
Text -- Deuteronomy 14:1-21 (NET)




Names, People and Places, Dictionary Themes and Topics



collapse allCommentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per phrase)
Whom therefore you must not disparage by unworthy or unbecoming practices.

Wesley: Deu 14:1 - -- Which were the practices of idolaters, both in the worship of their idols, in their funerals, and upon occasion of public calamities. Is not this like...
Which were the practices of idolaters, both in the worship of their idols, in their funerals, and upon occasion of public calamities. Is not this like a parent's charge to his little children, playing with knives, "Do not cut yourselves!" This is, the intention of those commands, which obliges us to deny ourselves. The meaning is, Do yourselves no harm! And as this also is, the design of cross providences, to remove from us those things by which we are in danger of doing ourselves harm.

Unclean and forbidden by me, which therefore should be abominable to you.
JFB: Deu 14:1 - -- It was a common practice of idolaters, both on ceremonious occasions of their worship (1Ki 18:28), and at funerals (compare Jer 16:6; Jer 41:5), to ma...
It was a common practice of idolaters, both on ceremonious occasions of their worship (1Ki 18:28), and at funerals (compare Jer 16:6; Jer 41:5), to make ghastly incisions on their faces and other parts of their persons with their finger nails or sharp instruments. The making a large bare space between the eyebrows was another heathen custom in honor of the dead (see on Lev 19:27-28; Lev 21:5). Such indecorous and degrading usages, being extravagant and unnatural expressions of hopeless sorrow (1Th 4:13), were to be carefully avoided by the Israelites, as derogatory to the character, and inconsistent with the position, of those who were the people of God [Deu 14:2].

JFB: Deu 14:5 - -- The Hebrew word (Jachmur) so rendered, does not represent the fallow deer, which is unknown in Western Asia, but an antelope (Oryx leucoryx), called b...
The Hebrew word (Jachmur) so rendered, does not represent the fallow deer, which is unknown in Western Asia, but an antelope (Oryx leucoryx), called by the Arabs, jazmar. It is of a white color, black at the extremities, and a bright red on the thighs. It was used at Solomon's table.

JFB: Deu 14:5 - -- The word akko is different from that commonly used for a wild goat (1Sa 24:2; Psa 104:18; Pro 5:19), and it is supposed to be a goat-deer, having the ...
The word akko is different from that commonly used for a wild goat (1Sa 24:2; Psa 104:18; Pro 5:19), and it is supposed to be a goat-deer, having the body of a stag, but the head, horns, and beard of a goat. An animal of this sort is found in the East, and called Lerwee [SHAW, Travels].

JFB: Deu 14:5 - -- A species of antelope (Oryx addax) with white buttocks, wreathed horns two feet in length, and standing about three feet seven inches high at the shou...
A species of antelope (Oryx addax) with white buttocks, wreathed horns two feet in length, and standing about three feet seven inches high at the shoulders. It is common in the tracks which the Israelites had frequented [SHAW].

JFB: Deu 14:5 - -- Supposed to be the Nubian Oryx, which differs from the Oryx leucoryx (formerly mentioned) by its black color; and it is, moreover, of larger stature a...
Supposed to be the Nubian Oryx, which differs from the Oryx leucoryx (formerly mentioned) by its black color; and it is, moreover, of larger stature and more slender frame, with longer and more curved horns. It is called Bekkar-El-Wash by the Arabs.

JFB: Deu 14:5 - -- Rendered by the Septuagint Cameleopard; but, by others who rightly judge it must have been an animal more familiar to the Hebrews, it is thought to be...
Rendered by the Septuagint Cameleopard; but, by others who rightly judge it must have been an animal more familiar to the Hebrews, it is thought to be the Kebsch (Ovis tragelaphus), rather larger than a common sheep, covered not with wool, but with reddish hair--a Syrian sheep-goat.|| 05302||1||10||0||@@OF BIRDS.==== (Deu 14:11-20)

JFB: Deu 14:17 - -- The Hebrew word Rachemah is manifestly identical with Rachamah, the name which the Arabs give to the common vulture of Western Asia and Egypt (Neophro...
The Hebrew word Rachemah is manifestly identical with Rachamah, the name which the Arabs give to the common vulture of Western Asia and Egypt (Neophron percnopterus). [See on Lev 11:18].

JFB: Deu 14:18 - -- The upupa or hoop: a beautiful bird, but of the most unclean habits. [See on Lev 11:19].
The upupa or hoop: a beautiful bird, but of the most unclean habits. [See on Lev 11:19].

JFB: Deu 14:21 - -- Not a proselyte, for he, as well as an Israelite, was subject to this law; but a heathen traveller or sojourner.
Not a proselyte, for he, as well as an Israelite, was subject to this law; but a heathen traveller or sojourner.

JFB: Deu 14:21 - -- This is the third place in which the prohibition is repeated [Exo 23:19; Exo 34:26]. It was pointed against an annual pagan ceremony (see on Exo 23:19...
This is the third place in which the prohibition is repeated [Exo 23:19; Exo 34:26]. It was pointed against an annual pagan ceremony (see on Exo 23:19; Exo 34:26).
[Deu 14:22-29. LAW OF THE TITHE].
Clarke: Deu 14:1 - -- Ye are the children of the Lord - The very highest character that can be conferred on any created beings; ye shall not cut yourselves, i. e., their ...
Ye are the children of the Lord - The very highest character that can be conferred on any created beings; ye shall not cut yourselves, i. e., their hair, for it was a custom among idolatrous nations to consecrate their hair to their deities, though they sometimes also made incisions in their flesh.

