
Text -- Deuteronomy 26:12-15 (NET)




Names, People and Places, Dictionary Themes and Topics



collapse allCommentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per phrase)
Wesley: Deu 26:12 - -- Heb. the year of that tithe, so called, either because these tithes were gathered only in that year. Or rather, because then only they were so bestowe...
Heb. the year of that tithe, so called, either because these tithes were gathered only in that year. Or rather, because then only they were so bestowed; and whereas these second tithes for two years together were eaten only by the owners and Levites, and that in Jerusalem, in the third year they were eaten also by the strangers, fatherless, and widows, and that in their own dwellings.

Wesley: Deu 26:13 - -- In thy private addresses to God; for this is to be said presently upon the distribution of these tithes, which was not done at Jerusalem, but in their...
In thy private addresses to God; for this is to be said presently upon the distribution of these tithes, which was not done at Jerusalem, but in their own private gates or dwellings. And this is to be spoken before the Lord, that is, solemnly, seriously, and in a religious manner, with due respect to God's presence, and will, and glory.

Wesley: Deu 26:14 - -- In sorrow, or grieving that I was to give away so much of my profits to the poor, but I have chearfully eaten and feasted with them, as I was obliged ...
In sorrow, or grieving that I was to give away so much of my profits to the poor, but I have chearfully eaten and feasted with them, as I was obliged to do.

Wesley: Deu 26:14 - -- For any common use; for any other use than that which thou hast appointed, which would have been a pollution of them.
For any common use; for any other use than that which thou hast appointed, which would have been a pollution of them.

Wesley: Deu 26:14 - -- For any funeral pomp or service; for the Jews used to send in provisions to feast with the nearest relations of the party deceased; and in that case b...
For any funeral pomp or service; for the Jews used to send in provisions to feast with the nearest relations of the party deceased; and in that case both the guests and food were legally polluted, Num 19:11, Num 19:14, and therefore the use of these tithes in such cases had been a double fault, both the defiling of sacred food, and the employing those provisions upon sorrowful occasions, which by God's express command were to be eaten with rejoicing.

Wesley: Deu 26:15 - -- After that solemn profession of their obedience to God's commands, they are taught to pray for God's blessing whereby they are instructed how vain and...
After that solemn profession of their obedience to God's commands, they are taught to pray for God's blessing whereby they are instructed how vain and ineffectual the prayers of unrighteous or disobedient persons are.
JFB: Deu 26:12-15 - -- Among the Hebrews there were two tithings. The first was appropriated to the Levites (Num 18:21). The second, being the tenth of what remained, was br...
Among the Hebrews there were two tithings. The first was appropriated to the Levites (Num 18:21). The second, being the tenth of what remained, was brought to Jerusalem in kind; or it was converted into money, and the owner, on arriving in the capital, purchased sheep, bread, and oil (Deu 14:22-23). This was done for two consecutive years. But this second tithing was eaten at home, and the third year distributed among the poor of the place (Deu 14:28-29).

JFB: Deu 26:13 - -- This was a solemn declaration that nothing which should be devoted to the divine service had been secretly reserved for personal use.
This was a solemn declaration that nothing which should be devoted to the divine service had been secretly reserved for personal use.

JFB: Deu 26:14 - -- In a season of sorrow, which brought defilement on sacred things; under a pretense of poverty, and grudging to give any away to the poor.
In a season of sorrow, which brought defilement on sacred things; under a pretense of poverty, and grudging to give any away to the poor.

JFB: Deu 26:14 - -- That is, any common purpose, different from what God had appointed and which would have been a desecration of it.
That is, any common purpose, different from what God had appointed and which would have been a desecration of it.

On any funeral service, or, to an idol, which is a dead thing.
Clarke: Deu 26:12 - -- The third year, which is the year of tithing - This is supposed to mean the third year of the seventh or Sabbatical year, in which the tenths were t...
The third year, which is the year of tithing - This is supposed to mean the third year of the seventh or Sabbatical year, in which the tenths were to be given to the poor. See the law, Deu 14:28. But from the letter in both these places it would appear that the tithe was for the Levites, and that this tithe was drawn only once in three years.

