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Text -- Deuteronomy 4:1-2 (NET)

Strongs On/Off
Context
The Privileges of the Covenant
4:1 Now, Israel, pay attention to the statutes and ordinances I am about to teach you, so that you might live and go on to enter and take possession of the land that the Lord, the God of your ancestors, is giving you. 4:2 Do not add a thing to what I command you nor subtract from it, so that you may keep the commandments of the Lord your God that I am delivering to you.
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Names, People and Places, Dictionary Themes and Topics

Names, People and Places:
 · Israel a citizen of Israel.,a member of the nation of Israel


Dictionary Themes and Topics: Word of God | SEPTUAGINT, 2 | Obedience | LAW IN THE OLD TESTAMENT | DIMINISH | COMMANDMENT, THE NEW | Blessing | ADD | 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 , MHCC , Matthew Henry , Keil-Delitzsch , Constable , Guzik

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Commentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per phrase)

Wesley: Deu 4:1 - -- The laws which concern the worship and service of God.

The laws which concern the worship and service of God.

Wesley: Deu 4:1 - -- The laws concerning your duties to men. So these two comprehend both tables, and the whole law of God.

The laws concerning your duties to men. So these two comprehend both tables, and the whole law of God.

JFB: Deu 4:1 - -- By statutes were meant all ordinances respecting religion and the rites of divine worship; and by judgments, all enactments relative to civil matters....

By statutes were meant all ordinances respecting religion and the rites of divine worship; and by judgments, all enactments relative to civil matters. The two embraced the whole law of God.

JFB: Deu 4:2 - -- By the introduction of any heathen superstition or forms of worship different from those which I have appointed (Deu 12:32; Num 15:39; Mat 15:9).

By the introduction of any heathen superstition or forms of worship different from those which I have appointed (Deu 12:32; Num 15:39; Mat 15:9).

JFB: Deu 4:2 - -- By the neglect or omission of any of the observances, however trivial or irksome, which I have prescribed. The character and provisions of the ancient...

By the neglect or omission of any of the observances, however trivial or irksome, which I have prescribed. The character and provisions of the ancient dispensation were adapted with divine wisdom to the instruction of that infant state of the church. But it was only a temporary economy; and although God here authorizes Moses to command that all its institutions should be honored with unfailing observance, this did not prevent Him from commissioning other prophets to alter or abrogate them when the end of that dispensation was attained.

Clarke: Deu 4:1 - -- Hearken - unto the statutes - Every thing that concerned the rites and ceremonies of religion; judgments - all that concerned matters of civil right...

Hearken - unto the statutes - Every thing that concerned the rites and ceremonies of religion; judgments - all that concerned matters of civil right and wrong.

Clarke: Deu 4:2 - -- Ye shall not add - Any book, chapter, verse or word, which I have not spoken; nor give any comment that has any tendency to corrupt, weaken, or dest...

Ye shall not add - Any book, chapter, verse or word, which I have not spoken; nor give any comment that has any tendency to corrupt, weaken, or destroy any part of this revelation

Clarke: Deu 4:2 - -- Neither shall ye diminish - Ye shall not only not take away any larger portion of this word, but ye shall not take one jot or tittle from the Law; i...

Neither shall ye diminish - Ye shall not only not take away any larger portion of this word, but ye shall not take one jot or tittle from the Law; it is that word of God that abideth for ever.

Calvin: Deu 4:1 - -- 1.Now, therefore, hearken, O Israel He requires the people to be teachable, in order that they may learn to serve God; for the beginning of a good an...

1.Now, therefore, hearken, O Israel He requires the people to be teachable, in order that they may learn to serve God; for the beginning of a good and upright life is to know what is pleasing to God. From hence, then, does Moses commence commanding them to be attentive in seeking direction from the Law; and then admonishing them to prove by their whole life that they have duly profited in the Law. The promise which is here inserted, only invites them to unreserved obedience through hope of the inheritance. The main point is, that they should neither add to nor diminish from the pure doctrine of the Law; and this cannot be the case, unless men first renounce their own private feelings, and then shut their ears against all the imaginations of others. For none are to be accounted (true) disciples of the Law, but those who obtain their wisdom from it alone. It is, then, as if God commanded them to be content with His precepts; because in no other way would they keep His law, except by giving themselves wholly to its teaching. Hence it follows, that they only obey God who depend on His authority alone; and that they only pay the Law its rightful honor, who receive nothing which is opposed to its natural meaning. The passage is a remarkable one, openly condemning whatsoever man’s ingenuity may invent for the service of God.