Clarke: Deu 14:4 - -- These are the beasts which ye shall eat - On Leviticus 11. I have entered into considerable detail relative to the clean and unclean animals there m...
These are the beasts which ye shall eat - On Leviticus 11. I have entered into considerable detail relative to the clean and unclean animals there mentioned. For the general subject, the reader is referred to the notes on that chapter; but as there are particulars mentioned here which Moses does not introduce in Leviticus, it will be necessary to consider them in this place

Clarke: Deu 14:4 - -- The ox - שור shor : Bos, fifth order Pecora, of the genus Mammalia, species 41. This term includes all clean animals of the beeve kind; not onl...
The ox -

Clarke: Deu 14:4 - -- The sheep - שה seh : Ovis, fifth order Pecora, of the genus Mammalia, species 40; including the ram, the wether, the ewe, and the lamb
The sheep -

Clarke: Deu 14:4 - -- The goat - עז az : Capra, fifth order Pecora, of the genus Mammalia, species 39; including the he-goat, she-goat, and kid. The words in the text...
The goat -
The flesh of these animals is universally allowed to be the most wholesome and nutritive. They live on the very best vegetables; and having several stomachs, their food is well concocted, and the chyle formed from it the most pure because the best elaborated, as it is well refined before it enters into the blood. On ruminating or chewing the cud, see the note on Lev 11:3.

Clarke: Deu 14:5 - -- The hart - איל aiyal , the deer, according to Dr. Shaw: see the note on Deu 12:15
The hart -

Clarke: Deu 14:5 - -- The roebuck - צבי tsebi , generally supposed to be the antelope, belonging to the fifth order Pecora, genus Mammalia, and species 38. It has rou...
The roebuck -

Clarke: Deu 14:5 - -- The fallow deer - יחמור yachmur , from חמר chamar , to be troubled, disturbed, disordered: this is supposed to mean, not the fallow deer, ...
The fallow deer -

Clarke: Deu 14:5 - -- The wild goat - אקו akko . It is not easy to tell what creature is intended by the akko. Dr. Shaw supposed it to be a kind of very timorous goa...
The wild goat -

Clarke: Deu 14:5 - -- The pygarg - דישן dishon . As this word is nowhere else used, we cannot tell what animal is meant by it. The word pygarg πυγαργος, li...
The pygarg -

Clarke: Deu 14:5 - -- The wild ox - תאו teo . This is supposed to be the oryx of the Greeks, which is a species of large stag. It may be the same with the bekker el ...
The wild ox -

Clarke: Deu 14:5 - -- The chamois - זמר zemer . This was probably a species of goat or deer, but of what kind we know not: that it cannot mean the chamois is evident...
The chamois -

Clarke: Deu 14:13 - -- The vulture after his kind - The word דאה daah is improperly translated vulture Lev 11:14, and means a kite or glede. The word דיה daiyah ...

