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Text -- Deuteronomy 29:1-16 (NET)
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Names, People and Places, Dictionary Themes and Topics
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collapse allCommentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per phrase)
Wesley: Deu 29:1 - -- These are the terms or conditions upon which God hath made, that is renewed his covenant with you. The covenant was but one in substance, but various ...
These are the terms or conditions upon which God hath made, that is renewed his covenant with you. The covenant was but one in substance, but various in the time and manner of its dispensation.
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Wesley: Deu 29:4 - -- That is, you have perceived and seen them with the eyes of your body, but not with your minds and hearts; you have not yet learned rightly to understa...
That is, you have perceived and seen them with the eyes of your body, but not with your minds and hearts; you have not yet learned rightly to understand the word and works of God, so as to know them for your good, and to make a right use of them, and to comply with them: which he expresseth thus, the Lord hath not given you, &c. not to excuse their wickedness, but to direct them to whom they must have recourse for a good understanding of God's works; and to intimate that although the hearing ear, and the seeing eye, be the workmanship of God, yet their want of his grace was their own fault, and the just punishment of their former sins; their present case being like theirs in Isaiah's time, who first shut their own eyes and ears that they might not see and hear, and would not understand, and then by the righteous judgment of God, had their eyes and ears closed that they should not see and hear, and understand. God's readiness to do us good in other things, is a plain evidence, that if we have not grace, that best of gifts, 'tis our own fault and not his: he would have gathered us, and we would not.
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Wesley: Deu 29:6 - -- Common bread purchased by your own money, or made by your own hands, but heavenly and angelical bread.
Common bread purchased by your own money, or made by your own hands, but heavenly and angelical bread.
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Wesley: Deu 29:6 - -- Omnipotent and all - sufficient for your provision without the help of any creatures, and your God in covenant with you who hath a true affection to y...
Omnipotent and all - sufficient for your provision without the help of any creatures, and your God in covenant with you who hath a true affection to you, and fatherly care of you.
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Wesley: Deu 29:11 - -- Such strangers as had embraced their religion: all sorts of persons, yea, even the meanest of them.
Such strangers as had embraced their religion: all sorts of persons, yea, even the meanest of them.
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Into covenant, confirmed by a solemn oath.
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Wesley: Deu 29:13 - -- Here is the summary of that covenant whereof Moses was the mediator, and in the covenant relation between God and them, all the precepts and promises ...
Here is the summary of that covenant whereof Moses was the mediator, and in the covenant relation between God and them, all the precepts and promises of the covenant are included. That they should be established for a people to him, to fear, love, obey, and be devoted to him, and that he should be to them a God, to make them holy and happy; and a due sense of the relation we stand in to God as our God, and the obligation we are under to him as his people, is enough to bring us to all the duties, and all the comforts of the covenant. And does this covenant include nothing spiritual? nothing that refers to eternity?
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Wesley: Deu 29:15 - -- With your posterity. For so the covenant was made at first with Abraham and his seed, by which as God engaged himself to continue the blessing of Abra...
With your posterity. For so the covenant was made at first with Abraham and his seed, by which as God engaged himself to continue the blessing of Abraham upon his posterity, so he also engaged them to the same duties which were required of Abraham. So it is even among men, where a king confers an estate upon a subject and his heirs for ever, upon some certain conditions, all his heirs who enjoy that benefit, are obliged to the same conditions. It may likewise include those who were then constrained to be absent, by sickness, or any necessary occasion. Nay one of the Chaldee pharaphrasts reads it, all the generations that have been from the first days of the world, and all that shall arise to the end of the whole world, stand with us here this day. And so taking this covenant as a typical dispensation of the covenant of grace, 'tis a noble testimony to the Mediator of that covenant, who is the same yesterday, to day, and for ever.
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Wesley: Deu 29:16 - -- Where you have seen their idolatries, and learned too much of them, as the golden calf shewed, and therefore have need to renew your covenant with God...
Where you have seen their idolatries, and learned too much of them, as the golden calf shewed, and therefore have need to renew your covenant with God; where also we were in dreadful bondage whence God alone hath delivered us, to whom therefore we are deeply obliged, and have all reason to renew our covenant with him.
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With what hazard, if God had not appeared for us!
JFB: Deu 29:1 - -- The discourse of Moses is continued, and the subject of that discourse was Israel's covenant with God, the privileges it conferred, and the obligation...
The discourse of Moses is continued, and the subject of that discourse was Israel's covenant with God, the privileges it conferred, and the obligations it imposed.
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JFB: Deu 29:1 - -- It was substantially the same; but it was renewed now, in different circumstances. They had violated its conditions. Moses rehearses these, that they ...
It was substantially the same; but it was renewed now, in different circumstances. They had violated its conditions. Moses rehearses these, that they might have a better knowledge of its conditions and be more disposed to comply with them.
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JFB: Deu 29:2 - -- This appeal to the experience of the people, though made generally, was applicable only to that portion of them who had been very young at the period ...
This appeal to the experience of the people, though made generally, was applicable only to that portion of them who had been very young at the period of the Exodus, and who remembered the marvellous transactions that preceded and followed that era. Yet, alas! those wonderful events made no good impression upon them (Deu 29:4). They were strangers to that grace of wisdom which is liberally given to all who ask it; and their insensibility was all the more inexcusable that so many miracles had been performed which might have led to a certain conviction of the presence and the power of God with them. The preservation of their clothes and shoes, the supply of daily food and fresh water--these continued without interruption or diminution during so many years' sojourn in the desert. They were miracles which unmistakably proclaimed the immediate hand of God and were performed for the express purpose of training them to a practical knowledge of, and habitual confidence in, Him. Their experience of this extraordinary goodness and care, together with their remembrance of the brilliant successes by which, with little exertion or loss on their part, God enabled them to acquire the valuable territory on which they stood, is mentioned again to enforce a faithful adherence to the covenant, as the direct and sure means of obtaining its promised blessings.|| 05690||1||20||0||@Ye stand this day all of you before the Lord your God==--The whole congregation of Israel, of all ages and conditions, all--young as well as old; menials as well as masters; native Israelites as well as naturalized strangers--all were assembled before the tabernacle to renew the Sinaitic covenant. None of them were allowed to consider themselves as exempt from the terms of that national compact, lest any lapsing into idolatry might prove a root of bitterness, spreading its noxious seed and corrupt influence all around (compare Heb 12:15). It was of the greatest consequence thus to reach the heart and conscience of everyone, for some might delude themselves with the vain idea that by taking the oath (Deu 29:12) by which they engaged themselves in covenant with God, they would surely secure its blessings. Then, even though they would not rigidly adhere to His worship and commands, but would follow the devices and inclinations of their own hearts, yet they would think that He would wink at such liberties and not punish them. It was of the greatest consequence to impress all with the strong and abiding conviction, that while the covenant of grace had special blessings belonging to it, it at the same time had curses in reserve for transgressors, the infliction of which would be as certain, as lasting and severe. This was the advantage contemplated in the law being rehearsed a second time. The picture of a once rich and flourishing region, blasted and doomed in consequence of the sins of its inhabitants, is very striking, and calculated to awaken awe in every reflecting mind. Such is, and long has been, the desolate state of Palestine; and, in looking at its ruined cities, its blasted coast, its naked mountains, its sterile and parched soil--all the sad and unmistakable evidences of a land lying under a curse--numbers of travellers from Europe, America, and the Indies ("strangers from a far country," Deu 29:22) in the present day see that the Lord has executed His threatening. Who can resist the conclusion that it has been inflicted "because the inhabitants had forsaken the covenant of the Lord God of their fathers. . . . and the anger of the Lord was kindled against this land, to bring upon it all the curses that are written in this book"?
