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Text -- Deuteronomy 25:6 (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 25:6
Wesley: Deu 25:6 - -- That a family be not lost. So this was a provision that the number of their families might not be diminished.
That a family be not lost. So this was a provision that the number of their families might not be diminished.
JFB -> Deu 25:5-10
JFB: Deu 25:5-10 - -- This usage existed before the age of Moses (Gen 38:8). But the Mosaic law rendered the custom obligatory (Mat 22:25) on younger brothers, or the neare...
This usage existed before the age of Moses (Gen 38:8). But the Mosaic law rendered the custom obligatory (Mat 22:25) on younger brothers, or the nearest kinsman, to marry the widow (Rth 4:4), by associating the natural desire of perpetuating a brother's name with the preservation of property in the Hebrew families and tribes. If the younger brother declined to comply with the law, the widow brought her claim before the authorities of the place at a public assembly (the gate of the city); and he having declared his refusal, she was ordered to loose the thong of his shoe--a sign of degradation--following up that act by spitting on the ground-- the strongest expression of ignominy and contempt among Eastern people. The shoe was kept by the magistrate as an evidence of the transaction, and the parties separated.
TSK -> Deu 25:6
TSK: Deu 25:6 - -- the firstborn : Gen 28:8-10
that his name : Deu 9:14, Deu 29:20; Rth 4:10-12; Psa 9:5, Psa 109:13, brother’ s wife, or, next kinsman’ s wife...
the firstborn : Gen 28:8-10
that his name : Deu 9:14, Deu 29:20; Rth 4:10-12; Psa 9:5, Psa 109:13, brother’ s wife, or, next kinsman’ s wife, go up, Deu 21:19; Rth 4:1-7
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collapse allCommentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per Verse)
Barnes -> Deu 25:5-10
Barnes: Deu 25:5-10 - -- The law of levirate marriage. The law on this subject is not unique to the Jews, but is found (see Gen 38:8) in all essential respects the same amon...
The law of levirate marriage. The law on this subject is not unique to the Jews, but is found (see Gen 38:8) in all essential respects the same among various Oriental nations, ancient and modern. The rules in these verses, like those upon divorce, do but incorporate existing immemorial usages, and introduce various wise and politic limitations and mitigations of them. The root of the obligation here imposed upon the brother of the deceased husband lies in the primitive idea of childlessness being a great calamity (compare Gen 16:4; and note), and extinction of name and family one of the greatest that could happen (compare Deu 9:14; Psa 109:12-15). To avert this the ordinary rules as to intermarriage are in the case in question (compare Lev 18:16) set aside. The obligation was onerous (compare Rth 4:6), and might be repugnant; and it is accordingly considerably reduced and restricted by Moses. The duty is recognized as one of affection for the memory of the deceased; it is not one which could be enforced at law. That it continued down to the Christian era is apparent from the question on this point put to Jesus by the Sadducees (see the marginal references).
No child - literally, "no son."The existence of a daughter would clearly suffice. The daughter would inherit the name and property of the father; compare Num 27:1-11.
Loose his shoe from off his foot - In token of taking from the unwilling brother all right over the wife and property of the deceased. Planting the foot on a thing was an usual symbol of lordship and of taking possession (compare Gen 13:17; Jos 10:24), and loosing the shoe and handing it to another in like manner signified a renunciation and transfer of right and title (compare Rth 4:7-8; Psa 60:8, and Psa 108:9). The widow here is directed herself, as the party slighted and injured, to deprive her brother-law of his shoe, and spit in his face (compare Num 12:14). The action was intended to aggravate the disgrace conceived to attach to the conduct of the man.
The house ... - Equivalent to "the house of the barefooted one."To go barefoot was a sign of the most abject condition; compare 2Sa 15:30.
Poole -> Deu 25:6
Poole: Deu 25:6 - -- In the name of his brother shall be called and reputed his son. See Rth 4:17 .
That his name be not put out of Israel that a family be not lost. So...
In the name of his brother shall be called and reputed his son. See Rth 4:17 .
That his name be not put out of Israel that a family be not lost. So this was a provision that the number of their families might not be diminished.
Haydock -> Deu 25:6
Haydock: Deu 25:6 - -- Name. Josephus ([Antiquities?] iv. 8) takes this literally, as St. Augustine once did, though afterwards he retracted that opinion, (B. ii. 12,) on ...