Clarke: Deu 14:21 - -- Thou shalt not seethe a kid in his mother’ s milk - Mr
Calmet thinks that this precept refers to the paschal lamb only, which was not to be off...
Thou shalt not seethe a kid in his mother’ s milk - Mr
Calmet thinks that this precept refers to the paschal lamb only, which was not to be offered to God till it was weaned from its mother; but see the note on Exo 23:19.
Calvin -> Deu 14:21
Calvin: Deu 14:21 - -- Deu 14:21.Ye shall not eat of any thing that dieth of itself The eating of any carcase, or of flesh torn by wild beasts, is reckoned among the causes ...
Deu 14:21.Ye shall not eat of any thing that dieth of itself The eating of any carcase, or of flesh torn by wild beasts, is reckoned among the causes of defilement; but we must understand it to be the carcase of an animal which has died of hunger or disease, for, from the nature of its death, it contracted impurity, although in itself it were otherwise pure. The end of the precept is gathered from the reason which is immediately subjoined, “for thou art a holy people unto the Lord thy God,” and from the ablution which is prescribed in the passage from Leviticus. The same thing is, secondly, enjoined respecting flesh that has been torn, as before with regard to the carcase, for the deformity of its laceration is counted as uncleanness. The holiness of the people is again referred to, that they may more diligently beware of defilements. Hence it follows that those were contaminated who should eat of torn flesh. Therefore, in the third passage, he confirms it that the Jews were to abstain, and were prohibited from the eating of a carcase or the flesh of an animal torn by beasts, lest they should pollute themselves. Nor is it an objection that the eating of carrion and of blood are here prohibited in conjunction with each other; for we know that Moses does not always arrange his precepts in order, but promiscuously adduces such as appertain to different classes. Therefore, I have thought it well to separate these two prohibitions which have distinct objects, and whose dissimilarity manifestly appears from the difference of their punishment. He who shall have eaten blood shall be cut off from the people; whereas he who shall have eaten carrion, shall wash himself and be unclean till the evening. A question might again arise respecting torn or lacerated flesh; but it seems in my judgment to be plain enough from the context, that flesh torn by beasts is counted amongst unclean meats; for the reason of the law is expressed, viz., because those who were chosen to be a holy people should keep themselves pure and incorrupt. Nor would God command that meat intended for man should be thrown to dogs, unless it were infected with a contagion, which would pollute His holy ones. As to the command, in the first passage, to give it to a stranger, or to sell it to an alien, that he might eat it, it does not appear reasonable, since that would be to supply the materials for sin, as though one should offer a sword to a madman, or transfer illicit goods to others. But the solution of this difficulty is easy: for the Gentiles were permitted to eat indifferently of all sorts of food, since no distinctions were placed between them; but the prohibition of certain meats was a mark of separation between them and the elect people of God. A more difficult question arises from a kind of contradiction, because Moses in another passage binds both the stranger and the home-born by the same law, and declares them to be alike unclean if they shall have tasted of carrion. But we must bear in mind that he sometimes calls those strangers who, although born of heathen parents, had embraced the Law. Circumcision, therefore, connected them with God, just as if they had derived their origin from Abraham; whilst there were other strangers, whom uncircumcision separated from the children of Abraham as profane and excomnmnicate. The sum is, that whosoever allege God’s name, and boast themselves to be His people, are called to cultivate holiness, and to keep themselves pure from every stain.
Defender -> Deu 14:3
Defender: Deu 14:3 - -- See also Leviticus 11 on the dietary and sanitary laws enjoined upon Israel."
See also Leviticus 11 on the dietary and sanitary laws enjoined upon Israel."
TSK: Deu 14:1 - -- the children : Gen 6:2, Gen 6:4; Exo 4:22, Exo 4:23; Psa 82:6, Psa 82:7; Jer 3:19; Hos 1:10; Joh 1:12, Joh 11:52; Rom 8:16, Rom 9:8, Rom 9:26; 2Co 6:1...
the children : Gen 6:2, Gen 6:4; Exo 4:22, Exo 4:23; Psa 82:6, Psa 82:7; Jer 3:19; Hos 1:10; Joh 1:12, Joh 11:52; Rom 8:16, Rom 9:8, Rom 9:26; 2Co 6:18; Gal 3:26; Heb 2:10; 1Jo 3:1, 1Jo 3:2, 1Jo 3:10, 1Jo 5:2
ye shall not : The heathen nations not only did these things in honour of their gods, but in grief for the death of a relative. Lev 19:27, Lev 19:28, Lev 21:5; Jer 16:6, Jer 41:5, Jer 47:5; 1Th 4:13

TSK: Deu 14:2 - -- Deu 14:21, Deu 7:6, Deu 26:18, Deu 26:19, Deu 28:9; Exo 19:5, Exo 19:6; Lev 11:45, Lev 19:2, Lev 20:26; Isa 6:13; Isa 62:12; Eze 21:2; Dan 8:24, Dan 1...

TSK: Deu 14:3 - -- Lev 11:43, Lev 20:25; Isa 65:4; Eze 4:14; Act 10:12-14; Rom 14:14; 1Co 10:28; Tit 1:15

TSK: Deu 14:5 - -- the wild goat : The word akko , according to the LXX and Vulgate, signifies the tragelephus , or goat-deer; so called from its resemblance to both...
the wild goat : The word
pygarg : or, bison. Heb.
the wild ox :

TSK: Deu 14:6 - -- Psa 1:1, Psa 1:2; Pro 18:1; 2Co 6:17; On this verse remark, that the clean beast must both chew the cud and part the hoofcaps1 . tcaps0 wo distinct c...
Psa 1:1, Psa 1:2; Pro 18:1; 2Co 6:17; On this verse remark, that the clean beast must both chew the cud and part the hoofcaps1 . tcaps0 wo distinct characteristics, or general signs, by which the possibility of error arising from the misinterpretation of names is obviated. When God directs, his commands are not of doubtful interpretation.


TSK: Deu 14:8 - -- the swine : Isa 65:4, Isa 66:3, Isa 66:17; Luk 15:15, Luk 15:16; 2Pe 2:22
touch : Lev 11:26, Lev 11:27

TSK: Deu 14:13 - -- the glede : Raâh , probably the same as daâh , rendered vulture in Lev 11:14, where six of Dr. Kennicott’ s codices read some animal of t...

TSK: Deu 14:15 - -- Job 30:29
the night : Tachmas , probably the bird which Hasselquist calls strix orientalis , or oriental owl.
the cuckoo : Shachpaph , probably ...
the night :
the cuckoo :

TSK: Deu 14:17 - -- gier : Rachamah , probably a species of vulture, still called in Arabic by the same name.
the cormorant : Shalach , probably the cataract, or plun...
gier :
the cormorant :

TSK: Deu 14:18 - -- the lapwing : Doocheephath , the upupa , or hoop, a beautiful but very unclean bird. Deu 14:18
the lapwing :

TSK: Deu 14:21 - -- any thing : Lev 17:15, Lev 22:8; Eze 4:14; Act 15:20
the stranger : Exo 12:43-45; Lev 19:33, Lev 19:34
an holy : Deu 14:2; Dan 8:24, Dan 12:7; 1Pe 1:1...

collapse allCommentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per Verse)
Barnes -> Deu 14:1; Deu 14:3-21
Barnes: Deu 14:1 - -- Make any baldness between your eyes - i. e. by shaving the forepart of the head and the eyebrows. The practices named in this verse were common...
Make any baldness between your eyes - i. e. by shaving the forepart of the head and the eyebrows. The practices named in this verse were common among the pagan, and seem to be forbidden, not only because such wild excesses of grief (compare 1Ki 18:28) would be inconsistent in those who as children of a heavenly Father had prospects beyond this world, but also because these usages themselves arose out of idolatrous notions.