Clarke: Deu 29:1 - -- These are the words of the covenant - This verse seems properly to belong to the preceding chapter, as a widely different subject is taken up at Deu...
These are the words of the covenant - This verse seems properly to belong to the preceding chapter, as a widely different subject is taken up at Deu 29:2 of this; and it is distinguished as the 69th verse in some of the most correct copies of the Hebrew Bible
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Clarke: Deu 29:1 - -- Commanded Moses to make - לכרת lichroth , to cut, alluding to the covenant sacrifice which was offered on the occasion and divided, as is expla...
Commanded Moses to make -
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Clarke: Deu 29:1 - -- Beside the covenant which he made - in Horeb - What is mentioned here is an additional institution to the ten words given on Horeb; and the curses d...
Beside the covenant which he made - in Horeb - What is mentioned here is an additional institution to the ten words given on Horeb; and the curses denounced here are different from those denounced against the transgressors of the decalogue.
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Clarke: Deu 29:4 - -- The Lord hath not given you a heart, etc. - Some critics read this verse interrogatively: And hath not God given you a heart, etc.? because they sup...
The Lord hath not given you a heart, etc. - Some critics read this verse interrogatively: And hath not God given you a heart, etc.? because they suppose that God could not reprehend them for the non-performance of a duty, when he had neither given them a mind to perceive the obligation of it, nor strength to perform it, had that obligation been known. Though this is strictly just, yet there is no need for the interrogation, as the words only imply that they had not such a heart, etc., not because God had not given them all the means of knowledge, and helps of his grace and Spirit, which were necessary; but they had not made a faithful use of their advantages, and therefore they had not that wise, loving, and obedient heart which they otherwise might have had. If they had had such a heart, it would have been God’ s gift, for he is the author of all good; and that they had not such a heart was a proof that they had grieved his Spirit, and abused the grace which he had afforded them to produce that gracious change, the want of which is here deplored. Hence God himself is represented as grieved because they were unchanged and disobedient: "O that there were such a heart in them, that they would fear me, and keep all my commandments always, that it might be well with them and with their children for ever!"See Deu 5:29 (note), and the note there.
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Clarke: Deu 29:6 - -- Ye have not eaten bread, etc. - That is, ye have not been supported in an ordinary providential way; I have been continually working miracles for yo...
Ye have not eaten bread, etc. - That is, ye have not been supported in an ordinary providential way; I have been continually working miracles for you, that ye might know that I am the Lord. Thus we find that God had furnished them with all the means of this knowledge, and that the means were ineffectual, not because they were not properly calculated to answer God’ s gracious purpose, but because the people were not workers with God; consequently they received the grace of God in vain. See 2Co 6:1.
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Clarke: Deu 29:10 - -- Ye stand - all of you before the Lord - They were about to enter into a covenant with God; and as a covenant implies two parties contracting, God is...
Ye stand - all of you before the Lord - They were about to enter into a covenant with God; and as a covenant implies two parties contracting, God is represented as being present, and they and all their families, old and young, come before him.
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Clarke: Deu 29:12 - -- That thou shouldest enter - לעבר leaber , to pass through, that is, between the separated parts of the covenant sacrifice. See Gen 15:18 (note)
That thou shouldest enter -
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Clarke: Deu 29:12 - -- And into his oath - Thus we find that in a covenant were these seven particulars
1. The parties about to contract were considered ...
And into his oath - Thus we find that in a covenant were these seven particulars
1. The parties about to contract were considered as being hitherto separated
2. They now agree to enter into a state of close and permanent amity
3. They meet together in a solemn manner for this purpose
4. A sacrifice is offered to God on the occasion, for the whole is a religious act
5. The victim is separated exactly into two equal parts, the separation being in the direction of the spine; and those parts are laid opposite to each other, sufficient room being allowed for the contracting parties to pass between them
6. The contracting parties meet in the victim, and the conditions of the covenant by which they are to be mutually bound are recited
7. An oath is taken by these parties that they shall punctually and faithfully perform their respective conditions, and thus the covenant is made and ratified. See Jer 34:18, Jer 34:19, and the notes on Gen 6:18 (note); Gen 15:18 (note); Exo 29:45 (note); Leviticus 26 (note).
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Clarke: Deu 29:15 - -- Him that standeth here - The present generation. Him that is not here - all future generations of this people.
Him that standeth here - The present generation. Him that is not here - all future generations of this people.
Calvin: Deu 29:2 - -- 2.And Moses called unto all Israel This passage also may be fitly referred to the preface of the Law, since its tendency is to recommend it, and to i...
2.And Moses called unto all Israel This passage also may be fitly referred to the preface of the Law, since its tendency is to recommend it, and to instruct and prepare the people’s minds to be teachable. It takes its commencement from the divine blessings, which they had experienced as well in their exodus as in their forty years’ wanderings; for it would have been the height of baseness and ingratitude not to devote themselves to a Deliverer who had dealt so graciously with them. And surely it was an inestimable sign of His paternal love towards them, that He should have arrayed Himself against so very powerful a king for His servants’ sake. Finally, lest there should be any question as to their deliverance, he enlarges upon the power which God displayed therein, in magnificent terms of praise according with its dignity.
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Calvin: Deu 29:4 - -- 4.Yet the Lord hath not given By reproaching them with their past stupidity, he stirs up their desire for a better understanding, as if he had said, ...
