
Text -- Deuteronomy 4:32-40 (NET)




Names, People and Places, Dictionary Themes and Topics



collapse allCommentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per phrase)
That is, of the earth under heaven. Ask all the inhabitants of the world.

And was not overwhelmed and consumed by such a glorious appearance.

Wesley: Deu 4:34 - -- Temptations is the general title, which is explained by the following particulars, signs, and wonders, &c. which are called temptations, because they ...
Temptations is the general title, which is explained by the following particulars, signs, and wonders, &c. which are called temptations, because they were trials both to the Egyptians and Israelites, whether they would be induced to believe and obey God or no.

Raised in the minds of the Egyptians, or, by terrible things done among them.

Keeping his eye fixed upon him, as the father doth on his beloved child.
Clarke: Deu 4:33 - -- Did ever people hear the voice of God - It seems to have been a general belief that if God appeared to men, it was for the purpose of destroying the...
Did ever people hear the voice of God - It seems to have been a general belief that if God appeared to men, it was for the purpose of destroying them; and indeed most of the extraordinary manifestations of God were in the way of judgment; but here it was different; God did appear in a sovereign and extraordinary manner; but it was for the deliverance and support of the people
1. They heard his voice speaking with them in a distinct, articulate manner
2. They saw the fire, the symbol of his presence, the appearances of which demonstrated it to be supernatural
3. Notwithstanding God appeared so terrible, yet no person was destroyed, for he came, not to destroy, but to save.

Clarke: Deu 4:34 - -- From the midst of another nation - This was a most extraordinary thing, that a whole people, consisting of upwards of 600,000 effective men, besides...
From the midst of another nation - This was a most extraordinary thing, that a whole people, consisting of upwards of 600,000 effective men, besides women and children, should, without striking a blow, be brought out of the midst of a very powerful nation, to the political welfare of which their services were so essential; that they should be brought out in so open and public a manner; that the sea itself should be supernaturally divided to afford this mighty host a passage; and that, in a desert utterly unfriendly to human life, they should be sustained for forty years. These were such instances of the almighty power and goodness of God as never could be forgotten
In this verse Moses enumerates seven different means used by the Almighty in effecting Israel’ s deliverance
1. Temptations,
2. Signs,
3. Wonders,
4. War,
5. A Mighty Hand,
6. A Stretched-Out Arm,
1. The finger of God denotes any manifestation of the Divine power, where effects are produced beyond the power of art or nature
2. The hand of God signifies the same power, but put forth in a more signal manner
3. The arm of God, the Divine omnipotence manifested in the most stupendous miracles
4. The arm of God stretched out, this same omnipotence exerted in a continuation of stupendous miracles, both in the way of judgment and mercy. In this latter sense it appears to be taken in the text: the judgments were poured out on the Egyptians; the mercies wrought in favor of the Israelites
7. Great Terrors,
Calvin: Deu 4:32 - -- 32.For ask now Moses here more forcibly extols and pronounces magnificent praises upon the miracles which he had before more simply related to have t...
32.For ask now Moses here more forcibly extols and pronounces magnificent praises upon the miracles which he had before more simply related to have taken place at the promulgation of the Law, his object being to produce a fuller conviction of its dignity. He magnifies, too, by comparison, the testimonies whereby its authority had been ratified, viz., because nothing like it had ever occurred; for if any such instance had previously taken place, some portion of its preciousness or honor would have been taken from it. But since from the beginning of the world only one such illustrious manifestation of His power had been given by God, it afforded the greater sanction to the Law. He adds, too, that if they were to search over the whole world they would nowhere find anything similar. For I do not approve of the more refined exposition which some give of this clause, as if he said that all creatures above and below were witnesses that God’s might had never been manifested by so many and such illustrious miracles; as also the sense appears too restricted which others give, understanding “the days that are past” to mean annals or chronicles; for I make no question that Moses simply desires them to inquire and to examine whether from the creation of the world, or in any most remote region, any such thing had come to pass.

