
Text -- Deuteronomy 16:3 (NET)




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collapse allCommentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per phrase)
Or, in it, that is, during the time of the feast of the passover.

Wesley: Deu 16:3 - -- Bread which is not usual nor pleasant, to put thee in mind both of thy miseries endured in Egypt; and of thy hasty coming out of it, which allowed the...
Bread which is not usual nor pleasant, to put thee in mind both of thy miseries endured in Egypt; and of thy hasty coming out of it, which allowed thee no time to leaven or prepare thy bread.
JFB -> Deu 16:3
JFB: Deu 16:3 - -- A sour, unpleasant, unwholesome kind of bread, designed to be a memorial of their Egyptian misery and of the haste with which they departed, not allow...
A sour, unpleasant, unwholesome kind of bread, designed to be a memorial of their Egyptian misery and of the haste with which they departed, not allowing time for their morning dough to ferment.
Clarke -> Deu 16:3
Clarke: Deu 16:3 - -- Bread of affliction - Because, being baked without leaven, it was unsavoury, and put them in mind of their afflictive bondage in Egypt.
Bread of affliction - Because, being baked without leaven, it was unsavoury, and put them in mind of their afflictive bondage in Egypt.
Calvin -> Deu 16:3
Calvin: Deu 16:3 - -- Deu 16:3Thou shalt eat no leavened bread with it Because by this sign they were reminded of their having escaped in haste, as it were from the very fl...
Deu 16:3Thou shalt eat no leavened bread with it Because by this sign they were reminded of their having escaped in haste, as it were from the very flames; therefore does Moses so often enforce the prohibition of leaven. And here this reason for it is alleged, viz., that their recollection should be recalled to the affliction from which they were rescued; for they must needs have been involved in the greatest straits, when there was no time even for baking bread. Unleavened bread is therefore called “the bread of affliction,” that the manner of their deliverance may the more enhance God’s grace. He repeats what we have seen before, that none of the flesh of the Lamb should be reserved to the following day. In the former passage from the Book of Exodus, because Moses speaks generally, the command may at first sight be referred to the perpetual sacrifice; but the latter passage takes away all obscurity, by the express mention of the passover. We need not wonder that in one place the word “fat” is used for the whole carcase, or any part of the lamb, either by synecdoche, or that God might commend the superior sanctity of the fat, of which they were not permitted to eat, and which was burnt in all sacrifices.
TSK -> Deu 16:3
TSK: Deu 16:3 - -- eat no : Exo 12:15, Exo 12:19, Exo 12:20, Exo 12:39, Exo 13:3-7, Exo 34:18; Lev 23:6; Num 9:11, Num 28:17; 1Co 5:8
the bread : 1Ki 22:27; Psa 102:9, P...
eat no : Exo 12:15, Exo 12:19, Exo 12:20, Exo 12:39, Exo 13:3-7, Exo 34:18; Lev 23:6; Num 9:11, Num 28:17; 1Co 5:8
the bread : 1Ki 22:27; Psa 102:9, Psa 127:2; Zec 12:10; 2Co 7:10, 2Co 7:11; 1Th 1:6
for thou camest : Exo 12:32, Exo 12:33, Exo 12:39
mayest : Exo 12:14, Exo 12:26, Exo 12:27, Exo 13:7-9; Psa 111:4; Luk 22:19; 1Co 11:24-26