Barnes: Deu 14:3-21 - -- Compare Lev. 11. The variations here, whether omissions or additions, are probably to be explained by the time and circumstances of the speaker. ...
Compare Lev. 11. The variations here, whether omissions or additions, are probably to be explained by the time and circumstances of the speaker.
The "pygarg"is a species of gazelle, and the "wild ox"and "chamois"are swift types of antelope.
The prohibition is repeated from Lev 22:8. The directions as to the disposal of the carcass are unique to Deuteronomy, and their motive is clear. To have forbidden the people either themselves to eat that which had died, or to allow any others to do so, would have involved loss of property, and consequent temptation to an infraction of the command. The permissions now for the first time granted would have been useless in the wilderness. During the 40 years’ wandering there could be but little opportunity of selling such carcasses; while non-Israelites living in the camp would in such a matter be bound by the same rules as the Israelites Lev 17:15; Lev 24:22. Further, it would seem (compare Lev 17:15) that greater stringency is here given to the requirement of abstinence from that which had died of itself. Probably on this, as on so many other points, allowance was made for the circumstances of the people. Flesh meat was no doubt often scarce in the desert. It would therefore have been a hardship to forbid entirely the use of that which had not been killed. However, now that the plenty of the promised land was before them, the modified toleration of this unholy food was withdrawn.
Poole: Deu 14:1 - -- Of the Lord your God whom therefore you must not disparage by unworthy or unbecoming practices, such as here follow, and whom you must not disobey. ...
Of the Lord your God whom therefore you must not disparage by unworthy or unbecoming practices, such as here follow, and whom you must not disobey. Ye shall not cut yourselves, nor make any baldness between your eyes which were the practices of idolaters, both in the worship of their idols, as 1Ki 18:28 ; or in their funerals, as here, and Jer 16:6 ; or upon occasion of public calamities, as Jer 41:5 47:5 . See Poole "Lev 19:27" , See Poole "Lev 19:28" . See Poole "Lev 21:5" . For the dead through excessive sorrow for your dead friends, as if you had no hope of their happiness after death, 1Th 4:13 .

i.e. Unclean and forbidden by me, which therefore should be abominable to you.

Poole: Deu 14:4 - -- Of which see Le 11 . The small differences between some of their names here and there are not proper for this work. The learned reader may find them...
Of which see Le 11 . The small differences between some of their names here and there are not proper for this work. The learned reader may find them cleared in my Latin Synopsis. For others, they may well enough want the knowledge of them, both because these are the smaller matters of the law, and because this distinction of clean and unclean beasts is now out of date.

Poole: Deu 14:21 - -- Unto the stranger not to the proselyte, for such were obliged by this law, Lev 17:15 , but to such as were strangers in religion as well as in nation...
Unto the stranger not to the proselyte, for such were obliged by this law, Lev 17:15 , but to such as were strangers in religion as well as in nation.
Haydock: Deu 14:1 - -- Be ye. Hebrew, "you are," &c. It may be connected with the preceding chapter. ---
Cut, as the barbarians and infidels do, who have no hope, 1 T...
Be ye. Hebrew, "you are," &c. It may be connected with the preceding chapter. ---
Cut, as the barbarians and infidels do, who have no hope, 1 Thessalonians iv. 12., and Leviticus xix. 29. ---
Dead idols, Adonis, &c. The Arabs and Saracens cut the hair on the forepart of the head only, and so did the ancient Scotch monks, in imitation, as they pretended, of St. John. The Egyptians cut off the hair of their head and eye-brows when they were initiated in the mysteries of Isis, (St. Ambrose, ep. 58,) to testify that they partook in her sorrow for the death of her husband, Osiris. Hence it is probable that Moses forbids any conformity in such superstitious practices; particularly as the Israelites were consecrated to the service of the living God. (Calmet)

Haydock: Deu 14:3 - -- Unclean. See the annotations on Leviticus xi. (Challoner) ---
Some of the beasts here specified were not mentioned before, as the buffle, &c.
Unclean. See the annotations on Leviticus xi. (Challoner) ---
Some of the beasts here specified were not mentioned before, as the buffle, &c.