4.Yet the Lord hath not given By reproaching them with their past stupidity, he stirs up their desire for a better understanding, as if he had said, that they had been too long indifferent to so many miracles, and therefore they should no longer delay to rouse themselves, etc., to give greater heed to God; not because they had been so senseless that His acts had altogether escaped their notice, but because all acknowledgment of them had immediately come to an end. For, just as the drunken man, or one suffering from lethargy, when he hears a cry, raises his head for a moment, and opens his eyes, and then relapses into a state of torpor, so the people had never seriously applied their minds to consider God’s works; and when they had been aroused by some miracle, had immediately sunk back into forgetfulness, wherefore there is good cause why Moses should seek to awaken them from their dulness and stupidity by various methods. But he does not merely condemn their senselessness, and blindness, and deafness, but declares that they were thus senseless, and blind, and deaf, because they were not inspired with grace from above to profit duly by so many lessons. Thence we learn that a clear and powerful understanding is a special gift of the Spirit, since men are ever blind even in the brightest light, until they have been enlightened by God. What Moses relates of the Israelites, is unquestionably common to us all. He declares, then, that they were not induced by the conspicuous glory of God to fear and worship Him, because He had not given them either mind, or eyes, or ears. It is true that at man’s creation He had naturally bestowed upon him a mind, and ears, and eyes; but Moses means, that whatever innate light we have, is either hidden or lost, so that, as far as regards the highest point of wisdom, all our senses lie useless. True that in nature’s corruption, the light still shineth in darkness, but it is light which is soon obscured; therefore, the entire understanding and faculty of reason, in which men glory and pique themselves, is nought but smoke and darkness. Well then may David ask that his eyes may be opened to behold the secrets of the Law. 259 (Psa 119:18.) Still this defect by no means frees us from blame; because (as we are told) none have wisdom, but those to whom it is given by the Father of lights; for we are ignorant 260 through our own fault. Besides, every one is sufficiently, and more than sufficiently convicted by his own conscience, that his ignorance is closely connected with pride and indolence, and is therefore voluntary. The word heart is not here used for the seat of the affections, but for the mind itself, which is the intellectual faculty of the soul.
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Calvin: Deu 29:5 - -- 5.And I have led you He descends to the blessings with which He had continually visited His people during the course of forty years. Yet he does not ...
5.And I have led you He descends to the blessings with which He had continually visited His people during the course of forty years. Yet he does not recount them all, but contents himself with a few of the most remarkable instances, viz., that their clothes had not been worn out by age, and that they had been fed from heaven, when no sustenance was to be obtained from the fruits of the earth. He reminds them that God’s glory had been manifested by these testimonies, in order that they might submit themselves to His rule.
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Calvin: Deu 29:7 - -- 7.And when ye came unto this place This, a third instance (of God’s goodness), because He had smitten the first enemies, who encountered them to im...
7.And when ye came unto this place This, a third instance (of God’s goodness), because He had smitten the first enemies, who encountered them to impede their passage, and thus had already begun to bring them into a place of rest. For inasmuch as the two tribes and a half had here chosen their home, they might behold as in a mirror that the possession of the promised land awaited them. Hence, then, Moses concludes that they were under obligation to keep the law, and exhorts them to shew their gratitude by faithful and sincere obedience. The object, therefore, of the recital is, to procure reverent attention to his doctrine; since the word
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Calvin: Deu 29:10 - -- 10.Ye stand this day all of you before the Lord your God. Again does Moses, as God’s appointed 261 representative, sanction the doctrine proclaimed...
10.Ye stand this day all of you before the Lord your God. Again does Moses, as God’s appointed 261 representative, sanction the doctrine proclaimed by him by a solemn adjuration. With this design he says that the Israelites stood there not only to hear the voice of God, but to enter into covenant with Him, in order that they might apply themselves seriously, and with becoming reverence, to perform the promise they had given. Nor does he only address their chiefs, but, after having begun with the officers, the elders, and men, 262 he descends to the little children and the wives, in order that they might understand that their whole race, from the least to the greatest, were bound to keep the Law: nay, he adds all the strangers, who had devoted themselves to the service of the God of Israel, and states particularly that the very porters and lacqueys 263 were included in the covenant, in order that the minds of those, who derive their origin from the holy Patriarchs, should be more solemnly impressed. Moreover, in order that they may accept the covenant with greater reverence, he says that it was established with an oath. Now, if perjury between man and man is detestable, much less pardonable is it to belie that which you have promised God by his sacred name. Finally, he requires that the covenant should be reverenced, both on account of its advantages and its antiquity. Nothing was more advantageous for the Israelites than that they should be adopted by God as His people; this incomparable advantage, therefore, ought deservedly to render the covenant gratifying; and, besides the exceeding greatness of this blessing, God had prevented them by His grace many ages 264 before they were born.
It would have been, therefore, very disgraceful not to embrace eagerly and ardently so signal a pledge of his love. Nevertheless, the question here arises, how the little children could have passed into covenant, when they were not yet of a proper age to learn (its contents; 265) the reply is easy, that, although they did not receive by faith the promised salvation, nor, on the other hand, renounce the flesh so as to dedicate themselves to God, still they were bound to God by the same obligations under which their parents laid themselves; for, since the grace was common to all, it was fitting that their consent to testify their gratitude should also be universal; so that when the children had come to age, they should more cheerfully endeavor after holiness, when they remembered that they had been already dedicated to God. For circumcision was a sign of their adoption from their mother’s womb; and therefore, although they were not yet possessed of faith or understanding, God had a paternal power over them, because He had conferred upon them so great an honor. Thus, now-a-days, infants are initiated into the service of God, 266 whom they do not yet know, by baptism; because He marks them out as His own peculiar people, and claims them as His children when He ingrafts them into the body of Christ. Moses goes further, stating that their descendants were bound by the same covenant, as if already enthralled to God; and surely, since slavery passes on by inheritance, it ought not to appear absurd that the same right should be assigned to God which mortal men claim for themselves. What he says, then, is tantamount to reminding the Israelites that they covenanted with God in the name of their offspring, so as to devote both themselves and those belonging to them to His service.
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Calvin: Deu 29:16 - -- 16.For ye know how we have dwelt in the land of Egypt. We know how greatly men’s minds are tickled by novelty; and this might occur to the Israelit...
16.For ye know how we have dwelt in the land of Egypt. We know how greatly men’s minds are tickled by novelty; and this might occur to the Israelites when, upon entering the land of Canaan, they would see many forms of idolatry hitherto unknown, which would be so many snares to entangle them. Although, therefore, they were not as yet accustomed to such corruptions, he exhorts them to beware by former instances; for they were not ignorant that God had held in abomination the superstitions of Egypt, and also of other nations, which He had punished in terrible ways. Consequently Moses reminds them that there was no reason why the people should be carried away to imitate the rites of the Gentiles with which they were unacquainted, since they knew by extraordinary proofs that whatever imaginations had been invented by heathen nations were hateful to God. This argument, then, is drawn from experience, whereby the Israelites had been abundantly admonished, that they should hereafter beware of all delusions. But, when he passes from individual men and women to families and tribes, he indicates that those who are associated with others in sin, seek to excuse themselves in vain by their numbers; since a whole nation is as much to be condemned as a single person.