collapse allCommentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per Verse)
Barnes -> Deu 16:1-8
Barnes: Deu 16:1-8 - -- The cardinal point on which the whole of the prescriptions in this chapter turn, is evidently the same as has been so often insisted on in the previ...
The cardinal point on which the whole of the prescriptions in this chapter turn, is evidently the same as has been so often insisted on in the previous chapters, namely, the concentration of the religious services of the people round one common sanctuary. The prohibition against observing the great Feasts of Passover, Pentecost, and tabernacle, the three annual epochs in the sacred year of the Jew, at home and in private, is reiterated in a variety of words no less than six times in the first sixteen verses of this chapter Deu 16:2, Deu 16:6-7, Deu 16:11, Deu 16:15-16. Hence, it is easy to see why nothing is here said of the other holy days.
The Feast of Passover Exo. 12:1-27; Num 9:1-14; Lev 23:1-8. A re-enforcement of this ordinance was the more necessary because its observance had clearly been intermitted for thirty-nine years (see Jos 6:10). One Passover only had been kept in the wilderness, that recorded in Num. 9, where see the notes.
Sacrifice the passover - " i. e."offer the sacrifices proper to the feast of the Passover, which lasted seven days. Compare a similar use of the word in a general sense in Joh 18:28. In the latter part of Deu 16:4 and in the following verses Moses passes, as the context again shows, into the narrower sense of the word Passover.
After the Paschal Supper in the courts or neighborhood of the sanctuary was over, they might disperse to their several "tents"or "dwellings"1Ki 8:66. These would of course be within a short distance of the sanctuary, because the other Paschal offerings were yet to be offered day by day for seven days and the people would remain to share them; and especially to take part in the holy convocation on the first and seventh of the days.
Poole -> Deu 16:3
Poole: Deu 16:3 - -- With it to wit, with the passover, in the sense delivered; or, in it , i.e. during the time of the feast of the passover.
The bread of affliction ...
With it to wit, with the passover, in the sense delivered; or, in it , i.e. during the time of the feast of the passover.
The bread of affliction i.e. bread which is not usual nor pleasant, but unsavoury and unwholesome, to put thee in mind both of thy miseries endured in Egypt, and of thy hasty coming out of it, which allowed thee no time to leaven or to prepare thy bread.
Haydock -> Deu 16:3
Haydock: Deu 16:3 - -- Affliction. Hebrew also, "of poverty." Syriac, "of humility." Septuagint, "of evil treatment;" or such bread as the poorest sort of people and slav...
Affliction. Hebrew also, "of poverty." Syriac, "of humility." Septuagint, "of evil treatment;" or such bread as the poorest sort of people and slaves are forced to eat. The Jews serve the bread in small pieces, to denote their former poverty. This unleavened bread is also less palatable, and less wholesome. ---
Fear. Septuagint, "in haste," Exodus xii. 11. The psalmist (Psalm civ. 43,) mentions the exultation and joy of the Hebrews, but it was mixed with fear, lest they should lose so great a benefit.
Gill -> Deu 16:3
Gill: Deu 16:3 - -- Thou shalt eat no leavened bread with it,.... With the passover, as the Targum of Jonathan expresses it; that is, with the passover lamb, nor indeed w...
Thou shalt eat no leavened bread with it,.... With the passover, as the Targum of Jonathan expresses it; that is, with the passover lamb, nor indeed with any of the passover, or peace offerings, as follows; see Exo 12:8.
seven days shall ye eat unleavened bread therewith; with the passover; this plainly shows, that by the passover in the preceding verse is not meant strictly the passover lamb, for that was eaten at once on the night of the fourteenth of the month, and not seven days running, and therefore must be put for the whole solemnity of the feast, and all the sacrifices of it, both the lamb of the fourteenth, and the Chagigah of the fifteenth, and every of the peace offerings of the rest of the days were to be eaten with unleavened bread:
even the bread of affliction; so called either from the nature of its being heavy and lumpish, not grateful to the taste nor easy of digestion, and was mortifying and afflicting to be obliged to eat of it seven days together; or rather from the use of it, which was, as Jarchi observes, to bring to remembrance the affliction they were afflicted with in Egypt:
for thou camest forth out of the land of Egypt in haste; and had not time to leaven their dough; so that at first they were obliged through necessity to eat unleavened bread, and afterwards by the command of God in remembrance of it; see Exo 12:33,
that thou mayest remember the day when thou camest forth out of the land of Egypt all the days of thy life; how it was with them then, how they were hurried out with their unleavened dough; and that this might be imprinted on their minds, the master of the family used p, at the time of the passover, to break a cake of unleavened bread, and say, this is the bread of affliction, &c. or bread of poverty; as it is the way of poor men to have broken bread, so here is broken bread.

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 ...