Haydock: Deu 14:5 - -- Buffle. Hebrew yachmur, which some translate "the fallow-deer." The Arabs give this name to a beast resembling a hart, which has horns and red ha...
Buffle. Hebrew yachmur, which some translate "the fallow-deer." The Arabs give this name to a beast resembling a hart, which has horns and red hair. (Calmet) ---
It was served up on the table of Solomon, 3 Kings iv. 23. Pliny ([Natural History?] viii. 13,) mentions the bubalus of Africa, which is like a calf. (Menochius) ---
Chamois, ( tragelaphum ) a beast which has the head of a he-goat, and the carcass of a hart. (Scaliger.) (Pliny, viii. 33.) ---
Bochart translates akko after the Arabic, "the wild goat." ---
Pygarg, another species of goat, (Pliny, viii. 53,) of the colour of ashes. (Bellon., q. 51.) Dishon means "ashes" in Hebrew. ---
Goat, ( orygem ) "a wild goat, (Septuagint; Bochart; &c.) or ox." Aristotle allows it only one horn. Juvenal mentions that the Getulians feasted on its flesh; and the Egyptian priests, according to Horus, were allowed to eat it, without any scrupulous examination of the sealers. (Calmet) ---
Camelopardalus. This animal resembles a camel in its head and longish neck, and the panther in the spotted skin. (Pliny, viii. 18.) ---
Bochart (iii. 21,) thinks that the Hebrew zamer, means "a wild goat," noted for "leaping."

Haydock: Deu 14:7 - -- Cherogril, or porcupine, Leviticus xi. 5. St. Barnabas and Clement of Alexandria (Pæd. ii. 10,) subjoin the hyena to the hare, though the name oc...
Cherogril, or porcupine, Leviticus xi. 5. St. Barnabas and Clement of Alexandria (Pæd. ii. 10,) subjoin the hyena to the hare, though the name occur not in Moses. This animal was supposed to change sexes every year, and was a symbol of incontinency. (Menochius)

Haydock: Deu 14:10 - -- Unclean. St. Barnabas adds, "Thou shalt not eat the murena, polypus, or cuttle fish;" and these are in effect of the description given by Moses. (Ca...
Unclean. St. Barnabas adds, "Thou shalt not eat the murena, polypus, or cuttle fish;" and these are in effect of the description given by Moses. (Calmet)

Haydock: Deu 14:13 - -- Ringtail ( ixion ). Hebrew raa. The same bird seems to be called dae in Leviticus, by the change of the first letter, though it is there transl...
Ringtail ( ixion ). Hebrew raa. The same bird seems to be called dae in Leviticus, by the change of the first letter, though it is there translated the kite. The ixion is a sort of white, quick-sighted vulture. ---
Kite. Hebrew diae, according to Bochart, means the vulture, as Isaias (xxxiv. 15,) insinuates that this bird goes in flocks, while the kite is a solitary bird.

Haydock: Deu 14:15 - -- Ostrich. Hebrew, "the daughter of the june. " The Rabbins say only the young ones were eaten. But this seems doubtful, with respect to many natio...
Ostrich. Hebrew, "the daughter of the june. " The Rabbins say only the young ones were eaten. But this seems doubtful, with respect to many nations, which formerly served up ostriches at table. Heliogabalus presented some of these, as well as camel, to his guests, falsely asserting, (Calmet) that the Jews were commanded to eat them, præceptum Judæis ut ederent. (Lamprid.)

Wings. Hebrew, "every reptile that flieth," such as bees. (Calmet)

Haydock: Deu 14:21 - -- Of itself, or by suffocation. ---
Stranger, who has not embraced your religion. (Menochius) ---
Hence it is inferred, that the Jews might keep un...
Of itself, or by suffocation. ---
Stranger, who has not embraced your religion. (Menochius) ---
Hence it is inferred, that the Jews might keep unclean animals, and sell them; as they did not defile till they were dead. (Jansenius) ---
If they had been unclean by nature, they could not have been sold, which shews that this ceremonial law regarded only the Jewish religion. ---
Dam. All appearance of cruelty must be avoided. Christ, who is signified by the kid, on account of his assuming our sinful nature, shall not be slain in his infancy. (St. Thomas Aquinas, [Summa Theologiae] 2. q. 102. a. 6.) (Worthington). ---
Some take this prohibition literally, and extend it to calves and lambs. The Arabs use milk in almost all their ragouts. (Roger. ii. 2.) ---
Others think that kids must not be eaten while they are as yet too tender, Qui plus lactis habet quam sanguinis. (Juvenal, Sat. xi.) ---
But we believe that God forbids the paschal lamb or kid to be offered while it sucks. It must be of a competent age, of one year, Exodus xii. 5., and xxiii. 19. Other victims would do if they were only eight days old, Leviticus xxii. 27. (Calmet)
Gill -> Deu 14:1; Deu 14:2; Deu 14:3; Deu 14:4; Deu 14:5; Deu 14:6-8; Deu 14:9-10; Deu 14:11; Deu 14:12-18; Deu 14:19; Deu 14:20; Deu 14:21
Gill: Deu 14:1 - -- Ye are the children of the Lord your God,.... Some of them were so by the special grace of adoption, and all of them by national adoption; which was t...
Ye are the children of the Lord your God,.... Some of them were so by the special grace of adoption, and all of them by national adoption; which was the peculiar privilege of the people of Israel, and laid them under great obligation to honour and obey the Lord their God, who stood in the relation of a father to them, and they of children to him, Mal 1:6. The Targum of Jonathan paraphrases it "beloved children"; so the apostle calls the saints; the "dear children of God", who therefore ought to be followers of him, Eph 5:1 and for a like reason this relation is observed here, namely, to quicken a regard to the exhortations of the Lord, his cautions, commands, laws, and ordinances, particularly to what follows:
ye shall not cut yourselves; for the dead, as appears from the next clause, as the Heathens did, who not only tore their garments, but their flesh in several parts of their bodies, in their mouths, cheeks, breasts, &c. r; and used other extravagant signs of mourning, which the apostle cautions against, 1Th 4:13 and were condemned by the Heathens themselves s. Though some think this refers to incisions the Heathens made in their flesh to the honour of their gods, cutting the names of them therein to whom they devoted themselves; or lashing their bodies at the worship of them, as the worshippers of Baal did when they called upon him, 1Ki 18:28 and so the Jerusalem Targum,"make not marks, marks,''that is, here and there, in many places, or bruises black and blue by striping and beating themselves, for strange worship, or at it, in honour of their gods; but the former sense seems best to agree with what follows; see Lev 19:28,
nor make any baldness between your eyes for the dead; by shaving the forepart of their head or their eyebrows, or both, which used to be done in lamentations for the dead; see Jer 16:6 if this could be thought to have any respect to rites and ceremonies used in the worship of dead and lifeless idols, the customs of the Egyptians might be referred to, who are said to shave their heads and their eyebrows in their sacred rites to Isis t.