Calvin: Deu 4:33 - -- 33.Did ever people hear? He points out more openly the greatness and extraordinary transcendency of the matter which he has just mentioned, viz., tha...
33.Did ever people hear? He points out more openly the greatness and extraordinary transcendency of the matter which he has just mentioned, viz., that they heard the voice of God speaking out of the fire. It is true, indeed, that the superstitions of the Gentiles had been confirmed of old by many apparitions, yet amongst the portents which wretched men have imagined for their willing self-deception, there is nothing approaching to this miracle. Many have individually lied, and their false and foolish tales have been rashly believed; but here we have not to do with unfounded and scattered rumors, nor with the dreams of some single person, but Moses produces more than 700,000 witnesses, to whom God’s glory had clearly and certainly appeared; he subjoins, therefore, that God had never assayed to do the same, but had afforded this solitary instance to render His Law illustrious in all ages. 228 Yet in this verse he not only alludes to the promulgation of the Law, but to the whole course of their deliverance, since he names in general His “temptations and signs.” He says that God “took him a nation from the midst of another nation,” for by His incomparable power He rescued the descendants of Abraham, who, though dispersed through Egypt, and, as it were, enclosed in its bowels, were yet an obscure and ignoble part of a most famous nation; whereof no similar example is to be found. 229

Calvin: Deu 4:35 - -- 35.Unto thee it was shewed He first says that God had so proved His divinity by miracles and prodigies, that the Israelites might know certainly that...
35.Unto thee it was shewed He first says that God had so proved His divinity by miracles and prodigies, that the Israelites might know certainly that He was God. Whence, too, he concludes that He is the only God; for although God’s holy name be torn in pieces by various opinions, whilst each one manufactures his own gods for himself, yet is it still sure that the power and dominion of God cannot be withdrawn from Him, but reside in a single subject, as the logicians say. Therefore the essence of the one God overthrows and annihilates all the other deities which we foolishly invent for ourselves. And this we must carefully remark, for this has been the common error of all ages, to seek for a mixture of many gods, whereas all these imaginations should vanish before the brightness of the true God. In the following verse he confirms this declaration, because God instructed His people out of heaven, and in the fire. Is it, however, asked how these two points accord which seem to be opposed to each other, that God’s voice was heard from heaven and from the midst of the fire? I reply, that Moses simply means that the voice which flowed out of the fire into the people’s ears was distinguished by plain indications which proved it to be heavenly.

Calvin: Deu 4:37 - -- 37.And because he loved These words admit of two meanings; for the copulative conjunction stands at the beginning of the verse, — “ And because ...
37.And because he loved These words admit of two meanings; for the copulative conjunction stands at the beginning of the verse, — “ And because he loved thy fathers,” and also before the next clause, “and he chose their seed;” the reasons here assigned might, therefore, be taken in connection with the previous sentence, viz., that so many miracles were wrought because God had chosen Abraham and his seed. Others understand it differently, that this people was honored with so many blessings by God because He loved their fathers. In this case they omit the copula in the middle of the verse, as must be often done. In the main, there is little discrepancy; for Moses desires to shew that whatever good things God has conferred upon His people are gratuitous, by which circumstance he commends God’s grace the more. He had said that by unusual favor this nation was taken from the midst of another; and he now adds that this was done on no other account but because God had embraced Abraham, Isaac, and Jacob with His love, and persevered in the same love towards their posterity. But we must remark that by the word “love” is expressed that favor which springs of mere generosity, so as to exclude all worthiness in the person beloved, as may be more clearly gathered from other passages, viz., Deu 7:8, and Psa 78:68, and as is pretty plain from the context here, wherein he attributes the election of the people to the love with which God had honored their fathers. If any object that God’s election is eternal, the objection is readily solved, for the seed of Abraham was separated from all nations, because God had gratuitously adopted their father. We now understand the meaning of Moses, that the deliverance of the people was only to be ascribed to God’s goodness. He thus amplifies this blessing by another circumstance, viz., that God had preferred to great and mighty nations this ignoble people, whose own proper worthiness could not have acquired His favor.

