collapse all  

Text -- Deuteronomy 28:1-52 (NET)

Strongs On/Off
Context
The Covenant Blessings
28:1 “If you indeed obey the Lord your God and are careful to observe all his commandments I am giving you today, the Lord your God will elevate you above all the nations of the earth. 28:2 All these blessings will come to you in abundance if you obey the Lord your God: 28:3 You will be blessed in the city and blessed in the field. 28:4 Your children will be blessed, as well as the produce of your soil, the offspring of your livestock, the calves of your herds, and the lambs of your flocks. 28:5 Your basket and your mixing bowl will be blessed. 28:6 You will be blessed when you come in and blessed when you go out. 28:7 The Lord will cause your enemies who attack you to be struck down before you; they will attack you from one direction but flee from you in seven different directions. 28:8 The Lord will decree blessing for you with respect to your barns and in everything you do– yes, he will bless you in the land he is giving you. 28:9 The Lord will designate you as his holy people just as he promised you, if you keep his commandments and obey him. 28:10 Then all the peoples of the earth will see that you belong to the Lord, and they will respect you. 28:11 The Lord will greatly multiply your children, the offspring of your livestock, and the produce of your soil in the land which he promised your ancestors he would give you. 28:12 The Lord will open for you his good treasure house, the heavens, to give you rain for the land in its season and to bless all you do; you will lend to many nations but you will not borrow from any. 28:13 The Lord will make you the head and not the tail, and you will always end up at the top and not at the bottom, if you obey his commandments which I am urging you today to be careful to do. 28:14 But you must not turn away from all the commandments I am giving you today, to either the right or left, nor pursue other gods and worship them.
Curses as Reversal of Blessings
28:15 “But if you ignore the Lord your God and are not careful to keep all his commandments and statutes I am giving you today, then all these curses will come upon you in full force: 28:16 You will be cursed in the city and cursed in the field. 28:17 Your basket and your mixing bowl will be cursed. 28:18 Your children will be cursed, as well as the produce of your soil, the calves of your herds, and the lambs of your flocks. 28:19 You will be cursed when you come in and cursed when you go out.
Curses by Disease and Drought
28:20 “The Lord will send on you a curse, confusing you and opposing you in everything you undertake until you are destroyed and quickly perish because of the evil of your deeds, in that you have forsaken me. 28:21 The Lord will plague you with deadly diseases until he has completely removed you from the land you are about to possess. 28:22 He will afflict you with weakness, fever, inflammation, infection, sword, blight, and mildew; these will attack you until you perish. 28:23 The sky above your heads will be bronze and the earth beneath you iron. 28:24 The Lord will make the rain of your land powder and dust; it will come down on you from the sky until you are destroyed.
Curses by Defeat and Deportation
28:25 “The Lord will allow you to be struck down before your enemies; you will attack them from one direction but flee from them in seven directions and will become an object of terror to all the kingdoms of the earth. 28:26 Your carcasses will be food for every bird of the sky and wild animal of the earth, and there will be no one to chase them off. 28:27 The Lord will afflict you with the boils of Egypt and with tumors, eczema, and scabies, all of which cannot be healed. 28:28 The Lord will also subject you to madness, blindness, and confusion of mind. 28:29 You will feel your way along at noon like the blind person does in darkness and you will not succeed in anything you do; you will be constantly oppressed and continually robbed, with no one to save you. 28:30 You will be engaged to a woman and another man will rape her. You will build a house but not live in it. You will plant a vineyard but not even begin to use it. 28:31 Your ox will be slaughtered before your very eyes but you will not eat of it. Your donkey will be stolen from you as you watch and will not be returned to you. Your flock of sheep will be given to your enemies and there will be no one to save you. 28:32 Your sons and daughters will be given to another people while you look on in vain all day, and you will be powerless to do anything about it. 28:33 As for the produce of your land and all your labor, a people you do not know will consume it, and you will be nothing but oppressed and crushed for the rest of your lives. 28:34 You will go insane from seeing all this. 28:35 The Lord will afflict you in your knees and on your legs with painful, incurable boils– from the soles of your feet to the top of your head. 28:36 The Lord will force you and your king whom you will appoint over you to go away to a people whom you and your ancestors have not known, and you will serve other gods of wood and stone there. 28:37 You will become an occasion of horror, a proverb, and an object of ridicule to all the peoples to whom the Lord will drive you.
The Curse of Reversed Status
28:38 “You will take much seed to the field but gather little harvest, because locusts will consume it. 28:39 You will plant vineyards and cultivate them, but you will not drink wine or gather in grapes, because worms will eat them. 28:40 You will have olive trees throughout your territory but you will not anoint yourself with olive oil, because the olives will drop off the trees while still unripe. 28:41 You will bear sons and daughters but not keep them, because they will be taken into captivity. 28:42 Whirring locusts will take over every tree and all the produce of your soil. 28:43 The foreigners who reside among you will become higher and higher over you and you will become lower and lower. 28:44 They will lend to you but you will not lend to them; they will become the head and you will become the tail! 28:45 All these curses will fall on you, pursuing and overtaking you until you are destroyed, because you would not obey the Lord your God by keeping his commandments and statutes that he has given you. 28:46 These curses will be a perpetual sign and wonder with reference to you and your descendants.
The Curse of Military Siege
28:47 “Because you have not served the Lord your God joyfully and wholeheartedly with the abundance of everything you have, 28:48 instead in hunger, thirst, nakedness, and poverty you will serve your enemies whom the Lord will send against you. They will place an iron yoke on your neck until they have destroyed you. 28:49 The Lord will raise up a distant nation against you, one from the other side of the earth as the eagle flies, a nation whose language you will not understand, 28:50 a nation of stern appearance that will have no regard for the elderly or pity for the young. 28:51 They will devour the offspring of your livestock and the produce of your soil until you are destroyed. They will not leave you with any grain, new wine, olive oil, calves of your herds, or lambs of your flocks until they have destroyed you. 28:52 They will besiege all of your villages until all of your high and fortified walls collapse– those in which you put your confidence throughout the land. They will besiege all your villages throughout the land the Lord your God has given you.
Parallel   Cross Reference (TSK)   ITL  

Names, People and Places, Dictionary Themes and Topics

Names, People and Places:
 · Egypt descendants of Mizraim


Dictionary Themes and Topics: Seven | Obedience | Moses | Jerusalem | Heathen | Field | Fear of God | EXODUS, THE | DEUTERONOMY | Corn | Caterpillar | By-word | Botch | Borrow | Betroth | Barn | Anoint | Ague | Agriculture | Afflictions and Adversities | more
Table of Contents

Word/Phrase Notes
Wesley , JFB , Clarke , Calvin , Defender , TSK

Word/Phrase Notes
Barnes , Poole , Haydock , Gill

Verse Notes / Footnotes
NET Notes , Geneva Bible

Verse Range Notes
TSK Synopsis , Maclaren , MHCC , Matthew Henry , Keil-Delitzsch , Constable , Guzik

collapse all
Commentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per phrase)

Wesley: Deu 28:2 - -- Those blessings which others greedily follow after, and never overtake, shall follow after thee, and shall be thrown into thy lap by special kindness.

Those blessings which others greedily follow after, and never overtake, shall follow after thee, and shall be thrown into thy lap by special kindness.

Wesley: Deu 28:3 - -- Whether they were husbandmen or tradesmen, whether in the town or country, they should be preserved from the dangers of both, and have the comforts of...

Whether they were husbandmen or tradesmen, whether in the town or country, they should be preserved from the dangers of both, and have the comforts of both. How constantly must we depend upon God, both for the continuance and comfort of life! We need him at every turn: we cannot be safe, if he withdraw his protection, nor easy, if he suspends his savour: but if he bless us, go where we will, 'tis well with us.

Wesley: Deu 28:5 - -- Store - house, it shall always be well replenished and the provision thou hast there shall be preserved for thy use and service.

Store - house, it shall always be well replenished and the provision thou hast there shall be preserved for thy use and service.

Wesley: Deu 28:6 - -- That is, in all thy affairs and administrations.

That is, in all thy affairs and administrations.

Wesley: Deu 28:9 - -- Shall confirm his covenant with thee, by which he separated thee to himself as an holy and peculiar people.

Shall confirm his covenant with thee, by which he separated thee to himself as an holy and peculiar people.

Wesley: Deu 28:10 - -- That you are in truth his people and children: A most excellent and glorious people, under the peculiar care and countenance of the great God.

That you are in truth his people and children: A most excellent and glorious people, under the peculiar care and countenance of the great God.

Wesley: Deu 28:11 - -- The same things which were said before are repeated, to shew that God would repeat and multiply his blessings upon them.

The same things which were said before are repeated, to shew that God would repeat and multiply his blessings upon them.

Wesley: Deu 28:12 - -- The heaven or the air, which is God's storehouse, where he treasures up rain or wind for man's use.

The heaven or the air, which is God's storehouse, where he treasures up rain or wind for man's use.

Wesley: Deu 28:13 - -- The chief of all people in power, or at least in dignity and privileges; so that even they that are not under thine authority shall reverence thy grea...

The chief of all people in power, or at least in dignity and privileges; so that even they that are not under thine authority shall reverence thy greatness and excellency. So it was in David's and Solomon's time, and so it should have been much oftner and much more, if they had performed the conditions.

Wesley: Deu 28:15 - -- So that thou shalt not be able to escape them, as thou shalt vainly hope and endeavour to do. There is no running from God, but by running to him; no ...

So that thou shalt not be able to escape them, as thou shalt vainly hope and endeavour to do. There is no running from God, but by running to him; no flying from his justice, but by flying to his mercy.

Wesley: Deu 28:20 - -- This seems chiefly to concern the mind, arising from the disappointment of hopes and the presages of its approaching miseries.

This seems chiefly to concern the mind, arising from the disappointment of hopes and the presages of its approaching miseries.

Wesley: Deu 28:20 - -- Namely, from God, not so much in words as by his actions, by cross providences, by sharp and sore afflictions.

Namely, from God, not so much in words as by his actions, by cross providences, by sharp and sore afflictions.

Wesley: Deu 28:23 - -- Like brass, hard and dry, and shut up from giving rain.

Like brass, hard and dry, and shut up from giving rain.

Wesley: Deu 28:23 - -- Hard and chapt and barren.

Hard and chapt and barren.

Wesley: Deu 28:24 - -- Either thy rain shall be as unprofitable to thy ground and seed as if it were only so much dust. Or instead of rain shall come nothing but dust from h...

Either thy rain shall be as unprofitable to thy ground and seed as if it were only so much dust. Or instead of rain shall come nothing but dust from heaven, which being raised and carried up by the wind in great abundance, returns, and falls upon the earth as it were in clouds or showers.

Wesley: Deu 28:27 - -- Such boils and blains as the Egyptians were plagued with, spreading from head to foot: The emerodes - Or piles.

Such boils and blains as the Egyptians were plagued with, spreading from head to foot: The emerodes - Or piles.

Wesley: Deu 28:28 - -- Of mind, so that they shall not know what to do: Astonishment - They shall be filled with wonder and horror because of the strangeness and soreness of...

Of mind, so that they shall not know what to do: Astonishment - They shall be filled with wonder and horror because of the strangeness and soreness of their calamities.

Wesley: Deu 28:29 - -- In the most clear and evident matters thou shalt grossly mistake.

In the most clear and evident matters thou shalt grossly mistake.

Wesley: Deu 28:29 - -- Thy counsels and enterprizes shall be frustrated and turn to thy destruction.

Thy counsels and enterprizes shall be frustrated and turn to thy destruction.

Wesley: Deu 28:32 - -- By those who have conquered them, and taken them captives, who shall give or sell them to other persons.

By those who have conquered them, and taken them captives, who shall give or sell them to other persons.

Wesley: Deu 28:32 - -- Or, be consumed, partly with grief and plentiful tears; and partly with earnest desire, and vain and long expectation of their return.

Or, be consumed, partly with grief and plentiful tears; and partly with earnest desire, and vain and long expectation of their return.

Wesley: Deu 28:32 - -- No power to rescue, nor money to ransom them.

No power to rescue, nor money to ransom them.

Wesley: Deu 28:33 - -- Which shall come from a far country, which thou didst not at all expect or fear, and therefore will be the more dreadful when they come; a nation whos...

Which shall come from a far country, which thou didst not at all expect or fear, and therefore will be the more dreadful when they come; a nation whose language thou understandest not, and therefore canst not plead with them for mercy, nor expect any favour from them.

Wesley: Deu 28:34 - -- Quite put out of the possession of their own souls; quite bereaved of all comfort and hope, and abandoned to utter despair. They that walk by sight, a...

Quite put out of the possession of their own souls; quite bereaved of all comfort and hope, and abandoned to utter despair. They that walk by sight, and not by faith, are in danger of losing reason itself, when all about them looks frightful; and their condition is bad indeed, who are mad for the sight of their eyes.

Wesley: Deu 28:36 - -- The calamity shall be both universal, which even thy king shall not be able to avoid, much less the subjects, who have far less advantage and opportun...

The calamity shall be both universal, which even thy king shall not be able to avoid, much less the subjects, who have far less advantage and opportunity for escape; and irrecoverable, because he who should protect or rescue them is lost with them, Lam 4:10.

Wesley: Deu 28:36 - -- So what formerly was their choice and delight now becomes their plague and misery. And this doubtless was the condition of many Israelites under the A...

So what formerly was their choice and delight now becomes their plague and misery. And this doubtless was the condition of many Israelites under the Assyrian and Balylonish captivities.

Wesley: Deu 28:43 - -- Within thy gates; who formerly honoured and served thee, and were some of them glad of the crumbs which fell from thy table.

Within thy gates; who formerly honoured and served thee, and were some of them glad of the crumbs which fell from thy table.

Wesley: Deu 28:45 - -- It seems Moses has been hitherto foretelling their captivity in Babylon, by which even after their return, they were brought to the low condition ment...

It seems Moses has been hitherto foretelling their captivity in Babylon, by which even after their return, they were brought to the low condition mentioned, Deu 28:44. But in the following he foretells their last destruction by the Romans. And the present deplorable state of the Jewish nation, so exactly answers this prediction, that it is an incontestable proof of the truth of the prophecy, and consequently of the divine authority of the scriptures. And this destruction more dreadful than the former shews, that their sin in rejecting Christ, was more provoking to God than idolatry itself, and left them more under the power of Satan. For their captivity in Babylon cured them effectually of idolatry in seventy years. But under this last destruction, they continue above sixteen hundred years incurably averse to the Lord Jesus.

Wesley: Deu 28:46 - -- These curses now mentioned.

These curses now mentioned.

Wesley: Deu 28:46 - -- Signal and wonderful to all that hear of them. 'Tis amazing, a people so incorporated, should be so universally disperst! And that a people scattered ...

Signal and wonderful to all that hear of them. 'Tis amazing, a people so incorporated, should be so universally disperst! And that a people scattered in all nations, should not mix with any, but like Cain, be fugitives and vagabonds, and yet so marked as to be known.

JFB: Deu 28:1 - -- In this chapter the blessings and curses are enumerated at length, and in various minute details, so that on the first entrance of the Israelites into...

In this chapter the blessings and curses are enumerated at length, and in various minute details, so that on the first entrance of the Israelites into the land of promise, their whole destiny was laid before them, as it was to result from their obedience or the contrary.

JFB: Deu 28:2 - -- Their national obedience was to be rewarded by extraordinary and universal prosperity.

Their national obedience was to be rewarded by extraordinary and universal prosperity.

JFB: Deu 28:7 - -- That is, in various directions, as always happens in a rout.

That is, in various directions, as always happens in a rout.

JFB: Deu 28:10 - -- That they are really and actually His people (Deu 14:1; Deu 26:18).

That they are really and actually His people (Deu 14:1; Deu 26:18).

JFB: Deu 28:11 - -- Beside the natural capabilities of Canaan, its extraordinary fruitfulness was traceable to the special blessing of Heaven.

Beside the natural capabilities of Canaan, its extraordinary fruitfulness was traceable to the special blessing of Heaven.

JFB: Deu 28:12 - -- The seasonable supply of the early and latter rain was one of the principal means by which their land was so uncommonly fruitful.

The seasonable supply of the early and latter rain was one of the principal means by which their land was so uncommonly fruitful.

JFB: Deu 28:12 - -- That is, thou shalt be in such affluent circumstances, as to be capable, out of thy superfluous wealth, to give aid to thy poorer neighbors.

That is, thou shalt be in such affluent circumstances, as to be capable, out of thy superfluous wealth, to give aid to thy poorer neighbors.

JFB: Deu 28:13-14 - -- An Oriental form of expression, indicating the possession of independent power and great dignity and acknowledged excellence (Isa 9:14; Isa 19:15).

An Oriental form of expression, indicating the possession of independent power and great dignity and acknowledged excellence (Isa 9:14; Isa 19:15).

JFB: Deu 28:15-20 - -- Curses that were to follow them in the event of disobedience are now enumerated, and they are almost exact counterparts of the blessings which were de...

Curses that were to follow them in the event of disobedience are now enumerated, and they are almost exact counterparts of the blessings which were described in the preceding context as the reward of a faithful adherence to the covenant.

JFB: Deu 28:21 - -- Some fatal epidemic. There is no reason, however, to think that the plague, which is the great modern scourge of the East, is referred to.

Some fatal epidemic. There is no reason, however, to think that the plague, which is the great modern scourge of the East, is referred to.

JFB: Deu 28:22 - -- A wasting disorder; but the modern tuberculosis is almost unknown in Asia.

A wasting disorder; but the modern tuberculosis is almost unknown in Asia.

JFB: Deu 28:22 - -- Fever is rendered "burning ague" (Lev 26:16), and the others mentioned along with it evidently point to those febrile affections which are of malignan...

Fever is rendered "burning ague" (Lev 26:16), and the others mentioned along with it evidently point to those febrile affections which are of malignant character and great frequency in the East.

JFB: Deu 28:22 - -- Rather, "dryness"--the effect on the human body of such violent disorders.

Rather, "dryness"--the effect on the human body of such violent disorders.

JFB: Deu 28:22 - -- Two atmospheric influences fatal to grain.

Two atmospheric influences fatal to grain.

JFB: Deu 28:23 - -- Strong Oriental figures used to describe the effects of long-continued drought. This want of regular and seasonable rain is allowed by the most intell...

Strong Oriental figures used to describe the effects of long-continued drought. This want of regular and seasonable rain is allowed by the most intelligent observers to be one great cause of the present sterility of Palestine.

JFB: Deu 28:24 - -- An allusion probably to the dreadful effects of tornadoes in the East, which, raising the sands in immense twisted pillars, drive them along with the ...

An allusion probably to the dreadful effects of tornadoes in the East, which, raising the sands in immense twisted pillars, drive them along with the fury of a tempest. These shifting sands are most destructive to cultivated lands; and in consequence of their encroachments, many once fertile regions of the East are now barren deserts.

JFB: Deu 28:27 - -- A troublesome eruption, marked by red pimples, to which, at the rising of the Nile, the Egyptians are subject.

A troublesome eruption, marked by red pimples, to which, at the rising of the Nile, the Egyptians are subject.

JFB: Deu 28:27 - -- Fistulæ or piles.

Fistulæ or piles.

JFB: Deu 28:27 - -- Scurvy.

Scurvy.

JFB: Deu 28:27 - -- The disease commonly known by that name; but it is far more malignant in the East than is ever witnessed in our part of the world.

The disease commonly known by that name; but it is far more malignant in the East than is ever witnessed in our part of the world.

JFB: Deu 28:28 - -- They would be bewildered and paralyzed with terror at the extent of their calamities.

They would be bewildered and paralyzed with terror at the extent of their calamities.

JFB: Deu 28:29-33 - -- A general description of the painful uncertainty in which they would live. During the Middle Ages the Jews were driven from society into hiding-places...

A general description of the painful uncertainty in which they would live. During the Middle Ages the Jews were driven from society into hiding-places which they were afraid to leave, not knowing from what quarter they might be assailed and their children dragged into captivity, from which no friend could rescue, and no money ransom them.

JFB: Deu 28:35 - -- This is an exact description of elephantiasis, a horrible disease, something like leprosy, which attacks particularly the lower extremities.

This is an exact description of elephantiasis, a horrible disease, something like leprosy, which attacks particularly the lower extremities.

JFB: Deu 28:36 - -- This shows how widespread would be the national calamity; and at the same time how hopeless, when he who should have been their defender shared the ca...

This shows how widespread would be the national calamity; and at the same time how hopeless, when he who should have been their defender shared the captive fate of his subjects.

JFB: Deu 28:36 - -- The Hebrew exiles, with some honorable exceptions, were seduced or compelled into idolatry in the Assyrian and Babylonish captivities (Jer 44:17-19). ...

The Hebrew exiles, with some honorable exceptions, were seduced or compelled into idolatry in the Assyrian and Babylonish captivities (Jer 44:17-19). Thus, the sin to which they had too often betrayed a perverse fondness, a deep-rooted propensity, became their punishment and their misery.

JFB: Deu 28:37 - -- The annals of almost every nation, for eighteen hundred years, afford abundant proofs that this has been, as it still is, the case--the very name of J...

The annals of almost every nation, for eighteen hundred years, afford abundant proofs that this has been, as it still is, the case--the very name of Jew being a universally recognized term for extreme degradation and wretchedness.

JFB: Deu 28:49 - -- The invasion of the Romans--"they came from far." The soldiers of the invading army were taken from France, Spain, and Britain--then considered "the e...

The invasion of the Romans--"they came from far." The soldiers of the invading army were taken from France, Spain, and Britain--then considered "the end of the earth." Julius Severus, the commander, afterwards Vespasian and Hadrian, left Britain for the scene of contest. Moreover, the ensign on the standards of the Roman army was "an eagle"; and the dialects spoken by the soldiers of the different nations that composed that army were altogether unintelligible to the Jews.

JFB: Deu 28:50 - -- A just description of the Romans, who were not only bold and unyielding, but ruthless and implacable.

