
Text -- Deuteronomy 16:16 (NET)




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collapse allCommentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per phrase)
JFB -> Deu 16:13-17; Deu 16:16
JFB: Deu 16:13-17 - -- (See on Exo 23:14; Lev 23:34; Num 29:12). Various conjectures have been formed to account for the appointment of this feast at the conclusion of the w...
(See on Exo 23:14; Lev 23:34; Num 29:12). Various conjectures have been formed to account for the appointment of this feast at the conclusion of the whole harvest. Some imagine that it was designed to remind the Israelites of the time when they had no cornfields to reap but were daily supplied with manna; others think that it suited the convenience of the people better than any other period of the year for dwelling in booths; others that it was the time of Moses' second descent from the mount; while a fourth class are of opinion that this feast was fixed to the time of the year when the Word was made flesh and dwelt--literally, "tabernacled"--among us (Joh 1:14), Christ being actually born at that season.

JFB: Deu 16:16 - -- No command was laid on women to undertake the journeys, partly from regard to the natural weakness of their sex, and partly to their domestic cares.
No command was laid on women to undertake the journeys, partly from regard to the natural weakness of their sex, and partly to their domestic cares.
Clarke -> Deu 16:16
Calvin -> Deu 16:16
Calvin: Deu 16:16 - -- 16.Three times in a year We have previously said that although the other feast-days were not to be neglected, still, because God would make some allo...
16.Three times in a year We have previously said that although the other feast-days were not to be neglected, still, because God would make some allowance for the infirmity of His people, the necessity of going up to Jerusalem five times a year was not imposed upon them. Again, because only half of the seventh month contained three feast-days, i.e., from the first to the fifteenth, for the same reason it is only required of the males that they should leave their houses and celebrate the sacred convocations; for thus the females are spared, to whom traveling is not so convenient. Besides, through the fecundity promised them by God, they were almost always either pregnant or nursing. It is also certain that the boys and young men were excepted under the age of twenty, since God includes under the term males only those who were comprised in the census. If any object that in God’s spiritual worship there is no difference between males and females; the reply is easy, that the fathers of families presented themselves there in the names of their wives and children: so that the profession was extended to the other sex, and to those of tender age. To this David seems to allude, when he says: 364
"Thy people shall come with voluntary offerings in the day of thy assembly, in the beauties of holiness,” (Psa 110:3;)
for, speaking of the free-will-offerings of the people, he seeks an example of it, after the manner of the prophets, from the legal worship. Lest the Jews should object that there was danger of hostile invasion, if the land should be stripped of its defenses by the gathering together of all the men into one place, God anticipates this doubt in Exo 34:0, promising that He will provide that no one shall desire to assail their forsaken homes; for to this the sentence refers: “ I will cast out the nations before thee, and enlarge thy borders, so that no man shall desire thy land, ” Exo 34:24 Whence also we gather, that God’s worship was not entirely established until all the neighboring nations were subdued, and He had placed His sanctuary in Mount Zion. Not that it was allowable for the people to omit the feast-days before that time; but that experience itself might teach them that God was wroth with them, whilst He deprived them of this special blessing; for fear and alarm arose only from their own fault. But let believers collect from hence the useful doctrine that, whenever they are following God, they will be safe under His protection, since it is in His power to repel the assaults of enemies, and everything that can harm them.
And they shall not appear before the Lord empty, 365 I know not how it could have entered the minds of some to suppose that God here promised that all should be rich who should present themselves three times (a year) before His sanctuary: whereas it is plain from the words of Moses that He requires from every one some gift in token of their gratitude. And perhaps 366 what historians relate respecting the Persians, that none should dare to address the king without a gift, was a more ancient custom, and common to other nations. God would indeed have a gift presented Him by each individual, as a symbol or earnest of their subjection; and, although this legal rite has ceased, yet its substance is to be retained, viz., that those only are true servants of God who do not boastfully make a mere empty profession, but effectually testify that they acknowledge Him as their King.
TSK -> Deu 16:16
TSK: Deu 16:16 - -- Three times : Exo 23:14-17, Exo 34:22, Exo 34:23; 1Ki 9:25
and they shall : Exo 23:15, Exo 34:20; 1Ch 29:3-9, 1Ch 29:14-17; Psa 96:8; Pro 3:9, Pro 3:1...
Three times : Exo 23:14-17, Exo 34:22, Exo 34:23; 1Ki 9:25
and they shall : Exo 23:15, Exo 34:20; 1Ch 29:3-9, 1Ch 29:14-17; Psa 96:8; Pro 3:9, Pro 3:10; Isa 23:18; Isa 60:6-9; Hag 1:9; Mat 2:11; Mar 12:3