The conclusion of verse 18, “ lest there should be among you a root, ” etc., seems to be tamely explained by some, 267 lest there should be venomous men, who should bring forth bitter fruits to God; for by the word root I rather under stand the hidden principles of sins, which, unless they be prevented in good time, spring up with collected vigor and lift themselves on high; for indulgence in sin increases by concealment and connivance. And to this the author of the Epistle to the Hebrews seems to allude when he exhorts believers lest, through their negligence, “any root of bitterness, springing up, trouble them, and thereby many be defiled.” (Heb 12:15.) As soon, therefore, as any one should endeavor to excite his brethren to worship false gods, God commands him to be plucked up, lest the poison should burst forth, and the bitter root should produce its natural fruits in the corruption of others. Wormwood 268 ( absinthium) is here used, as often elsewhere, in a bad sense, on account of its unpleasant savour; unless perhaps it is some other herb, as is more probable.
TSK: Deu 29:1 - -- the words : Deu 29:12, Deu 29:21, Deu 29:25; Lev 26:44, Lev 26:45; 2Ki 23:3; Jer 11:2, Jer 11:6, Jer 34:18; Act 3:25
beside the : Deu 4:10, Deu 4:13, ...
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TSK: Deu 29:2 - -- Ye have seen all : Exo 8:12, Exo 19:4; Jos 24:5, Jos 24:6; Psa 78:43-51, Psa 105:27-36
Ye have seen all : Exo 8:12, Exo 19:4; Jos 24:5, Jos 24:6; Psa 78:43-51, Psa 105:27-36
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TSK: Deu 29:4 - -- Deu 2:30; Pro 20:12; Isa 6:9, Isa 6:10, Isa 63:17; Eze 36:26; Mat 13:11-15; Joh 8:43; Joh 12:38-40; Act 28:26, Act 28:27; Rom 11:7-10; 2Co 3:15; Eph 4...
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TSK: Deu 29:5 - -- I have led : Deu 1:3, Deu 8:2
your clothes : Deu 8:4; Neh 9:21; Mat 6:31, Mat 6:32
and thy shoe : Jos 9:5, Jos 9:13; Mat 10:10
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TSK: Deu 29:6 - -- eaten bread : Deu 8:3; Exo 16:12, Exo 16:35; Neh 9:15; Psa 78:24, Psa 78:25
neither have : Num 16:14, Num 20:8; 1Co 9:25, 1Co 10:4; Eph 5:18
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TSK: Deu 29:9 - -- Deu 29:1, Deu 4:6; Jos 1:7; 1Ki 2:3; Psa 25:10, Psa 103:17, Psa 103:18; Isa 56:1, Isa 56:2, Isa 56:4-7; Jer 50:5; Luk 11:28; Heb 13:20, Heb 13:21
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TSK: Deu 29:10 - -- Deu 4:10, Deu 31:12, Deu 31:13; 2Ch 23:16, 2Ch 34:29-32; Neh 8:2, Neh 9:1, Neh 9:2, Neh 9:38, Neh 10:28; Joe 2:16, Joe 2:17; Rev 6:15, Rev 20:12
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TSK: Deu 29:11 - -- stranger : Deu 5:14; Exo 12:38, Exo 12:48, Exo 12:49; Num 11:4
the hewer : Jos 9:21-27; Gal 3:28; Col 3:11
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TSK: Deu 29:12 - -- thou shouldest : Deu 5:2, Deu 5:3; Exo 19:5, Exo 19:6; Jos 24:25; 2Ki 11:17; 2Ch 15:12-15
enter : Heb. pass, This is an allusion to the solemn ceremon...
thou shouldest : Deu 5:2, Deu 5:3; Exo 19:5, Exo 19:6; Jos 24:25; 2Ki 11:17; 2Ch 15:12-15
enter : Heb. pass, This is an allusion to the solemn ceremony used by several ancient nations, when they entered into a covenant with each other. The victims, slain as a sacrifice on this occasion, were divided, and and parts laid asundercaps1 . tcaps0 he contracting parties then passed between them, imprecating, as a curse on those who violated the sacred compact, that they might in like manner be cut asunder (Gen 15:10). St. Cyril, in his work against Julian, shows that passing between the divided parts of a victim was used also among the Chaldeans and other people.
into his oath : Deu 29:14; 2Ch 15:12-15; Neh 10:28, Neh 10:29
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TSK: Deu 29:13 - -- establish : Deu 7:6, Deu 26:18, Deu 26:19, Deu 28:9
he may be : Gen 17:7, Gen 26:3, Gen 26:4, Gen 28:13-15; Exo 6:7; Jer 31:31-33, Jer 32:38; Heb 11:1...
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collapse allCommentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per Verse)
Barnes: Deu 29:1 - -- This and the following chapter contain the address of Moses to the people on the solemn renewal of the covenant. Consult the marginal references for...
This and the following chapter contain the address of Moses to the people on the solemn renewal of the covenant. Consult the marginal references for proof of historical statements or explanation of obscure words.
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Barnes: Deu 29:4 - -- Ability to understand the things of God is the gift of God (compare 1Co 2:13-14); yet man is not guiltless if he lacks that ability. The people had ...
Ability to understand the things of God is the gift of God (compare 1Co 2:13-14); yet man is not guiltless if he lacks that ability. The people had it not because they had not felt their want of it, nor asked for it. Compare 2Co 3:14-15.
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Barnes: Deu 29:9 - -- That ye may prosper - literally, "that ye may act wisely."The connection of the two ideas of wisdom in conduct and prosperity in circumstances ...
That ye may prosper - literally, "that ye may act wisely."The connection of the two ideas of wisdom in conduct and prosperity in circumstances is noteworthy.
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Barnes: Deu 29:11 - -- The covenant was national, and therefore embraced all the elements which make up the nation. The "little ones"would of course be represented by thei...
The covenant was national, and therefore embraced all the elements which make up the nation. The "little ones"would of course be represented by their parents or guardians; the absent Deu 29:15 by those present; nor were the servants and proselytes to be excluded (compare Act 2:39). The text is fairly alleged in justification of the Church’ s practice of admitting little ones into covenant with God by Baptism, and accepting promises made on their behalf by sponsors.
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Barnes: Deu 29:15 - -- With him that is not here with us - i. e. as the Jews explain, posterity; which throughout all generations was to be taken as bound by the act ...
With him that is not here with us - i. e. as the Jews explain, posterity; which throughout all generations was to be taken as bound by the act and deed of those present and living.
Poole: Deu 29:1 - -- These are the words of the covenant these are the term, or conditions upon which God hath made, i.e. renewed covenant with you.
Beside the covenan...
These are the words of the covenant these are the term, or conditions upon which God hath made, i.e. renewed covenant with you.