A just description of the Romans, who were not only bold and unyielding, but ruthless and implacable.

JFB: Deu 28:51 - -- According to the Jewish historian, every district of the country through which they passed was strewn with the wrecks of their devastation.

According to the Jewish historian, every district of the country through which they passed was strewn with the wrecks of their devastation.

JFB: Deu 28:52 - -- All the fortified places to which the people betook themselves for safety were burnt or demolished, and the walls of Jerusalem itself razed to the gro...

All the fortified places to which the people betook themselves for safety were burnt or demolished, and the walls of Jerusalem itself razed to the ground.

Clarke: Deu 28:2 - -- All these blessings shall come on thee - God shall pour out his blessing from heaven upon thee. And overtake thee. Upright men are represented as go...

All these blessings shall come on thee - God shall pour out his blessing from heaven upon thee. And overtake thee. Upright men are represented as going to the kingdom of God, and God’ s blessings as following and overtaking them in their heavenly journey. There are several things in this verse worthy of the most careful observation: - 1. If thou shalt hearken unto the voice of the Lord thy God. The voice of God must be heard; without a Divine revelation how can the Divine will be known? And if not known, it cannot be fulfilled. 2. When God speaks, men must hearken to the words of his mouth. He who does not hearken will not obey. 3. He who hearkens to the words of God must set out for the kingdom of heaven. The curse must fall on him who stands in the way of sinners, and will overtake them who loiter in the way of righteousness. 4. Those who run in the way of God’ s testimonies shall have an abundance of blessing. Blessings shall come upon them, and blessings shall overtake them - in every part of their march through life they shall continue to receive the fulfillment of the various promises of God which relate to all circumstances, vicissitudes, trials, stages of life, etc., etc., each overtaking them in the time and place where most needed.

Clarke: Deu 28:3 - -- In the city - In all civil employments. In the field - in all agricultural pursuits.

In the city - In all civil employments. In the field - in all agricultural pursuits.

Clarke: Deu 28:4 - -- Fruit of thy body - All thy children. Increase of thy kine, etc.; every animal employed in domestic and agricultural purposes shall be under the esp...

Fruit of thy body - All thy children. Increase of thy kine, etc.; every animal employed in domestic and agricultural purposes shall be under the especial protection of Divine Providence.

Clarke: Deu 28:5 - -- Thy basket - Thy olive gathering and vintage, as the basket was employed to collect those fruits

Thy basket - Thy olive gathering and vintage, as the basket was employed to collect those fruits

Clarke: Deu 28:5 - -- Store - משארת mishereth , kneading-trough, or remainder; all that is laid up for future use, as well as what is prepared for present consumpti...

Store - משארת mishereth , kneading-trough, or remainder; all that is laid up for future use, as well as what is prepared for present consumption. Some think that by basket all their property abroad may be meant, and by store all that they have at home, i. e., all that is in the fields, and all that is in the houses. The following note of Mr. Harmer is important: -

"Commentators seem to be at a great loss how to explain the basket and the store mentioned Deu 28:5, Deu 28:17. Why Moses, who in the other verses mentions things in general, should in this case be so minute as to mention baskets, seems strange; and they that interpret either the first or the second of these words of the repositories of their corn, etc., forget that their barns or storehouses are spoken of presently after this in Deu 28:8. Might I be permitted to give my opinion here, I should say that the basket, טנא tene , in this place means their travelling baskets, and the other word משארת mishereth , (their store), signifies their leathern bags, in both which they were wont to carry things in travelling. The first of these words occurs nowhere else in the Scriptures but in the account that is given us of the conveyance in which they were to carry their first-fruits to Jerusalem; the other nowhere but in the description of the hurrying journey of Israel out of Egypt, where it means the utensils in which they then carried their dough, which I have shown elsewhere in these papers means a piece of leather drawn together by rings, and forming a kind of bag. Agreeably to this, Hasselquist informs us that the Eastern people use baskets in travelling; for, speaking of that species of the palm tree which produces dates, and its great usefulness to the people of those countries, he tells us that of the leaves of this tree they make baskets, or rather a kind of short bags, which are used in Turkey on journeys and in their houses; pages 261,262. Hampers and panniers are English terms denoting travelling baskets, as tene seems to be a Hebrew word of the same general import, though their forms might very much differ, as it is certain that of the travelling baskets mentioned by Hasselquist now does

"In like manner as they now carry meal, figs, and raisins, in a goat’ s skin in Barbary for a viaticum, they might do the same anciently, and consequently might carry merchandise after the same manner, particularly their honey, oil, and balm, mentioned Eze 27:17. They were the proper vessels for such things. So Sir J. Chardin, who was so long in the East, and observed their customs with so much care, supposed, in a manuscript note on Gen 43:11, that the balm and the honey sent by Jacob into Egypt for a present were carried in a goat or kid’ s skin, in which all sorts of things, both dry and liquid, are wont to be carried in the East. "Understood after this manner, the passage promises Israel success in their commerce, as the next verse (the 6th) promises them personal safety in their going out and in their return. In this view the passage appears with due distinctness, and a noble extent."- Observations, vol. 2:, p. 181.

Clarke: Deu 28:6 - -- When thou comest in - From thy employment, thou shalt find that no evil has happened to the family or dwelling in thy absence

When thou comest in - From thy employment, thou shalt find that no evil has happened to the family or dwelling in thy absence

Clarke: Deu 28:6 - -- When thou goest out - Thy way shall be made prosperous before thee, and thou shalt have the Divine blessing in all thy labors.

When thou goest out - Thy way shall be made prosperous before thee, and thou shalt have the Divine blessing in all thy labors.

Clarke: Deu 28:7 - -- The Lord shall cause thine enemies, etc. - This is a promise of security from foreign invasion, or total discomfiture of the invaders, should they e...

The Lord shall cause thine enemies, etc. - This is a promise of security from foreign invasion, or total discomfiture of the invaders, should they enter the land. They shall come against thee one way - in the firmest and most united manner. And flee seven ways - shall be utterly broken, confounded, and finally routed.

Clarke: Deu 28:8 - -- The Lord shall command the blessing upon thee - Every thing that thou hast shall come by Divine appointment; thou shalt have nothing casually, but e...

The Lord shall command the blessing upon thee - Every thing that thou hast shall come by Divine appointment; thou shalt have nothing casually, but every thing, both spiritual and temporal, shall come by the immediate command of God.

Clarke: Deu 28:9 - -- The Lord shall establish thee a holy people unto himself - This is the sum of all blessings, to be made holy, and be preserved in holiness

The Lord shall establish thee a holy people unto himself - This is the sum of all blessings, to be made holy, and be preserved in holiness

Clarke: Deu 28:9 - -- If thou shalt keep, etc. - Here is the solemn condition; if they did not keep God’ s testimonies, taking them for the regulators of their lives...

If thou shalt keep, etc. - Here is the solemn condition; if they did not keep God’ s testimonies, taking them for the regulators of their lives, and according to their direction walking in his ways, under the influence and aids of his grace, then the curses, and not the blessings, must be their portion. See Deu 28:15, etc.

Clarke: Deu 28:12 - -- The Lord shall open unto thee his good treasure - The clouds, so that a sufficiency of fructifying showers should descend at all requisite times, an...

The Lord shall open unto thee his good treasure - The clouds, so that a sufficiency of fructifying showers should descend at all requisite times, and the vegetative principle in the earth should unfold and exert itself, so that their crops should be abundant.

Clarke: Deu 28:14 - -- Thou shalt not go aside - to the right hand or to the left - The way of obedience is a straight way; it goes right forward; he who declines either t...

Thou shalt not go aside - to the right hand or to the left - The way of obedience is a straight way; it goes right forward; he who declines either to right or left from this path goes astray and misses heaven.

Clarke: Deu 28:20 - -- Cursing - This shall be thy state; vexation - grief, trouble, and anguish of heart; rebuke - continual judgments, and marks of God’ s displeasu...

Cursing - This shall be thy state; vexation - grief, trouble, and anguish of heart; rebuke - continual judgments, and marks of God’ s displeasure.

Clarke: Deu 28:21 - -- The pestilence cleave unto thee - ידבק יהוה בך אה הדבר yadbek Yehovah becha eth haddaber , the Lord shall cement the pestilence or ...

The pestilence cleave unto thee - ידבק יהוה בך אה הדבר yadbek Yehovah becha eth haddaber , the Lord shall cement the pestilence or plague to thee. Sept., Προσκολλησει Κυριος εις σε τον θανατον, The Lord will glue - inseparably attach, the death unto thee. How dreadful a plague it must be that ravages without intermission, any person may conceive who has ever heard the name.

Clarke: Deu 28:22 - -- Consumption - שחפת shachepheth , atrophy through lack of food; from שחף shacaph , to be in want

Consumption - שחפת shachepheth , atrophy through lack of food; from שחף shacaph , to be in want

Clarke: Deu 28:22 - -- Fever - קדחת kaddachath , from קדח kadach , to be kindled, burn, sparkle; a burning inflammatory fever

Fever - קדחת kaddachath , from קדח kadach , to be kindled, burn, sparkle; a burning inflammatory fever

Clarke: Deu 28:22 - -- Inflammation - דלקת dalleketh , from דלק dalak , to pursue eagerly, to burn after; probably a rapidly consuming cancer

Inflammation - דלקת dalleketh , from דלק dalak , to pursue eagerly, to burn after; probably a rapidly consuming cancer

Clarke: Deu 28:22 - -- Extreme burning - חרחר charchur , burning upon burning, scald upon scald; from חר char , to be heated, enraged, etc. This probably refers, n...

Extreme burning - חרחר charchur , burning upon burning, scald upon scald; from חר char , to be heated, enraged, etc. This probably refers, not only to excruciating inflammations on the body, but also to the irritation and agony of a mind utterly abandoned by God, and lost to hope. What an accumulation of misery! how formidable! and especially in a land where great heat was prevalent and dreadful

Clarke: Deu 28:22 - -- Sword - War in general, enemies without, and civil broils within. This was remarkably the case in the last siege of Jerusalem

Sword - War in general, enemies without, and civil broils within. This was remarkably the case in the last siege of Jerusalem

Clarke: Deu 28:22 - -- Blasting - שדפון shiddaphon , probably either the blighting east wind that ruined vegetation, or those awful pestilential winds which suffocat...

Blasting - שדפון shiddaphon , probably either the blighting east wind that ruined vegetation, or those awful pestilential winds which suffocate both man and beast wherever they come. These often prevail in different parts of the East, and several examples have already been given. See Gen 41:6 (note)

Clarke: Deu 28:22 - -- Mildew - ירקון yerakon , an exudation of the vegetative juice from different parts of the stalk, by which the maturity and perfection of the p...

Mildew - ירקון yerakon , an exudation of the vegetative juice from different parts of the stalk, by which the maturity and perfection of the plant are utterly prevented. It comes from ירק yarak , to throw out moisture

Of these seven plagues, the five former were to fall on their bodies, the two latter upon their substance. What a fearful thing it is to fall into the hands of the living God!

Clarke: Deu 28:23 - -- Thy heaven - shall be brass, and the earth - iron - The atmosphere should not be replenished with aqueous vapours, in consequence of which they shou...

Thy heaven - shall be brass, and the earth - iron - The atmosphere should not be replenished with aqueous vapours, in consequence of which they should have neither the early nor the latter rain; hence the earth - the ground, must be wholly intractable, and, through its hardness, incapable of cultivation. God shows them by this that he is Lord of nature; and that drought and sterility are not casualties, but proceed from the immediate appointment of the Lord.

Clarke: Deu 28:24 - -- The rain of thy land powder and dust - As their heavens - atmosphere, clouds, etc., were to be as brass - yielding no rain; so the surface of the ea...

The rain of thy land powder and dust - As their heavens - atmosphere, clouds, etc., were to be as brass - yielding no rain; so the surface of the earth must be reduced to powder; and this, being frequently taken up by the strong winds, would fall down in showers instead of rain. Whole caravans have been buried under showers of sand; and Thevenot, a French traveler, who had observed these showers of dust, etc., says, "They grievously annoy all they fall on, filling their eyes, ears, nostrils, etc."- Travels in the East, part 1, book ii., chap. 80. The ophthalmia in Egypt appears to be chiefly owing to a very fine sand, the particles of which are like broken glass, which are carried about by the wind, and, entering into the ciliary glands, produce grievous and continual inflammations.

Clarke: Deu 28:27 - -- The Lord will smite thee with the botch - שחין shechin , a violent inflammatory swelling. In Job ii., one of the Hexapla versions renders it ...

The Lord will smite thee with the botch - שחין shechin , a violent inflammatory swelling. In Job ii., one of the Hexapla versions renders it ελεφας, the elephantiasis, a disease the most horrid that can possibly afflict human nature. In this disorder, the whole body is covered with a most loathsome scurf; the joints are all preternaturally enlarged, and the skin swells up and grows into folds like that of an elephant, whence the disease has its name. The skin, through its rigidity, breaks across at all the joints, and a most abominable ichor flows from all the chinks, etc. See an account of it in Aretaeus, whose language is sufficient to chill the blood of a maniac, could he attend to the description given by this great master, of this most loathsome and abominable of all the natural productions of death and sin. This was called the botch of Egypt, as being peculiar to that country, and particularly in the vicinity of the Nile. Hence those words of Lucretius: -

Est Elephas morbus, qui circum flumina Nil

Nascitur, Aegypto in media; nec praeterea usquam

Lib. vi., ver. 1112

Emerods - עפלים ophalim , from עפל aphal , to be elevated, raised up; swellings, protuberances; probably the bleeding piles

Clarke: Deu 28:27 - -- Scab - brg garab does not occur as a verb in the Hebrew Bible, but gharb , in Arabic, signifies a distemper in the corner of the eye, (Castel)., a...

Scab - brg garab does not occur as a verb in the Hebrew Bible, but gharb , in Arabic, signifies a distemper in the corner of the eye, (Castel)., and may amount to the Egyptian ophthalmia , which is so epidemic and distressing in that country: some suppose the scurvy to be intended

Clarke: Deu 28:27 - -- Itch - חרס cheres , a burning itch, probably something of the erysipelatous kind, or what is commonly called St. Anthony’ s fire

Itch - חרס cheres , a burning itch, probably something of the erysipelatous kind, or what is commonly called St. Anthony’ s fire

Clarke: Deu 28:27 - -- Whereof thou canst not be healed - For as they were inflicted by God’ s justice, they could not of course be cured by human art.

Whereof thou canst not be healed - For as they were inflicted by God’ s justice, they could not of course be cured by human art.

Clarke: Deu 28:28 - -- The Lord shall smite thee with madness - שגעון shiggaon , distraction, so that thou shalt not know what to do

The Lord shall smite thee with madness - שגעון shiggaon , distraction, so that thou shalt not know what to do

Clarke: Deu 28:28 - -- And blindness - עורון ivvaron , blindness, both physical and mental; the גרב garab , (Deu 28:27), destroying their eyes, and the judgments...

And blindness - עורון ivvaron , blindness, both physical and mental; the גרב garab , (Deu 28:27), destroying their eyes, and the judgments of God confounding their understandings

Clarke: Deu 28:28 - -- Astonishment - תמהון timmahon , stupidity and amazement. By the just judgments of God they were so completely confounded, as not to discern th...

Astonishment - תמהון timmahon , stupidity and amazement. By the just judgments of God they were so completely confounded, as not to discern the means by which they might prevent or remove their calamities, and to adopt those which led directly to their ruin. How true is the ancient saying, Quos Deus vult perdere, prius dementat ! "Those whom God is determined to destroy, he first infatuates."But this applies not exclusively to the poor Jews: how miserably infatuated have the powers of the continent of Europe been, in all their councils and measures, for several years past! And what is the result? They have fallen - most deplorably fallen!

Clarke: Deu 28:29 - -- Thou shalt be only oppressed, etc. - Perhaps no people under the sun have been more oppressed and spoiled than the rebellious Jews. Indeed, this has...

Thou shalt be only oppressed, etc. - Perhaps no people under the sun have been more oppressed and spoiled than the rebellious Jews. Indeed, this has been their portion, with but little intermission, for nearly 1,800 years. And still they grope at noon day, as the blind gropeth in darkness - they do not yet discover, notwithstanding the effulgence of the light by which they are encompassed, that the rejection of their own Messiah is the cause of all their calamities.

Clarke: Deu 28:30 - -- Thou shalt betroth a wife, etc. - Can any heart imagine any thing more grievous than the evils threatened in this and the following verses? To be on...

Thou shalt betroth a wife, etc. - Can any heart imagine any thing more grievous than the evils threatened in this and the following verses? To be on the brink of all social and domestic happiness, and then to be suddenly deprived of all, and see an enemy possess and enjoy every thing that was dear to them, must excite them to the utmost pitch of distraction and madness. They have, it is true, grievously sinned; but, O ye Christians, have they not grievously suffered for it? Is not the stroke of God heavy enough upon them? Do not then, by unkind treatment or cruel Oppression, increase their miseries. They are, above all others, the men who have seen affliction by the stroke of his rod; Lam 3:1.

Clarke: Deu 28:32 - -- Thy sons and thy daughters shall be given unto another people - In several countries, particularly in Spain and Portugal, the children of the Jews h...

Thy sons and thy daughters shall be given unto another people - In several countries, particularly in Spain and Portugal, the children of the Jews have been taken from them by order of government, and educated in the Popish faith. There have been some instances of Jewish children being taken from their parents even in Protestant countries.

Clarke: Deu 28:35 - -- With a sore botch - שחין shechin , an inflammatory swelling, a burning boil. See Deu 28:27.||&& @@5648||1||10||0|| Can any thing be conceived ...

With a sore botch - שחין shechin , an inflammatory swelling, a burning boil. See Deu 28:27.

||&& @@5648||1||10||0||

Can any thing be conceived more dreadful than the calamities threatened in these verses?

Clarke: Deu 28:48 - -- Therefore shalt thou serve thine enemies - Because they would not serve God, therefore they became slaves to men.

Therefore shalt thou serve thine enemies - Because they would not serve God, therefore they became slaves to men.

Clarke: Deu 28:49 - -- A nation - from far - Probably the Romans

A nation - from far - Probably the Romans

Clarke: Deu 28:49 - -- As the eagle flieth - The very animal on all the Roman standards. The Roman eagle is proverbial

As the eagle flieth - The very animal on all the Roman standards. The Roman eagle is proverbial

Clarke: Deu 28:49 - -- Whose tongue thou shalt not understand - The Latin language, than which none was more foreign to the structure and idiom of the Hebrew.

Whose tongue thou shalt not understand - The Latin language, than which none was more foreign to the structure and idiom of the Hebrew.

Clarke: Deu 28:52 - -- He - Nebuchadnezzar first, (2Ki 25:1, 2Ki 25:2, etc)., and Titus next; shall besiege thee - beset thee round on every side, and cast a trench around...

He - Nebuchadnezzar first, (2Ki 25:1, 2Ki 25:2, etc)., and Titus next; shall besiege thee - beset thee round on every side, and cast a trench around thee: viz., lines of circumvallation, as our Lord predicted; (see Mat 24:1, etc., and Luk 21:5, etc.); in all thy gates throughout all thy land - all thy fenced cities, which points out that their subjugation should be complete, as both Jerusalem and all their fortified places should be taken. This was done literally by Nebuchadnezzar and the Romans.

Calvin: Deu 28:1 - -- 1.And it shall come to pass, if thou shalt hearken. He teaches the same thing as before in different words; but the diversity of expression, as well ...

1.And it shall come to pass, if thou shalt hearken. He teaches the same thing as before in different words; but the diversity of expression, as well as the repetition, tends to its confirmation. First, God says that He would deal with them so bountifully that they should excel all other nations; for this is the meaning of the words, that they should be illustrious above all the rest of the world on account of the special blessings of God. He afterwards enumerates the blessings which shall never depart from them, if they persevere in the service of God; and here it must be observed that they are reminded, not only in how many ways God is bountiful towards His servants, but also to how many necessities they are exposed, which require His direct and constant aid; for if we are blessed in the city and in the field, we can no more move a foot than stand still, except by His blessing. Such also is the tendency of the whole list, that a scarcity of all things impends over us at every moment, unless God should continually succor us by remedies sent down from heaven, and that every good thing can only come from that one source.

Calvin: Deu 28:9 - -- 9.The Lord shall establish thee a holy people unto himself. This refers indeed to earthly blessings, as if Moses said, that by them would be manifest...

9.The Lord shall establish thee a holy people unto himself. This refers indeed to earthly blessings, as if Moses said, that by them would be manifested God’s love towards His chosen people; still it rises higher, so that the Israelites, led on by degrees, should learn to embrace God alone, and to trust in Him according to the covenant which He had made with Abraham, “I am thy exceeding great reward.” (Gen 15:1.) For the children of Abraham were set apart and chosen to be a holy people, not only in order that, being well fed, and with a full belly, they should aspire to nothing but earthly things, but that they might be confidently assured that they would be blessed in death as well as life. Although their adoption was gratuitous, still, inasmuch as they were called unto purity, it is not without reason that God promises that what He had spoken should be sure, if by keeping the Law the Israelites themselves should continue in the covenant; as much as to say, that their sanctification 215 should be firm and perpetual if they walked in the commandments of the Law. When He adds that it should be manifest “to 216 all people of the earth that the name of God was called upon them,” it is equivalent to saying, that it should be known that they were under God’s defense and patronage, and that thus they should always be safe and secure in His protection.

Calvin: Deu 28:12 - -- 12.The Lord shall open to thee his good treasure. He again repeats, that the goodness of God shines forth in many ways in the life of men, since He n...