Name. Josephus ([Antiquities?] iv. 8) takes this literally, as St. Augustine once did, though afterwards he retracted that opinion, (B. ii. 12,) on considering that Booz called his son Obed, and not Mahalon, which was the name of the first husband of Ruth, Ruth iv. 17. (Calmet) ---
Houbigant thinks some omissions have taken place in the very short genealogy of David, mentioned in that chapter, and instead of Obed, he would substitute Jachin, as the first-born of Ruth. He thinks that Solomon alluded to two of his ancestors, when he styled the two pillars before the temple Jachin and Booz. "In strength it shall stand or establish," 3 Kings vii. 21. Hebrew, "the first-born which she beareth shall arise (or succeed) in the name (or by the right and title) of his brother." See Numbers xxiv. 3. (Haydock) ---
Name is sometimes put for succession, (Calmet) or instead of another. (Menochius)
Gill -> Deu 25:6
Gill: Deu 25:6 - -- And it shall be that the firstborn that she beareth,.... To her husband's brother, now married to her:
shall succeed in the name of his brother w...
And it shall be that the firstborn that she beareth,.... To her husband's brother, now married to her:
shall succeed in the name of his brother which is dead; the meaning is, as the Targum of Jonathan,"he shall rise up in the inheritance in the name of his brother;''or, as Jarchi expresses it,"he shall take the inheritance of the deceased in the goods of his father;''that is, he shall have his part and share in the inheritance that the deceased brother would have had if he had lived, which would come to him by his father:
that his name be not put out of Israel; that the family be not lost in Israel, and the inheritance belonging to it pass to another. This law was designed to keep families distinct, and inheritances in them, until the Messiah came, and that it might appear from what family he came; as he did from one in whom, as it is generally thought, this law took place: and it might have still a more special respect to him, as Ainsworth suggests; for Christ in the mystical sense may be signified by the deceased brother; he stands in the relation of a brother to his people, and has all the love, friendship, compassion, and condescension of one; he and they are of one and the same father, of the same family, and of the same nature, and have the same inheritance they being co-heirs with him; nor is he ashamed to own the relation. This brother of theirs is deceased; his death was according to the will of God, what he himself agreed to, and was foretold by the prophets; for which purpose he came into the world, and did die as to the flesh, and that for the sins of his people. Now the Jewish church was his wife, by whom he had no children through the law; that church was espoused to him, he stood in the relation of an husband to her, and she in the relation of a wife to him. Very few children were brought forth by her to him, see, Isa 54:1; and none by the law, by which there is no regeneration, but by the Gospel; it is through that, and not the law, the Spirit and his graces come; or souls are born again to Christ, renewed and sanctified. The apostles that survived Christ, and the ministers of the Gospel, are his brethren, Joh 20:17; and who are instruments in begetting souls to Christ; and these are a seed raised up unto him, and are called not after the name of the apostles and ministers of the word, through whose ministry they are begotten, 1Co 1:12; but after Christ; and have the name of Christians, or anointed ones, from him, and by which means his name is, and will be continued as long as the sun endures, Act 11:26.
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expand allCommentary -- Verse Notes / Footnotes
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expand allCommentary -- Verse Range Notes
TSK Synopsis -> Deu 25:1-19
TSK Synopsis: Deu 25:1-19 - --1 Stripes must not exceed forty.4 The ox is not to be muzzled.5 Of raising seed unto a brother.11 Of the immodest woman.13 Of unjust weights and measu...
MHCC -> Deu 25:5-12
MHCC: Deu 25:5-12 - --The custom here regulated seems to have been in the Jewish law in order to keep inheritances distinct; now it is unlawful.
Matthew Henry -> Deu 25:5-12
Matthew Henry: Deu 25:5-12 - -- Here is, I. The law settled concerning the marrying of the brother's widow. It appears from the story of Judah's family that this had been an ancien...
Keil-Delitzsch -> Deu 25:5-10
Keil-Delitzsch: Deu 25:5-10 - --
On Levirate Marriages. - Deu 25:5, Deu 25:6. If brothers lived together, and one of them died childless, the wife of the deceased was not to be marr...
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 12:1--25:19 - --B. An exposition of selected covenant laws 12-25
Moses' homiletical exposition of the law of Israel that...
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Constable: Deu 24:8--26:1 - --9. Laws arising from the ninth commandment 24:8-25:19
The ninth commandment is, "You shall not b...
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Constable: Deu 25:5-19 - --10. Laws arising from the tenth commandment 25:5-19
The tenth commandment is, "You shall not cov...
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