Beside the covenant i.e. that entering into or striking of covenant. The covenant was but one in substance, but various in the time and manner of its dispensation.
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Poole: Deu 29:4 - -- This verse comes in by way of correction or exception to the foregoing clause in this manner, I said indeed, Ye have seen , &c., Deu 29:2 , and th...
This verse comes in by way of correction or exception to the foregoing clause in this manner, I said indeed, Ye have seen , &c., Deu 29:2 , and thine eyes have seen , &c., but I must recall my words, for in truth you have not seen them; in seeing you have not seen, and perceiving you have not perceived them: you have perceived and seen them with the eyes of your body, but not with your minds and hearts; you have not seen them to any purpose; you have not yet learned rightly to understand the word and works of God, so as to know them for your good, and to make a right use of them, and to comply with them; which he expresseth thus,
the Lord hath not given you & c., not to excuse their wickedness, but partly to direct them what course to take, and to whom they must have recourse for the amending of their former errors, and for a good understanding and improvement of God’ s works; and partly to aggravate their sin, and to intimate that although the hearing ear, and the seeing eye, and the understanding heart, be the workmanship of God, Pro 20:12 , and the effects of his special grace, Deu 30:6 Jer 31:33 32:39 , &c., yet their want of this grace was their own fault, and the just punishment of their former sins; their present case being like theirs in Isaiah’ s time, who first shut their eyes and ears that they might not see and hear, and would not understand, and then by the tremendous, but righteous judgment of God, had their hearts made fat, and their eyes and ears closed, that they should not be able to see, and hear, and understand, as is manifest from the history of their carriage in the wilderness.
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Poole: Deu 29:5 - -- So far that it was necessary for you to throw them away, and to get new ones. See on "Deu 8:4" .
So far that it was necessary for you to throw them away, and to get new ones. See on "Deu 8:4" .
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Poole: Deu 29:6 - -- Not eaten bread i.e. common bread purchased by your own money, or made by your own hands, but heavenly and angelical bread, Deu 8:3 Psa 78:24,25 . Yo...
Not eaten bread i.e. common bread purchased by your own money, or made by your own hands, but heavenly and angelical bread, Deu 8:3 Psa 78:24,25 . You have subsisted without bread, the staff of life.
Neither wine or strong drink but only water out of the rock.
The Lord your God the Lord omnipotent and all-sufficient for your provision, without the help of any creatures, and your God in covenant with you, who hath a true affection to you, and fatherly care of you, even when ordinary means fail.
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Poole: Deu 29:10 - -- Before the Lord your God in his presence, who sees your hearts and carriages; and before his tabernacle, where it is probable they were now called to...
Before the Lord your God in his presence, who sees your hearts and carriages; and before his tabernacle, where it is probable they were now called together, and assembled for this work. See Deu 29:2 .
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Poole: Deu 29:11 - -- Thy stranger such strangers as had embraced their religion.
From the hewer of thy wood unto the drawer of thy water all sorts of persons, yea, even...
Thy stranger such strangers as had embraced their religion.
From the hewer of thy wood unto the drawer of thy water all sorts of persons, yea, even the meanest of them, such as these were, Jos 9:27 , all sorts and ranks of servants.
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Poole: Deu 29:12 - -- Into covenant, and into his oath i.e. into covenant or agreement, confirmed by a solemn oath.
Into covenant, and into his oath i.e. into covenant or agreement, confirmed by a solemn oath.
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Poole: Deu 29:15 - -- i.e. With your posterity; for so the covenant was made at first with Abraham and his seed, by which, as God engaged himself to continue the blessing...
i.e. With your posterity; for so the covenant was made at first with Abraham and his seed, by which, as God engaged himself to continue the blessing of Abraham upon his posterity, so he also engaged them to the same duties and conditions which were required of Abraham. So it is even among men, where a king confers an estate upon a subject and his heirs for ever, upon some certain conditions, all his heirs who enjoy that benefit are obliged to the same conditions. But whatsoever becomes of man’ s right, God the Creator and sovereign Lord of all men and things hath an unquestionable right and power to oblige all persons that are or shall be to such conditions as he pleaseth, and especially to such conditions as are for their own benefit, which is the present case.
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Poole: Deu 29:16 - -- In the land of Egypt where you have seen their idolatries, and learned too much of them, as the golden calf showed, and therefore need to renew your ...
In the land of Egypt where you have seen their idolatries, and learned too much of them, as the golden calf showed, and therefore need to renew your covenant with God; where also we were in dreadful bondage, whence God alone hath delivered us, to whom therefore we are deeply obliged, and have all reason to renew our covenant with him.
How we came through the nations i.e. with what hazards, if God had not appeared for us.
Haydock: Deu 29:1 - -- Covenant renewed, and confirmed with an oath, ver. 12. (Menochius) ---
Horeb. Thus the speech of Moses is concluded, (Calmet) and consequently th...
Covenant renewed, and confirmed with an oath, ver. 12. (Menochius) ---
Horeb. Thus the speech of Moses is concluded, (Calmet) and consequently this verse should be at the end of the last chapter, as it is placed in the celebrated editions of Michaelis and Houbigant. The latter observes that, beside that covenant, &c., shews, that the curses here recorded, are not by way of explication of those mentioned in the preceding 27th chapter, "but of a quite different kind. The former are denounced against those who violate the law of the decalogue, which was given at Horeb; neither do they threaten that the chastisements shall be inflicted in this life: the latter maledictions threaten present punishments, and those of a public nature." See chap. xxvii. 26. (Haydock) ---
Josue put in execution in a more solemn manner, what Moses here describes, (Josue viii. 30,) to intimate that Jesus would give the last finishing to the outlines of the old covenant.
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Haydock: Deu 29:3 - -- Seen. Many who were present had seen the plagues of Egypt, and what the Israelites themselves had suffered in the wilderness. (Calmet)
Seen. Many who were present had seen the plagues of Egypt, and what the Israelites themselves had suffered in the wilderness. (Calmet)
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Haydock: Deu 29:4 - -- Hath not given you, &c. Through your own fault, and because you resisted his grace. (Challoner) ---
If they had not been guilty, Moses would never...
Hath not given you, &c. Through your own fault, and because you resisted his grace. (Challoner) ---
If they had not been guilty, Moses would never have made them this reproach. "But he shews that they could not understand or obey without God's assistance,....and yet if....it be wanting, si adjutorium Dei desit, the vice of man is not on that account, deserving of excuse, since the judgments of God are just, though they be hidden." (St. Augustine, q. 50.) ---
Others explain it thus: Hitherto you have not been able to discern the designs of God in your regard: but now, being on the point of crossing the Jordan, to take possession of the land which God had promised to your fathers, you ought to place an unbounded confidence in him. Others read with an interrogation, which entirely removes the evil interpretation of the wicked, who pretend that God requires impossibilities. "Hath not the Lord?" &c. (Calmet) ---
God sometimes delivers over to a reprobate sense, and to their own will. (Theodoret, q. 37.) (Worthington)
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Haydock: Deu 29:6 - -- Bread, &c., as your ordinary food, (Menochius) though they might have both bread and wine on some occasions; as when they adored the calf, &c. (St. ...