12.The Lord shall open to thee his good treasure. He again repeats, that the goodness of God shines forth in many ways in the life of men, since He not only supplies the bread that they eat, but that the rain which descends from heaven waters the earth; and that thus He produces whatever is required for food from His plenteous store-house or treasure. Let us learn, therefore, both above and beneath, as well in the temperature of the atmosphere, in the quickening heat of the sun, in the rain, and in other means, as in the fertility of the earth, to contemplate the manifold riches which God brings forth from His treasures. And when He declares that He will bless the work of our hands, hence, too, let us learn that we can attain nothing by our industry and hardest labors, except in so far as God vouchsafes us good success; and that all our efforts without His secret blessing are mere useless fatigue. For the figure which Paul uses in reference to the spiritual culture of the Church, is taken from nature itself:

“Neither is he that planteth anything, neither he that watereth, but God that giveth the increase.” (1Co 3:7.)

God would not, indeed, have 217 us lie idle, and therefore He requires the labor of our hands, but He would have the fruit of our labors attributed to Himself.

After having spoken of the whole Law, and forbidden that they should turn aside to the right or the left, He adverts to the principal point, i. e. , that they should not revolt to strange gods. Wherefore, the sum comes to this, that, in order that God may continue to shew us the favor which He has begun towards us, we ought on our sides to be altogether submissive to His rule. This indeed He demands of us by His word, and enables us to perform it by the power of His Spirit; not, it is true, fully to do our duty, but to strive to reach the goal; and, whereas we are far from attaining perfection, His indulgence supplies what is wanting in us.

Here, however, a difficult question arises, — If all prosperity proceeds from the peculiar blessing which God vouchsafes to His servants, whence is it that many of His despisers have children, easy and happy circumstances, abundance of the fruits of fire earth, enjoyment and luxury, honors and power? I answer, that the happy condition of life, which He assigns to His servants, does not prevent Him from diffusing His bounty promiscuously over the whole human race. He is truly called in Psa 36:6, the preserver of “man and beast.” It is said elsewhere, 218 that His mercy is extended over all His creatures, (Psa 145:17;) and justly does Christ exalt His unbounded goodness, in that “He maketh his sun to rise on the evil and on the good.” (Mat 5:45.) But equally true is the exclamation of the Prophet;

“Oh, how great is thy goodness, which thou hast laid up
for them that fear thee!” (Psa 31:19.)

For since all without exception enjoy all the supports of life, God’s goodness, which thus contends with the wickedness of men, shines forth universally even towards the ungodly, so that He does not cease to cherish and preserve those whom He has created, although they be unworthy. He therefore does good to the ungodly, because He is their Creator; besides, in order to keep the minds of believers in suspense in expectation of the final judgment, He now suffers many things to be confusedly mixed together, and hides His judgment in the darkness of night, as it were, or at least under clouds; whilst He also so tempers His patience towards the reprobate, as that, in this confusion of which I have spoken, some signs of His anger and favor are manifested. Thus, although the government of the world is not yet reduced to a perfect rule, still God shews by it that He is both the avenger of sins and the rewarder of righteousness, and some sparks are seen through the darkness; whilst the faithful, although they do not attain to the full enjoyment of the blessing promised them, nevertheless taste of it as far as is expedient. But to the ungodly, although they abound with all sorts of good things, not a single drop of God’s goodness is dispensed; for unless a sense of God’s paternal favor is awakened by His blessing, the blessing itself ceases to exist; nay, the more they gorge themselves, they attain to a deadly fatness; and God purposely lifts them up, that He may cast them down more heavily from their high estate. In a word, they are fed, as the Prophet says, 219 “unto the day of slaughter.”

It must be concluded, therefore, that the blessings which God here promises to His servants are seasoned by Him with spiritual salt, lest they should be tasteless; whilst the reprobate, who are destitute of a sense of His grace, are also deprived altogether of all His blessings. There still, however, remains a difficulty, because the felicity here spoken of does not always, nor equally fall to the lot of God’s servants; nay, even under the Law they were sharply tried by many troubles and adversities. I answer, that since none, not even the most holy, was ever a perfect keeper of the Law, since none was ever free from all transgression, it is no cause of surprise that they only partially enjoyed the promised blessings; inasmuch as they were not fit recipients ( capaces) of their fullness; and, if it sometimes happens that they are chastised more severely than the ungodly, neither in this is there any absurdity, since God usually begins His judgment at His own house. (Isa 10:12; 1Pe 4:17.) Still, even in this confusion we see what the Prophet teaches, that the righteous are never forsaken, (Psa 37:25,) and that they are like green and fruitful olive-trees in the courts of the Lord, (Psa 52:8,) whilst the ungodly, although for a season they may be exalted like cedars of Lebanon, yet are plucked up in a moment by the roots, so that no trace of them remains.

Calvin: Deu 28:15 - -- 15.But it shall come to pass, if thou wilt not hearken. This list of curses is longer than the previous one which was proclaimed from Mount Sinai, un...

15.But it shall come to pass, if thou wilt not hearken. This list of curses is longer than the previous one which was proclaimed from Mount Sinai, undoubtedly because the Spirit of God foresaw that the sluggishness of the people had need of sharper stimulants. If they had been only moderately teachable, what they had already heard would have been even more than sufficient to alarm them; but now God redoubles His threatenings against them in their inertness and forgetfulness, that they might not only be compelled to fear, but also aroused by constant reminding. For this reason, He declares that they should be “cursed in the city and in the field,” i e. , at home and abroad, in the house or out of the house; and again, that their food should be cursed in the seed and in the meal. Afterwards, He enumerates three kinds of fruit in which they should be cursed, viz., their own offspring, the produce of the soil, and the young of their animals; for all these Scripture embraces in the word fruit, as sufficiently appears from this passage.

Calvin: Deu 28:19 - -- 19.Cursed shalt thou be when thou comest in. God here pronounces that all their undertakings should meet with ill success; for going out and coming i...

19.Cursed shalt thou be when thou comest in. God here pronounces that all their undertakings should meet with ill success; for going out and coming in signifies their various actions, and the whole course of their life; and this is more clearly expressed in the next verse, where He denounces against them misfortune in all their affairs, in that God would confound and mar whatever they should undertake. The words 237 מהומה , mehumah, and מגערת , migegnereth, are indeed variously explained. Still the sum comes to this, that God would be against them, so as to discomfit and overthrow all their counsels and labors. Hence we are taught that all men’s endeavors are useless and vain, unless they seek for success from God.

Calvin: Deu 28:21 - -- 21.The Lord shall make the pestilence cleave unto thee. He now proceeds to diseases which are as it were the lictors of God; and finally, His executi...

21.The Lord shall make the pestilence cleave unto thee. He now proceeds to diseases which are as it were the lictors of God; and finally, His executioners, if men pertinaciously continue in their ungodliness. He does not, therefore, merely declare that He will send the pestilence, but that He will cause it to cleave to them, and when it shall have once laid hold of them, that it shall be impossible to remove it. It might also be translated, The Lord shall cause that the pestilence should seize thee; but with the same meaning, viz., that the pestilence should be fixed, or glued ( agglutinatam) upon them, until it should consume them in the Holy Land itself. He adds phthisis, or consumption, which disease emaciates the body, and gradually exhausts its juices. It is superfluous to speak particularly of the other diseases, only let us learn that, whilst the multitude of diseases is almost innumerable, they are all so many ministers ( satellites) prepared to execute God’s vengeance. It is true, indeed, that diseases are contracted in various ways, and especially by intemperance; still, this does not prevent God from smiting the transgressors of the Law with them, although no natural cause may be apparent. He adds war, which He designates by the name of “the sword,” but of this curse He will soon speak more fully.

He then unfolds in more distinct detail what He had before adverted to with respect to the curse on the produce of the land. And, first, He names two blights of the corn, which destroy it just as it is ripening, and snatch the bread, as it were, out of men’s mouths; for dryness 238 is not here used for all want of moisture in the soil, but for that emptying of the ears, which is caused by the east wind. Mildew occurs from the sudden heat of the sun, if it strikes upon the corn when moistened with cold dew. Now, although these evils arise from natural causes, still God, the Author of nature, in His supreme power, so controls the atmosphere, that its unwholesomeness is His undoubted scourge. 239

Calvin: Deu 28:23 - -- 23.And thy heaven that is over thy head. He enumerates other causes of barrenness, and especially drought. Often does God by the Prophets, desirous o...

23.And thy heaven that is over thy head. He enumerates other causes of barrenness, and especially drought. Often does God by the Prophets, desirous of giving a token of His favor towards the people, promise them the rain of autumn and of spring: the one immediately following the sowing, the other giving growth to the fruits before they begin to ripen; whilst in many passages He also threatens that it should be withheld. To this refers what He now says, that the heavens shall be of brass, and the earth of iron, because neither shall the moisture descend from heaven to fertilize the earth, whilst the earth, bound up and hardened, shall have no juice or dampness in order to production. Whence we gather, that not even a drop of rain falls to the earth except distilled by God, and that whenever it rains, the earth is irrigated as if by His hand. It must, however, be observed, as we have seen before, that the land of Canaan was not like Egypt, which was watered by the care and industry of man, but fertilized by the bounty of heaven. Thus God, by the Prophet, marks the degrees which are worthy of observation, viz., that when He is reconciled to His people, He will “hear the heavens, and they shall hear the earth; and the earth shall hear the corn, and the wine, and the oil;” so that, finally, all these things shall hear starving men. 240 (Hos 2:21.)

It is not superfluous that He should expressly speak of the “heaven over our head,” and the earth that is “under our feet,” for He thus indicates that His weapons are prepared both above and below to execute His vengeance, so as to assail the people on all sides. Another Prophet confirms this, although only in a brief allusion:

“Therefore the heaven over you is stayed from dew, and the earth is stayed from her fruit; and I called for a drought,” etc. (Hag 1:10.)

Another mode of expression is then used to make the same thing more sure, viz., that the rain should be turned into “powder and dust;” still this clause may be explained in two ways, either that the rain shall no more fertilize the ground than as if it were ashes; or that, instead of rain, dust should fall, as though God would dry up the rich soil by scattering ashes on it.

Calvin: Deu 28:25 - -- 25.The Lord shall cause thee to be smitten before thine enemies. What He had briefly threatened in His mention of “the sword,” He now more fully ...

25.The Lord shall cause thee to be smitten before thine enemies. What He had briefly threatened in His mention of “the sword,” He now more fully pursues, that they should be given up to the will of their enemies, so as to be indiscriminately slaughtered. We have previously seen that those who execute punishment on the transgressors of the Law, are stirred up and armed by the just judgment of God; Moses does not now touch on that point, but merely declares that the enemies of the people should be their conquerors, should cruelly entreat them and pursue them in their flight. Moreover, in order that God’s judgment might be more conspicuous, He says, that when they have gone out to battle by one way, i e. , with their army in regular order, they should return by seven ways, because, in the confusion of their flight, they should be dispersed in all directions. Hence we gather that the bravery of men is in God’s power, so that He can make cowards of the boldest whenever He so pleases. And we must bear in mind what we shall see elsewhere, “How should one chase a thousand, and two put ten thousand to flight, except God had sold them and had shut them up” under their hand? (Deu 32:30.) And for this reason God calls Himself the God of hosts, in order that believers may live securely under His guardianship; whilst the wicked, and the despisers of the Law, should dread the slightest motion when He is wroth with them.

What follows, that they should be “for 241 a removing in all the kingdoms of the earth,” some take to mean that they should be a laughing-stock; because we usually shake or move our heads by way of insult; but others explain it, that they should be wanderers and vagabonds in unknown places of exile. The first exposition is the one I prefer. In Ezekiel 242 (Eze 23:46,) it is used for a tumultuous rout; nor am I indisposed to understand it in this way, that whatever nations shall assail them, they should be shaken by their slightest attacks.

Calvin: Deu 28:26 - -- 26.And thy carcase shall be meat. The punishment is here doubled by the disgrace which is added to death; for it is ignominious to be deprived of bur...

26.And thy carcase shall be meat. The punishment is here doubled by the disgrace which is added to death; for it is ignominious to be deprived of burial, and justly reckoned amongst the curses of God; whilst it is a sign of His paternal favor that we should be distinguished from the brutes, inasmuch as the rites of burial arouse us to the hope of resurrection and everlasting life. Wherefore, on the contrary, God deprives of burial those whom He curses. But as we have said that punishments affecting the body are common to the pious and the reprobate, so also we must think of being deprived of sepulture, since it sometimes happens that the reprobate are honorably buried, as Christ relates of the luxurious Dives, (Luk 16:22,) whilst the bodies of the pious are ignominiously cast a prey for birds and beasts; as the Prophet complains in Psa 79:2. Still such an interchange does not prevent God from avenging the contempt of His Law by this mode of punishment, as by pestilence, famine, or sword.

Calvin: Deu 28:27 - -- 27.The Lord will smite thee with the botch of Egypt. Whether you understand this passage of the extraordinary plagues which God inflicted on the Egyp...

27.The Lord will smite thee with the botch of Egypt. Whether you understand this passage of the extraordinary plagues which God inflicted on the Egyptians at the time of His people’s deliverance, or of the ordinary diseases which had before prevailed among them, though the latter is more probable, still Moses signifies, that whilst the Egyptians were smitten with these plagues, God’s people escaped them, in order that this distinction might more clearly represent His favor. For it could not happen naturally that in the same place the diseases, from which the Israelites were free, should afflict the Egyptians alone. God therefore threatens, that if they should despise His Law, He would deal with them as they had seen Him deal with heathen nations. And assuredly, since God then chose to multiply His people miraculously, it can be by no means doubted but that He wonderfully privileged them by the bestowment of health and rigor. It is doubtful whether by diseases of the fundament He signifies hemorrhoids or prolapsus, or some other secret disease, such as that which attacked the Philistines when they captured the ark of the covenant. (1Sa 5:6.) He subjoins other diseases, in which there appear special marks of God’s wrath; for although they sometimes affect the children of God also, still I have shewn elsewhere that the same punishments are so dealt out to them respectively, that they widely differ from each other. When Job was smitten with terrible ulcers, so as to become corrupt, he seemed for a time to present the marks of a reprobate person; but what in that holy man was an exercise of patience, is in the transgressors of the Law the just reward of their crimes by the curse of God.

Calvin: Deu 28:28 - -- 28.The Lord shall smite thee with madness and blindness. This punishment is very often referred to by the Prophets, when God is said to smite the wic...

28.The Lord shall smite thee with madness and blindness. This punishment is very often referred to by the Prophets, when God is said to smite the wicked with a spirit 243 of giddiness and madness, to make them drunk with astonishment. Now, whatever God declares respecting this blindness or fury of mind, has a wide application; for hence it arises that the wicked rush willfully into vile lusts, shudder at no crime, are hurried headlong to destruction, are utterly deprived of discretion, throw away the remedies which are in their hands; and although 244 the carnal sense is not greatly disturbed by this form of vengeance, still it is much more severe and awful than any bodily disease. The Poets imagined that wicked men were agitated and terrified by the furies, because experience taught them that it was not without a secret impulse from God that they became so senseless, when, their minds being affected, they were like beasts in the shape of men. Even heathens, then, perceived that when the wicked are given over to a reprobate mind, God thus manifests Himself as the just Avenger of their crimes. And so it is in all cases of “astonishment;” for it is plain that those who are thus stupified by their miseries, are prostrated by the hand of God.

Calvin: Deu 28:30 - -- 30.Thou shalt betroth a wife, and another man. He here denounces that all they possessed should be rifled and plundered by their enemies. He, however...

30.Thou shalt betroth a wife, and another man. He here denounces that all they possessed should be rifled and plundered by their enemies. He, however, puts the most painful thing of all in the first place, viz., that they shall be despoiled of their wives, and magnifies the enormity of the evil, by saying, that not only shall the wife be torn from her husband’s bosom, but that the betrothed virgin shall be defiled. The same denunciation is extended to their houses and vineyards. It is grievous indeed to see the fruit of our labors seized on by our enemies before we have been permitted to enjoy them; since the frustration of our hope does not slightly increase our pain. He then passes on to their flocks and their herds: then to their children, and in their case heightens the calamity, in that their sons and their daughters should be taken from them in their very sight, so that their eyes should fail with grief, and their hands, as if dead, should be unable to afford them assistance. For two reasons He says that the robbers, who shall strip them of everything, should be unknown to them; both because they might expect less consideration and kindness from strangers and barbarians than from neighbors; and also that the Jews might be alarmed by this threat, so as not to suppose that they only had to deal with neighboring nations; inasmuch as it was in God’s power to fetch nations from afar. Finally, He adds that there shall be no end to their affliction, until the magnitude of their calamities 245 shall stupify them.

Calvin: Deu 28:35 - -- 35.The Lord shall smite thee in the knees. Since death is common to the whole human race, they must needs also be all subject to disease; nor is it a...

35.The Lord shall smite thee in the knees. Since death is common to the whole human race, they must needs also be all subject to disease; nor is it a matter of surprise that the whole posterity of Adam, which is infected with the taint of sin, should so be liable to many afflictions, which are the wages of sin. But, since the offenses of all are not alike, God also maintains a just proportion in the execution of His various punishments; thus, in this passage He does not speak only of common maladies, but of those whereby He openly shews His vengeance against the transgressors of the Law; of which sort are incurable diseases.

Calvin: Deu 28:36 - -- 36.The Lord shall bring thee, and thy king. The fulfillment of this prophecy at length taught the Jews, though too late, that it was no empty threat,...

36.The Lord shall bring thee, and thy king. The fulfillment of this prophecy at length taught the Jews, though too late, that it was no empty threat, merely for the purpose of frightening them; and this also applies to the other predictions. For, on account of the great distance from them, the Jews would never have supposed that the Assyrians and Chaldeans were God’s scourges, as they actually found them to be; because they placed no faith in the words of Moses. Much less credible was it to them that the king, whom they had appointed, should be dragged as a prisoner to distant countries. And surely this was a very sad and formidable punishment, since all their safety depended on the stability of their kingly government. Thus Jeremiah magnifies this evil above all others, that the Christ of God, who was the breath of the Church, and under whose shadow they hoped to be everywhere safe, should be taken. 246 (Lam 4:20.) And this was fulfilled in the case of Jeconiah, as well as in that of Jehoiachin and Zedekiah. Let us, therefore, learn not to measure God’s judgments by our own reason, but to tremble at them, although they are hidden from us. All aggravation of their captivity is also added, i e. , that they should be oppressed by such tyranny as to be compelled to serve wood and stone. Dull and stupid as they were, still they ought to have retained their abomination of such gross wickedness. Hence it might be gathered that they would not be reduced to such a necessity except by the terrible vengeance of God. For although they had been attracted by the superstitions of the Gentiles, so as eagerly to run after them, still, after they were deprived of the worship of God, and had undergone the yoke of the wretched and ungodly servitude which was imposed on them, the foulness of idolatry must have been more fully understood. There is also an antithesis implied in these words, viz., that because they had refused to submit themselves to the true God, and to obey His Law, they should become the slaves of idols.

Calvin: Deu 28:37 - -- 37.And thou shalt become an astonishment. The climax of their miseries is here added, that they should be so far from receiving consolation from men,...

37.And thou shalt become an astonishment. The climax of their miseries is here added, that they should be so far from receiving consolation from men, that on every side their misery should meet with taunts and insults; for nothing more bitterly wounds the wretched than this indignity of being harassed by reproaches and sarcasms; and thus to be a laughing-stock and byword to all nations, is a dreadful infliction. Again, there is an implied antithesis between the ignominy to which God condemns His ungrateful people, and the extraordinary dignity with which He had honored them, so that they should be illustrious before the whole world. Hence the Prophets have often imitated this mode of expression; I will not quote the instances of it which everywhere occur.

Calvin: Deu 28:38 - -- 38.Thou shalt carry much seed out into the field. He again makes mention of the scarcity of wine, of wheat, and all sorts of corn; but He assigns dif...

38.Thou shalt carry much seed out into the field. He again makes mention of the scarcity of wine, of wheat, and all sorts of corn; but He assigns different causes for it. He proclaims that the harvest shall be scanty, notwithstanding an abundant sowing, because the locust shall consume the seed; that the vintage shall be poor, nay, almost nothing, because the worms shall devour the bunches; that the oil produced should be little, because the olives should wither on the trees and fall of themselves. Thus He admonishes them that He has at hand innumerable ministers ( satellites) wherewith to destroy by famine the transgressors of His Law. Thus, whenever we see beetles, and locusts, and other insects attacking the fruits, we should remember that God, as it were, puts forth His arm to take away the food which He had given: thus Joel reminds us, that when the locust eats that which the palmer-worm hath left, and another insect that which the locust hath left, the curse of God is sufficiently conspicuous. 247 (Joe 1:4.) Philosophers discover the reason why more of these little creatures are generated in one year than another; but we must remember the teaching of Moses, that they never trouble us except by God’s command. For if we were submissive to God, as we ought to be, such a prodigy would never happen as that vile and filthy insects should devour the fruits of the earth which He Himself has provided for the sustenance of His children.

Calvin: Deu 28:43 - -- 43.The stranger that is within thee shall get up above thee. This also was no doubtful mark of God’s wrath, that the sojourners who dwelt in the la...

43.The stranger that is within thee shall get up above thee. This also was no doubtful mark of God’s wrath, that the sojourners who dwelt in the land of Canaan by sufferance should in a manner become its masters; for we know how those who are in debt are under the power of their creditors. In fact, what Solomon says is found to be true, that

“the rich ruleth over the poor, and the borrower is servant
to the lender.” (Pro 22:7.)

The Israelites, therefore, must have felt that God was contrary to them, when they were suppliants to their own guests, especially since He had promised that He would so enrich them that they should lend to others. This revolution of affairs, then, plainly convinced them of their iniquities. Meanwhile, it must be observed that poverty as well as wealth is in God’s hands, and that whilst the latter is a proof of God’s favour the former is reckoned amongst His curses; still, however, in such a manner that God often chastises His own children with want, or proves and exercises their patience without ceasing to be their Father, whilst he bestows abundance upon the reprobate, wherewith they may gorge themselves to their own destruction. God’s blessing, however, shines forth in the elect, as far as it is expedient for them; nor is it said in vain in the Psalm, “Wealth and riches are in the house (of the just,”) in order that he may lend and be bountiful. (Psa 112:3.)