Gill: Deu 14:2 - -- For thou art an holy people unto the Lord thy God,.... Set apart by him from all other people, and devoted to his worship and service, and many of the...
For thou art an holy people unto the Lord thy God,.... Set apart by him from all other people, and devoted to his worship and service, and many of them were sanctified and made holy in a special and spiritual sense; and therefore should not conform to the customs of Gentiles, whether in their extravagant mourning for the dead, or in their religious services; see Deu 7:6,
and the Lord hath chosen thee to be a peculiar people, above all the nations that are upon the earth; to be his peculiar treasure, to be his peculiar servants and worshippers, to enjoy peculiar blessings and privileges, and behave in a peculiar manner different from all other people; and have no connection with them, especially in things sacred; and, in order to keep them a distinct peculiar people from all others, a peculiar diet was appointed them, that so being prohibited to eat such things as others did, they might be kept out of their company and conversation, and so from being drawn into their idolatrous practices; the rules concerning which follow; see Deu 7:6.

Gill: Deu 14:3 - -- Thou shall not eat any abominable thing. That is so either in its own nature, or because forbidden by the Lord; what are such are declared in the foll...
Thou shall not eat any abominable thing. That is so either in its own nature, or because forbidden by the Lord; what are such are declared in the following verses.

Gill: Deu 14:4 - -- These are the beasts which they shall eat,.... That is, which they might lawfully eat of, which were allowed for their food; for they were not obliged...
These are the beasts which they shall eat,.... That is, which they might lawfully eat of, which were allowed for their food; for they were not obliged to eat of them if they did not choose it:
the ox, the sheep, and the goat; which were creatures used in sacrifice, and the only ones, yet nevertheless they might be used for food if chosen.

Gill: Deu 14:5 - -- The hart, the roebuck, and the fallow deer,.... All of the deer kind, and very agreeable food; harts were very common in the land of Canaan and parts ...
The hart, the roebuck, and the fallow deer,.... All of the deer kind, and very agreeable food; harts were very common in the land of Canaan and parts adjacent; Aelianus says u harts are bred in the great mountains in Syria, Amanus, Lebanon, and Carmel: the roebuck, or "dorcas", from whence a good woman had her name, Act 9:36 is spoken of by Martial w as very delicious food, and so are fallow deer; the word "jachmur", here used, having the signification of redness in it, may be used for that sort which are called red deer: it is observed that in the Arabic language it is used for an animal with two horns, living in the woods, not unlike an hart, but swifter than that; and it is asked, is it not the "aloe" or "elch" x?
and the wild goat, and the pygarg, and the wild ox, and the chamois; the wild goat is reckoned by Pliny y among the half wild creatures in Africa; according to the philosopher z there are none but in Syria, on which Canaan bordered, and were very remarkable ones, having ears a span and nine inches long, and some reached to the ground. The Hebrew name for this creature is "akko"; and there is a fourfooted wild beast, by the Tartarians called "akkyk", and by the Turks "akoim", and which with the Scythians and Sarmatians are to be met with in flocks; it is between a hart and a ram, its body whitish, and the flesh exceeding sweet a; it seems to be the same with the "tragelaphus", of which there were in Arabia, as Diodorus Siculus b says; the next is the "pygarg", which we so render from the Septuagint and Vulgate Latin versions, or white buttocks, so called from the hinder part of it being white; a species of the eagle with a white tail is called a "pygarg", but here a four footed animal is meant; and which is mentioned as such, along with hinds, does, and goats, by Herodotus c, Aelian d, and Pliny e: it has its name "dishon", in Hebrew, from its ash colour, and the "tragelaphus", or goat deer, has part of its back ash coloured, and has ash coloured spots or streaks on its sides f: some take it to be the "strepsiceros", a kind of buck or goat with writhed horns, which the Africans, as Pliny says g, call "addaca", which is thought by some to be a corruption of "al-dashen", so Junius; the Targum of Jonathan takes it for the "unicorn" or "rhinoceros"; and the Talmudists say h that the unicorn, though it has but one horn, is free, i.e. lawful to be eaten: the "wild ox" was common in Arabia; Strabo i speaks of multitudes of wild oxen in some parts of Arabia, on the flesh of which and other animals the Arabians live; in the Septuagint version it is called the "oryx", which is a creature that has but one horn, and divides the hoof k, and so might be eaten; See Gill on Isa 51:20, the last, the "chamois", has a French name, and is a creature of the goat kind, from whose skin the chamois leather is made; in the figure of its body it seems to approach very much to the stag kind l; perhaps it is the same with the "cemas" of Aelian m, mentioned by him along with roebucks. Some take it to be the "tarandus", of which Pliny says n it is of the size of an ox, has a head bigger than a hart, and not unlike it; its horns are branched, hoofs cloven, and is hairy like a bear. In the Targums of Onkelos and Jonathan this is the "pygarg"; these several sorts of beasts were allowed to be eaten; the three first there is no difficulty about them, but the other seven it is hard to determine what they are, at least some of them. Dr. Shaw o thinks that the deer, the antelope, the wild bear, the goat deer, the white buttocks, the buffalo, and jeraffa, may lay in the best claim to the "ailee", "tzebi", "yachmur", "akkub", "dishon", "thau", and "zomer", here.