Defender: Deu 4:2 - -- This uniquely important commandment - not to augment or diminish the revealed word of God - is reflected in the final climactic words of God in the Bi...

This uniquely important commandment - not to augment or diminish the revealed word of God - is reflected in the final climactic words of God in the Bible (Rev 22:18, Rev 22:19). Moses here clearly claims verbal inspiration."

TSK: Deu 4:1 - -- unto the statutes : Statutes, every thing that concerned morals and the rites and ceremonies of religion; judgments, all matters of civil right and wr...

unto the statutes : Statutes, every thing that concerned morals and the rites and ceremonies of religion; judgments, all matters of civil right and wrong. Deu 4:8, Deu 4:45, Deu 5:1, Deu 6:1, Deu 6:2, Deu 8:1, Deu 11:1, Deu 11:32; Lev 19:37, Lev 20:8, Lev 22:31; Psa 105:45; Psa 119:4; Eze 11:20, Eze 36:27, Eze 37:24; Mat 28:20; Luk 1:6; Joh 15:14

that ye may : Lev 18:5; Eze 20:11, Eze 20:21; Rom 10:5

TSK: Deu 4:2 - -- Deu 12:32; Jos 1:7; Pro 30:6; Ecc 12:13; Mat 5:18, Mat 5:43, Mat 15:2-9; Mar 7:1-13; Gal 3:15; Rev 22:18, Rev 22:19

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Commentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per Verse)

Barnes: Deu 4:1 - -- The general entreaty contained in this chapter is pointed by special mention and enforcement of the fundamental principles of the whole covenant Deu...

The general entreaty contained in this chapter is pointed by special mention and enforcement of the fundamental principles of the whole covenant Deut. 4:9-40, the spiritual nature of the Deity, His exclusive right to their allegiance, His abhorrence of idolatry in every form, His choice of them for His elect people. Compare further Moses’ third and last address, Deut. 27\endash 30.

Poole: Deu 4:1 - -- The statutes the laws which concern the worship and service of God. The judgments the laws concerning your duties to men. So these two comprehend b...

The statutes the laws which concern the worship and service of God. The judgments the laws concerning your duties to men. So these two comprehend both tables, and the whole law of God.

Poole: Deu 4:2 - -- Ye shall not add by devising other doctrines or ways of worship than what I have taught or prescribed; see Num 15:39,40 De 12:8,32 1Ki 12:33 Pro 30:6...

Ye shall not add by devising other doctrines or ways of worship than what I have taught or prescribed; see Num 15:39,40 De 12:8,32 1Ki 12:33 Pro 30:6 Mat 15:9 ; for this were to accuse me of want of wisdom or care or faithfulness in not giving you sufficient instructions for my own service.

Neither shall ye diminish by rejecting or neglecting any thing which I have commanded, though it seem never so small.

Haydock: Deu 4:1 - -- There. Hebrew, "thence" from the place of captivity, or returning from the love of idols to the services of the true God. --- Soul. Hebrew, "with...

There. Hebrew, "thence" from the place of captivity, or returning from the love of idols to the services of the true God. ---

Soul. Hebrew, "with all thy soul. (Ver. 30) In thy tribulation after," &c. (Calmet) ---

God often sends chastisements as the most effectual means of salvation, to make his children enter into themselves. In this state, the soul is more at liberty to consider the follow of adhering to any thing in opposition to the sovereign Lord. Then she is forced to confess that her idols cannot afford her any protection. How, in effect, could any one fall into such an abyss of corruption and stupidity, as to imagine those things to be gods which have not even the dignity and advantages which they themselves possess? Their soul must first have been strangely blinded, and their heart corrupt. Even the more enlightened pagans acknowledged the folly of pretending to represent the Divinity under sensible forms. "God, says Empedocles, has no human members....He is a pure and ineffable spirit, who governs the world by his profound wisdom." Numa would not allow any picture of Him, conformably to the doctrine of Pythagoras; and, for the first 170 years of Rome, no representation of God was set up in the temples. (Plutarch) ---

The ancient Phœnicians seemed to have acted on the same principle, as the temple of Hercules, at the Straits, had no image. It is well known that the Persians rejected both the statues and temples erected in honour of the gods; and the Germans esteemed it beneath the majesty of the heavenly Beings, to represent them under any human form. (Tacitus, Hist. v.) (Calmet) ---

Yet these sages gave way to the folly of the people, and, against their better knowledge, adored the stupid and senseless idols. (Haydock)

Haydock: Deu 4:1 - -- And judgments, regarding religion and civil affairs. (Calmet) --- Live a happy life. (Menochius)

And judgments, regarding religion and civil affairs. (Calmet) ---

Live a happy life. (Menochius)

Haydock: Deu 4:2 - -- Add any thing repugnant to the spirit of my law. No interpretation of this kind can be admitted. But this does not condemn well authorized traditio...