Calvin: Deu 28:45 - -- 45.Moreover, all these curses shall come upon thee. He not only confirms what he has already said, but takes away all hope of alleviation, since God...

45.Moreover, all these curses shall come upon thee. He not only confirms what he has already said, but takes away all hope of alleviation, since God’s scourges shall not cease until they have repented. He declares that all the curses shall come upon them; for although they are not always congregated into a single band, still it is true that God pays the wages of the transgressors of His Law with this multitude of miseries which Moses has recounted. By the word pursue, he takes away all hope of escape, whilst to overtake is equivalent to laying hold of them tenaciously, till, as it is further said, they be destroyed. The sum is, that the ungodly by their subterfuges only bring it to pass that they accumulate upon themselves heavier punishments, which will never cease to afflict them until they are destroyed by them. For this reason, he says that they shall be “for a sign and a wonder,” i e. , that they shall awaken astonishment in all men; for those who are but little moved by the common and ordinary judgments of God, are compelled, whether they will or no, to give attention to these prodigies. Thus, notable punishments, and such as are worthy of special observation, are “for a sign and a wonder.”

Their ingratitude is also reproved as well as their contempt of the Law, because they served not God “with joyfulness and gladness of heart,” when He had been so abundantly generous to them; for it is the fault of a corrupt and malignant nature, that it should not be possible to bring it to serve God joyfully, when He invites us by His liberality. But Moses takes it for granted that, since God will prevent the Israelites with His favor, before He proceeds to inflict punishments upon them, they will be guilty of this brutal sin, not to allow themselves to be liberally sustained by Him.

Calvin: Deu 28:49 - -- 49.The Lord shall bring a nation against them from far. He enforces the same threatenings in different words, viz., that unknown and barbarous enemie...

49.The Lord shall bring a nation against them from far. He enforces the same threatenings in different words, viz., that unknown and barbarous enemies should come, who shall attack them with great impetuosity and violence. And still further to aggravate their cruelty, He says that their language shall be a strange one; for, when there can be no oral communication, there is no room for entreaties, which sometimes awaken the most savage to mercy. But Jeremiah shews that this was fulfilled in the case of the Chaldeans;

“Lo, I will bring a nation upon you from far, O house of Israel; it is a mighty nation, a nation whose language thou howest not, neither understandest what they say.” (Jer 5:15.)

On the other hand, when Isaiah promises them deliverance, he mentions this among the chief of their blessings, that the Jews should “not see a fierce people,” that they should not hear

“a people of deeper speech than they could perceive, of a stammering tongue 248 that they could not understand.” (Isa 33:19.)

For, as I have elsewhere said, the Prophets were careful to take their form of expression from Moses, lest the Jews should, according to their custom, proudly despise the threats which God had interwoven with His Law.

Lest the distance of their countries should lull them into security, He says that they should be like eagles in swiftness, so as suddenly to overwhelm them, just as God often compares the ministers of His wrath to the whirlwind and the storm. Jeremiah has also imitated this similitude, where he declares that the slaughter which the Jews in their false imagination had supposed to be far away from them, should come suddenly upon them. (Jer 4:13.)

Moses adds, that this nation shall be “strong of face, 249 which shall not regard the person of the old, nor shew favor to the young,” whereby he signifies their extreme ferocity. I have already expounded what follows respecting their rapine and plunder.

Calvin: Deu 28:52 - -- 52.And he shall besiege thee in thy gates. He overthrows every ground of false confidence. The number of their towns inspired them with courage, beca...

52.And he shall besiege thee in thy gates. He overthrows every ground of false confidence. The number of their towns inspired them with courage, because they never would have supposed that their enemies would undergo so much fatigue as not to cease from fighting till they were all taken. He therefore includes all their towns, in reliance upon whose multitude they despised hostile aggression. He adds, that in vain they trust in their high and fortified walls, which will be either overthrown by military engines, or shall voluntarily surrender from the length of their besiegal; for the passage may be explained in both ways, either that the enemies shall overthrow and lay prostrate all their fortresses, or that by their perseverance they shall pass over the walls however high. It seems to me that the length of the siege as well as their valiant fighting is indicated. The repetition which follows magnifies the evil, viz., that they shall be thus sorely pressed in their own land given them by God; for the very associations of the place only increased the indignity.

Defender: Deu 28:37 - -- Here is another prophecy dealing with Israel remarkably fulfilled over a thousand years later. Not only was it continuously fulfilled during the almos...

Here is another prophecy dealing with Israel remarkably fulfilled over a thousand years later. Not only was it continuously fulfilled during the almost 1900 years when the people of Israel had no homeland, but even with the establishment of the nation of Israel in 1948, Israel continues to be "an astonishment, a proverb, and a byword among all nations," and most of its people, worldwide, continue to believe in the evolutionary "gods" of nature."

TSK: Deu 28:1 - -- If thou shalt : Deu 11:13, Deu 15:5, Deu 27:1; Exo 15:26; Lev 26:3-13; Psa 106:3, Psa 111:10; Isa 1:19; Isa 3:10, Isa 55:2, Isa 55:3; Jer 11:4, Jer 12...

TSK: Deu 28:2 - -- come on thee : Deu 28:15, Deu 28:45; Zec 1:6; 1Ti 4:8

come on thee : Deu 28:15, Deu 28:45; Zec 1:6; 1Ti 4:8

TSK: Deu 28:3 - -- in the city : Psa 107:36, Psa 107:37, Psa 128:1-5, Psa 144:12-15; Isa 65:21-23; Zec 8:3-5 in the field : Gen 26:12, Gen 39:5; Amo 9:13, Amo 9:14; Hag ...

TSK: Deu 28:4 - -- Deu 28:11, Deu 7:13; Gen 22:17, Gen 49:25; Lev 26:9; Psa 107:38, Psa 127:3, Psa 128:3; Pro 10:22; Pro 13:22, Pro 20:7; 1Ti 4:8

TSK: Deu 28:5 - -- thy basket : By basket, may be understood the olive-gathering and vintage, in which it was employed; and by the store or remainder, all laid up for fu...

thy basket : By basket, may be understood the olive-gathering and vintage, in which it was employed; and by the store or remainder, all laid up for future use, or prepared for present consumption.

store : or, dough, or kneading troughs, Deu 28:5

TSK: Deu 28:6 - -- Deu 31:2; Num 27:17; 2Sa 3:25; 2Ch 1:10; Psa 121:8

TSK: Deu 28:7 - -- shall cause : Deu 28:25, Deu 32:30; Lev 26:7, Lev 26:8; 2Sa 22:38-41; Psa 89:23 flee before : Jos 8:22, Jos 10:10, Jos 10:11, Jos 10:42; 1Sa 7:3, 1Sa ...

TSK: Deu 28:8 - -- command : Lev 25:21; Psa 42:8, Psa 44:4, Psa 133:3 storehouses : or, barns, Lev 26:4, Lev 26:5, Lev 26:10; 2Ki 6:27; Psa 144:13; Pro 3:9, Pro 3:10; Ha...

TSK: Deu 28:9 - -- establish : Deu 7:6, Deu 26:18, Deu 26:19, Deu 29:13; Gen 17:7; Exo 19:5, Exo 19:6; Psa 87:5; Isa 1:26, Isa 62:12; 2Th 3:3; Tit 2:14; 1Pe 2:9-11, 1Pe ...

TSK: Deu 28:10 - -- And all : Mal 3:12 called : Num 6:27; 2Ch 7:14; Isa 63:19; Dan 9:18, Dan 9:19 and they shall : Deu 4:6-8, Deu 11:25; Exo 12:33, Exo 14:25; Jos 5:1; 1S...

TSK: Deu 28:11 - -- plenteous : Deu 28:4, Deu 30:9; Lev 26:9; Pro 10:22 in goods : or, for good body : Heb. belly, Job 19:17; Psa 132:11 *marg.

plenteous : Deu 28:4, Deu 30:9; Lev 26:9; Pro 10:22

in goods : or, for good

body : Heb. belly, Job 19:17; Psa 132:11 *marg.

TSK: Deu 28:12 - -- open : Deu 11:14; Lev 26:4; Job 38:22; Psa 65:9-13, Psa 135:7; Joe 2:23, Joe 2:24 to bless all : Deu 14:29, Deu 15:10 lend : Deu 28:44, Deu 15:6; Pro ...

TSK: Deu 28:13 - -- the head : Num 24:18, Num 24:19; Isa 9:14, Isa 9:15 if that thou : Deu 28:1, Deu 4:6-9; Phi 1:27

TSK: Deu 28:14 - -- thou shalt : Deu 5:32, Deu 11:16, Deu 11:26-28; Jos 23:6; 2Ki 22:2; Pro 4:26, Pro 4:27 the right : Isa 30:21

TSK: Deu 28:15 - -- if thou wilt : Lev. 26:14-46; Lam 2:17; Dan 9:11-13; Mal 2:2; Rom 2:8, Rom 2:9 all these curses : The same variety of expression is used in these terr...

if thou wilt : Lev. 26:14-46; Lam 2:17; Dan 9:11-13; Mal 2:2; Rom 2:8, Rom 2:9

all these curses : The same variety of expression is used in these terrible curses, as in the preceding blessings, to intimate every kind of prosperity or adversity, personal, relative, and public. Consulting the marginal references will generally lead to the best exposition of the terms employed; and will frequently point out the fulfilment of the promises and threatenings. Deu 28:2, Deu 27:15-26, Deu 29:20; Isa 3:11; Gal 3:10

TSK: Deu 28:16 - -- in the city : Deu 28:3-14; Pro 3:33; Isa 24:6-12, Isa 43:28; Jer 9:11, Jer 26:6, Jer 44:22; Lam 1:1; Lam 2:11-22, Lam 4:1-13; Mal 2:2, Mal 4:6 in the ...

TSK: Deu 28:17 - -- Deu 28:5; Psa 69:22; Pro 1:32; Hag 1:6; Zec 5:3, Zec 5:4; Mal 2:2; Luk 16:25

TSK: Deu 28:18 - -- the fruit of thy body : Deu 28:4, Deu 5:9; Job 18:16-19; Psa 109:9-15; Lam 2:11, Lam 2:12, Lam 2:20; Hos 9:11-14; Mal 2:3; Luk 23:29, Luk 23:30 thy la...

TSK: Deu 28:19 - -- Deu 28:6; Jdg 5:6, Jdg 5:7; 2Ch 15:5

TSK: Deu 28:20 - -- send : Psa 7:11; Mal 2:2 vexation : 1Sa 14:20; Psa 80:4-16; Isa 28:19, Isa 30:17, Isa 51:20, Isa 66:15; Zec 14:12, Zec 14:13; Joh 3:36; 1Th 2:16 for t...

send : Psa 7:11; Mal 2:2

vexation : 1Sa 14:20; Psa 80:4-16; Isa 28:19, Isa 30:17, Isa 51:20, Isa 66:15; Zec 14:12, Zec 14:13; Joh 3:36; 1Th 2:16

for to do : Heb. which thou wouldest do

until thou be : Deu 4:26; Lev 26:31-33, Lev 26:38; Jos 23:16

TSK: Deu 28:21 - -- Exo 5:3; Lev 26:25; Num 14:12, Num 16:46-49, Num 25:9; 2Sa 24:15; Jer 15:2, Jer 16:4; Jer 21:6, Jer 21:7, Jer 24:10; Mat 26:7

TSK: Deu 28:22 - -- a consumption : Lev 26:16; 2Ch 6:28; Jer 14:12 sword : or, drought blasting : 1Ki 8:37; Amo 4:9; Hag 2:17

a consumption : Lev 26:16; 2Ch 6:28; Jer 14:12

sword : or, drought

blasting : 1Ki 8:37; Amo 4:9; Hag 2:17

TSK: Deu 28:23 - -- The language here is remarkable: ""Thy heaven;""that part of the atmosphere which was over Judea, instead of being replenished with aqueous vapours, ...

The language here is remarkable: ""Thy heaven;""that part of the atmosphere which was over Judea, instead of being replenished with aqueous vapours, should become, with respect to moisture, like brass, and consequently their land would become as hard as iron, and wholly incapable of cultivation; while the clouds might give showers in abundance, and the earth be moist and fruitful in other regions.

Lev 26:19; 1Ki 17:1, 1Ki 18:2; Jer 14:1-6; Amo 4:7

TSK: Deu 28:24 - -- make the rain : This was a natural consequence of their heaven’ s being brass, or yielding no rain; for the surface of the earth being reduced to...

make the rain : This was a natural consequence of their heaven’ s being brass, or yielding no rain; for the surface of the earth being reduced to powder, and frequently taken up by strong winds, would fall down in showers instead of rain. These showers of sand frequently, in the East, bury whole caravans. Deu 28:12; Gen 19:24; Job 18:15-21; Isa 5:24; Amo 4:11

TSK: Deu 28:25 - -- cause thee : Deu 28:7, Deu 32:30; Lev 26:17, Lev 26:36, Lev 26:37; Isa 30:17 removed : Heb. for a removing, Jer 15:2-9, Jer 24:9, Jer 29:18, Jer 34:17...

TSK: Deu 28:26 - -- 1Sa 17:44-46; Psa 79:1-3; Isa 34:3; Jer 7:33, Jer 8:1, Jer 16:4, Jer 19:7, Jer 34:20; Eze 39:17-20

TSK: Deu 28:27 - -- the botch : Deu 28:35; Exo 9:9, Exo 9:11, Exo 15:26 emerods : 1Sa 5:6, 1Sa 5:9, 1Sa 5:12; Psa 78:66 scab : Lev 13:2-8, Lev 21:20; Isa 3:17

TSK: Deu 28:28 - -- 1Sa 16:14; Psa 60:3; Isa 6:9, Isa 6:10, Isa 19:11-17, Isa 43:19; Jer 4:9; Eze 4:17; Luk 21:25, Luk 21:26; Act 13:41; 2Th 2:9-11

TSK: Deu 28:29 - -- grope : Job 5:14, Job 12:25; Psa 69:23, Psa 69:24; Isa 59:10; Lam 5:17; Zep 1:17; Rom 11:7-10, Rom 11:25; 2Co 4:3, 2Co 4:4 thou shalt be : Jdg 3:14, J...

TSK: Deu 28:30 - -- betroth : Deu 20:6, Deu 20:7; Job 31:10; Jer 8:10; Hos 4:2 build : Job 3:18; Isa 5:9, Isa 5:10, Isa 65:21, Isa 65:22; Jer 12:13; Lam 5:2; Amo 5:11; Mi...

betroth : Deu 20:6, Deu 20:7; Job 31:10; Jer 8:10; Hos 4:2

build : Job 3:18; Isa 5:9, Isa 5:10, Isa 65:21, Isa 65:22; Jer 12:13; Lam 5:2; Amo 5:11; Mic 6:15; Zep 1:13

gather : Heb. profane, or, use it as common meat, Deu 20:6 *marg.

TSK: Deu 28:31 - -- ox : Jdg 6:1; Job 1:14, Job 1:15 be restored to thee : Heb. return to thee

ox : Jdg 6:1; Job 1:14, Job 1:15

be restored to thee : Heb. return to thee

TSK: Deu 28:32 - -- sons : In several countries, particularly in Spain and Portugal, the children of the Jews have been taken from them, by order of the government, to be...

sons : In several countries, particularly in Spain and Portugal, the children of the Jews have been taken from them, by order of the government, to be educated in the Popish faith. Deu 28:18, Deu 28:41; Num 21:29; 2Ch 29:9; Neh 5:2-5; Jer 15:7-9, Jer 16:2-4; Eze 24:25; Joe 3:6; Amo 5:27; Mic 4:10

fail : Deu 28:65; Job 11:20, Job 17:5; Psa 69:3, Psa 119:82, Psa 119:123; Isa 38:14; Lam 2:11, Lam 4:17; Lam 5:17

TSK: Deu 28:33 - -- The fruit : Deu 28:30, Deu 28:51; Lev 26:16; Neh 9:36, Neh 9:37; Isa 1:7; Jer 5:17, Jer 8:16 thou shalt be : Deu 28:29; Jer 4:17

TSK: Deu 28:34 - -- Deu 28:28, Deu 28:68; Isa 33:14; Jer 25:15, Jer 25:16; Rev 16:10, Rev 16:11

TSK: Deu 28:35 - -- botch : Deu 28:27; Job 2:6, Job 2:7; Isa 1:6, Isa 3:17, Isa 3:24

TSK: Deu 28:36 - -- bring thee : 2Ki 17:4-6, 2Ki 24:12-15, 2Ki 25:6, 2Ki 25:7, 2Ki 25:11; 2Ch 33:11, 2Ch 36:6, 2Ch 36:17, 2Ch 36:20; Isa 39:7; Jer 22:11, Jer 22:12, Jer 2...

bring thee : 2Ki 17:4-6, 2Ki 24:12-15, 2Ki 25:6, 2Ki 25:7, 2Ki 25:11; 2Ch 33:11, 2Ch 36:6, 2Ch 36:17, 2Ch 36:20; Isa 39:7; Jer 22:11, Jer 22:12, Jer 22:24-27, Jer 24:8-10, Jer 39:5-7, Jer 52:8-11; Lam 4:20; Eze 12:12, Eze 12:13

there shalt thou : The Israelites, who were carried captive by the Assyrians, and many of the Jews in Chaldea, were finally incorporated with the nations among whom they lived, and were given up to their idolatry. It is probable, however, that this refers to Jews being compelled, in Popish countries, to conceal their religion, and profess that of the Romish church Deu 28:64, Deu 4:28; Jer 16:13; Eze 20:32, Eze 20:33, Eze 20:39

TSK: Deu 28:37 - -- become : Deu 28:28, Deu 29:22-28; 1Ki 9:7, 1Ki 9:8; 2Ch 7:20; Psa 44:13, Psa 44:14; Jer 24:9, Jer 25:9; Joe 2:17 *marg. Zec 8:13 a proverb : The name ...

become : Deu 28:28, Deu 29:22-28; 1Ki 9:7, 1Ki 9:8; 2Ch 7:20; Psa 44:13, Psa 44:14; Jer 24:9, Jer 25:9; Joe 2:17 *marg. Zec 8:13

a proverb : The name of Jew has long been a proverbial mark of detestation and contempt among all the nations whither they have been dispersed, and is so to this day, whether among Christians, Mohmammedans, or Pagans.

TSK: Deu 28:38 - -- shalt carry : Isa 5:10; Mic 6:15; Hag 1:6 for the locust : Exo 10:14, Exo 10:15; Joe 1:4, Joe 2:3, Joe 2:25; Amo 4:9, Amo 7:1, Amo 7:2

TSK: Deu 28:39 - -- for the worms : Joe 1:4-7, Joe 2:2-4; Jon 4:7

for the worms : Joe 1:4-7, Joe 2:2-4; Jon 4:7

TSK: Deu 28:40 - -- anoint thyself : Psa 23:5, Psa 104:15; Mic 6:15

anoint thyself : Psa 23:5, Psa 104:15; Mic 6:15

TSK: Deu 28:41 - -- thou shalt not enjoy them : Heb. they shall not be thine, for. Deu 28:32; 2Ki 24:14; Lam 1:5

thou shalt not enjoy them : Heb. they shall not be thine, for. Deu 28:32; 2Ki 24:14; Lam 1:5

TSK: Deu 28:42 - -- thy trees : Deu 28:38, Deu 28:39; Amo 7:1, Amo 7:2 consume : or, possess

thy trees : Deu 28:38, Deu 28:39; Amo 7:1, Amo 7:2

consume : or, possess

TSK: Deu 28:43 - -- Jdg 2:3, Jdg 2:11-15, Jdg 4:2, Jdg 4:3, Jdg 10:7-10, Jdg 14:4, Jdg 15:11, Jdg 15:12; 1Sa 13:3-7, 1Sa 13:19-23; 2Ki 17:20, 2Ki 17:23, 2Ki 24:14-16; Joh...

TSK: Deu 28:44 - -- Deu 28:12, Deu 28:13; Lam 1:5

TSK: Deu 28:45 - -- Moreover : Deu 28:5, Deu 28:15, Deu 29:20, Deu 29:21; Lev 26:28; 2Ki 17:20; Pro 13:21; Isa 1:20, Isa 65:14, Isa 65:15; Jer 24:9, Jer 24:10; Lam 2:15-1...

TSK: Deu 28:46 - -- a sign : Deu 28:37, Deu 28:59, Deu 29:20, Deu 29:28; Isa 8:18; Jer 19:8, Jer 25:18; Eze 14:8, Eze 23:32, Eze 23:33; Eze 36:20; 1Co 10:11

TSK: Deu 28:47 - -- Deu 12:7-12, Deu 16:11, Deu 32:13-15; Neh 9:35; 1Ti 6:17-19

TSK: Deu 28:48 - -- serve : 2Ch 12:8; Neh 9:35-37; Jer 5:19, Jer 17:4; Eze 17:3, Eze 17:7, Eze 17:12 in hunger : Jer 44:17, Jer 44:18, Jer 44:22, Jer 44:27; Lam 5:2-6; Ez...

