.
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expand allCommentary -- Verse Notes / Footnotes
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NET Notes: Deu 11:19 Or “as you are away on a journey” (cf. NRSV, TEV, NLT); NAB “at home and abroad.”
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NET Notes: Deu 11:23 Heb “the Lord.” The pronoun has been used in the translation for stylistic reasons to avoid redundancy.
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NET Notes: Deu 11:24 Heb “the after sea,” that is, the sea behind one when one is facing east, which is the normal OT orientation. Cf. ASV “the hinder se...
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NET Notes: Deu 11:26 A blessing and a curse. Every extant treaty text of the late Bronze Age attests to a section known as the “blessings and curses,” the form...
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NET Notes: Deu 11:28 Heb “walk after”; NIV “by following”; NLT “by worshiping.” This is a violation of the first commandment, the most ...
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NET Notes: Deu 11:29 Mount Gerizim…Mount Ebal. These two mountains are near the ancient site of Shechem and the modern city of Nablus. The valley between them is lik...
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NET Notes: Deu 11:30 The MT plural “oaks” (אֵלוֹנֵי, ’eloney) should probably be altered (with many Greek...
Geneva Bible: Deu 11:21 That your days may be multiplied, and the days of your children, in the land which the LORD sware unto your fathers to give them, as ( g ) the days of...
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Geneva Bible: Deu 11:24 Every place whereon the soles of ( h ) your feet shall tread shall be yours: from the wilderness and Lebanon, from the river, the river Euphrates, eve...
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Geneva Bible: Deu 11:28 And a curse, if ye will not obey the commandments of the LORD your God, but turn aside out of the way which I command you this day, to go after other ...
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Geneva Bible: Deu 11:30 [Are] they not on the other side Jordan, by the way ( l ) where the sun goeth down, in the land of the Canaanites, which dwell in the champaign over a...
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expand allCommentary -- Verse Range Notes
TSK Synopsis -> Deu 11:1-32
TSK Synopsis: Deu 11:1-32 - --1 An exhortation to obedience;2 by their own experience of God's great works;8 by promise of God's great blessings;16 and by threatenings.18 A careful...
MHCC: Deu 11:8-17 - --Moses sets before them, for the future, life and death, the blessing and the curse, according as they did or did not keep God's commandment. Sin tends...
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MHCC: Deu 11:18-25 - --Let all be directed by the three rules here given. 1. Let our hearts be filled with the word of God. There will not be good practices in the life, unl...
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MHCC: Deu 11:26-32 - --Moses sums up all the arguments for obedience in two words, the blessing and the curse. He charged the people to choose which they would have. Moses t...
Matthew Henry: Deu 11:8-17 - -- Still Moses urges the same subject, as loth to conclude till he had gained his point. " If thou wilt enter into life, if thou wilt enter into Canaa...
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Matthew Henry: Deu 11:18-25 - -- Here, I. Moses repeats the directions he had given for the guidance and assistance of the people in their obedience, and for the keeping up of relig...
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Matthew Henry: Deu 11:26-32 - -- Here Moses concludes his general exhortations to obedience; and his management is very affecting, and such as, one would think, should have engaged ...
Keil-Delitzsch -> Deu 11:13-32
Keil-Delitzsch: Deu 11:13-32 - --
This peculiarity in the land of Canaan led Moses to close the first part of his discourse on the law, his exhortation to fear and love the Lord, wit...
Constable: Deu 5:1--26:19 - --IV. MOSES' SECOND MAJOR ADDRESS: AN EXPOSITION OF THE LAW chs. 5--26
". . . Deuteronomy contains the most compre...
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Constable: Deu 5:1--11:32 - --A. The essence of the law and its fulfillment chs. 5-11
"In seven chapters the nature of Yahweh's demand...
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Constable: Deu 7:1--11:32 - --3. Examples of the application of the principles chs. 7-11
"These clearly are not laws or comman...
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