Bread, &c., as your ordinary food, (Menochius) though they might have both bread and wine on some occasions; as when they adored the calf, &c. (St. Augustine, q. 51.) See chap. viii. 4. (Calmet) ---
Your God, providing a miraculous food for you. (Menochius)
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Understand. Hebrew, "succeed in all your undertakings." (Calmet)
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Haydock: Deu 29:10 - -- Doctors. Hebrew Shoterim. Septuagint Grammateisagogeis, (Calmet) "officers, heralds," &c. Chap. i. 15., and xix. 18., they are translated mag...
Doctors. Hebrew Shoterim. Septuagint Grammateisagogeis, (Calmet) "officers, heralds," &c. Chap. i. 15., and xix. 18., they are translated magistros, "masters of magistrates." (Haydock)
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Haydock: Deu 29:11 - -- Besides, ( exceptis ,) which may signify all were present; or rather that the strangers of Egypt, &c., who were employed in servile offices, were alo...
Besides, ( exceptis ,) which may signify all were present; or rather that the strangers of Egypt, &c., who were employed in servile offices, were alone excluded, as having no part in the covenant made with the Israelites. (Calmet) ---
St. Jerome seems to have rendered min, præter, in the latter sense; but the Chaldean, Septuagint, &c., take it in the former, as if none at all were absent, from the highest to the lowest. (Menochius)
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Haydock: Deu 29:12 - -- Pass; alluding to the custom of people who pass between the victims, when they engage in a solemn covenant, as Abraham did, Genesis xv. 10. ---
Oath...
Pass; alluding to the custom of people who pass between the victims, when they engage in a solemn covenant, as Abraham did, Genesis xv. 10. ---
Oath. Septuagint, "imprecations," specified in the preceding chapters, ver. 14. (Calmet)
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Haydock: Deu 29:15 - -- Absent. Hebrew, "with him that standeth here this day before the Lord, and with him that is not here with us this day." If all were present, (ver...
Absent. Hebrew, "with him that standeth here this day before the Lord, and with him that is not here with us this day." If all were present, (ver. 11,) the absent must here denote the posterity of the Israelites yet unborn. (Haydock) ---
God made the covenant with Abraham and with his seed, before he had any children in the world.
Gill: Deu 29:1 - -- These are the words of the covenant,.... Not what go before, but follow after, in the next chapters, to the end of the book; in which are various pro...
These are the words of the covenant,.... Not what go before, but follow after, in the next chapters, to the end of the book; in which are various promises of grace, and promises of good things, both with respect to Jews and Gentiles, intermixed with other things:
which the Lord commanded Moses to make with the children of Israel in the land of Moab; or to declare unto them, and acquaint them with, they being now in the plains of Moab, ready to enter into the land of, Canaan:
besides the covenant which he made with them at Horeb: or Sinai; which Jarchi interprets, besides the curses in Leviticus, delivered on Sinai; he seems to have respect to Lev 26:14. This covenant was different from that at Sinai, spoken of Exo 24:8; being made not only at a different time, at near forty years' distance, and at a different place, nor Sinai; but when Israel were come nearer Mount Sion, and were actually possessed of part of their inheritance, the land of promise, that part of the land of Moab which the two kings of the Amorites had seized and dwelt in, whom Israel had dispossessed; and with different persons, that generation being dead, excepting a very few, which were at Sinai: but it was different as to the substance and matter of it, it not only including that, and being a renewal of it, as is generally thought, but containing such declarations of grace which had not been made before, not only respecting the repenting and returning Israelites, but the Gentiles also; for this covenant was made with the stranger, as well as with Israel, Deu 29:11; and relates to the times of the Messiah, the call of the Gentiles, the conversion of the Jews, and their return to their own land in the latter day.
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Gill: Deu 29:2 - -- Moses called unto all Israel,.... He had been speaking before to the heads of them, and delivered at different times what is before recorded; but now ...
Moses called unto all Israel,.... He had been speaking before to the heads of them, and delivered at different times what is before recorded; but now he summoned the whole body of the people together, a solemn covenant being to be made between God and them; or such things being to be made known unto them as were of universal concernment:
and said unto them; what is in this chapter; which is only a preparation or introduction to what he had to declare unto them in the following:
ye have seen all that the Lord did before your eyes in the land of Egypt; the Targum of Jonathan is,"what the Word of the Lord did;''for all the wonderful things there done in Egypt were done by the essential Word of God, Christ, the Son of God; who appeared to Moses in the bush, and sent him to Egypt, and by him and Aaron wrought the miracles there; which many now present had seen, and were then old enough to take notice of, and could remember, though their fathers then in being were now dead:
unto Pharaoh and unto all his servants, and unto all his land; the plagues he inflicted on the person of Pharaoh, and on all his courtiers, and on all the people in Egypt, for they reached the whole land.
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Gill: Deu 29:3 - -- The great temptations which thine eyes have seen,.... Or trials, the ten plagues which tried the Egyptians, whether they would let Israel go; and trie...
The great temptations which thine eyes have seen,.... Or trials, the ten plagues which tried the Egyptians, whether they would let Israel go; and tried the Israelites, whether they would believe in the Lord, and trust in his almighty power to deliver them:
the signs and those great miracles: as the said plagues were such as were beyond the power of nature to produce, and which only Omnipotence could really effect.
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Gill: Deu 29:4 - -- Yet the Lord hath not given you an heart to perceive,.... They had some of them seen the above miracles with their bodily eyes, but had not discerned ...
Yet the Lord hath not given you an heart to perceive,.... They had some of them seen the above miracles with their bodily eyes, but had not discerned with the eyes of their understanding the power of God displayed in them, the goodness of God to them on whose behalf they were wrought, in order to obtain their deliverance, and the vengeance of God on the Egyptians for detaining them; so Jarchi interprets it of an heart to know the mercies of the Lord, and to cleave unto him:
and eyes to see, and ears to hear, unto this day; to see and observe the gracious dealings of God with them, and to hearken to his voice and obey it: so the understanding heart, the seeing eye, and hearing ear, in things spiritual, are from the Lord, are special gifts of his grace, which he bestows on some, and not on others; see Pro 20:12. The Targum of Jonathan is,"the Word of the Lord did not give you an heart, &c.''
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Gill: Deu 29:5 - -- And I have led you forty years in the wilderness,.... From the time of their coming out of Egypt unto that day, which though not quite complete, is gi...