collapse allCommentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per Verse)
Poole -> Deu 16:16
Poole: Deu 16:16 - -- All thy males not the women, partly, because of their infirmity and unfitness for many journeys; partly, because the care of their children and famil...
All thy males not the women, partly, because of their infirmity and unfitness for many journeys; partly, because the care of their children and families lay upon them; and partly, because they were sufficiently represented in the men.
Haydock -> Deu 16:16
Haydock: Deu 16:16 - -- Empty. All were bound to make some offering, which was left to their option, and thus the festivity was much increased, by the abundance of all thin...
Empty. All were bound to make some offering, which was left to their option, and thus the festivity was much increased, by the abundance of all things; so that all might find a particular pleasure in being present at these feasts, even though they were not influenced by sentiments of piety and of religion. See Exodus xxiii. 15. (Calmet) ---
While the masters of families were from home, thrice in the year, God protected their houses and children from the incursions of enemies, so that they were never more secure. (Sanctius) (Tirinus)
Gill -> Deu 16:16
Gill: Deu 16:16 - -- Three times a year shall all thy males appear before the Lord thy God,.... This has been observed before, Exo 23:17, and is repeated here for the sake...
Three times a year shall all thy males appear before the Lord thy God,.... This has been observed before, Exo 23:17, and is repeated here for the sake of mentioning the place where they were to appear, which before now was not observed, and indeed it is chiefly for that the other festivals are here recited:
in the place which he shall choose; which though not expressed is now easily understood; and the three times at which they were to appear there were, in the feast of unleavened bread, and in the feast of weeks, and in the feast of tabernacles; or passover, Pentecost, and tabernacles; and of numbers of people going up from the country to each of these feasts, we have instances in the New Testament; to the passover, Luk 2:42, to Pentecost, Act 2:5, to tabernacles, Joh 7:2,
and they shall not appear before the Lord empty; Aben Ezra observes, the meaning is, not empty of the tribute of the freewill offering of their hand, and which Jarchi more fully explains of the burnt offerings of appearance, and of the peace offerings of the Chagigah, or money answerable to them; which, according to the Misnah q was a meah of silver for a burnt offering, and two pieces of silver for the Chagigah, which weighed thirty two barley corns r.

expand allCommentary -- Verse Notes / Footnotes

expand allCommentary -- Verse Range Notes
TSK Synopsis -> Deu 16:1-22
TSK Synopsis: Deu 16:1-22 - --1 The feast of the passover,9 of weeks,13 of tabernacles.16 Every male must offer, as he is able, at these three feasts.18 Of judges and justice.21 Gr...
MHCC -> Deu 16:1-17
MHCC: Deu 16:1-17 - --The laws for the three yearly feasts are here repeated; that of the Passover, that of the Pentecost, that of Tabernacles; and the general law concerni...
Matthew Henry -> Deu 16:1-17
Matthew Henry: Deu 16:1-17 - -- Much of the communion between God and his people Israel was kept up, and a face of religion preserved in the nation, by the three yearly feasts, the...
Keil-Delitzsch -> Deu 16:1-17
Keil-Delitzsch: Deu 16:1-17 - --
The annual feasts appointed by the law were to be celebrated, like the sacrificial meals, at the place which the Lord would choose for the revelatio...
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 14:22--16:18 - --4. Laws arising from the fourth commandment 14:22-16:17
The fourth commandment is, "Observe the ...