TSK: Deu 28:49 - -- bring a nation : Though the Chaldeans are frequently described under the figure of an eagle, yet these verses especially predict the desolations broug...

bring a nation : Though the Chaldeans are frequently described under the figure of an eagle, yet these verses especially predict the desolations brought on the Jews by the Romans; who came from a country far more distant than Chaldea; whose conquests were as rapid as the eagle’ s flight, and whose standard bore this very figure; who spake a language to which the Jews were then entire strangers, being wholly unlike the Hebrew, of which the Chaldee was merely a dialect; whose appearance and victories were terrible; and whose yoke was a yoke of iron; and the havoc which they made tremendous. Num 24:24; Isa 5:26-30; Jer 5:15-17; Dan 6:22, Dan 6:23, Dan 9:26; Hab 1:6, Hab 1:7; Luk 19:43, Luk 19:44

as the eagle : Jer 4:13, Jer 48:40, Jer 49:22; Lam 4:19; Eze 17:3, Eze 17:12; Hos 8:1; Mat 24:28

a nation whose : Jer 5:15; Eze 3:6; 1Co 14:21

understand : Heb. hear

TSK: Deu 28:50 - -- of fierce countenance : Heb. strong of face, Pro 7:13; Ecc 8:1 *marg. Dan 7:7, Dan 8:23 shall not : 2Ch 36:17; Isa 47:6; Hos 13:16; Luk 19:44, Luk 21:...

of fierce countenance : Heb. strong of face, Pro 7:13; Ecc 8:1 *marg. Dan 7:7, Dan 8:23

shall not : 2Ch 36:17; Isa 47:6; Hos 13:16; Luk 19:44, Luk 21:23, Luk 21:24

TSK: Deu 28:51 - -- the fruit : Deu 28:33; Isa 1:7, Isa 62:8 which also : Lev 26:26; Jer 15:13, Jer 17:3; Eze 12:19; Hab 3:16, Hab 3:17

TSK: Deu 28:52 - -- Lev 26:25; 2Ki 17:1-6, 2Ki 18:13, 2Ki 24:10, 2Ki 24:11, 2Ki 25:1-4; Isa 1:7, Isa 62:8; Jer 21:4-7, Jer 37:8, Jer 39:1-3, Jer 52:4-7; Eze 4:1-8; Dan 9:...

collapse all
Commentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per Verse)

Barnes: Deu 28:1-14 - -- A comparison of this chapter with Exo 23:20-23 and Lev. 26 will show how Moses here resumes and amplifies the promises and threats already set forth...

A comparison of this chapter with Exo 23:20-23 and Lev. 26 will show how Moses here resumes and amplifies the promises and threats already set forth in the earlier records of the Law. The language rises in this chapter to the sublimest strains, especially in the latter part of it; and the prophecies respecting the dispersion and degradation of the Jewish nation in its later days are among the most remarkable in scripture. They are plain, precise, and circumstantial; and the fulfillment of them has been literal, complete, and undeniable.

The Blessing. The six repetitions of the word "blessed"introduce the particular forms which the blessing would take in the various relations of life.

Deu 28:5

The "basket"or bag was a customary means in the East for carrying about whatever might be needed for personal uses (compare Deu 26:2; Joh 13:29).

The "store"is rather the kneading-trough Exo 8:3; Exo 12:34. The blessings here promised relate, it will be observed, to private and personal life: in Deu 28:7 those which are of a more public and national character are brought forward.

Deu 28:9

The oath with which God vouchsafed to confirm His promises to the patriarchs (compare Gen 22:16; Heb 6:13-14) contained by implication these gifts of holiness and eminence to Israel (compare the marginal references).

Barnes: Deu 28:15-68 - -- The curses correspond in form and number Deu 28:15-19 to the blessings Deu 28:3-6, and the special modes in which these threats should be executed a...

The curses correspond in form and number Deu 28:15-19 to the blessings Deu 28:3-6, and the special modes in which these threats should be executed are described in five groups of denunciations Deut. 28:20-68.

Deu 28:20-26

First series of judgments. The curse of God should rest on all they did, and should issue in manifold forms of disease, in famine, and in defeat in war.

Deu 28:20

Vexation - Rather, confusion: the word in the original is used Deu 7:23; 1Sa 14:20 for the panic and disorder with which the curse of God smites His foes.

Deu 28:22

"Blasting"denotes (compare Gen 41:23) the result of the scorching east wind; "mildew"that of an untimely blight falling on the green ear, withering it and marring its produce.

Deu 28:24

When the heat is very great the atmosphere in Palestine is often filled with dust and sand; the wind is a burning sirocco, and the air comparable to the glowing heat at the mouth of a furnace.

Deu 28:25

Shalt be removed - See the margin. The threat differs from that in Lev 26:33, which refers to a dispersion of the people among the pagan. Here it is meant that they should be tossed to and fro at the will of others, driven from one country to another without any certain settlement.

Deu 28:27-37

Second series of judgments on the body, mind, and outward circumstances of the sinners.

Deu 28:27

The "botch"(rather "boil;"see Exo 9:9), the "emerods"or tumors 1Sa 5:6, 1Sa 5:9, the "scab"and "itch"represent the various forms of the loathsome skin diseases which are common in Syria and Egypt.

Deu 28:28

Mental maladies shah be added to those sore bodily plagues, and should Deu 28:29-34 reduce the sufferers to powerlessness before their enemies and oppressors.

Blindness - Most probably mental blindness; compare Lam 4:14; Zep 1:17; 2Co 3:14 ff.

Deu 28:30-33

See the marginal references for the fulfillment of these judgments.

Deu 28:38-48

Third series of judgments, affecting every kind of labor and enterprise until it had accomplished the total ruin of the nation, and its subjection to its enemies.

Deu 28:39

Worms - i. e. the vine-weevil. Naturalists prescribed elaborate precautions against its ravages.

Deu 28:40

Cast ... - Some prefer "shall be spoiled"or "plundered."

Deu 28:43, Deu 28:44

Contrast Deu 28:12 and Deu 28:13.

Deu 28:46

Forever - Yet "the remnant"Rom 9:27; Rom 11:5 would by faith and obedience become a holy seed.

Deu 28:49-58

Fourth series of judgments, descriptive of the calamities and horrors which should ensue when Israel should be subjugated by its foreign foes.

Deu 28:49

The description (compare the marginal references) applies undoubtedly to the Chaldeans, and in a degree to other nations also whom God raised up as ministers of vengeance upon apostate Israel (e. g. the Medes). But it only needs to read this part of the denunciation, and to compare it with the narrative of Josephus, to see that its full and exact accomplishment took place in the wars of Vespasian and Titus against the Jews, as indeed the Jews themselves generally admit.

The eagle - The Roman ensign; compare Mat 24:28; and consult throughout this passage the marginal references.

Deu 28:54

Evil - i. e. grudging; compare Deu 15:9.

Deu 28:57

Young one - The "afterbirth"(see the margin). The Hebrew text in fact suggests an extremity of horror which the King James Version fails to exhibit. Compare 2Ki 6:29.

Deu 28:58-68

Fifth series of judgments. The uprooting of Israel from the promised land, and its dispersion among other nations. Examine the marginal references.

Deu 28:58

In this book - i. e. in the book of the Law, or the Pentateuch in so far as it contains commands of God to Israel. Deuteronomy is included, but not exclusively intended. So Deu 28:61; compare Deu 27:3 and note, Deu 31:9.

Deu 28:66

Thy life shall hang in doubt before thee - i. e. shall be hanging as it were on a thread, and that before thine own eyes. The fathers regard this passage as suggesting in a secondary or mystical sense Christ hanging on the cross, as the life of the Jews who would not believe in Him.

Deu 28:68

This is the climax. As the Exodus from Egypt was as it were the birth of the nation into its covenant relationship with God, so the return to the house of bondage is in like manner the death of it. The mode of conveyance, "in ships,"is added to heighten the contrast. They crossed the sea from Egypt with a high hand. the waves being parted before them. They should go back again cooped up in slaveships.

There ye shall be sold - Rather, "there shall ye offer yourselves, or be offered for sale."This denunciation was literally fulfilled on more than one occasion: most signally when many thousand Jews were sold into slavery and sent into Egypt by Titus; but also under Hadrian, when numbers were sold at Rachel’ s grave Gen 35:19.

No man shall buy you - i. e. no one shall venture even to employ you as slaves, regarding you as accursed of God, and to be shunned in everything.

Poole: Deu 28:2 - -- Those blessings which others greedily follow after, and ofttimes never overtake, they shall follow after thee, and shall be thrown into thy lap by m...

Those blessings which others greedily follow after, and ofttimes never overtake, they shall follow after thee, and shall be thrown into thy lap by my special kindness.

Poole: Deu 28:5 - -- i.e. It shall always be well replenished, and the provision thou hast there shall be preserved for, and in due time brought forth to, thy use and se...

i.e. It shall always be well replenished, and the provision thou hast there shall be preserved for, and in due time brought forth to, thy use and service. See Deu 26:2,10 .

Poole: Deu 28:6 - -- i.e. In all thy affairs and administrations, which are oft expressed by this phrase, as Num 27:17 Deu 31:2 2Sa 3:25 2Ch 1:10 Act 1:21 9:28 .

i.e. In all thy affairs and administrations, which are oft expressed by this phrase, as Num 27:17 Deu 31:2 2Sa 3:25 2Ch 1:10 Act 1:21 9:28 .

Poole: Deu 28:7 - -- i.e. Many ways, as is usual when an army is totally overthrown and dissipated.

i.e. Many ways, as is usual when an army is totally overthrown and dissipated.

Poole: Deu 28:8 - -- Shall command i.e. shall by his sovereign and powerful providence give it, even when it seems furthest from thee, and not likely to come to time with...

Shall command i.e. shall by his sovereign and powerful providence give it, even when it seems furthest from thee, and not likely to come to time without a word of command from God himself.

Poole: Deu 28:9 - -- Shall establish thee an holy people unto himself i.e. shall confirm and establish his covenant with thee, by which he separated thee to himself as a ...

Shall establish thee an holy people unto himself i.e. shall confirm and establish his covenant with thee, by which he separated thee to himself as a holy and peculiar people, and shall publicly own thee for such, as it follows, Deu 28:10 .

Poole: Deu 28:10 - -- i.e. That you are in deed and truth his people and children: see Deu 14:1 26:18 . For to be called ofttimes signifies to be, as Isa 47:1,5 56:7 Mat ...

i.e. That you are in deed and truth his people and children: see Deu 14:1 26:18 . For to be called ofttimes signifies to be, as Isa 47:1,5 56:7 Mat 5:9,19 21:13 .

Poole: Deu 28:11 - -- The same things which were said before are repeated, to show that God would repeat and multiply his blessings upon them.

The same things which were said before are repeated, to show that God would repeat and multiply his blessings upon them.

Poole: Deu 28:12 - -- His good treasure to wit, the heaven or the air, as it here follows, which is God’ s storehouse, where he treasures up rain or wind or other thi...

His good treasure to wit, the heaven or the air, as it here follows, which is God’ s storehouse, where he treasures up rain or wind or other things for man’ s use. See Job 38:22 Psa 33:7 .

Poole: Deu 28:13 - -- The head the chief of all people in power, or at least in dignity and privileges; so that even they that are not under thine authority shall reverenc...

The head the chief of all people in power, or at least in dignity and privileges; so that even they that are not under thine authority shall reverence thy greatness and excellency. So it was in David’ s and Solomon’ s time, and so it should have been much oftener and much more, if they had performed the conditions here required. For the phrase, see Isa 9:14,15 19:15 .

Poole: Deu 28:15 - -- So as thou shalt not be able to escape them, as thou shalt vainly hope and endeavour to do.

So as thou shalt not be able to escape them, as thou shalt vainly hope and endeavour to do.

Poole: Deu 28:20 - -- Vexation or, disturbance . This seems chiefly to concern the mind, and its torment arising from the disappointment of hopes, the presages of its app...

Vexation or, disturbance . This seems chiefly to concern the mind, and its torment arising from the disappointment of hopes, the presages of its approaching miseries.

Rebuke to wit, from God, not so much in words as by his actions, by cross providences, by sharp and sore afflictions, which are oft called rebukes, as 2Ki 19:3 Psa 18:15 Psa 39:11 80:16 Isa 51:20 66:15 Eze 5:15 25:17 .

Poole: Deu 28:22 - -- With blasting, and with mildew two plagues or evil affections of corn. See 1Ki 8:37 2Ch 6:28 Amo 4:9 Hag 2:17 .

With blasting, and with mildew two plagues or evil affections of corn. See 1Ki 8:37 2Ch 6:28 Amo 4:9 Hag 2:17 .

Poole: Deu 28:23 - -- Be brass i.e. like brass, hard and dry, and shut up from giving rain. See Lev 26:19 . Be iron hard, and chapt, and barren.

Be brass i.e. like brass, hard and dry, and shut up from giving rain. See Lev 26:19 .

Be iron hard, and chapt, and barren.

Poole: Deu 28:24 - -- Either, 1. Thy rain shall be as unprofitable to thy ground and seed as if it were only so much dust. Or, 2. Instead of rain shall come nothing but...

Either,

1. Thy rain shall be as unprofitable to thy ground and seed as if it were only so much dust. Or,

2. Instead of rain shall come nothing but dust from heaven, which being raised and carried up by the wind in great abundance, doth return and fall upon the earth as it were in clouds or showers.

Until thou be destroyed to wit, by famine, following these great droughts.

Poole: Deu 28:25 - -- Removed Heb. for a removing ; to be tossed like a football from place to place, and from people to people.

Removed Heb. for a removing ; to be tossed like a football from place to place, and from people to people.

Poole: Deu 28:28 - -- Blindness to wit, of mind, so that they shall not know what to do; see Job 5:13,14 ; so as they shall commonly choose and follow the worst counsels a...

Blindness to wit, of mind, so that they shall not know what to do; see Job 5:13,14 ; so as they shall commonly choose and follow the worst counsels and courses, to their own ruin.

Astonishment of heart they shall be filled with wonder and horror, because of the strangeness and soreness of their calamities.

Poole: Deu 28:29 - -- At noon-day i.e. in the most clear and evident matters thou shalt grossly mistake and miss thy way. Thou shalt not prosper in thy ways thy counsels...

At noon-day i.e. in the most clear and evident matters thou shalt grossly mistake and miss thy way.

Thou shalt not prosper in thy ways thy counsels and enterprises shall be frustrated, and turn to thy destruction.

Poole: Deu 28:30 - -- Another man shall lie with her before thou canst consummate thy marriage, and enjoy her as thy wife. And so in the following branches.

Another man shall lie with her before thou canst consummate thy marriage, and enjoy her as thy wife. And so in the following branches.

Poole: Deu 28:32 - -- Shall be given unto another people by those who have conquered them, and taken them captives, who shall give or sell them to other persons, as the ma...

Shall be given unto another people by those who have conquered them, and taken them captives, who shall give or sell them to other persons, as the manner was.

Fail or, be consumed , partly with grief and plentiful tears shed for them; and partly with earnest desire, and vain and long expectation of their return. See Psa 119:82 . No might, i.e. no power to rescue them, nor money to ransom them.

Poole: Deu 28:33 - -- Which thou knowest not which shall come from a far country, which thou didst not at all expect or fear and therefore will be the more dreadful when t...

Which thou knowest not which shall come from a far country, which thou didst not at all expect or fear and therefore will be the more dreadful when they come; a nation whose language thou understandest not, and therefore canst not plead with them for mercy, nor expect any favour from them.

Oppressed and crushed alway not sometimes conquered, and sometimes conquering, as the course of war commonly is, but in all times, and in all thy actions and attempts, foiled and worsted.

Poole: Deu 28:36 - -- Thee and thy king: the calamity shall be both universal, which even thy king shall not be able to avoid, much less the subjects, who have far less ad...

Thee and thy king: the calamity shall be both universal, which even thy king shall not be able to avoid, much less the subjects, who have far less advantage and opportunity for escape; and irrecoverable, because he who should protect or rescue them is lost with them. See Lam 4:20 .

There shalt thou serve other gods either being corrupted by their examples and counsels, or compelled to it by their tyranny. So what formerly was their choice and delight now becomes their plague and misery. And this doubtless was the condition of many Israelites under the Assyrian and Babylonish captivities, as we may gather from Jer 44:17-19 , and other places, though many of them kept themselves free from that infection.

Poole: Deu 28:37 - -- All other nations shall wonder to see such calamities befall such a people; and when they would express any dreadful affliction in a proverbial way,...

All other nations shall wonder to see such calamities befall such a people; and when they would express any dreadful affliction in a proverbial way, they shall make use of thy example: they shall also sport themselves in thy miseries, and say, These are the people of the Lord, the only saints upon earth, &c.

Poole: Deu 28:43 - -- Within thee i.e. within thy gates; who formerly honoured and served thee, and were some of them glad of the crumbs which fell from thy table.

Within thee i.e. within thy gates; who formerly honoured and served thee, and were some of them glad of the crumbs which fell from thy table.

Poole: Deu 28:46 - -- They shall be i.e. these curses now mentioned. For a wonder, i.e. signal and wonderful to all that hear of them.

They shall be i.e. these curses now mentioned. For a wonder, i.e. signal and wonderful to all that hear of them.

Poole: Deu 28:47 - -- Or, in the abundance of all things for this is opposed to in hunger, in thirst, &c., Deu 28:48 . And the Hebrew men oft signifies in, as Exo 25:...

Or,

in the abundance of all things for this is opposed to in hunger, in thirst, &c., Deu 28:48 . And the Hebrew men oft signifies in, as Exo 25:18 Job 19:26 Psa 72:16 .

Poole: Deu 28:48 - -- A yoke of iron which thou canst neither well bear, nor break. See Jer 28:13,14 .

A yoke of iron which thou canst neither well bear, nor break. See Jer 28:13,14 .

Poole: Deu 28:49 - -- As the eagle flieth Heb. as the eagle flies , i.e. not only swiftly, as is expressed in our translation, for which the Babylonian is noted and compa...

As the eagle flieth Heb. as the eagle flies , i.e. not only swiftly, as is expressed in our translation, for which the Babylonian is noted and compared to an eagle, Jer 4:13 Eze 17:3 Dan 7:4 ; but also fiercely and greedily, as the eagle to its prey; also strongly and irresistibly. Possibly this may be understood of the Romans, who did come

from far, from the end of the earth more truly and literally than the Chaldeans, whose country was not far from Judea, and this may allude to the eagle, which was in their ensigns.

Poole: Deu 28:50 - -- Of fierce countenance Heb. strong of face or countenance , i.e. bold and impudent, hardy and undaunted, cruel and uncompassionate and inflexible, sp...

Of fierce countenance Heb. strong of face or countenance , i.e. bold and impudent, hardy and undaunted, cruel and uncompassionate and inflexible, sparing no age nor sex, &c.

Haydock: Deu 28:1 - -- Away. No threat could be more terrible to the Jews. They did not refuse burial to those who had been hung on the gibbet, chap. xxi. 23. Even the h...

Away. No threat could be more terrible to the Jews. They did not refuse burial to those who had been hung on the gibbet, chap. xxi. 23. Even the high priest, if he should find a corpse in the field, was obliged to bury it; though he was not allowed on other occasions, to attend the funeral of his relations. God threatens the impious king (Calmet) Joachim, that he shall be buried with the burial of an ass, Jeremias xxii. 19. (Haydock) ---

The ancient Christians allowed the sacred vessels to be sold, in order to bury the dead. "For we shall not suffer the figure and the work of God to be exposed a prey to the wild beasts and birds." (Lactantius 6.)

Haydock: Deu 28:1 - -- Earth. Similar denunciations are made, Leviticus xxvi. (Menochius)

Earth. Similar denunciations are made, Leviticus xxvi. (Menochius)

Haydock: Deu 28:2 - -- All these blessings, &c. In the Old Testament God promised temporal blessings to the keepers of his law, heaven being not opened as yet; and that ...

All these blessings, &c. In the Old Testament God promised temporal blessings to the keepers of his law, heaven being not opened as yet; and that gross and sensual people being more moved with present and sensible things. But in the New Testament, the goods that are promised us are spiritual and eternal: and temporal evils are turned into blessings.

Haydock: Deu 28:3 - -- Field. Wherever thou art, all thy undertakings shall prosper. (Calmet)

Field. Wherever thou art, all thy undertakings shall prosper. (Calmet)

Haydock: Deu 28:4 - -- Womb. This was most fully verified in the birth of the Messias, as the Holy Ghost insinuated, by causing St. Elizabeth to address these words to the...

Womb. This was most fully verified in the birth of the Messias, as the Holy Ghost insinuated, by causing St. Elizabeth to address these words to the mother of Jesus Christ, Luke i. 42. (Calmet)

Haydock: Deu 28:5 - -- Barns. Hebrew tene, is translated (chap. xxvi. 2,) basket, in which bread was kept, and served up at table. Loaves were placed thus in baskets,...

Barns. Hebrew tene, is translated (chap. xxvi. 2,) basket, in which bread was kept, and served up at table. Loaves were placed thus in baskets, near the altar of holocausts. ---

Stores. What thou hast laid up for thy provisions in corn, fruit, &c. (Calmet)

Haydock: Deu 28:6 - -- Out, in all thy actions and affairs, (Menochius) at home and abroad; in peace and war.

Out, in all thy actions and affairs, (Menochius) at home and abroad; in peace and war.

Haydock: Deu 28:7 - -- Down. Hebrew, "dead." Septuagint, "bruised to pieces," ver. 25. (Calmet) --- Seven. This denotes the confusion and hurry with which the enemy sh...

Down. Hebrew, "dead." Septuagint, "bruised to pieces," ver. 25. (Calmet) ---

Seven. This denotes the confusion and hurry with which the enemy shall endeavour to escape. (Menochius)

Haydock: Deu 28:10 - -- Upon thee; so that thou art called God's people (Calmet) with truth. (Menochius) --- He has taken thee under his protection, and defended them [the...

Upon thee; so that thou art called God's people (Calmet) with truth. (Menochius) ---

He has taken thee under his protection, and defended them [thee?] against every attack. (Haydock)

Haydock: Deu 28:12 - -- Lend. To do this with usury, is far from being a blessing; but to be able to assist those who are in distress, is a happiness; particularly for that...

Lend. To do this with usury, is far from being a blessing; but to be able to assist those who are in distress, is a happiness; particularly for that nation which as yet does not know the merit of evangelical poverty. (Calmet)

Haydock: Deu 28:13 - -- Tail, as he had promised, ver. 1. (Menochius) --- You shall have dominion over others. (Calmet) --- So Isaias (ix. 14,) says, the Lord shall des...

Tail, as he had promised, ver. 1. (Menochius) ---

You shall have dominion over others. (Calmet) ---

So Isaias (ix. 14,) says, the Lord shall destroy the head, (the magistrate) and the tail, or (ver. 15,) the lying prophet. (Haydock)

Haydock: Deu 28:15 - -- All these curses, &c. Thus God dealt with the transgressors of his law in the Old Testament: but now he often suffers sinners to prosper in this wor...