And I have led you forty years in the wilderness,.... From the time of their coming out of Egypt unto that day, which though not quite complete, is given as a round number. Eupolemus d, an Heathen writer, confirms this date of the ministry of Moses among the Israelites; he says, Moses performed the office of a prophet forty years:
your clothes are not waxen old upon you: were not worn out; all those forty years they had been in the wilderness, they had never wanted clothes fitting for them, according to their age and stature, and which decayed not; See Gill on Deu 8:4,
and thy shoe is not waxen old upon thy foot; which were necessary to wear in travelling, and especially in a rugged wilderness; and yet, thought they had been always in use during so long a time, were not worn out, which was really miraculous; See Gill on Deu 8:4.
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Gill: Deu 29:6 - -- Ye have not eaten bread,.... Bread made of corn, common bread, of their own preparing, made by the labour of their own hands; but manna, the food of a...
Ye have not eaten bread,.... Bread made of corn, common bread, of their own preparing, made by the labour of their own hands; but manna, the food of angelS, the bread of heaven:
neither have you drank wine, nor strong drink; only water out of the rock, at least chiefly, and for constancy; though it may be, when they were on the borders of other countries, as of the Edomites, they might obtain some wine for their money:
that ye might know that I am the Lord your God; who was both able and willing to provide food, drink, and raiment for them, and supply them with all good things, and support them without the use of the common necessaries of life; which were abundant proofs of his power and goodness.
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Gill: Deu 29:7 - -- And when ye came unto this place,.... The borders of Moab, the wilderness before it, to which joined the plains they were now in; see Num 21:13,
Si...
And when ye came unto this place,.... The borders of Moab, the wilderness before it, to which joined the plains they were now in; see Num 21:13,
Sihon king of Heshbon, and Og king of Bashan, came out against us unto battle; not together, but one after the other, and that very quickly; as soon almost as they had fought with the one, and conquered him, the other came out against them:
and we smote them; killed them and their armies, and the inhabitants of their countries; the history of which see in Num 21:23.
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Gill: Deu 29:8 - -- And we took their land,.... Which belonged to the two kings, the lands of Jazer, Gilead, and Bashan, fine countries for pasturage:
and gave it for ...
And we took their land,.... Which belonged to the two kings, the lands of Jazer, Gilead, and Bashan, fine countries for pasturage:
and gave it for an inheritances unto the Reubenites, and to the Gadites, and to the half tribe of Manasseh; who requested it, and to whom it was granted on certain conditions, and they were now in possession of it; see Num 32:1.
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Gill: Deu 29:9 - -- Keep therefore the words of this covenant, and do them,.... To do which they were laid under great obligations, through the goodness of God to them, i...
Keep therefore the words of this covenant, and do them,.... To do which they were laid under great obligations, through the goodness of God to them, in giving them victory over the two kings, and delivering their countries into their hands, as well as by all the favours bestowed on them in the wilderness, where they were sufficiently supplied with food, drink, and raiment; all which is made use of as a motive and argument to engage them to observe and keep the covenant the Lord made with them:
that ye may prosper in all that ye do: in all their occupations and businesses of life, in their manufactures and commerce, in the culture of their fields and vineyards, and in whatsoever they were employed in a lawful way; the word used has sometimes, the signification of acting wisely and prudently, as in Isa 52:13; hence the Septuagint version is, "that ye may understand all that ye do"; and so the Jerusalem Targum.
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Gill: Deu 29:10 - -- Ye stand this day all of you before the Lord your God,.... Being gathered together at the door of the tabernacle, at the summons of Moses. Aben Ezra i...
Ye stand this day all of you before the Lord your God,.... Being gathered together at the door of the tabernacle, at the summons of Moses. Aben Ezra interprets it round about the ark, which was the symbol of the divine Presence:
your captains of your tribes; the heads and rulers of them:
your elders and your officers, with all the men of Israel; not the seventy elders only, but their elders in their several tribes, cities, and families, men of gravity and prudence, as well as of age, and who were in some place of power and authority or another: and the "officers" may design such who attended the judges, and executed their orders; see Deu 16:18; and with them were the common people, the males, who were grown persons. Aben Ezra thinks they stood in the order in which they here are mentioned, which is not improbable; next to Moses the princes, then the elders, and after them the officers, and next every man of Israel, the males; and then the little ones with the males; after them the women, and last of all the proselytes.
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Gill: Deu 29:11 - -- Your little ones, your wives,.... Who are scarce ever mentioned in any special law or solemn transaction:
and thy stranger that is in thy camp; no...
Your little ones, your wives,.... Who are scarce ever mentioned in any special law or solemn transaction:
and thy stranger that is in thy camp; not only the proselyte of righteousness, who embraced the Jewish religion entirely, but the proselyte of the gate, who was admitted to dwell among them, having renounced idolatry. These standing with the Israelites, when this covenant was made, has respect to the Gentiles, who as well as the Jews have an interest in the covenant of grace made with Christ; in whom there is, neither Jew nor Gentile, any difference between them:
from the hewer of thy wood to the drawer of thy water; that hewed wood for firing and other uses, and drew water for the camp; who were generally mean persons, and perhaps some that came out of Egypt with them are here intended; however, mean and abject persons are meant, and signifies that none should be excluded from a concern in this solemn affair on account of their meanness.
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Gill: Deu 29:12 - -- That thou shouldest enter into covenant with the Lord thy God,.... That is, they were all to appear and stand in this order before the Lord, that they...
That thou shouldest enter into covenant with the Lord thy God,.... That is, they were all to appear and stand in this order before the Lord, that they might solemnly avouch him to be their God, and hear him declaring them to be his people, and the many promises and prophecies of good things he should deliver to them, as well as threatenings of wrath and vengeance in case of disobedience to him: or "that thou shouldest pass" e: which some think is an allusion to the manner of making covenants, by slaying a creature, and cutting it in pieces, and passing between them, as in Jer 34:18; so Jarchi and Aben Ezra:
and into his oath; annexed to his covenant and promise, to show the immutability and certain fulfilment of it on his part; and may signify not only the oath he swore that they should be his people, but the oath he gave them, and they took, that he should be their God:
which the Lord thy God maketh with thee this day; which refers both to the covenant and the oath, or the covenant confirmed by an oath, even the covenant now made in the plains of Moab, distinct from that at Horeb or Sinai.
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Gill: Deu 29:13 - -- That be may establish thee this day for a people unto himself, and that he may be unto thee a God,.... Which contains the sum and substance of the co...
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Gill: Deu 29:14 - -- Neither with you only do I make this covenant and this oath. That is, Moses; for he was ordered to make this covenant with them in the name of the Lor...