Clarke: Deu 26:14 - -- I have not - given aught thereof for the dead - That is, I have not consecrated any of it to an idol which was generally a dead man whom superstitio...
I have not - given aught thereof for the dead - That is, I have not consecrated any of it to an idol which was generally a dead man whom superstition and ignorance had deified. From 1Co 10:27, 1Co 10:28, we learn that it was customary to offer that flesh to idols which was afterwards sold publicly in the shambles; probably the blood was poured out before the idol in imitation of the sacrifices offered to the true God. Perhaps the text here alludes to a similar custom.
Calvin: Deu 26:12 - -- 12.When thou hast made an end of tithing In this passage Moses urgently stimulates them to offer the tithes willingly and abundantly, by placing God,...
12.When thou hast made an end of tithing In this passage Moses urgently stimulates them to offer the tithes willingly and abundantly, by placing God, as it were, before their eyes, as if they paid them into his hand: for a solemn protestation is enjoined, in which they condemn themselves as guilty before God, if they have not faithfully paid the tax imposed upon them; but they pray for grace and peace if they have honestly discharged their duty. For nothing can be more awakening to men, than when 219 God is introduced as the judge of any particular matter. This is the reason why he commands them to protest in God’s sight that they have obeyed His ordinance in the payment of their tithes. To separate, or “bring away out of the house,” is equivalent to their being conscious of no fraud in withholding from God what was His; and thus that they were guiltless of sacrilege, since they had not diverted anything holy to their private use. What follows, “I have not transgressed thy commandments, neither have I forgotten them,” must only be referred to the matter in hand; for it would have been too great an act of temerity and arrogance in them, to have boasted that they had kept and fulfilled the Law in every part and parcel. Still this manner of speaking signifies desire rather than perfection; as if they had said, that it was the full purpose of their minds to obey God’s precepts. We must remember, however, what I have said, that this properly refers to the legal ceremonies. With the same meaning it is soon after said, “I have done according to all that thou hast commanded me:” for if they had gloried in their perfection, they had no need of sacrifices, or other means of purification. But as I have just said, God only invites them to examine themselves, 220 so that they may in sincerity of heart call upon Him as the witness of their piety.

Calvin: Deu 26:14 - -- 14.I have not eaten thereof in my mourning ( tristitia) It is clear that the sacred offerings are here spoken of; but the question is, what is meant ...
14.I have not eaten thereof in my mourning ( tristitia) It is clear that the sacred offerings are here spoken of; but the question is, what is meant by eating in mourning? This is the exposition received by almost universal consent; that although want may have tempted them to theft and fraud, yet the people assert that, even in their poverty and straits, they have abstained from the hallowed things; and to this I willingly assent; although this word “mourning” may be taken for the anxiety of a mind conscious of its iniquity in this sense, “I have not knowingly and willingly eaten anything consecrated to God, so that the hot iron ( cauterium) of an evil conscience should burn me, in the way in which man’s guilt ever torments and troubles him.” As to the second clause, interpreters differ. Some translate the word ‘

Calvin: Deu 26:15 - -- 15.Look down from thy holy habitation Whilst they are commanded to offer their prayers and supplications, that God would bless the land, on this cond...
15.Look down from thy holy habitation Whilst they are commanded to offer their prayers and supplications, that God would bless the land, on this condition, that they had not defiled themselves by any sacrilege, at the same time they are reminded, on the other hand, that God’s blessing was not else to be hoped for. Meanwhile the expression is remarkable, “Bless the land which thou hast given us, a land that floweth with milk and honey:” for we infer from hence that the land was not so much fertile by nature, as because God daily watered it by His secret blessing to make it so.
TSK: Deu 26:12 - -- the tithes : Lev 27:30; Num 18:24
the third : Deu 14:22-29
hast given it : Deu 12:17-19, Deu 16:14; Pro 14:21; Phi 4:18, Phi 4:19
the tithes : Lev 27:30; Num 18:24
the third : Deu 14:22-29
hast given it : Deu 12:17-19, Deu 16:14; Pro 14:21; Phi 4:18, Phi 4:19