All these curses, &c. Thus God dealt with the transgressors of his law in the Old Testament: but now he often suffers sinners to prosper in this world, rewarding them for some little good they have done, and reserving their punishment for the other world.

Haydock: Deu 28:20 - -- Rebuke, or "curse." Septuagint, the pestilence, (Calmet) or destruction, ( analosin. ) (Haydock)

Rebuke, or "curse." Septuagint, the pestilence, (Calmet) or destruction, ( analosin. ) (Haydock)

Haydock: Deu 28:22 - -- Cold. The word occurs no where else. The Chaldean, Syriac, &c., have the reverse, "heat." --- Blasting. In the original, either the mildew destr...

Cold. The word occurs no where else. The Chaldean, Syriac, &c., have the reverse, "heat." ---

Blasting. In the original, either the mildew destroying the corn, (Haydock) or the jaundice, which attacks the human body, may be meant. (Calmet)

Haydock: Deu 28:23 - -- Of brass, and yield no rain. (Menochius) --- Pindar says, (Pyth. x.) "The heaven of brass they never can ascend." See Leviticus xxvi. 19.

Of brass, and yield no rain. (Menochius) ---

Pindar says, (Pyth. x.) "The heaven of brass they never can ascend." See Leviticus xxvi. 19.

Haydock: Deu 28:24 - -- Consumed. Protestants, "The Lord shall make the rain of thy land powder and dust: from heaven it shall come down upon thee, till thou be destroyed."...

Consumed. Protestants, "The Lord shall make the rain of thy land powder and dust: from heaven it shall come down upon thee, till thou be destroyed." (Haydock) ---

The dust coming instead of rain shall render the land more barren. (Calmet) In those dreary regions, where clouds of sand and dust overwhelm the poor traveller, the Israelites would have a good idea what inconveniences would attend such a state of the atmosphere, if it were only for a short continuance. But when it was intended for destruction, how could they possibly support life!

Haydock: Deu 28:25 - -- Scattered, as they are at present. The real import of the Hebrew is doubtful. Some agree with the Vulgate and Septuagint; (Haydock) others translat...

Scattered, as they are at present. The real import of the Hebrew is doubtful. Some agree with the Vulgate and Septuagint; (Haydock) others translate, Thou shalt be trembling, an object of astonishment and horror. Others, All who see thee shall quake; they shall insult over thee, wagging their head. (Calmet)

Haydock: Deu 28:27 - -- Egypt. See chap. vi. 15., xxviii. 60., Exodus ix. 9, and xv. 25., or with such diseases as those with which he afflicted Egypt. (Calmet) --- Out. ...

Egypt. See chap. vi. 15., xxviii. 60., Exodus ix. 9, and xv. 25., or with such diseases as those with which he afflicted Egypt. (Calmet) ---

Out. Hebrew, "with the emerods, scab, and itch," (Haydock) 1 Kings v. 6, 12.

Haydock: Deu 28:28 - -- Madness, folly, or phrensy; with such Saul was attacked, and David feigned himself (1 Kings xxi. 13,) to be in a similar condition at the court of Ac...

Madness, folly, or phrensy; with such Saul was attacked, and David feigned himself (1 Kings xxi. 13,) to be in a similar condition at the court of Achis.

Haydock: Deu 28:29 - -- Ways. Is not this visibly the present condition of the Jews, amid the blaze of the gospel light, the miracles and divine conduct of the Son of God! ...

Ways. Is not this visibly the present condition of the Jews, amid the blaze of the gospel light, the miracles and divine conduct of the Son of God! They shut their eyes, and will not acknowledge him for the Messias. (Calmet)

Haydock: Deu 28:30 - -- Her. Job makes use of the same imprecation, Job xxxi. 10. Let my wife be the harlot of another. But he immediately subjoins, For this is a hein...

Her. Job makes use of the same imprecation, Job xxxi. 10. Let my wife be the harlot of another. But he immediately subjoins, For this is a heinous crime, &c., which may be applied, both to him who seeks to commit an impure action, (ver. 9,) and to those who attempt to punish it by a similar abomination. No person is allowed to wish that a sin may be committed. The Hebrew and Septuagint very properly render all these imprecations in the future tense. "Thou shalt marry (or betroth) a wife, and another man shall," which, no doubt, would be an intolerable provocation. (Haydock)

Haydock: Deu 28:31 - -- Slain, ( immoletur ,) for a feast, and not for a sacrifice. (Menochius)

Slain, ( immoletur ,) for a feast, and not for a sacrifice. (Menochius)

Haydock: Deu 28:32 - -- Hand. Hebrew also, "thy hand shall not be lifted up towards God." Targum of Jerusalem says, Thou shalt possess nothing, wherewith thou mayest rende...

Hand. Hebrew also, "thy hand shall not be lifted up towards God." Targum of Jerusalem says, Thou shalt possess nothing, wherewith thou mayest render God propitious. (Calmet) ---

Thou shalt not be able to rescue, (Menochius) or to assist thy distressed children.

Haydock: Deu 28:33 - -- A people. The Gentiles, whom the Jews so much despised, and whom the Scripture styles not a nation, have supplanted the Israelites, and entered in...

A people. The Gentiles, whom the Jews so much despised, and whom the Scripture styles not a nation, have supplanted the Israelites, and entered into the inheritance, which they had lost by their prevarications, Romans x. 19. (Haydock)

Haydock: Deu 28:34 - -- Astonished. Hebrew, "go mad," become stupified at such a scene of misfortunes.

Astonished. Hebrew, "go mad," become stupified at such a scene of misfortunes.

Haydock: Deu 28:36 - -- Thy king. Nabuchodonosor thus led Joachin and Sedecias, with almost all their people, captives to Babylon, 4 Kings xxiv., and xxv. 7. --- Stone. ...

Thy king. Nabuchodonosor thus led Joachin and Sedecias, with almost all their people, captives to Babylon, 4 Kings xxiv., and xxv. 7. ---

Stone. The ten tribes mixed with other nations, (Calmet) and for the most part followed their idolatrous worship. Only some few returned with the tribes of Juda, Benjamin, and Levi, and became more careful than before not to irritate God by that hateful sin. (Haydock)

Haydock: Deu 28:37 - -- Lost. Hebrew, "an object of desolation, a fable and a mockery." Septuagint, "thou shalt be a riddle, a parable, and an example," to employ the thou...

Lost. Hebrew, "an object of desolation, a fable and a mockery." Septuagint, "thou shalt be a riddle, a parable, and an example," to employ the thoughts and tongues of all nations, who will not be able to comprehend the greatness of thy distress. (Calmet)

Haydock: Deu 28:38 - -- All: so that the little which thou mayst gather will not be worth mentioning. (Haydock) --- Hebrew may also signify, "Thy field shall produce a gre...

All: so that the little which thou mayst gather will not be worth mentioning. (Haydock) ---

Hebrew may also signify, "Thy field shall produce a great deal, and give thee abundant expectations, but the locusts shall consume it," to mortify thee the more.

Haydock: Deu 28:42 - -- Blast. This is a different word from that mentioned, ver. 22. Tselatsal may here probably denote a grasshopper, which delights in the shade, and ...

Blast. This is a different word from that mentioned, ver. 22. Tselatsal may here probably denote a grasshopper, which delights in the shade, and has a shrill note. In hot countries it does great hurt to trees, &c. (Calmet)

Haydock: Deu 28:43 - -- Lower. Hebrew repeats this word, to signify the utmost abjection. (Haydock) --- The Fathers gather hence the glorious superiority to which the Chr...

Lower. Hebrew repeats this word, to signify the utmost abjection. (Haydock) ---

The Fathers gather hence the glorious superiority to which the Christian Church is raised. (Origen, Rom. ii.) (Theodoret, q. 34.)

Haydock: Deu 28:46 - -- For ever. The nations which were employed by God to scourge the Jews, recognized that they were the instruments of his indignation. We are accustom...

For ever. The nations which were employed by God to scourge the Jews, recognized that they were the instruments of his indignation. We are accustomed to consider many evils as the necessary appendages of human nature; but the surprising misfortunes, with which God visited his people, subjecting them to the Babylonians, Greeks, and Romans, could not be taken in this light. (Calmet)

Haydock: Deu 28:47 - -- Things: as in gratitude thou oughtest to have done. On the contrary, the more the Jews were cherished by God, the more insolent they became, chap. x...

Things: as in gratitude thou oughtest to have done. On the contrary, the more the Jews were cherished by God, the more insolent they became, chap. xxxii. 15.

Haydock: Deu 28:49 - -- Swiftly. The Chaldeans are designated in the same manner, Jeremias v. 5., and Ezechiel xvii. 3, 12. The Romans also carried an eagle, as their ch...

Swiftly. The Chaldeans are designated in the same manner, Jeremias v. 5., and Ezechiel xvii. 3, 12. The Romans also carried an eagle, as their chief standard, and the rapidity of their conquests astonished all the world.

Haydock: Deu 28:50 - -- Insolent. Hebrew, "of a fierce countenance." It is well known how the Babylonians treated the princes of the Jews. (Calmet)

Insolent. Hebrew, "of a fierce countenance." It is well known how the Babylonians treated the princes of the Jews. (Calmet)

Haydock: Deu 28:51 - -- Until thou be destroyed. This was not expressed in the Septuagint.

Until thou be destroyed. This was not expressed in the Septuagint.

Gill: Deu 28:1 - -- And it shall come to pass, if thou shalt hearken diligently unto the voice of the Lord thy God,.... In his law, and by his prophets: to observe an...

And it shall come to pass, if thou shalt hearken diligently unto the voice of the Lord thy God,.... In his law, and by his prophets:

to observe and to do all his commandments, which I command thee this day; for without observing them to do them, hearing them would be to little purpose, and they were all of them to be observed and done, the lesser and weightier matters of the law as they were commanded by Moses in the name of the Lord, and as they would be taught, explained, and enforced by the prophets:

that the Lord thy God will set thee on high above all nations of the earth: as they were in the times of David and Solomon; See Gill on Deu 26:19.

Gill: Deu 28:2 - -- And all these blessings shall come on thee and overtake thee,.... After mentioned, which should come upon them from God from heaven, by the direction ...

And all these blessings shall come on thee and overtake thee,.... After mentioned, which should come upon them from God from heaven, by the direction of his providence, and that freely and plentifully, and beyond their expectations and deserts, and continue with them:

if thou shall hearken to the voice of the Lord thy God; obedience to the law being the condition of their coming and continuance; for only temporal blessings in the land of Canaan are here intended, as follow.

Gill: Deu 28:3 - -- Blessed shalt thou be in the city,.... Not only in the city of Jerusalem, where the temple would be built, and there be blessed with the service, wo...

Blessed shalt thou be in the city,.... Not only in the city of Jerusalem, where the temple would be built, and there be blessed with the service, worship, and ordinances of God, but in all other cities of the land; where they should dwell in title, large, and spacious houses, and their cities should be walled and fenced, and be very populous; yet should enjoy health, and have plenty of all sorts of provisions brought unto them, as well as prosper in all kinds of merchandise there, as Aben Ezra notes:

and blessed shalt thou be in the field; in the country villages, and in all rural employments, in sowing and planting, as the same writer observes; in all kinds of husbandry, in the culture of the fields for corn, and of vineyards and oliveyards; all should prosper and succeed, and bring forth fruit abundantly.

Gill: Deu 28:4 - -- Blessed shall be the fruit of thy body,.... Their children, of which they should have many, and these live; be healthful, thrive, and arrive to manhoo...

Blessed shall be the fruit of thy body,.... Their children, of which they should have many, and these live; be healthful, thrive, and arrive to manhood, and increase and perpetuate their families. Grotius thinks this was eminently fulfilled in Mary, the mother of our Lord; see Luk 1:42,

and the fruit of thy ground; of their gardens, orchards, and fields; grass for the cattle, and the wheat, barley, vines, figs, pomegranates, olives, and dates for the use of men:

and the fruit of thy cattle; which being distinguished from oxen and sheep in the following clause, must be understood of camels and asses, which were used for the carriage both of persons and burdens, and were very serviceable, and were a considerable part of their substance in those countries; see Job 1:3,

the increase of thy kine, and the flocks of thy sheep; of their cows and oxen, and of their sheep and goats, which were very increasing creatures, and in the increase of which much of their outward happiness lay; see Psa 144:13.

Gill: Deu 28:5 - -- Blessed shall be thy basket,.... Which the Targums of Jonathan and Jerusalem restrain to the basket of firstfruits, and the cake of the first of thei...

Blessed shall be thy basket,.... Which the Targums of Jonathan and Jerusalem restrain to the basket of firstfruits, and the cake of the first of their dough; but it intends any and every vessel in which they put their provisions for present use, and that that should never be empty of them, and that they should always have a sufficiency:

and thy store; what remained, and was laid up in their barns, cellars, and storehouses, for future use, or in proper places for seed.

Gill: Deu 28:6 - -- Blessed shalt thou be when thou comest in, and blessed shalt thou be when thou goest out. In all their business and employments of life whether wi...

Blessed shalt thou be when thou comest in, and blessed shalt thou be when thou goest out. In all their business and employments of life whether within doors or without; in the administration of every office, whether more public or private; and in all their journeys going out and coming home; and particularly when they went out to war, and returned, all should be attended with success.

Gill: Deu 28:7 - -- The Lord shall cause thine enemies that rise up against thee to be smitten before thy face,.... As the Philistines, Moabites, Syrians, Edomites, and A...

The Lord shall cause thine enemies that rise up against thee to be smitten before thy face,.... As the Philistines, Moabites, Syrians, Edomites, and Ammonites were, especially in the times of David:

they shall come out against thee one way: in a body, all together, in large numbers, marching in great order, to give them battle:

and flee before thee seven ways; be entirely routed, and flee some one way, and some another, even every way they could take to make their escape. The phrase is expressive of an entire victory, and of a complete rout and dispersion of an enemy.

Gill: Deu 28:8 - -- The Lord shall command the blessing upon thee in thy storehouses,.... Barns, granaries, and cellar, where their corn, wine, and oil, were laid up; by ...

The Lord shall command the blessing upon thee in thy storehouses,.... Barns, granaries, and cellar, where their corn, wine, and oil, were laid up; by preserving the corn from being devoured by vermin, and the casks of wine and oil from bursting and running out:

and in all thou settest thine hand unto; in all their manufactures, occupations, and trades, in which they were employed, and in the culture of their vines, olives, and other fruit trees:

and he shall bless thee in the land which the Lord thy God giveth thee; with health and long life in it, and with an abundance of all good things, it being a land flowing with milk and honey.

Gill: Deu 28:9 - -- And the Lord shall establish thee an holy people unto himself,.... Having separated them from all others, for his service, honour, and glory, should c...

And the Lord shall establish thee an holy people unto himself,.... Having separated them from all others, for his service, honour, and glory, should continue them as such, and settle them in the land, and confirm all their privileges, natural, civil, and religious. The Targum of Jonathan is,"the Word of the Lord shall establish thee, &c.''he that brought them out of Egypt, through the Red sea and wilderness, to the land of Canaan:

as he hath sworn unto thee: and to their fathers; see Deu 7:12,

if thou shall keep the commandments of the Lord thy God, and walk in his ways; by which tenure they held the land of Canaan, and their settlement and continuance in it, and enjoyment of all the good things thereof; see Isa 1:19.

Gill: Deu 28:10 - -- And all the people of the earth shall see that thou art called by the name of the Lord,.... Called his children, his people, his portion, and his inhe...

And all the people of the earth shall see that thou art called by the name of the Lord,.... Called his children, his people, his portion, and his inheritance; and that they are his, and he is theirs, by the care he takes of them, the provision he makes for them, and the protection they have from him:

and they shall be afraid of thee; as not only the Canaanites were, but all other nations; see Deu 11:25.

Gill: Deu 28:11 - -- And the Lord shall make thee plenteous in goods,.... In all temporal good things, give them an affluence of them, even all things richly to enjoy; the...

And the Lord shall make thee plenteous in goods,.... In all temporal good things, give them an affluence of them, even all things richly to enjoy; the Targum of Jonathan is,"the Word of the Lord shall, &c."

in the fruit of thy body, and in the fruit of thy cattle, and in the fruit of thy ground: increase their children, cattle, and substance, as before, Deu 28:4,

in the land which the Lord sware unto thy fathers to give thee; the land of Canaan, often thus described.

Gill: Deu 28:12 - -- The Lord shall open unto thee his good treasure,.... The Lord has his treasures of snow and of hail, and of wind, Job 38:22; but here his good treasur...

The Lord shall open unto thee his good treasure,.... The Lord has his treasures of snow and of hail, and of wind, Job 38:22; but here his good treasure, as appears by what follows, is his treasure of rain. In the Targum of Jonathan it is said,

"there are four keys in the hand of the Lord of the whole world, which he does not deliver into the hands of any prince; the keys of life, and of the grave, and of food, and of rain:"

the heaven, to give the rain unto thy land in its season; that is, he will open the heaven, where his good treasure of rain is laid up, and bring it forth or, the land of Canaan for the enriching of it; or will open the windows thereof, and pour down the blessing; see Mal 3:10; and that at the proper time, both in autumn and spring, the one is called the former, and the other the latter rain; the one was in Marchesvan, or October, and the other in Nisan, or March, as the Targum of Jonathan; the former rain for the fitting the earth for seed, or for watering it when sown, and the latter for the plumping of it before harvest:

and to bless all the work of thine hand; in agriculture, for without the blessing of rain, all the labour of the husbandman would be to little purpose:

and thou shall lend unto many nations, and thou shall not borrow; See Gill on Deu 15:16. The connection of these words with what goes before may lead to observe this sense of them, that they should furnish other countries with corn, and not need any of theirs; see Eze 27:17.

Gill: Deu 28:13 - -- And the Lord shall make thee the head, and not the tail,.... Give them dominion over others, and not make them subject to them; the head signifies rul...

And the Lord shall make thee the head, and not the tail,.... Give them dominion over others, and not make them subject to them; the head signifies rulers and governors, and the tail the common people that are subjects; or the one such that are honourable and in high esteem, and the other such that are mean and base; see Isa 9:14; the Targum of Jonathan is,"the Word of the Lord shall make thee, &c."

and thou shalt be above only, and thou shall not be beneath; which explains what is meant by head and tail, being uppermost and lowermost, as the head is the upper part, and the tail the lower part of a creature; the one is more honourable, the other vile: the sense is, that they should be superior to other people in honour and dignity, and not below them, or vassals to them:

if that thou hearken to the commandments of the Lord thy God, which I command thee this day to observe and to do them; which is the condition on which all this happiness depended.

Gill: Deu 28:14 - -- And thou shall not go aside from any of the words which I command thee this day,.... Depart from them as a rule to walk by, turn out from them as a pa...

And thou shall not go aside from any of the words which I command thee this day,.... Depart from them as a rule to walk by, turn out from them as a path to walk in, neglect and disobey them, and go into practices contrary to them: turning

to the right hand or to the left, to go after other gods to serve them; which to do was to break the first and principal table of the law, than which nothing was more abominable and provoking to God.

Gill: Deu 28:15 - -- But it shall come to pass, if thou wilt not hearken to the voice of the Lord thy God,.... As directed, exhorted, and encouraged to, Deu 28:1, &c. t...

But it shall come to pass, if thou wilt not hearken to the voice of the Lord thy God,.... As directed, exhorted, and encouraged to, Deu 28:1, &c.

to observe to do all his commandments and his statutes, which I command thee this day; both moral and ceremonial:

that all these curses shall come upon thee; from the hand of God, certainly, suddenly, and unawares:

and overtake thee; pursuing after thee, will come up to thee, and seize upon thee, though they may seem to move slowly; see Zec 5:3; namely, the curses which follow. Manasseh Ben Israel f divides them into two parts, the first from hence to Deu 28:45; which respects the destruction of the first temple, and the things that went before or related to that; and the second from thence to the end of the chapter, which he thinks refers to the destruction of the second temple, and their present case and circumstances; and it must be owned that for the most part the distinction may seem to hold good; what is prophesied of that should befall the Jews for their disobedience being more remarkably and distinctly fulfilled in the one than in the other; yet there are things in the whole which respect both, or that were fulfilled, some under one dispensation, and some under another, and some that were fulfilled in both; but chiefly and more manifestly at and since their dispersion by the Romans.

Gill: Deu 28:16 - -- Cursed shalt thou be in the city, and cursed shalt thou be in the field. In Deu 28:16 the curses are delivered out in form, as the reverse of the ...

Cursed shalt thou be in the city, and cursed shalt thou be in the field. In Deu 28:16 the curses are delivered out in form, as the reverse of the blessings in Deu 28:3; and by observing what the blessings mean, the sense of the curses may easily be understood, the one being directly opposite to the other. See Gill on Deu 28:3.

Gill: Deu 28:17 - -- Cursed shall be thy basket and thy store. See Gill on Deu 28:5, Deu 28:16.

Cursed shall be thy basket and thy store. See Gill on Deu 28:5, Deu 28:16.

Gill: Deu 28:18 - -- Cursed shall be the fruit of thy body, and the fruit of thy land, the increase of thy kine, and the flocks of thy sheep. See Gill on Deu 28:4, Deu 28...

Cursed shall be the fruit of thy body, and the fruit of thy land, the increase of thy kine, and the flocks of thy sheep. See Gill on Deu 28:4, Deu 28:16.

Gill: Deu 28:19 - -- Cursed shalt thou be when thou comest in, and cursed shalt thou be when thou goest out. See Gill on Deu 28:6, Deu 28:16.

Cursed shalt thou be when thou comest in, and cursed shalt thou be when thou goest out. See Gill on Deu 28:6, Deu 28:16.

Gill: Deu 28:20 - -- The Lord shall send upon thee cursing,.... Which is either a general word for all that follows, or rather, since that had been expressed before in var...