Calvin: Deu 4:39 - -- 39.Know therefore this day He again inculcates what we have lately spoken of, that the glory of the one true God was proved by the miracles, but he d...
39.Know therefore this day He again inculcates what we have lately spoken of, that the glory of the one true God was proved by the miracles, but he does so by way of exhortation. For he desires them carefully and attentively to consider what God had shewn them, because in so plain a matter there would be no excuse for error or ignorance. He therefore infers from what had gone before, that the people must beware of shutting their eyes against the clear revelation of God’s power, and therefore urges them to keep it in memory, because man’s ingratitude is but too prone to forgetfulness. He afterwards reminds them wherefore God would be known, viz., that they might keep His Law and obey His statutes. The sum is, that they would be inexcusable if they did not obediently receive the Law, which they knew to have come from God; for they must needs be worse than stupid if the majesty of God, known and understood by so many proofs, did not awaken them to reverence. And lest they should undervalue the doctrine as proceeding from a mortal man, he expressly confesses, indeed, that he is the minister, and yet that he had set before them nothing which he had not received from God.
Defender: Deu 4:32 - -- "The days that are past," to which Moses referred, "since the day that God created man upon the earth," had been some 2500 years (assuming no gaps in ...
"The days that are past," to which Moses referred, "since the day that God created man upon the earth," had been some 2500 years (assuming no gaps in the received chronological genealogies of Genesis 5 and 11). That was a long time, of course, but was at least a reasonable point of reference to which the people could relate - nothing like the eternal evolutionary ages postulated by the Egyptians, Canaanites and other ancient pagan nations."

Defender: Deu 4:37 - -- Israel was not God's chosen people because it deserved to be, but "because He loved thy fathers." God had made an unconditional promise to Abraham, Is...
Israel was not God's chosen people because it deserved to be, but "because He loved thy fathers." God had made an unconditional promise to Abraham, Isaac and Jacob because of their faithfulness, not that of their "seed after them.""
TSK: Deu 4:32 - -- ask now : Job 8:8; Psa 44:1; Joe 1:2
from the one : Deu 30:4; Mat 24:31; Mar 13:27

TSK: Deu 4:33 - -- Deu 4:24-26, Deu 9:10; Exo 19:18, Exo 19:19, Exo 20:18, Exo 20:19, Exo 24:11, Exo 33:20; Jdg 6:22

TSK: Deu 4:34 - -- take him : Exo 1:9, Exo 3:10, Exo 3:17-20
temptations : Deu 7:19, Deu 29:3; Exo 9:20, Exo 9:21, Exo 10:7
by signs : Exo 7:3; Psa 78:12, Psa 78:48-53
b...

TSK: Deu 4:35 - -- know : 1Sa 17:45-47; 1Ki 18:36, 1Ki 18:37; 2Ki 19:19; Psa 58:11, Psa 83:18
none else : Deu 32:23; Exo 15:11; 1Sa 2:2; Isa 44:6, Isa 44:8, Isa 45:5, Is...

TSK: Deu 4:36 - -- Deu 4:33; Exo 19:9, Exo 19:19, Exo 20:18-22, Exo 24:16; Neh 9:13; Heb 12:18, Heb 12:25

TSK: Deu 4:37 - -- because : Deu 7:7-9, Deu 9:5, Deu 10:15; Psa 105:6-10; Isa 41:8, Isa 41:9; Jer 31:1; Mal 1:2; Luk 1:72, Luk 1:73; Rom 9:5
and brought : Exo 13:3, Exo ...