Add any thing repugnant to the spirit of my law. No interpretation of this kind can be admitted. But this does not condemn well authorized traditions, and laws enacted by lawful superiors. The Jews always boast of their close adherence to the letter of the law, but they often forget the spirit of it, and by their traditions render it deformed, like a carcass. Demosthenes takes notice, that the Locrians had such a regard for their laws, that if any one chose to propose any fresh ones, he came with a rope about his neck, that if they did not meet with the approbation of the people, he might be strangled immediately. (Calmet) ---

Moses cannot mean to forbid any more divine or civil commandments being written by Josue and the subsequent prophets. He only enjoins that nothing shall be altered by human authority. The other books of the Old Testament serve to explain the law; and so do the apostolical traditions (Worthington) afford great assistance to understand the true meaning of all the Scriptures, and hence we learn whatever we have to perform, without danger of being led astray. (Haydock) ---

To these the Scriptures frequently refer. He that heareth you, heareth me, Luke x. Hold the traditions which you have learnt, 2 Thessalonians ii. The rest I will set in order, when I come, 1 Corinthians xi. 34. Hence St. Augustine (contra Cresc. i. 33) observes, "Though no evident example can be produced from Scripture, yet we hold the truth of the same Scripture, when we do what meets with the approbation of that Church whose authority the Scripture establishes." See ep. 80, St. Chrysostom in 1 Thess. iv.; St. Irenæus, Against Heresies iii. 4. (Worthington) ---

The Jews themselves never had the folly to imagine with the modern innovators, that all laws both of a religous or civil nature were here proscribed. Under David, Mardocheus, and the Machabees, various laws and feasts were commanded, and observed in the true spirit of the law, 1 Kings xxx. 25., and Esther ix., and 1 Machabees iv. God does not leave to the discretion of the Jews, the appointing of different victims, &c., in his worship, (chap. xii. 30,) as they might very easily give way to the superstitious observances of their neighbours, and these things that had been sufficiently determined. But he enjoins all to obey the declarations of the priests and judges, chap. xvii. 10. (Bellarmine) (Tirinus) ---

Thus when the Apocalypse records a prohibition similar to this, (Apocalypse xxii. 18, 19,) it is not intended to seal up the divine volume, so that nothing more shall be admitted into it, for St. John wrote his gospel afterwards. But it must be explained in the same sense as this passage, and condemns all those who, of their own authority, would set up fresh doctrine in opposition to the word of God. Let Protestants consider if they be not concerned in this caution, when they not only cut off whole books of Scripture, but deny the authority of the Church itself, without which the Scripture can be of little service. They are the book sealed with seven seals, impenetrable to man without the aid of the Divine author; (Apocalypse v. 5;) and this aid he will never grant to those who obstinately refuse to hear the Church, Matthew xviii. 17., and 2 Peter i. 20. (Haydock)

Gill: Deu 4:1 - -- Now therefore hearken, O Israel, unto the statutes and unto the judgments,.... The laws of God, moral, ceremonial, and judicial, which they are exhort...

Now therefore hearken, O Israel, unto the statutes and unto the judgments,.... The laws of God, moral, ceremonial, and judicial, which they are exhorted to attend to and obey, in consideration of the great and good things the Lord had done for them, ever since they came from Horeb, where they were given them; such as providing for them, and feeding them in the wilderness, preserving them from every hurtful thing, and delivering their enemies into their hands, the two kings of the Amorites, which they are put in mind of in the preceding chapters; hence this begins with "therefore hearken"; for nothing is a greater incentive to obedience than the kindness and goodness of God:

which I teach you for to do that ye may live; the law was taught by Moses, but the Gospel of grace and truth by Jesus Christ; and it was taught by him, as well as it was to be hearkened to by them, in order to yield obedience to it; for not bare hearing, but doing the law, is the principal thing of any avail; and which was to be done, that they might live; not a spiritual and eternal life, which are not by the works of the law, but are had only from Christ, through his grace and righteousness; but a corporeal life, and a comfortable enjoyment of the blessings of it, and particularly that that might be continued to them:

and go in and possess the land which the Lord God of your fathers giveth you; the land of Canaan, which the Lord God of Abraham, Isaac, and Jacob, had promised to give to their posterity, and which they were to hold by their obedience to his laws.