The Lord shall send upon thee cursing,.... Which is either a general word for all that follows, or rather, since that had been expressed before in various instances, this may denote some particular judgment. Jarchi interprets it of penury, of want of all good things, extreme poverty, so as to be reduced to the utmost necessity, and as to stand in need of the common comforts and supports of life, and even to have their blessings and mercies turned into curses; the consequence of which must needs be

vexation; trouble, distress, and anguish of spirit:

and rebuke; this may well be considered as a rebuke and correction in Providence for sins committed, to awaken to a sense and acknowledgment of them, and to repentance for them:

in all that thou settest thine hand to do; nothing done should prosper, to relieve them under their pressing wants, a curse attending all their efforts, and so sad disappointment follows; and all as a just rebuke for their many sins: and this would be their case more or less:

until thou be destroyed, and until thou perish quickly; through famine, and want of the common necessaries of life; as at the sieges of Samaria and Jerusalem, by the kings of Syria, Assyria, and Babylon:

because of the wickedness of thy doings, because thou hast forsaken me; their several immoralities and impieties, and particularly their idolatry, which was a forsaking the worship of the true God, and following idols; an iniquity to be punished by the judge, and of all things the most provoking to the Lord.

Gill: Deu 28:21 - -- The Lord shall make the pestilence cleave unto thee,.... Not only to come upon them; but to continue with them: until he have consumed thee from of...

The Lord shall make the pestilence cleave unto thee,.... Not only to come upon them; but to continue with them:

until he have consumed thee from off the land whither thou goest to possess it; which shows that this respects not some particular seasons, when the pestilence came and continued awhile, and then ceased, as in the times of David; but when it became more general, and issued with other judgments in the utter consumption of them, as at the destruction of Jerusalem, both by the Babylonians and the Romans; at what times the pestilence raged and remained, until by that and other sore judgments the land was wholly depopulated.

Gill: Deu 28:22 - -- The Lord shall smite thee with a consumption,.... An emaciation of their bodies, either through famine or wasting diseases, whereby the fluids are was...

The Lord shall smite thee with a consumption,.... An emaciation of their bodies, either through famine or wasting diseases, whereby the fluids are washed off, and men are reduced to skin and bones:

and with a fever; a hot burning disease, which dries up the radical moisture, consumes it, and so threatens with death; of which there are various sorts, and some very pestilential and mortal Jarchi and Aben Ezra interpret it of a fire in the face, by which they seem to mean what is called St. Anthony's fire:

and with an inflammation, and with an extreme burning; either in the inward parts, as an inflammation of the lungs; or in the outward parts, as carbuncles, burning ulcers, and the like:

and with the sword; in the margin it is, "with drought"; so Aben Ezra interprets the word, which seems better to suit with what it is in company with; and designs either drought in human bodies, occasioned by fevers, inflammations, and extreme burnings; or in the earth, through the force of the sun, and want of rain, which render the earth barren and unfruitful, and so cause a famine:

and with blasting and with mildew; whereby the corn that is sown, and springs up, comes to nothing, being blasted by east winds, or turns pale and yellow by the mildew, and so withers away; the consequence of which is want of food, and so destruction and ruin; see Amo 4:9,

and they shall pursue thee until thou perish; follow hard after them, and come so close one after another upon them, until they are utterly destroyed.

Gill: Deu 28:23 - -- And the heaven that is over thy head shall be brass,.... Or like brass, not for its clearness, brightness, and splendour, or for its being spread out...

And the heaven that is over thy head shall be brass,.... Or like brass, not for its clearness, brightness, and splendour, or for its being spread out like a molten looking glass which was of brass, Job 37:18; but for its dryness and hardness, no moisture being in it, or passing through it; no showers of rain nor dew being let down from it:

and the earth that is under thee shall be iron; or like iron, hard and impenetrable, into which the plough and spade will not enter; nor anything spring out of it, for want of rain and dew to moisten and soften it. The same is said in Lev 26:19; only there is an inversion of the figures; there the heaven is said to be as iron, and the earth like brass, but signify the same thing.

Gill: Deu 28:24 - -- The Lord shall make the rain of thy land powder and dust,.... That is, instead of showers of rain in their season, to water, refresh, and enrich the e...

The Lord shall make the rain of thy land powder and dust,.... That is, instead of showers of rain in their season, to water, refresh, and enrich the earth, and make it fruitful; and for want of them, and through the heat of the sun, being dried and parched, and its clods crumbled into dust, this should be raised up into the air by the force of winds, and let down again in showers of dust; whereby the few herbs, plants, or green trees on it would be utterly destroyed: and so the Targum of Jonathan interprets it of the Lord's sending a wind that should raise the dust and earth upon the herbs of their fields. Such ploughing winds, that cast up the earth and sand, and dust, into the air, whereby men and cattle are sometimes covered, are frequent in the eastern countries; of which See Gill on Jon 4:8,

from heaven shall it come down upon thee until thou be destroyed; that is, from the air, up to which the dust is carried by the wind, and then let fall in vast quantities, like showers, which are very destructive.

Gill: Deu 28:25 - -- The Lord shall cause thee to be smitten fore thine enemies,.... And by them, as they sometimes were by the Philistines and others, before their utter ...

The Lord shall cause thee to be smitten fore thine enemies,.... And by them, as they sometimes were by the Philistines and others, before their utter destruction, when they sinned against the Lord; and by the Assyrians, Babylonians, and Romans:

thou shall go out one way against them, and flee seven ways before them; march out against them in a body, promising themselves victory, but be utterly routed; so that they shall flee every way they can for their safety; see Deu 28:7,

and shall be removed into all the kingdoms of the earth; this shows that Manasseh's case 2Ki 21:1, observed Deu 28:15; will not strictly and entirely hold good, nor is there any necessity to adhere closely to it; it is enough that the things threatened and prophesied of were at one time or another fulfilled in these people; for neither the ten tribes, when taken captive by Shalmaneser, were carried into all the kingdoms of the earth, only to some particular places mentioned in 2Ki 17:6; nor the two tribes by Nebuchadnezzar, who were carried by him to Babylon, and returned from thence again at the end of seventy years; but this was exactly fulfilled at their last destruction by the Romans, when they were sent by them into various countries, and have been ever since scattered about in each of the nations of the world. And yet it must be owned that Strabo g, who wrote before the last destruction of them, affirms, that it was not easy to find any place in the world which had not received them, and was not occupied by them.

Gill: Deu 28:26 - -- And thy carcass shall be meat unto all fowls of the air, and unto the beasts of the earth,.... Which was always reckoned a very grievous calamity, hav...

And thy carcass shall be meat unto all fowls of the air, and unto the beasts of the earth,.... Which was always reckoned a very grievous calamity, have no other burial than in the bowels of beasts and birds; and was the case of many of the Jews in the Antiochian persecution, Psa 79:2; and in a treatise of theirs h, which relates their many afflictions and sufferings in their present captivity, speaking of a persecution of them in Spain, in the Jewish year 5172, it is reported, how that those that fled to avoid punishment were killed in the fields, where their carcasses lying unburied became a prey to beasts:

and no man shall fray them away; the fowls and the beasts; none of their friends being left to do it, and their enemies would not show so much respect to them, and care of them.

Gill: Deu 28:27 - -- The Lord will smite thee with the botch of Egypt,.... Which some understand of the leprosy, Of that sort of it called "elephantiasis", frequent among ...

The Lord will smite thee with the botch of Egypt,.... Which some understand of the leprosy, Of that sort of it called "elephantiasis", frequent among the Egyptians; See Gill on Lev 13:2. Thevenot i relates, that when the time of the increase of the Nile expires, the Egyptians are attended with sharp prickings in their skin like needles. So Vansleb says k,"the waters of the Nile cause an itch in the skin, which troubles such as drink of them when the river increases. This itch is very small, and appears first about the arms, next upon the stomach, and spreads all about the body, which causes a grievous pain; and not only the river water, but that out of the cisterns drank of, brings it, and it lasts about six weeks.''Though some take this botch to be the botch and blain which the Egyptians were plagued with for refusing to let Israel go, Exo 9:9,

and with the emerods; or haemorrhoids, the piles, a disease of the fundament, attended sometimes with ulcers there; see 1Sa 5:9,

and with the scab and with the itch: the one moist, the other dry, and both very distressing:

whereof thou canst not be healed; by any art of men; which shows these to be uncommon ones, and from the immediate hand of God.

Gill: Deu 28:28 - -- The Lord shall smite thee with madness,.... At the calamities befallen them, and through the force of diseases on them: and blindness; not of body,...

The Lord shall smite thee with madness,.... At the calamities befallen them, and through the force of diseases on them:

and blindness; not of body, but of mind; with judicial blindness and hardness of heart:

and astonishment of heart; at the miserable condition they and their families should be in.

Gill: Deu 28:29 - -- And thou shalt grope at noon day as the blind gropeth in darkness,.... That is, being in darkness through the loss of their sight; otherwise the darkn...

And thou shalt grope at noon day as the blind gropeth in darkness,.... That is, being in darkness through the loss of their sight; otherwise the darkness and the light are alike to them, and they grope in the one as well as in the other. This comparison shows that the darkness and blindness of the Jews, threatened them, is to be understood not of the darkness of their bodily eyes, but of their minds; not being able to understand, or form a judgment of things that are as clear as noon day; and being at the utmost loss what methods to take and pursue, when they are plain and manifest before them; but being infatuated and besotted, follow the lusts and counsels of their own hearts, which lead them wrong:

and thou shall not prosper in thy ways; in any steps they may take to extricate themselves out of their difficulties, distresses, and calamities, or to bring themselves into easy and comfortable circumstances; to get wealth and riches, and honour and esteem with men; but, on the contrary, become forlorn and miserable, poor and wretched, mean and despicable:

and thou shalt be only oppressed and spoiled evermore; continually, every day, all the days of their lives, oppressed with taxes and tributes, with mulcts and fines, and spoiled of their goods and substance under one pretence or another; which has been generally their case in Popish countries; for this seems not to refer to the Babylonish captivity, where they built houses, and dwelt in them, and planted gardens, and ate the fruit of them; and in the peace of cities had peace themselves, Jer 29:5,

and no man shall save thee; from the oppressions, exactions, and spoils of their enemies, nor deliver them out of their hands; whereas in process of time they had deliverance and salvation from the Babylonish captivity, by the means of Cyrus king of Persia.

Gill: Deu 28:30 - -- Thou shall betroth a wife, and another man shall lie with her,.... Espouse a woman in order to make her his wife, and before he can take her home, and...

Thou shall betroth a wife, and another man shall lie with her,.... Espouse a woman in order to make her his wife, and before he can take her home, and consummate the marriage, through some calamity or another coming upon them, they should be set at a distance from each other, and she should fall into the hands of another man, who either should ravish her, or gain her consent to lie with her, or become his wife; which, when the marriage was so near being consummated, must be a grievous disappointment, and a great vexation:

thou shall build an house, and thou shall not dwell therein; being, before it is quite finished, or however before he is got into it, carried captive, or obliged to flee to a distant place:

thou shall plant a vineyard, and shall not gather the grapes thereof; or make it common, on the fourth year to eat the fruits of it, as Jarchi; which might not be done until sanctified and redeemed according to the law in Lev 19:23; See Gill on Deu 20:6.

Gill: Deu 28:31 - -- Thine ox shall be slain before thine eyes, and thou shalt not eat thereof,.... Shall be taken from the herd, and out of the field or stall, by the en...

Thine ox shall be slain before thine eyes, and thou shalt not eat thereof,.... Shall be taken from the herd, and out of the field or stall, by the enemy, and killed for the soldiers to feed on, and not the least part of it given to them:

thine ass shall be violently taken away from before thy face, and shall not be restored unto thee; no leave shall be asked to take it, but without their consent, and against their will, it should be taken away by the soldiers to carry them and their burdens, and it may be the booty and spoil of them, and never returned more:

thy sheep shall be given unto thine enemies, and thou shall have none to rescue them; not given them by themselves, but they should be suffered to fall into their hands, and they should never be able to get them out again, nor any for them. These, strictly and literally taken, suppose them to be in their own land, when those things would be done, where they were possessed of farms, and fields, cattle, being much employed in husbandry; but they may be put for any kind of substance they would be possessed of, which they should be stripped of under one pretence or another; which has been frequently their case in their present dispersion in several countries, and in ours; when Popish princes have wanted money, they have made very exorbitant demands on the Jews in their countries, and sadly squeezed and oppressed them, and who were not able to resist them, and never had any restoration made to them.

Gill: Deu 28:32 - -- Thy sons and thy daughters shall be given unto another people,.... This also was not true in the Babylonish captivity; for then their sons and daught...

Thy sons and thy daughters shall be given unto another people,.... This also was not true in the Babylonish captivity; for then their sons and daughters went with them, and continued with them, and returned again; but has been oftentimes verified since their captivity by the Romans; frequently their sons and daughters have been taken from them by force, to be brought up in another religion, by the edicts of kings and popes, and by the canons of councils, and particularly of the fourth council of Toledo:

and thine eyes shall look and fail; with longing:

for them all the day long; expecting every day their children would be returned to them, at least wishing and hoping they would; their hearts yearning after them, but all in vain:

and there shall be no might in thy hand; to recover them out of the hands of those who had the possession of them, or fetch them back from distant countries, whither they were carried. By an edict of the Portuguese, the children of the Jews were ordered to be carried to the uninhabited islands; and when, by the king's command, they were had to the ships in which they were to be transported, it is incredible, the Jewish historian says l, what howlings and lamentations were made by the women; and there wore none pitied them and comforted them, or could help them.

Gill: Deu 28:33 - -- The fruit of thy land, and all thy labour, shall a nation which thou knowest not eat up,.... The same was prophesied of by Jeremiah, concerning the Ba...

The fruit of thy land, and all thy labour, shall a nation which thou knowest not eat up,.... The same was prophesied of by Jeremiah, concerning the Babylonish captivity, and was fulfilled in it, Jer 5:17; and has been also verified in the frequent pillage and spoil of this people, in their present state; for though they have no land to till, from whence to gather fruit, yet they are employed in manufactures and merchandise, the fruit and benefit of which they have been frequently stripped of:

and thou shall be only oppressed and crushed always; this seems best to agree with their present case; for in their former captivities they were not always oppressed and crushed, but had respite and deliverance; See Gill on Deu 28:29.

Gill: Deu 28:34 - -- So that thou shalt be mad, for the sight of thine eyes that thou shall see. On account of the shocking things seen by them, their dreadful calamities,...

So that thou shalt be mad, for the sight of thine eyes that thou shall see. On account of the shocking things seen by them, their dreadful calamities, oppressions, and persecutions, such as before related; not only violent diseases on their bodies, which were grievous to behold, as well as their pains were intolerable, and made them mad; but to be deprived of a betrothed wife, a newly built house, and a newly planted vineyard; to have an ox slain, and an ass taken away by their enemies, and their sheep given to them before their eyes; to have their sons and daughters taken from them, and brought up in another religion, and to be stripped of their substance; these have made them stark mad, insomuch that they have sometimes destroyed themselves and their families. In Germany, in their rage and madness, they burnt a city and themselves in it; and, in the same country, being summoned by an edict to change their religion, or to be burnt, they agreed to meet together in a certain house, and destroy one another; and first parents killed their children, and husbands their wives, and then killed themselves; leaving only one person to be their doorkeeper, who finished the tragedy by destroying himself, as their own historian relates m. Other stories of the like kind are reported of them, and some such facts as done in our own nation n.

Gill: Deu 28:35 - -- The Lord shall smite thee in the knees, and in the legs, with a sore botch, that cannot be healed,.... Which in those parts as it is very painful, so ...

The Lord shall smite thee in the knees, and in the legs, with a sore botch, that cannot be healed,.... Which in those parts as it is very painful, so is not easily cured; and this which is threatened was incurable by the art of man, as others in Deu 28:27; and which should not stop there in the lower parts of the body, but proceed and spread:

from the sole of thy foot unto the top of thy head; and so be filled with them, as Job was with his boils and ulcers.

Gill: Deu 28:36 - -- And the Lord shall bring thee, and thy king which thou shall set over thee,.... This was fulfilled both in Jehoiachin and in Zedekiah, kings of Judah,...

And the Lord shall bring thee, and thy king which thou shall set over thee,.... This was fulfilled both in Jehoiachin and in Zedekiah, kings of Judah, who were carried captive to Babylon, by Nebuchadnezzar, 2Ki 24:15,

unto a nation which neither thou nor thy fathers have known; the land of Babylon, which was at a distance from them, and is represented in Scripture as afar off, Jer 5:15; and which the Jews, not being a trading people, or dealing in merchandise in foreign parts, were unacquainted with:

and there shall thou serve other gods, wood and stone; which they were obliged to do in Babylon, of which it seems best to understand it; for though it may be interpreted of their compliance with the image worship of the Papists in their present condition, as the former clause may be of their rulers and governors, included in the name of king, carried captive by the Romans; who were a nation as little, if not less known than the Babylonians: but the former sense seems to suit best here, as this does with Deu 28:64; where the language is somewhat different, and very appropriate. The Targum of Jonathan is,"shall pay tribute to those that worship idols of wood and stone.''

Gill: Deu 28:37 - -- And thou shall become an astonishment,.... To neighbouring nations, that shall hear of their overthrow and captivity, and that shall see the miserable...

And thou shall become an astonishment,.... To neighbouring nations, that shall hear of their overthrow and captivity, and that shall see the miserable condition they are brought into:

a proverb and a byword among all nations whither the Lord shall lead thee; both for the wickedness committed by them, and for the ill usage of them by the nations among whom they should be, as they were in the Babylonish captivity; see Jer 24:9; and now are, it being common to say,"do you think I am a Jew?''or,"none but a Jew would have done such a thing.''

Gill: Deu 28:38 - -- Thou shall carry much seed into the field,.... And sow it plentifully; this and what is said in some following verses plainly refer to them while in t...

Thou shall carry much seed into the field,.... And sow it plentifully; this and what is said in some following verses plainly refer to them while in their own land, before carried captive, and not to their present case and circumstances:

and shall gather but little in at harvest; little springing up, or not coming to perfection, being blighted and blasted, and so yielded but a small crop; see Hag 1:9; and chiefly for the following reason:

for the locust shall consume it; which is a great destroyer of the fruits of the earth; see Joe 1:4.

Gill: Deu 28:39 - -- Thou shalt plant vineyards, and dress them,.... Plant them and prune them, in expectation of much fruit from them: but shall neither drink of the...

Thou shalt plant vineyards, and dress them,.... Plant them and prune them, in expectation of much fruit from them:

but shall neither drink of the wine nor gather the grapes; so far from drinking of the wine of them, that they should not be able to gather any grapes from them:

for the worms shall eat them; a sort of worms pernicious to vines, which the Greeks call "ipes", or "ikes" o; and the Latins "convolvuli" and "volvoces", as Pliny p.

Gill: Deu 28:40 - -- Thou shalt have olive trees throughout thy coasts,.... In the several parts of the land of Canaan, which is therefore called a land of olive oil, Deu ...

Thou shalt have olive trees throughout thy coasts,.... In the several parts of the land of Canaan, which is therefore called a land of olive oil, Deu 8:8,

but thou shalt not anoint thyself with the oil; nor any other relations, friends, guests, as was usual at entertainments; see Psa 23:5; for the phrase "thyself" is not in the text. The reason why they should not anoint is, because they would have no oil to anoint with:

for thine olive shall cast his fruit; before it is ripe, by one means or another, as by winds, or blasting and mildew; see Amo 4:9.

Gill: Deu 28:41 - -- Thou shalt beget sons and daughters, but thou shall not enjoy them,.... Or, "they shall not be thine" q; being taken from them, and given to others, s...

Thou shalt beget sons and daughters, but thou shall not enjoy them,.... Or, "they shall not be thine" q; being taken from them, and given to others, see Deu 28:32; and for the following reason:

for they shall go into captivity; as when the ten tribes were carried captive by Shalmaneser, and the two tribes by Nebuchadnezzar, and all the people of the Jews by the Romans.

Gill: Deu 28:42 - -- All thy trees and fruit of thy land shall the locust consume. Which is a creature that not only consumes grass, and herbs, and the corn of the field, ...

All thy trees and fruit of thy land shall the locust consume. Which is a creature that not only consumes grass, and herbs, and the corn of the field, but all green trees; see Exo 10:15. This sort here has its name from the shade they make, hiding the light of the sun, and darkening the face of the earth at no on day; or from the noise they make with their wings in flying; see Joe 2:5.

Gill: Deu 28:43 - -- The stranger that is within thee shall get up above thee very high,.... In wealth and riches, in power and authority, in honour and dignity. This Man...

The stranger that is within thee shall get up above thee very high,.... In wealth and riches, in power and authority, in honour and dignity. This Manasseh Ben Israel r interprets of the Samaritans, whom the king of Assyria drove out of Samaria, and the neighbouring places; but the design of the expression is to show how mean and abject they should be in another country; that even one who had been a stranger or proselyte of the gate, when in their own country, should now be vastly above them:

and thou shall come down, very low; into a very mean condition, to be in great subjection, a vassal and a slave; see Psa 106:41; and much more when reduced by the Romans, and sent to the mines in Egypt.

Gill: Deu 28:44 - -- He shall lend to thee, and thou shall not lend to him,.... The stranger, or one of another nation, shall be in a capacity of lending to the Jew, when ...

He shall lend to thee, and thou shall not lend to him,.... The stranger, or one of another nation, shall be in a capacity of lending to the Jew, when the Jew would not be able to lend to the Gentile, his circumstances being so low and mean; to show which is the design of the expression, and not the kindness or unkindness of either; see Deu 28:12,

he shall be the head, and thou shalt be the tail; he shall be ruler and governor, and thou shalt be subject to him; see Deu 28:13.

Gill: Deu 28:45 - -- Moreover, all these curses shall come upon thee,.... Before related, as well as what follow: and shall pursue thee, and overtake thee till thou be ...