TSK: Deu 26:13 - -- Levite : Deu 26:12, Deu 14:29, Deu 24:19-21; Job 31:16-20
I have not : Psa 18:21-24, Psa 26:1-3, Psa 26:6; Act 24:16; 2Co 1:12, 2Co 11:31; 1Th 2:10; 1...
Levite : Deu 26:12, Deu 14:29, Deu 24:19-21; Job 31:16-20
I have not : Psa 18:21-24, Psa 26:1-3, Psa 26:6; Act 24:16; 2Co 1:12, 2Co 11:31; 1Th 2:10; 1Jo 3:17-22
forgotten : Psa 119:93, Psa 119:139, Psa 119:141, Psa 119:153, Psa 119:176; Pro 3:1

TSK: Deu 26:14 - -- eaten : Deu 16:11; Lev 7:20, Lev 21:1, Lev 21:11; Hos 9:4; Mal 2:13
the dead : Psa 106:28; Eze 24:17

TSK: Deu 26:15 - -- Look down : Deu 26:7; 1Ki 8:27, 1Ki 8:43; Psa 102:19, Psa 102:20; Isa 57:15, Isa 61:1, Isa 63:15, Isa 66:1, Isa 66:2; Zec 2:13; Mat 6:9; Act 7:49
bles...

collapse allCommentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per Verse)
Barnes: Deu 26:12 - -- See the marginal reference to Numbers and note. A strict fulfillment of the onerous and complicated tithe obligations was a leading part of the righ...
See the marginal reference to Numbers and note. A strict fulfillment of the onerous and complicated tithe obligations was a leading part of the righteousness of the Pharisees: compare Mat 23:23.

Barnes: Deu 26:14 - -- I have not eaten thereof in my mourning - When the Israelite would be unclean (compare the marginal references). Nor given ought thereof f...
I have not eaten thereof in my mourning - When the Israelite would be unclean (compare the marginal references).
Nor given ought thereof for the dead - The reference is not so much to the superstitious custom of placing food on or in tombs as to the funeral expenses, and more especially the usual feast for the mourners (compare Jer 16:7; Eze 24:17; Hos 9:4; Tobit 4:17). The dedicated things were to be employed in glad and holy feasting, not therefore for funeral banquets; for death and all associated with it was regarded as unclean.
Poole: Deu 26:12 - -- Of
the tithes See Poole on "Deu 14:28". The year of tithing , Heb. the year of that tithe ; so called, either,
1. Because these tithes were gath...
Of
the tithes See Poole on "Deu 14:28". The year of tithing , Heb. the year of that tithe ; so called, either,
1. Because these tithes were gathered only in that year. Or rather,
2. Because then only they were so bestowed or used; and whereas these second tithes for two years together were eaten only by the owners and Levites, and that in Jerusalem, in the third year they were eaten also by the strangers, fatherless, and widows, and that in their own dwellings. The LXX. join these words with the following, and for shemath, the year , read shenith, the second , and take vau for redundant, as sometimes it is, and read the place thus, The second tithe thou shalt give to the Levite , &c.

Poole: Deu 26:13 - -- Before the Lord i.e. either before the tabernacle or temple; or rather, in thy private and domestic addresses to God; for this is to be said presentl...
Before the Lord i.e. either before the tabernacle or temple; or rather, in thy private and domestic addresses to God; for this is to be said presently upon the distribution of these tithes, which was not done at Jerusalem, but
in their own private gates or dwellings; except we will suppose that after he had given away these tithes at home he should go up to Jerusalem merely to make this acknowledgment, which seems improbable. And this is to be spoken before the Lord , i.e. solemnly, seriously, and in a religious manner, with due respect to God’ s presence and will and glory, which is a sufficient ground for that phrase. I have brought away , or, separated , or, removed , to wit, from my own proper and private fruits. The hallowed things , i.e. the tithes which have been sanctified and set apart for these uses.