Gill: Deu 14:6-8 - -- And every beast that parted the hoof,.... In this and the two following verses two general rules are given, by which it might be known what beasts wer...
And every beast that parted the hoof,.... In this and the two following verses two general rules are given, by which it might be known what beasts were fit for food and what not; one is if they parted the hoof, and the other if they chewed the cud, such might be eaten; but such that only chewed the cud, but did not divide the hoof, as the camel, hare, and coney, might not be eaten; and so if they divided the hoof, and did not chew the cud, as the swine, they were alike unlawful; See Gill on Lev 11:3; see Gill on Lev 11:4; see Gill on Lev 11:5; see Gill on Lev 11:6; see Gill on Lev 11:7; see Gill on Lev 11:8.

Gill: Deu 14:9-10 - -- These ye shall eat of, all that are in the waters,.... The fishes there, even such as have fins and scales, but they that have not were not to be eate...

Gill: Deu 14:11 - -- Of all clean birds ye shall eat. Which the Targum of Jonathan describes, everyone that has a craw, and whose crop is naked, and has a superfluous talo...
Of all clean birds ye shall eat. Which the Targum of Jonathan describes, everyone that has a craw, and whose crop is naked, and has a superfluous talon, and is not rapacious; but such as are unclean are expressed by name in the following verses, so that all except them might be reckoned clean and fit for food. Maimonides p observes, that only the number of the unclean are reckoned, so that all the rest are free.

Gill: Deu 14:12-18 - -- But these are they of which they shall not eat,.... Jarchi observes, that the unclean birds are particularly mentioned, to teach that the clean sort a...
But these are they of which they shall not eat,.... Jarchi observes, that the unclean birds are particularly mentioned, to teach that the clean sort are more than the unclean, and therefore the particulars of the fewest are given: these are all the same names as in Lev 11:13, excepting one, "the glede", Deu 14:13 which is a kind of kite or puttock; the Jerusalem Targum renders it the vulture, and the Targum of Jonathan the white "dayetha" or vulture; and Aristotle says q there are two sorts of vultures, the one small and whiter, the other larger and of many forms or colours; in Hebrew its name here is "raah", and is thought to be the same with "daah" in Lev 11:14 there translated the "vulture", which has its name there from flying, and here from seeing, for which it is remarkable; see Job 28:7 and the letters

Gill: Deu 14:19 - -- And every creeping thing that flieth is unclean,.... Which the Targum of Jonathan thus paraphrases;"all flies and wasps (or hornets), and worms of len...

Gill: Deu 14:20 - -- But of all clean fowls ye may eat. Even of all fowls, but those before excepted; Aben Ezra instances in the locust, as being a clean fowl, that might ...
But of all clean fowls ye may eat. Even of all fowls, but those before excepted; Aben Ezra instances in the locust, as being a clean fowl, that might be eaten; and so the Targum of Jonathan is"every clean locust ye may eat;''see Lev 11:22.

Gill: Deu 14:21 - -- Ye shall not eat of anything that dieth of itself,.... This law is repeated from Lev 17:15; see Gill on Lev 17:15,
thou shalt give it unto the stra...
Ye shall not eat of anything that dieth of itself,.... This law is repeated from Lev 17:15; see Gill on Lev 17:15,
thou shalt give it unto the stranger that is in thy gates, that he may eat it; not to the proselyte of righteousness, for he might not eat of it any more than an Israelite, and if he did, he was obliged to wash his clothes, and bathe himself in water, and was unclean until the evening, as in Lev 17:15 but to a proselyte of the gate, who took upon him, as Jarchi observes, not to serve idols, one that has renounced idolatry, but has not embraced the Jewish religion; such an one might eat of things that died of themselves, or were not killed in a proper manner. The Targums of Onkelos and Jonathan call him an uncircumcised stranger or proselyte, who had not submitted to circumcision, as the proselyte of righteousness did:
or thou mayest sell it unto an alien; an idolater, one that was neither a proselyte of righteousness nor of the gate, an entire alien from the commonwealth of Israel; one that was occasionally in the land of Canaan, or was travelling in it or through it, to such an one it might be sold:
for thou art an holy people unto the Lord thy God; separated from all others, and devoted to his service, and therefore must live on clean, food and good meat, and not eat what others might:
thou shalt not seethe a kid in its mother's milk; this is the third time this law is mentioned; refer to the notes; see Gill on Exo 23:19; see Gill on Exo 34:26; the reason of which repetition, the Jewish writers say s, is, that it is once said to forbid the eating it, a second time to forbid any use of it or profit by it, and a third time to forbid the boiling of it.