TSK: Deu 4:38 - -- drive : Deu 7:1, Deu 9:1-5, Deu 11:23; Exo 23:27, Exo 23:28; Jos 3:10; Psa 44:2, Psa 44:3
as : Deu 2:31-37, 3:1-16, Deu 8:18

TSK: Deu 4:39 - -- and consider : Deu 32:29; 1Ch 28:9; Isa 1:3, Isa 5:12; Hos 7:2
the Lord : Deu 4:35; Jos 2:11; 1Ch 29:11; 2Ch 20:6; Psa 115:3, Psa 135:6; Dan 4:35

TSK: Deu 4:40 - -- keep : Deu 4:1, Deu 4:6, Deu 28:1-14; Lev 22:31, Lev 26:1-13; Jer 11:4; Joh 14:15, Joh 14:21-24
it may go : Deu 5:16, Deu 6:3, Deu 6:18, Deu 12:25, De...

collapse allCommentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per Verse)
Barnes -> Deu 4:29-40
Barnes: Deu 4:29-40 - -- Unwilling, as it might seem, to close his discourse with words of terror, Moses makes a last appeal to them in these verses in a different strain. ...
Unwilling, as it might seem, to close his discourse with words of terror, Moses makes a last appeal to them in these verses in a different strain.
Temptations - Compare Deu 7:18-19; Deu 29:2-3; not, "i. e."the tribulations and persecutions undergone by the Israelites, out the plagues miraculously inflicted on the Egyptians.
He chose their seed after them - literally, "his seed after him."Speaking of the love of God to their fathers in general, Moses has more especially in mind that one of them who was called "the Friend of God"Jam 2:23.
Brought thee out in his sight - literally, "by His face:""i. e."by the might of His personal presence. Compare Exo 33:14; where God promises "My presence (literally ‘ My face’ ) shall go with thee."
Poole: Deu 4:32 - -- From the one side of heaven i.e. of the earth under heaven. Ask all the inhabitants of the world. Compare Mat 24:31 , with Mar 13:27 .

Poole: Deu 4:33 - -- i.e. And was not overwhelmed and consumed by such a glorious appearance. See Exo 24:11 33:20
i.e. And was not overwhelmed and consumed by such a glorious appearance. See Exo 24:11 33:20

Poole: Deu 4:34 - -- By temptations by tribulations and persecutions, which are commonly called temptations , which are here fitly mentioned as one great occasion first ...
By temptations by tribulations and persecutions, which are commonly called temptations , which are here fitly mentioned as one great occasion first of their cries unto God, and then of God’ s coming for their rescue. Or, temptations is the general title, which is explained by the following particulars,
signs and wonders & c., which are called temptations, because they were trials both to the Egyptians and Israelites, whether thereby they would be induced to believe and obey God or no.
Great terrors raised in the minds of the Egyptians, as the history showeth; compare Deu 2:25 34:12 ; or by terrible things done among them.

Poole: Deu 4:36 - -- Out of heaven i.e. out of the air, above Mount Sinai. See Exo 19:9 20:18,22 . Upon earth; at the top of Mount Sinai.
Out of heaven i.e. out of the air, above Mount Sinai. See Exo 19:9 20:18,22 . Upon earth; at the top of Mount Sinai.

Poole: Deu 4:37 - -- In his sight keeping his eye fixed upon him, as the father doth on his beloved child. Or, with his presence , i.e. he did not send them forth by Mos...
In his sight keeping his eye fixed upon him, as the father doth on his beloved child. Or, with his presence , i.e. he did not send them forth by Moses, but he himself was present with them, and as it were marched along with them, in the pillar of cloud and fire.
Haydock: Deu 4:32 - -- Heaven. To our senses the sky seems to rest upon the horizon. So Jesus says, Then he....shall gather....his elect....from the uttermost part of ea...
Heaven. To our senses the sky seems to rest upon the horizon. So Jesus says, Then he....shall gather....his elect....from the uttermost part of earth, to the uttermost part of heaven, Matthew xxiv. 31. Vatable translates, "from the east to the west." In no age or place did God ever declare his will, as he had done at Sinai. (Calmet)

Haydock: Deu 4:33 - -- And lived. It was generally supposed that those who had seen a vision of God, or of his angel, would instantly die. See Genesis xvi. 13. (Haydock)...
And lived. It was generally supposed that those who had seen a vision of God, or of his angel, would instantly die. See Genesis xvi. 13. (Haydock) (Chap. v. 24.)