Neither with you only do I make this covenant and this oath. That is, Moses; for he was ordered to make this covenant with them in the name of the Lord; what promises of good things, or declarations of his mind and will, God would make, Moses was to deliver to them; and what was required of them he would inform them of. Aben Ezra interprets it, not only you, but those that will come after you, your sons and your sons' sons.
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Gill: Deu 29:15 - -- But with him that standeth here with us this day before the Lord our God,.... Who are before specified according to their dignity, age, sex, and stat...
But with him that standeth here with us this day before the Lord our God,.... Who are before specified according to their dignity, age, sex, and station of life; or rather, "but as with him that standeth", &c.
and so with him that is not here with us this day; detained at home by illness and indisposition of body, or by one providence or another; so that they could not come out of their tents, and make their appearance before the tabernacle; though Jarchi interprets this of the people of future generations.
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Gill: Deu 29:16 - -- For ye know how we have dwelt in the land of Egypt,.... How long they and their fathers had dwelt there, the number of years they had been in the land...
For ye know how we have dwelt in the land of Egypt,.... How long they and their fathers had dwelt there, the number of years they had been in the land, as the Targum of Jonathan, which was upwards of two hundred years; and being a country the inhabitants of which were much given to idolatry, they had seen many of their idols, and much of their idolatrous worship; and their hearts had been apt to be ensnared by it, and the minds of some tinctured with it, and the remembrance thereof might make ill impressions on them; to remove or prevent which this covenant was made:
and how we came through the nations which ye passed by; as the Edomites, Ammonites, Moabites, and Midianites, as Aben Ezra observes, through whose borders they came, as they passed by their countries in their journeys in the wilderness.
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expand allCommentary -- Verse Notes / Footnotes
NET Notes: Deu 29:1 Horeb is another name for Mount Sinai (which some English versions substitute here for clarity, cf. NCV, TEV, CEV, NLT).
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NET Notes: Deu 29:2 The Hebrew text includes “to your eyes,” but this is redundant in English style (cf. the preceding “you have seen”) and is omi...
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NET Notes: Deu 29:4 Heb “a heart to know, eyes to see and ears to hear” (NASB similar); NAB, NRSV “a mind to understand, or eyes to see, or ears to hear...
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NET Notes: Deu 29:10 Heb “your heads, your tribes.” The Syriac presupposes either “heads of your tribes” or “your heads, your judges,” ...
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NET Notes: Deu 29:12 Heb “for you to pass on into the covenant of the Lord your God and into his oath, which the Lord your God is cutting with you today.”
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NET Notes: Deu 29:15 This is interpreted by some English versions as a reference to generations not yet born (cf. TEV, CEV, NLT).
Geneva Bible: Deu 29:1 These [are] the ( a ) words of the covenant, which the LORD commanded Moses to make with the children of Israel in the land of Moab, beside the covena...
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Geneva Bible: Deu 29:3 The ( c ) great temptations which thine eyes have seen, the signs, and those great miracles:
( c ) The proofs of my power.
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Geneva Bible: Deu 29:4 Yet the LORD hath not ( d ) given you an heart to perceive, and eyes to see, and ears to hear, unto this day.
( d ) He shows that it is not in man's ...
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Geneva Bible: Deu 29:6 Ye have not eaten ( e ) bread, neither have ye drunk wine or strong drink: that ye might know that I [am] the LORD your God.
( e ) Made by man's art,...
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Geneva Bible: Deu 29:10 Ye stand this day all of you before the LORD your ( f ) God; your captains of your tribes, your elders, and your officers, [with] all the men of Israe...
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Geneva Bible: Deu 29:12 That thou shouldest ( g ) enter into covenant with the LORD thy God, and into his oath, which the LORD thy God maketh with thee this day:
( g ) Allud...
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Geneva Bible: Deu 29:15 But with [him] that standeth here with us this day before the LORD our God, and also with [him] ( h ) that [is] not here with us this day:
( h ) Mean...
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expand allCommentary -- Verse Range Notes
TSK Synopsis -> Deu 29:1-29
TSK Synopsis: Deu 29:1-29 - --1 Moses exhorts them to obedience, by the memory of the works they had seen.10 All are presented before the Lord to enter into his covenant.18 The gre...
MHCC -> Deu 29:1-9; Deu 29:10-21
MHCC: Deu 29:1-9 - --Both former mercies, and fresh mercies, should be thought on by us as motives to obedience. The hearing ear, and seeing eye, and the understanding hea...
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MHCC: Deu 29:10-21 - --The national covenant made with Israel, not only typified the covenant of grace made with true believers, but also represented the outward dispensatio...
Matthew Henry -> Deu 29:1-9; Deu 29:10-29
Matthew Henry: Deu 29:1-9 - -- Now that Moses had largely repeated the commands which the people were to observe as their part of the covenant, and the promises and threatenings w...
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Matthew Henry: Deu 29:10-29 - -- It appears by the length of the sentences here, and by the copiousness and pungency of the expressions, that Moses, now that he was drawing near to ...
Keil-Delitzsch: Deu 29:1 - --
Is not the close of the address in ch. 5-28, as Schultz , Knobel , and others suppose; but the heading to ch. 29-30, which relate to the making of ...
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Keil-Delitzsch: Deu 29:2-4 - --
The introduction in Deu 29:2 resembles that in Deu 5:1. " All Israel "is the nation in all its members (see Deu 29:10, Deu 29:11). - Israel had no ...
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Keil-Delitzsch: Deu 29:5-8 - --
With the appeal to the gracious guidance of Israel by God through the desert, the address of Moses passes imperceptibly into an address from the Lor...
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Keil-Delitzsch: Deu 29:9 - --
These benefits from the Lord demanded obedience and fidelity. "Keep the words of this covenant," etc. (cf. Deu 8:18). השׂכּיל , to act wisely ...
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Keil-Delitzsch: Deu 29:10-15 - --
Summons to enter into the covenant of the Lord, namely, to enter inwardly, to make the covenant an affair of the heart and life.
Deu 29:10
"To-day...
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Keil-Delitzsch: Deu 29:16-17 - --
The summons to enter into the covenant of the Lord is explained by Moses first of all by an exposition of the evil results which would follow from a...
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...
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Constable: Deu 29:1 - --E. Narrative interlude 29:1
Chapter 29 verse 1 is the last verse of chapter 28 in the Hebrew Bible. Mose...
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Constable: Deu 29:2--31:1 - --VI. MOSES' THIRD MAJOR ADDRESS: AN EXHORTATION TO OBEDIENCE 29:2--30:20
"The rest of chapter 29 contains many re...
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Constable: Deu 29:2-8 - --1. Historical review 29:2-8
The emphasis in this section is on God's faithfulness in bringing Is...
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Constable: Deu 29:9-15 - --2. The purpose of the assembly 29:9-15
In view of God's past faithfulness the Israelites should ...
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