Poole: Deu 26:14 - -- In my mourning i.e. either,
1. In my funeral solemnities for the dead. But this falls in with the last branch. Or,
2. In my distress or poverty, or...
In my mourning i.e. either,
1. In my funeral solemnities for the dead. But this falls in with the last branch. Or,
2. In my distress or poverty, or upon pretence of my own want, in which case men are tempted and inclined to fall upon sacred or forbidden things. Or,
3. In sorrow, or grieving that I was to give away so much of my profits to the poor, but I have cheerfully eaten and feasted with them, as I was obliged to do. For though it be taken for granted by some learned expositors, from Deu 14:28,29 , that the owner was not to eat any part of the third year’ s tithe, but to give it all away to the stranger and fatherless, &c., the contrary seems to me more probable from that very place, where it is said, thou shalt lay it up within thy gates , and then it follows, that the Levite, stranger, &c. shall come , to wit, to thy gates, and shall eat , to wit, there, as is expressed Deu 26:12 , that they may eat within thy gates, and be filled ; which implies that these tithes, or some part of them, were eaten in the owner’ s gates or dwelling, with holy rejoicing and feasting, wherein it is most probable the owner had his share, though it be not there expressed, because it was evident in itself from the foregoing passage, Deu 14:23 , &c., where the owner is allowed and commanded to eat those tithes together with the Levites. And howsoever some think the third year’ s tithes, Deu 14:28 , were not the same with those Deu 14:23 , yet it cannot with any colour of reason be thought that those tithes which were to be eaten, not only by the Levites, but also by the strangers, Deu 14:29 , were more sacred than those that were to be eaten by none but the Levites and the owners, Deu 14:23,27 , or that the owner might eat of the one, and not of the other. For any unclean use , i.e. for any common use; the words common and unclean being oft indifferently used one for the other, or for any other use than that which thou hast appointed, which would have been a pollution of them.
For the dead i.e. for any funeral pomp, or service, or feast; for the Jews used to send in provisions to feast with the nearest relations of the party deceased, of which see Jer 16:7 Eze 24:17 Hos 9:4 ; and in that case both the guests and food were legally polluted, Num 19:11,14 , and therefore the use of these tithes in such cases had been a double fault, both the defiling of sacred food, and the employing of those provisions upon sorrowful occasions, which by God’ s express command were to be eaten with rejoicing, Deu 14:26 26:11 .

Poole: Deu 26:15 - -- After that solemn profession of their obedience to God’ s commands, they are taught to pray for God’ s blessing upon their land, whereby t...
After that solemn profession of their obedience to God’ s commands, they are taught to pray for God’ s blessing upon their land, whereby they are instructed how vain and ineffectual the prayers of unrighteous or disobedient persons are.
Haydock: Deu 26:12 - -- Third. It has been remarked (chap. xiv. 28., and Leviticus xxvii. 30,) that the Jews gave two tithes every year, the second was for feasts at Jerusa...
Third. It has been remarked (chap. xiv. 28., and Leviticus xxvii. 30,) that the Jews gave two tithes every year, the second was for feasts at Jerusalem, or on the third year at home, if there was not also a third tithe due on that year. (Haydock)

Haydock: Deu 26:13 - -- Taken. Hebrew, "burnt." (Calmet) ---
I have brought all that was due, (Tirinus) so that no more can be found in my house than what the fire would ...
Taken. Hebrew, "burnt." (Calmet) ---
I have brought all that was due, (Tirinus) so that no more can be found in my house than what the fire would have spared, if it had been thrown into it.