Gill: Deu 4:2 - -- Ye shall not add to the word which I command you, nether shall you diminish ought from it,.... Neither make new laws of their own, and join them to th...

Ye shall not add to the word which I command you, nether shall you diminish ought from it,.... Neither make new laws of their own, and join them to the law of God, and set them upon a level with it, or prefer them before it; as the Scribes and Pharisees did in Christ's time, who by their traditions made the word of God of none effect, as do the Papists also by their unwritten traditions; nor abrogate nor detract from the law of God, nor make void any part of it: or else the sense is, neither do that which is forbidden, nor neglect that which is commanded; neither be guilty of sins of omission nor commission, nor in any way break the law of God, and teach men so to do by word or by example; not a jot or tittle is either to be put to it, or taken from it, Pro 30:5.

that ye may keep the commandments of the Lord your God, which I command you; in his name; or which he delivered unto them as his commandments, and which were to be kept just as they were delivered, without adding to them, or taking from them.

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Commentary -- Verse Notes / Footnotes

NET Notes: Deu 4:1 Heb “fathers” (also in vv. 31, 37).

NET Notes: Deu 4:2 Heb “commanding.”

Geneva Bible: Deu 4:1 Now therefore hearken, O Israel, unto the statutes and unto the judgments, which I teach you, for to ( a ) do [them], that ye may live, and go in and ...

Geneva Bible: Deu 4:2 Ye shall ( b ) not add unto the word which I command you, neither shall ye ( c ) diminish [ought] from it, that ye may keep the commandments of the LO...

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Commentary -- Verse Range Notes

TSK Synopsis: Deu 4:1-49 - --1 An exhortation to obedience.41 Moses appoints the three cities of refuge on that side of Jordan.44 Recapitulation.

MHCC: Deu 4:1-23 - --The power and love of God to Israel are here made the ground and reason of a number of cautions and serious warnings; and although there is much refer...

Matthew Henry: Deu 4:1-40 - -- This most lively and excellent discourse is so entire, and the particulars of it are so often repeated, that we must take it altogether in the expos...

Keil-Delitzsch: Deu 4:1-8 - -- The Israelites were to hearken to the laws and rights which Moses taught to do (that they were to do), that they might live and attain to the posses...

Constable: Deu 1:6--4:41 - --II. MOSES' FIRST MAJOR ADDRESS: A REVIEW OF GOD'S FAITHFULNESS 1:6--4:40 ". . . an explicit literary structure t...

Constable: Deu 3:1--5:13 - --B. Entrance into the land 3:1-5:12 The entrance into the land was an extremely important event in the li...

Constable: Deu 4:1-40 - --B. An exhortation to observe the law faithfully 4:1-40 Moses turned in his address from contemplating th...

Constable: Deu 4:1-8 - --1. The appeal to hearken and obey 4:1-8 Moses urged the Israelites to "listen to" (v. 1) and to ...

Guzik: Deu 4:1-49 - --Deuteronomy 4 - A Call to Obedience A. Moses challenges the nation to obedience. 1. (1-8) Moses challenges Israel to learn from the example of Baal-...

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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 4 (Chapter Introduction) Overview Deu 4:1, An exhortation to obedience; Deu 4:41, Moses appoints the three cities of refuge on that side of Jordan; Deu 4:44, Recapitulatio...

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 4 (Chapter Introduction) CHAPTER 4 An exhortation to obey the law, Deu 4:1-13 ; and warning against idolatry, Deu 4:14-24 ; from the mischief of it upon themselves and chil...

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 4 (Chapter Introduction) (v. 1-23) Earnest exhortations to obedience, and dissuasions from idolatry. (v. 24-40) Warnings against disobedience, and promises of mercy. (Deu 4:...

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 4 (Chapter Introduction) In this chapter we have, I. A most earnest and pathetic exhortation to obedience, both in general, and in some particular instances, backed with a...

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 4 (Chapter Introduction) INTRODUCTION TO DEUTERONOMY 4 This chapter contains an exhortation to Israel to keep the commands, statutes, and judgments of God, urged from the s...

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