Haydock: Deu 4:34 - -- Temptations. The Chaldean and Arabic understand this of the prodigies which God wrought in favour of his people; though they may also denote the tri...
Temptations. The Chaldean and Arabic understand this of the prodigies which God wrought in favour of his people; though they may also denote the trials to which the Patriarchs and the Hebrews had been exposed, that their virtue might shine more brightly. Many indeed lost courage under these trials, but they were of great service to form a perfect people; and those who continued to lead a virtuous life received the reward of their labours. (Calmet) ---
Visions, during the three days' darkness mentioned, Wisdom xvii. 9, 18, &c., (Menochius) or those terrible appearances on Sinai, ver. 33, 36., and chap. v. 22. (Calmet) Hebrew may be, "by great terrors." ---
In Egypt. God himself fought for his people, when he brought them out of that country. He repeatedly made the king and his people feel the impressions of terror, but as they presently recovered their wonted insolence and pride, he at last miraculously divided the Red Sea, and buried vast multitudes in its waters. (Haydock)

Haydock: Deu 4:38 - -- Day. They had already conquered the mighty kingdoms of Sehon and of Og. (Menochius)
Day. They had already conquered the mighty kingdoms of Sehon and of Og. (Menochius)

Haydock: Deu 4:39 - -- Other. The power of the true and only God is not confined to the sea, or to the land, &c., (Calmet) as the pagans believed that of their various ido...
Other. The power of the true and only God is not confined to the sea, or to the land, &c., (Calmet) as the pagans believed that of their various idols was. (Haydock)
Gill: Deu 4:32 - -- For ask now of the days that are past, which were before thee,.... Inquire into and consult the annals of former times, of ages past:
since the day...
For ask now of the days that are past, which were before thee,.... Inquire into and consult the annals of former times, of ages past:
since the day that God created man upon the earth; trace them quite up to the creation of the world, and men in it:
and ask from the one side of heaven to the other; traverse the whole globe, and examine the records of every nation in it in both hemispheres:
whether there hath been any such thing as this great thing is, or hath been heard like it? whether they can give any account of anything seen, heard, or done like what follows; suggesting that they cannot furnish out an instance to be mentioned with it.

Gill: Deu 4:33 - -- Did ever people hear the voice of God speaking out of the midst of fire,.... None ever heard the voice of God as they did, much less speaking such wo...
Did ever people hear the voice of God speaking out of the midst of fire,.... None ever heard the voice of God as they did, much less speaking such words as they heard, and still less out of the midst of fire, which was their case, Deu 4:12.
as thou hast heard, and live? which was stranger still, when they might have expected they should, and doubtless feared they would be, as it was wonderful they were not, consumed by it.

Gill: Deu 4:34 - -- Or hath God assayed to go and take him a nation from the midst of another nation,.... As he now had done, namely, the nation of Israel out of the nati...
Or hath God assayed to go and take him a nation from the midst of another nation,.... As he now had done, namely, the nation of Israel out of the nation of the Egyptians; this he not only had assayed to do, but had actually done it; whereas no such instance like it could be produced, and especially as done in the manner this was:
by temptations, by signs, and by wonders, and by war; the word "temptations" may be considered as a general word, as Aben Ezra thinks, and may signify the temptations by signs, &c. or the various essays and trials, ways, means, and methods taken by the Lord to bring about the event; by "signs" may be meant those which were required of Moses, and done by him before the people of Israel, and before Pharaoh, as proofs of his mission from the Lord, Exo 4:1 and by "wonders", the ten plagues of Egypt, which were done by a supernatural and miraculous operation, and were amazing things; see Psa 78:11; and by "war", either the slaying of the firstborn, with the destruction of the judges and gods of Egypt, as Aben Ezra; or the Lord's fighting for Israel at the Red sea, as Jarchi; he saved them and destroyed the Egyptians, and showed himself to be a man of war, Exo 14:14.
and by a mighty hand and stretched out arm; phrases frequently used when this affair is spoken of, and are expressive of the mighty power of God in the above instances, and in the issue of them, bringing Israel out of Egypt; though Aben Ezra interprets it of the pillar of fire and cloud in which the Lord went before them:
and by great terrors; which the same writer interprets of the drowning of Pharaoh and his host in the sea, and dividing it for Israel; but may be understood not only of the terrors which possessed him and his people then, but at other times, especially at the time of the thunder and lightning, and when they sat in thick darkness, and particularly when all their firstborn were slain; see Deu 26:8,
according to all that the Lord your God did for you in Egypt before your eyes; among the men of Egypt, as the above writer, Pharaoh and his courtiers: the above things were done as before them for their terror, so before Israel for their encouragement.