Moreover, all these curses shall come upon thee,.... Before related, as well as what follow:

and shall pursue thee, and overtake thee till thou be destroyed; which though they would endeavour to flee from and escape, should not be able, since they would follow them so closely and swiftly, and overtake them, and seize upon them; see Deu 28:15,

because thou hearkenedst not unto the voice of the Lord thy God, to keep his commandments and his statutes which he commanded thee; to which disobedience all the curses are to be imputed that go before or follow after.

Gill: Deu 28:46 - -- And they shall be upon thee for a sign and for a wonder,.... That is, those curses before pronounced, Deu 27:15, and what follow, should rest and rema...

And they shall be upon thee for a sign and for a wonder,.... That is, those curses before pronounced, Deu 27:15, and what follow, should rest and remain upon them, continue with them, and be very visible on them; so as to be observed by others, as a sign of the wrath and displeasure of God, and of the fulfilment of prophecy, and of the truth of divine revelation: and so "for a wonder": as it is most astonishing to observe how exactly all the curses threatened them have fallen upon them and have abode with them, as they did in their former captivities, and more especially do in the present one: and, what is the greater wonder, that notwithstanding these dreadful calamities, and so long continued, enough to have crushed any people from being a people, yet they have continued, and still do continue, a distinct people; which is a standing miracle, and one would think sufficient to convince the most hardened and obstinate deist of the truth and authority of the sacred Scriptures; in which stand so many glaring prophecies that have been fulfilled, and are continually fulfilling in this people:

and upon thy seed for ever; this shows that these curses, said to be upon them, not only refer to those that came upon them at and in the Babylonish captivity, but to those that came upon them at their destruction by the Romans, and which have continued on them nineteen hundred years; and how much longer they will continue none can say: it will be their case, until new heavens and a new earth are created, or there will be a new state of things, at least with them; when they shall be converted to the Lord, and all Israel saved; see Isa 65:17; and it may be observed, that the ten tribes carried captive never returned.

Gill: Deu 28:47 - -- Because thou servedst not the Lord thy God,.... By attending his worship, and keeping his commandments: with joyfulness and gladness of heart, for ...

Because thou servedst not the Lord thy God,.... By attending his worship, and keeping his commandments:

with joyfulness and gladness of heart, for the abundance of all things; which they enjoyed in the land of Canaan, a land that abounded with all good things; which laid them under great obligations to serve the Lord: and yet, as they were wanting in a ready attendance on his worship, and in a cheerful obedience to his laws, so in their sacrifices, of praise and thanksgivings for their manifold mercies; and, because of all this, the curses written in this book came upon them.

Gill: Deu 28:48 - -- Therefore shall thou serve thine enemies, which the Lord shall send against thee,.... Since they would not serve the Lord their God, who was so good a...

Therefore shall thou serve thine enemies, which the Lord shall send against thee,.... Since they would not serve the Lord their God, who was so good a master to them, and supplied them with all good things, and with plenty of them, they should serve other lords, their enemies, whom God would raise up and send against them; not only, the Assyrians, Chaldeans, and Babylonians, but the Romans, after described, whom they should find hard masters, and from whom they; should have very severe usage, and should be

in hunger and in thirst, and in nakedness, and in want of all good things; being destitute of food, and drink and raiment, and the common necessaries of life, and so in famishing and starving circumstances:

and he shall put a yoke of iron upon thy neck; bring them into a state of subjection to their enemies, which would be intolerable to them, and from which they would not be able to free themselves, any more than to break an iron yoke; which, as it agrees with the Babylonish captivity, and their subjection in that state, see Jer 28:13; so more especially with their bondage under the Romans, who are the legs of iron in Nebuchadnezzar's image, and the fourth beast with great iron teeth in Daniel's vision, Dan 2:33, and this yoke was to continue

until he have destroyed thee; the Jews were under the Roman yoke, Roman governors being set over them, and Judea made a Roman province many years before the destruction of their nation, city, and temple, by them.

Gill: Deu 28:49 - -- The Lord shall bring a nation against thee from far, from the end of the earth,.... Now though Babylon is represented as a country distant from Judea,...

The Lord shall bring a nation against thee from far, from the end of the earth,.... Now though Babylon is represented as a country distant from Judea, and said to be a nation "from far", Jer 5:15; yet not "from the end of the earth"; as here; and though the Roman nation, strictly speaking, was not at so great a distance from Jerusalem, yet the Roman emperors, and great part of their armies brought against it, were fetched from our island of Great Britain, which in former times was reckoned the end of the earth, and the uttermost parts of the world s; and so Manasseh Ben Israel t interprets this nation of Rome, and observes, that Vespasian brought for his assistance many nations (or soldiers) out of England, France, Spain, and other parts of the world: and not only Vespasian was sent for from Britain to make war with the Jews, but when they rebelled, in the times of Adrian, Julius Severus, a very eminent general, was sent for from thence to quell them. And it appears to be a very ancient opinion of the Jews, that this passage is to be understood of the Romans, from what is related in one of their Talmuds u: they say, that"Trajan, being sent for by his wife to subdue the Jews, determined to come in ten days, and came in five; he came and found them (the Jews) busy in the law on that verse, "the Lord shall bring a nation against thee from far", &c. he said unto them, what are ye busy in? they answered him, so and so; he replied to them, this is the man (meaning himself) who thought to come in ten days, and came in five; and he surrounded them with his legions, and slew them:"

as swift as the eagle flieth; which may respect not so much the swiftness of this creature, the words which convey the idea being a supplement of the text, as the force with which it flies when in sight of its prey, and hastes unto it and falls upon it, which is irresistible; and this is the sense of the Septuagint and Vulgate Latin versions, and is what is ascribed to the eagle by other writers w. Now though this figure is used of the Chaldeans and Babylonians, Jer 4:13; it agrees full as well or better with the Romans, because of their swiftness in coming from distant parts, and because of the force and impetus with which they invaded Judea, besieged Jerusalem, and attacked the Jews everywhere; and besides, the eagle was borne on the standard in the Roman army x:

a nation whose tongue thou shalt not understand; which, though it is also said of the language of the Chaldean nation, Jer 5:15; yet as the Chaldee and Hebrew languages were only dialects of one and the same language, common to the eastern nations, the Chaldee language, though on account of termination of words, pronunciation, and other things, might be difficult, and hard to be understood by the Jews, yet must be much more easy to understand than the Roman language, so widely different from theirs.

Gill: Deu 28:50 - -- A nation of fierce countenance,.... Or, "strong of face" y; which aptly describes the old Romans, who are always represented as such; and whereas it i...

A nation of fierce countenance,.... Or, "strong of face" y; which aptly describes the old Romans, who are always represented as such; and whereas it is said of the Chaldeans, that they were a nation dreadful and terrible, Hab 1:7; the same is said of the fourth beast, or Roman empire, Dan 7:7; who were a terror to all the world:

which shall not regard the person of the old, nor show favour to the young: cruel, unmerciful, and uncompassionate, to persons of whatsoever age or sex; which, as it was the character of the Chaldeans, 2Ch 36:17; so of the Romans, who especially showed no mercy to the Jews, as Josephus z, who was an eyewitness, testifies."The Romans (says he) showed no mercy to any age, out of hatred to the nation (of the Jews), and in remembrance of the injuries done to Cestius;''one of their governors, when among them. And in another place he says a,"the Romans, remembering what they suffered in the siege, spared none, and showed no mercy.''

Gill: Deu 28:51 - -- And he shall eat the fruit of thy cattle,.... Larger and lesser, oxen and sheep, as their calves and lambs, and kids of the goat: and the fruit of ...

And he shall eat the fruit of thy cattle,.... Larger and lesser, oxen and sheep, as their calves and lambs, and kids of the goat:

and the fruit of thy land; their wheat, barley, figs, grapes, pomegranates, olives, and dates:

until thou be destroyed; the land of Judea, and all the increase of it: this being before said, Deu 28:31; and here repeated, shows that the same should be fulfilled at different times, as by the Chaldeans, so by the Romans; whose nation, or army, with their general at the head of them, may be more especially here intended by "he", that should eat up their fruit until utter destruction was brought upon them:

which also shall not leave thee either corn, wine, or oil, or the increase of thy kine, or flocks of thy sheep, until he have destroyed thee; all being consumed by the Roman army. There is a promise and prophecy, that though this would be the case, as it has been, there shall be a time when it shall be so no more; see Isa 62:8.

Gill: Deu 28:52 - -- And he shall besiege thee in all thy gates,.... That is, in all their cities and walled towns, which had gates and bars for security: until thy hig...

And he shall besiege thee in all thy gates,.... That is, in all their cities and walled towns, which had gates and bars for security:

until thy high and fenced walls come down, wherein thou trustedst,

throughout all thy land; the Jews had several cities well fenced and strongly fortified, besides Jerusalem, which was fortified both by art and nature, and in which they greatly put their trust and confidence; but these were broken down, particularly by the battering rams of the Romans:

and he shall besiege thee in all thy gates, throughout all thy land,

which the Lord thy God hath given thee; this is repeated for the certainty of it, and that it might be taken notice of, and abate their trust and confidence in their outward strength. Now all this was fulfilled, partly in the siege of Samaria by the king of Assyria, who went through all the land of the ten tribes, 2Ki 17:5; and in Sennacherib's taking the fenced cities of Judah, 2Ki 18:13; and in the siege of Jerusalem, and breaking down the walls of it by Nebuchadnezzar, 2Ki 25:10; and, last of all, in the siege of Jerusalem, and battering down the walls of it, by the Romans; at which time also all their strong and fenced cities throughout the land were taken and demolished.

expand all
Commentary -- Verse Notes / Footnotes

NET Notes: Deu 28:1 Heb “commanding”; NAB “which I enjoin on you today” (likewise in v. 15).

NET Notes: Deu 28:2 Heb “come upon you and overtake you” (so NASB, NRSV); NIV “come upon you and accompany you.”

NET Notes: Deu 28:3 Or “in the country” (so NAB, NIV, NLT). This expression also occurs in v. 15.

NET Notes: Deu 28:4 Heb “the fruit of your womb” (so NAB, NIV, NRSV).

NET Notes: Deu 28:6 Come in…go out. To “come in” and “go out” is a figure of speech (merism) indicating all of life and its activities.

NET Notes: Deu 28:7 Heb “way” (also later in this verse and in v. 25).

NET Notes: Deu 28:8 Heb “the Lord your God.” Because English would not typically reintroduce the proper name following a relative pronoun (“he will bles...

NET Notes: Deu 28:9 Heb “and walk in his ways” (so NAB, NASB, NIV, NRSV, NLT).

NET Notes: Deu 28:10 Heb “the name of the Lord is called over you.” The Hebrew idiom indicates ownership; see 2 Sam 12:28; Isa 4:1, as well as BDB 896 s.v. ...

NET Notes: Deu 28:11 Heb “fathers” (also in vv. 36, 64).

NET Notes: Deu 28:12 Heb “all the work of your hands.”

NET Notes: Deu 28:13 Heb “commanding” (so NRSV); NASB “which I charge you today.”

NET Notes: Deu 28:14 Heb “in order to serve.”

NET Notes: Deu 28:15 Heb “and overtake you” (so NIV, NRSV); NAB, NLT “and overwhelm you.”

NET Notes: Deu 28:18 Heb “the fruit of your womb” (so NAB, NIV, NRSV).

NET Notes: Deu 28:19 See note on the similar expression in v. 6.

NET Notes: Deu 28:20 Heb “the evil of your doings wherein you have forsaken me”; CEV “all because you rejected the Lord.”

NET Notes: Deu 28:21 Heb “will cause pestilence to cling to you.”

NET Notes: Deu 28:22 Or “drought” (so NIV, NRSV, NLT).

NET Notes: Deu 28:23 Or “heavens” (also in the following verse). The Hebrew term שָׁמַיִם (shamayim) may be tra...

NET Notes: Deu 28:25 The meaningless MT reading זַעֲוָה (za’avah) is clearly a transposition of the more commonly attested ...

NET Notes: Deu 28:28 Heb “heart” (so KJV, NASB).

NET Notes: Deu 28:29 Heb “you will not cause your ways to prosper.”

NET Notes: Deu 28:30 For MT reading שָׁגַל (shagal, “ravish; violate”), the Syriac, Targum, and Vulgate presume the less vi...

NET Notes: Deu 28:32 Heb “and there will be no power in your hand”; NCV “there will be nothing you can do.”

NET Notes: Deu 28:36 The LXX reads the plural “kings.”

NET Notes: Deu 28:40 Heb “your olives will drop off” (נָשַׁל, nashal), referring to the olives dropping off before they rip...

NET Notes: Deu 28:42 The Hebrew term denotes some sort of buzzing or whirring insect; some have understood this to be a type of locust (KJV, NIV, CEV), but other insects h...

NET Notes: Deu 28:43 Heb “the foreigner.” This is a collective singular and has therefore been translated as plural; this includes the pronouns in the followin...

NET Notes: Deu 28:45 Heb “commanded”; NAB, NIV, TEV “he gave you.”

NET Notes: Deu 28:46 Heb “seed” (so KJV, ASV).

NET Notes: Deu 28:48 Heb “he” (also later in this verse). The pronoun is a collective singular referring to the enemies (cf. CEV, NLT). Many translations under...

NET Notes: Deu 28:49 Some translations understand this to mean “like an eagle swoops down” (e.g., NAB, NASB, NIV, NRSV, NLT), comparing the swift attack of an ...

NET Notes: Deu 28:51 Heb “growth of flocks.”

NET Notes: Deu 28:52 Heb “gates,” also in vv. 55, 57.

Geneva Bible: Deu 28:1 And it shall come to pass, if thou shalt hearken diligently unto the voice of the LORD thy God, to observe [and] to do all his commandments which I co...

Geneva Bible: Deu 28:2 And all these blessings shall come on thee, and ( b ) overtake thee, if thou shalt hearken unto the voice of the LORD thy God. ( b ) When you think y...

Geneva Bible: Deu 28:3 Blessed [shalt] thou [be] in the ( c ) city, and blessed [shalt] thou [be] in the field. ( c ) You will live richly.

Geneva Bible: Deu 28:4 Blessed [shall be] the fruit ( d ) of thy body, and the fruit of thy ground, and the fruit of thy cattle, the increase of thy kine, and the flocks of ...

Geneva Bible: Deu 28:6 Blessed [shalt] thou [be] when thou ( e ) comest in, and blessed [shalt] thou [be] when thou goest out. ( e ) All your enterprises will have good suc...

Geneva Bible: Deu 28:7 The LORD shall cause thine enemies that rise up against thee to be smitten before thy face: they shall come out against thee one way, and flee before ...

Geneva Bible: Deu 28:8 The LORD shall command the blessing upon thee in thy storehouses, and in all that thou settest thine ( g ) hand unto; and he shall bless thee in the l...

Geneva Bible: Deu 28:10 And all people of the earth shall see that thou art ( h ) called by the name of the LORD; and they shall be afraid of thee. ( h ) In that he is your ...

Geneva Bible: Deu 28:12 The LORD shall open unto thee his good treasure, the ( i ) heaven to give the rain unto thy land in his season, and to bless all the work of thine han...

Geneva Bible: Deu 28:23 And thy heaven that [is] over thy head shall be ( k ) brass, and the earth that is under thee [shall be] iron. ( k ) It will give you no more moistur...

Geneva Bible: Deu 28:25 The LORD shall cause thee to be smitten before thine enemies: thou shalt go out one way against them, and flee seven ways before them: and shalt be ( ...

Geneva Bible: Deu 28:26 And thy ( m ) carcase shall be meat unto all fowls of the air, and unto the beasts of the earth, and no man shall fray [them] away. ( m ) You will be...

Geneva Bible: Deu 28:29 And thou shalt grope at noonday, as the ( n ) blind gropeth in darkness, and thou shalt not prosper in thy ways: and thou shalt be only oppressed and ...

Geneva Bible: Deu 28:32 Thy sons and thy daughters [shall be] given unto another people, and thine eyes ( o ) shall look, and fail [with longing] for them all the day long: a...

Geneva Bible: Deu 28:36 The LORD shall bring thee, and thy ( p ) king which thou shalt set over thee, unto a nation which neither thou nor thy fathers have known; and there s...

Geneva Bible: Deu 28:42 All thy trees and fruit of thy land ( q ) shall the locust consume. ( q ) Under one kind he contains all the vermin, which destroy the fruit of the l...

expand all
Commentary -- Verse Range Notes

TSK Synopsis: Deu 28:1-68 - --1 The blessings for obedience.15 The curses for disobedience.

Maclaren: Deu 28:47-48 - --Deut. 28:47-48 The history of Israel is a picture on the large scale of what befalls every man. A service--we are all born to obedience, to depend on ...

MHCC: Deu 28:1-14 - --This chapter is a very large exposition of two words, the blessing and the curse. They are real things and have real effects. The blessings are here p...

MHCC: Deu 28:15-44 - --If we do not keep God's commandments, we not only come short of the blessing promised, but we lay ourselves under the curse, which includes all misery...

MHCC: Deu 28:45-68 - --If God inflicts vengeance, what miseries his curse can bring upon mankind, even in this present world! Yet these are but the beginning of sorrows to t...

Matthew Henry: Deu 28:1-14 - -- The blessings are here put before the curses, to intimate, 1. That God is slow to anger, but swift to show mercy: he has said it, and sworn, that he...

Matthew Henry: Deu 28:15-44 - -- Having viewed the bright side of the cloud, which is towards the obedient, we have now presented to us the dark side, which is towards the disobedie...

Matthew Henry: Deu 28:45-68 - -- One would have thought that enough had been said to possess them with a dread of that wrath of God which is revealed from heaven against the ungo...

Keil-Delitzsch: Deu 28:1-14 - -- For the purpose of impressing upon the hearts of all the people in the most emphatic manner both the blessing which Israel was to proclaim upon Geri...

Keil-Delitzsch: Deu 28:15-68 - -- The Curse, in case Israel should not hearken to the voice of its God, to keep His commandments. After the announcement that all these (the following...

Constable: Deu 27:1--29:2 - --V. PREPARATIONS FOR RENEWING THE COVENANT 27:1--29:1 Moses now gave the new generation its instructions concerni...

Constable: Deu 28:1-14 - --C. The blessings that follow obedience 28:1-14 "For the purpose of impressing upon the hearts of all the...

Constable: Deu 28:15-68 - --D. The curses that follow disobedience to general stipulations 28:15-68 In this section Moses identified about four times as many curses as he had lis...

Guzik: Deu 28:1-68 - --Deuteronomy 28 - Blessing and Cursing A. Blessings on obedience. 1. (1-2) Overtaken by blessing. Now it shall come to pass, if you diligently obey...

expand all
Introduction / Outline

JFB: Deuteronomy (Book Introduction) DEUTERONOMY, the second law, a title which plainly shows what is the object of this book, namely, a recapitulation of the law. It was given in the for...

JFB: Deuteronomy (Outline) MOSES' SPEECH AT THE END OF THE FORTIETH YEAR. (Deu. 1:1-46) THE STORY IS CONTINUED. (Deu. 2:1-37) CONQUEST OF OG, KING OF BASHAN. (Deu. 3:1-20) AN E...

TSK: Deuteronomy (Book Introduction) The book of Deuteronomy marks the end of the Pentateuch, commonly called the Law of Moses; a work every way worthy of God its author, and only less th...

TSK: Deuteronomy 28 (Chapter Introduction) Overview Deu 28:1, The blessings for obedience; Deu 28:15, The curses for disobedience.

Poole: Deuteronomy (Book Introduction) FIFTH BOOK of MOSES, CALLED DEUTERONOMY THE ARGUMENT Moses, in the two last months of his life, rehearseth what God had done for them, and their ...

Poole: Deuteronomy 28 (Chapter Introduction) CHAPTER 28 The blessings of obedience, Deu 28:1-14 . Curses for disobedience, Deu 28:15-68 . i.e. Advance and honour thee with divers privileges ...

MHCC: Deuteronomy (Book Introduction) This book repeats much of the history and of the laws contained in the three foregoing books: Moses delivered it to Israel a little before his death, ...

MHCC: Deuteronomy 28 (Chapter Introduction) (Deu 28:1-14) The blessings for obedience. (v. 15-44) The curses for disobedience. (v. 45-68) Their ruin, if disobedient.

Matthew Henry: Deuteronomy (Book Introduction) An Exposition, with Practical Observations, of The Fifth Book of Moses, Called Deuteronomy This book is a repetition of very much both of the history ...

Matthew Henry: Deuteronomy 28 (Chapter Introduction) This chapter is a very large exposition of two words in the foregoing chapter, the blessing and the curse. Those were pronounced blessed in general...

Constable: Deuteronomy (Book Introduction) Introduction Title The title of this book in the Hebrew Bible was its first two words,...

Constable: Deuteronomy (Outline) Outline I. Introduction: the covenant setting 1:1-5 II. Moses' first major address: a review...

Constable: Deuteronomy Deuteronomy Bibliography Adams, Jay. Marriage, Divorce and Remarriage in the Bible. Phillipsburg, N.J.: Presbyt...

Haydock: Deuteronomy (Book Introduction) INTRODUCTION. THE BOOK OF DEUTERONOMY. This Book is called Deuteronomy, which signifies a second law , because it repeats and inculcates the ...

Gill: Deuteronomy (Book Introduction) INTRODUCTION TO DEUTERONOMY This book is sometimes called "Elleh hadebarim", from the words with which it begins; and sometimes by the Jews "Mishne...

Gill: Deuteronomy 28 (Chapter Introduction) INTRODUCTION TO DEUTERONOMY 28 In this chapter Moses enlarges on the blessings and the curses which belong, the one to the doers, the other to the ...

Advanced Commentary (Dictionaries, Hymns, Arts, Sermon Illustration, Question and Answers, etc)


TIP #03: Try using operators (AND, OR, NOT, ALL, ANY) to refine your search. [ALL]
created in 2.02 seconds
powered by
bible.org - YLSA