Haydock: Deu 26:14 - -- Mourning . It was then unlawful to taste what was set apart for the Lord, and even to touch a thing, at that time, would render it unclean, Osee ix. ...
Mourning . It was then unlawful to taste what was set apart for the Lord, and even to touch a thing, at that time, would render it unclean, Osee ix. 4. Others explain it thus: I have not eaten, how much soever I was distressed; or, I eat it with a cheerful heart. But these interpretations seem unnatural. Spencer (Rit. ii. 24,) thinks rather that the Jews thus disclaim having given any worship to Isis, whom the Egyptians invoked after the harvest, with mournful cries. (Diodorus, Sic. i.) About the same season of the year, lamentations were also made for the death of Adonis, (Marcel. xxii.) and for that of Osiris. (Firminus.) ---
The Phœnicians mourned in like manner for the desolate appearance of the earth, after the fruits were collected. The Egyptians thought that Isis had discovered fruits and corn, and therefore offered the first-fruits to her. But the Jews are here taught to refer all such favours to God alone, and they testify that they have taken no part in the superstitious rites of other nations, nor spent any thing in funerals. Hebrew, "upon the dead;" Osiris, &c., here styled uncleanness, by way of contempt. (Calmet)
Gill: Deu 26:12 - -- When thou hast made an end of tithing all the tithes of thine increase,.... Which, according to Maimonides k, is to be understood of the feast, in whi...
When thou hast made an end of tithing all the tithes of thine increase,.... Which, according to Maimonides k, is to be understood of the feast, in which all tithes are finished, which is the feast of the passover:
the third year, which is the year of tithing; that is, the third from every seventh, when the land lay fallow. Every year a tithe was paid to the Levites; and besides that a second tithe, which was carried to Jerusalem and eaten there; and every third year it was eaten at home, in their towns and cities in the country instead of it, with the Levite, poor and stranger, and was called the poor's tithe; and hence the Targum of Jonathan here calls this year the year of the poor's tithe, as was also the sixth year, and was reckoned not complete till the passover in the following year, as the Jewish writers l say:
and hath given it unto the Levite, the stranger, the fatherless, and the widow; that is, the poor's tithe of the third year, which these were to eat of with the owner, Deu 14:28; though the Jews commonly distinguish the Levite from the rest, and suppose that both first and second tithes are meant, the one to be given to the former, and the other to the latter; so the Targum of Jonathan and Jarchi:
that they may eat within thy gates, and be filled: for this was a considerable entertainment, a sort of a feast, a full meal, however; hence it is concluded, as Jarchi says, that they did not give less of corn to a poor man than half a kab of wheat, which was above three pints.

Gill: Deu 26:13 - -- Then thou shalt say before the Lord thy God,.... Make the following declaration as in his presence; for this was not made in the tabernacle or temple ...
Then thou shalt say before the Lord thy God,.... Make the following declaration as in his presence; for this was not made in the tabernacle or temple at, Jerusalem, since the tithe was to be eaten with the poor in the gates of the owner, as in Deu 26:12,
I have brought away the hallowed things out of mine house: which Aben Ezra and Onkelos interpret of the tithe; but it seems, besides that, to take in everything devoted to all holy uses, be they what they will, which were at this time to be separated from a man's own common goods, and applied to the purposes for which they were designed and devoted, and particularly what was to be given to the poor:
and also have, given them unto the Levite, and unto the stranger, to the fatherless, and to the widow, according to all thy commandments which thou hast commanded me; giving to each according as the law directs; which the Targum of Jonathan and Jarchi interpret as before, giving the first tithe to the Levites, and the second tithe to the rest:
I have not transgressed thy commandments, neither have I forgotten them: neither broken them wilfully, nor omitted them through carelessness, negligence, and forgetfulness, but was mindful to observe them punctually and exactly.