Gill: Deu 4:35 - -- Unto thee it was showed,.... What the Lord did in Egypt:
that thou mightest know that the Lord he is God, there is none else besides him; that he...
Unto thee it was showed,.... What the Lord did in Egypt:
that thou mightest know that the Lord he is God, there is none else besides him; that he is the one only living and true God, and there is no other: this phrase is often used by the Prophet Isaiah, to express the same great article of faith.

Gill: Deu 4:36 - -- Out of heaven he made thee to hear his voice, that he might instruct thee,.... Thunder is the voice of God, and by which he instructs men in the great...
Out of heaven he made thee to hear his voice, that he might instruct thee,.... Thunder is the voice of God, and by which he instructs men in the greatness of his power, Job 26:14, &c. unless his voice in giving the law, which was for the instruction of Israel, is meant; for that was heard on earth, on Mount Sinai, to which the following refers:
and upon earth he showed thee his great fire; on Mount Sinai, which burned with it:
and thou heardest his words out of the midst of the fire; the ten commands, and therefore may well be called, a fiery law; see Deu 4:12.

Gill: Deu 4:37 - -- And because he loved thy fathers,.... Not their immediate fathers, whose carcasses fell in the wilderness, and entered not into the good land because ...
And because he loved thy fathers,.... Not their immediate fathers, whose carcasses fell in the wilderness, and entered not into the good land because of their unbelief, but their more remote fathers or ancestors, Abraham, Isaac, and Jacob, who had some singular testimonies of the love of God to them, Abraham is called their friend of God, and Isaac was the son of promise in whom the seed was called; and Jacob is particularly said to be loved by God, when Esau was hated:
therefore he chose their seed after them; not to eternal life and salvation, but to the enjoyment of external blessings and privileges, to be called by his name, and to set up his name and worship among them, and to be a special people to him above all people on the earth, as to outward favours, both civil and ecclesiastical:
and brought thee out in his sight with his mighty power out of Egypt; which was done not only in the sight of the Egyptians openly, they not daring to hinder them, as the wonders wrought to oblige them to let them go out, done in the sight of the Israelites as before observed, but in the sight of God, he going before them in the pillar of cloud and fire, smiling upon them the Israelites, and looking with a frown upon the host of the Egyptians, and conducting the people by the angel of his presence.

Gill: Deu 4:38 - -- To drive out nations from before thee, greater and mightier than thou art,.... The seven nations of the land of Canaan, which were more in number and ...
To drive out nations from before thee, greater and mightier than thou art,.... The seven nations of the land of Canaan, which were more in number and mightier in power and strength than they, and particularly the Amorites, who were already driven out and dispossessed of their country, even the kingdoms and nations of Sihon and Og:
to bring thee in to give thee their land for an inheritance, as it is this day; referring, as Aben Ezra observes, to the inheritance of the land of the two kings of the Amorites, which the tribes of Reuben and Gad, and the half tribe of Manasseh, were put into the possession of already.

Gill: Deu 4:39 - -- Know therefore this day, and consider it in thine heart,.... Own and acknowledge it now with thy mouth, and lay it up and consider it in thine heart h...
Know therefore this day, and consider it in thine heart,.... Own and acknowledge it now with thy mouth, and lay it up and consider it in thine heart hereafter, as a truth of the greatest importance to be professed and held fast, and to be thought of and meditated upon continually, and never to be forgotten:
that the Lord he is God in heaven above, and upon the earth beneath; that he has made both, and is the possessor and Lord of them, and does what he pleases with them; that the one is his throne, his dwelling place, and the other his footstool; and that the inhabitants of both are his creatures, and under his authority and command, and he can dispose of them as he pleases:
there is none else; no God in heaven or in earth beside him.