expand allCommentary -- Verse Notes / Footnotes
NET Notes -> Deu 14:1; Deu 14:1; Deu 14:2; Deu 14:2; Deu 14:2; Deu 14:2; Deu 14:3; Deu 14:5; Deu 14:5; Deu 14:5; Deu 14:5; Deu 14:5; Deu 14:5; Deu 14:6; Deu 14:7; Deu 14:8; Deu 14:12; Deu 14:12; Deu 14:12; Deu 14:13; Deu 14:15; Deu 14:15; Deu 14:15; Deu 14:16; Deu 14:17; Deu 14:19; Deu 14:21; Deu 14:21
NET Notes: Deu 14:1 Do not cut yourselves or shave your forehead bald. These were pagan practices associated with mourning the dead; they were not be imitated by God̵...

NET Notes: Deu 14:2 The Hebrew term translated “select” (and the whole verse) is reminiscent of the classic covenant text (Exod 19:4-6) which describes Israel...

NET Notes: Deu 14:3 The Hebrew word תּוֹעֵבָה (to’evah, “forbidden; abhorrent”) describes anything...

NET Notes: Deu 14:5 The Hebrew term זֶמֶר (zemer) is another hapax legomenon with the possible meaning “wild sheep.” Cf. KJV, AS...

NET Notes: Deu 14:6 The Hebrew text includes “among the animals.” This has not been included in the translation for stylistic reasons.

NET Notes: Deu 14:7 The Hebrew term שָׁפָן (shafan) may refer to the “coney” (cf. KJV, NIV) or hyrax (“rock badger,&...


NET Notes: Deu 14:12 The Hebrew term עָזְנִיָּה (’ozniyyah) may describe the black vulture (so NIV) or it...

NET Notes: Deu 14:13 The Hebrew term is דַּיָּה (dayyah). This, with the previous two terms (רָאָה ...

NET Notes: Deu 14:15 The Hebrew term נֵץ (nets) may refer to the falcon or perhaps the hawk (so NEB, NIV).

NET Notes: Deu 14:16 The Hebrew term תִּנְשֶׁמֶת (tinshemet) may refer to a species of owl (cf. ASV ̶...

NET Notes: Deu 14:17 The Hebrew term קָאַת (qa’at) may also refer to a type of owl (NAB, NIV, NRSV “desert owl”) or perhaps...

NET Notes: Deu 14:19 The MT reads the Niphal (passive) for expected Qal (“you [plural] must not eat”); cf. Smr, LXX. However, the harder reading should stand.

NET Notes: Deu 14:21 Do not boil a young goat in its mother’s milk. This strange prohibition – one whose rationale is unclear but probably related to pagan rit...
Geneva Bible: Deu 14:2 For thou [art] an holy people unto the LORD thy God, and the LORD hath chosen thee to be a ( a ) peculiar people unto himself, above all the nations t...

Geneva Bible: Deu 14:4 ( b ) These [are] the beasts which ye shall eat: the ox, the sheep, and the goat,
( b ) This ceremonial Law instructed the Jews to seek a spiritual p...

Geneva Bible: Deu 14:21 Ye shall not eat [of] any thing that ( c ) dieth of itself: thou shalt give it unto the ( d ) stranger that [is] in thy gates, that he may eat it; or ...

expand allCommentary -- Verse Range Notes
TSK Synopsis -> Deu 14:1-29
TSK Synopsis: Deu 14:1-29 - --1 God's children are not to disfigure themselves in mourning.3 What may, and what may not be eaten;4 of beasts;9 of fishes;11 of fowls.21 That which d...
MHCC -> Deu 14:1-21
MHCC: Deu 14:1-21 - --Moses tells the people of Israel how God had given them three distinguishing privileges, which were their honour, and figures of those spiritual bless...
Matthew Henry -> Deu 14:1-21
Matthew Henry: Deu 14:1-21 - -- Moses here tells the people of Israel, I. How God had dignified them, as a peculiar people, with three distinguishing privileges, which were their h...
Keil-Delitzsch -> Deu 14:1-2; Deu 14:3-21
Keil-Delitzsch: Deu 14:1-2 - --
The Israelites were not only to suffer no idolatry to rise up in their midst, but in all their walk of life to show themselves as a holy nation of t...

Keil-Delitzsch: Deu 14:3-21 - --
With reference to food, the Israelites were to eat nothing whatever that was abominable. In explanation of this prohibition, the laws of Lev 11 rela...
Constable: Deu 5:1--26:19 - --IV. MOSES' SECOND MAJOR ADDRESS: AN EXPOSITION OF THE LAW chs. 5--26
". . . Deuteronomy contains the most compre...

Constable: Deu 12:1--25:19 - --B. An exposition of selected covenant laws 12-25
Moses' homiletical exposition of the law of Israel that...

Constable: Deu 12:32--14:1 - --2. Laws arising from the second commandment 12:32-13:18
The second commandment is, "You shall no...