Gill: Deu 26:14 - -- I have not eaten thereof in my mourning,.... When in grief and sorrow on account of any afflictive circumstance, for these were to be eaten with joy, ...
I have not eaten thereof in my mourning,.... When in grief and sorrow on account of any afflictive circumstance, for these were to be eaten with joy, Deu 16:11; and especially of the loss of relations by death, when holy things were not to be eaten by such persons; see Lev 10:19; and particularly tithes, though it is said n,"What is doubtful of tithing (whether it has been tithed or no) might be eaten by a mourner;''and a man was reckoned such an one until his dead was buried. So Maimonides o observes,"a mourner may not eat holy things, as it is written, Deu 26:14; he is one whose relation is dead, when he is obliged to mourn; for he is called by the law a mourner as long as the dead lies upon the face of the earth (above ground), or as long as he is not yet buried he is called a mourner; and so likewise on the day of burial:"
neither have I taken away ought thereof for any unclean use; or common use, or any other use than it was designed for, and devoted to; or for any unclean person, who by the law might not eat thereof; or, as Jarchi interprets it, that he had not removed it, or taken it away from being eaten, on account of any unclean person, because I am unclean and he pure, or he pure and I unclean:
nor given ought thereof for the dead; for the necessities of the dead, as Aben Ezra; more particularly Jarchi, to make for him a coffin and grave clothes; and so the Targum of Jonathan interprets it of grave clothes for the dead; though that of Jerusalem of clothes for those that are polluted by the dead. It may have respect also to the parentalia, or funeral feasts made at the interment of the dead; though Aben Ezra says, there are some that say it was for idolatry, and so the person here speaking denies that he had made use of any of the holy things in honour of idols, of dead men deified; and some are of opinion that all the above things may have some respect to idolatrous practices p:
but I have hearkened to the voice of the Lord my God, and have done according to all that thou hast commanded me; observed his word, and kept close to it, and not swerved from it, but acted according to it in all things before referred to.

Gill: Deu 26:15 - -- Look down from thy holy habitation, from heaven,.... This is a prayer of the person that makes the above declaration annexed to it, desiring that God ...
Look down from thy holy habitation, from heaven,.... This is a prayer of the person that makes the above declaration annexed to it, desiring that God would vouchsafe to look with an eye of love, complacency, and delight, upon him and upon all his people, from heaven his holy habitation, though they were on earth, and unholy persons in themselves, and especially if compared with him; see Isa 57:15,
and bless thy people Israel; with blessings temporal and spiritual:
and the land which thou hast given us; with fertility and plenty of all good things, that it might be
as thou swarest to our fathers, a land flowing with milk and honey; See Gill on Deu 26:9.

expand allCommentary -- Verse Notes / Footnotes

NET Notes: Deu 26:13 Heb “according to all your commandment that you commanded me.” This has been simplified in the translation for stylistic reasons.

Geneva Bible: Deu 26:13 Then thou shalt ( h ) say before the LORD thy God, I have brought away the hallowed things out of [mine] house, and also have given them unto the Levi...

Geneva Bible: Deu 26:14 I have not eaten thereof in my mourning, neither have I taken away [ought] thereof for [any] unclean [use], nor given [ought] thereof for the dead: [b...

expand allCommentary -- Verse Range Notes
TSK Synopsis -> Deu 26:1-19
TSK Synopsis: Deu 26:1-19 - --1 The confession of him that offers the basket of first-fruits.12 The prayer of him that gives his third year's tithes.16 The covenant between God and...
MHCC -> Deu 26:12-15
MHCC: Deu 26:12-15 - --How should the earth yield its increase, or, if it does, what comfort can we take in it, unless therewith our God gives us his blessing? All this repr...
Matthew Henry -> Deu 26:12-15
Matthew Henry: Deu 26:12-15 - -- Concerning the disposal of their tithe the third year we had the law before, Deu 14:28, Deu 14:29. The second tithe, which in the other two years wa...
Keil-Delitzsch -> Deu 26:12-13; Deu 26:14-15
Keil-Delitzsch: Deu 26:12-13 - --
The delivery of the tithes, like the presentation of the first-fruits, was also to be sanctified by prayer before the Lord. It is true that only a p...

Keil-Delitzsch: Deu 26:14-15 - --
"I have not eaten thereof in my sorrow." אני , from און , tribulation, distress, signifies here in all probability mourning, and judging fro...
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 26:1-15 - --1. Laws of covenant celebration and confirmation 26:1-15
This section concludes the "purely lega...