Gill: Deu 4:40 - -- Thou shall keep therefore his statutes, and his commandments,.... All his laws, moral, ceremonial, and judicial, partly being under obligation to him ...
Thou shall keep therefore his statutes, and his commandments,.... All his laws, moral, ceremonial, and judicial, partly being under obligation to him for all the great and good things done by him for them before enumerated, and partly and chiefly because he is the Lord God in heaven and in earth, and has a right to command and ought to be obeyed:
which I command thee this day; in the name of the Lord, and which he repeated, opened, and explained, and charged them afresh to observe; otherwise they were such that had been given long ago:
that it may go well with thee, and with thy children after thee; that they and theirs might enjoy temporal mercies, and continue in the land of Canaan, and partake of all the blessings in it, as follows, and of the sanctuary of the Lord, and the privileges of it:
and that thou mayest prolong thy days upon the earth, which the Lord thy God giveth thee for ever; that is, that they and theirs might live long in the land of Canaan, which the Lord gave for an inheritance for ever, provided they kept his law, and were obedient to his commands; see Deu 6:25, and though they have had several interruptions by their captivities, and especially by their present very long one, yet when they shall return and seek the Lord their God, and David their king, they shall have their land restored to them again, and shall never more be dispossessed of it.

expand allCommentary -- Verse Notes / Footnotes
NET Notes: Deu 4:32 The verb is not present in the Hebrew text but has been supplied in the translation for clarification. The challenge has both temporal and geographica...



NET Notes: Deu 4:37 The LXX, Smr, Syriac, Targum, and Vulgate read a third person masculine plural suffix for the MT’s 3rd person masculine singular, “his des...

NET Notes: Deu 4:38 Heb “(as) an inheritance,” that is, landed property that one can pass on to one’s descendants.

Geneva Bible: Deu 4:32 For ask now of the days that are past, which were before thee, since the day that God created man upon the earth, and ( x ) [ask] from the one side of...

Geneva Bible: Deu 4:34 Or hath God assayed to go [and] take him a nation from the midst of [another] nation, by ( y ) temptations, by signs, and by wonders, and by war, and ...

Geneva Bible: Deu 4:35 Unto thee it was shewed, that thou mightest ( z ) know that the LORD he [is] God; [there is] none else beside him.
( z ) He shows the reason why God ...

Geneva Bible: Deu 4:37 And because ( a ) he loved thy fathers, therefore he chose their seed after them, and brought thee out in his sight with his mighty power out of Egypt...

Geneva Bible: Deu 4:40 Thou shalt keep therefore his statutes, and his commandments, which I command thee this day, that it may ( b ) go well with thee, and with thy childre...

expand allCommentary -- Verse Range Notes
TSK Synopsis -> Deu 4:1-49
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 4:24-40
MHCC: Deu 4:24-40 - --Moses urged the greatness, glory, and goodness of God. Did we consider what a God he is with whom we have to do, we should surely make conscience of o...
Matthew Henry -> Deu 4:1-40
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 4:32-34 - --
But in order to accomplish something more than merely preserving the people from apostasy by the threat of punishment, namely, to secure a more fait...

Keil-Delitzsch: Deu 4:35 - --
Israel was made to see all this, that it might know that Jehovah was God ( האלהים , the God, to whom the name of elohim rightfully belonged)...

Keil-Delitzsch: Deu 4:36 - --
But the Lord had spoken to Israel chiefly down from heaven (cf. Exo 20:19 [22]), and that out of the great fire, in which He had come down upon Sina...

Keil-Delitzsch: Deu 4:37-38 - --
All this He did from love to the fathers of Israel (the patriarchs): " and indeed because He loved thy fathers, He chose his seed (the seed of Abra...

Keil-Delitzsch: Deu 4:39-40 - --
By this the Israelites were to know and lay it to heart, that Jehovah alone was God in heaven and on earth, and were to keep His commandments, in or...
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...
