
Text -- Deuteronomy 7:1-9 (NET)




Names, People and Places, Dictionary Themes and Topics



collapse allCommentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per phrase)
Wesley: Deu 7:1 - -- There were ten in Gen 15:19-21. But this being some hundreds of years after, it is not strange if three of them were either destroyed by foreign or do...
There were ten in Gen 15:19-21. But this being some hundreds of years after, it is not strange if three of them were either destroyed by foreign or domestick wars, or by cohabitation and marriage united with, and swallowed up in the rest.

Wesley: Deu 7:4 - -- That is, there is manifest danger of apostacy and idolatry from such matches. Which reason doth both limit the law to such of these as are unconverted...

Wesley: Deu 7:5 - -- Which idolaters planted about the temples and altars of their Gods. Hereby God designed to take away whatsoever might bring their idolatry to remembra...
Which idolaters planted about the temples and altars of their Gods. Hereby God designed to take away whatsoever might bring their idolatry to remembrance, or occasion the reviving of it.

Wesley: Deu 7:7 - -- To wit, at that time when God first declared his choice of you for his peculiar people, which was done to Abraham. For Abraham had but one son concern...
To wit, at that time when God first declared his choice of you for his peculiar people, which was done to Abraham. For Abraham had but one son concerned in this choice and covenant, namely, Isaac, and that was in his hundredth year; and Isaac was sixty years old ere he had a child, and then had only two children; and though Jacob had twelve sons, it was a long time before they made any considerable increase. Nor do we read of any great multiplication of them 'till after Joseph's death.

It was his free choice without any cause or motive on your part.
JFB: Deu 7:1 - -- This people were descended from Heth, the second son of Canaan (Gen 10:15), and occupied the mountainous region about Hebron, in the south of Palestin...
This people were descended from Heth, the second son of Canaan (Gen 10:15), and occupied the mountainous region about Hebron, in the south of Palestine.

JFB: Deu 7:1 - -- Supposed by some to be the same as the Gergesenes (Mat 8:28), who lay to the east of Lake Gennesareth; but they are placed on the west of Jordan (Jos ...
Supposed by some to be the same as the Gergesenes (Mat 8:28), who lay to the east of Lake Gennesareth; but they are placed on the west of Jordan (Jos 24:11), and others take them for a branch of the large family of the Hivites, as they are omitted in nine out of ten places where the tribes of Canaan are enumerated; in the tenth they are mentioned, while the Hivites are not.

JFB: Deu 7:1 - -- Descended from the fourth son of Canaan. They occupied, besides their conquest on the Moabite territory, extensive settlements west of the Dead Sea, i...
Descended from the fourth son of Canaan. They occupied, besides their conquest on the Moabite territory, extensive settlements west of the Dead Sea, in the mountains.

JFB: Deu 7:1 - -- Located in Phœnicia, particularly about Tyre and Sidon, and being sprung from the oldest branch of the family of Canaan, bore his name.
Located in Phœnicia, particularly about Tyre and Sidon, and being sprung from the oldest branch of the family of Canaan, bore his name.

JFB: Deu 7:1 - -- That is, villagers, a tribe who were dispersed throughout the country and lived in unwalled towns.
That is, villagers, a tribe who were dispersed throughout the country and lived in unwalled towns.

JFB: Deu 7:1 - -- Who dwelt about Ebal and Gerizim, extending towards Hermon. They are supposed to be the same as the Avims.
Who dwelt about Ebal and Gerizim, extending towards Hermon. They are supposed to be the same as the Avims.

Resided about Jerusalem and the adjacent country.

JFB: Deu 7:1 - -- Ten were formerly mentioned (Gen 15:19-21). But in the lapse of near five hundred years, it cannot be surprising that some of them had been extinguish...
Ten were formerly mentioned (Gen 15:19-21). But in the lapse of near five hundred years, it cannot be surprising that some of them had been extinguished in the many intestine feuds that prevailed among those warlike tribes. It is more than probable that some, stationed on the east of Jordan, had fallen under the victorious arms of the Israelites.

JFB: Deu 7:2-6 - -- This relentless doom of extermination which God denounced against those tribes of Canaan cannot be reconciled with the attributes of the divine charac...
This relentless doom of extermination which God denounced against those tribes of Canaan cannot be reconciled with the attributes of the divine character, except on the assumption that their gross idolatry and enormous wickedness left no reasonable hope of their repentance and amendment. If they were to be swept away like the antediluvians or the people of Sodom and Gomorrah, as incorrigible sinners who had filled up the measure of their iniquities, it mattered not to them in what way the judgment was inflicted; and God, as the Sovereign Disposer, had a right to employ any instruments that pleased Him for executing His judgments. Some think that they were to be exterminated as unprincipled usurpers of a country which God had assigned to the posterity of Eber and which had been occupied ages before by wandering shepherds of that race, till, on the migration of Jacob's family into Egypt through the pressure of famine, the Canaanites overspread the whole land, though they had no legitimate claim to it, and endeavored to retain possession of it by force. In this view their expulsion was just and proper. The strict prohibition against contracting any alliances with such infamous idolaters was a prudential rule, founded on the experience that "evil communications corrupt good manners" [1Co 15:33], and its importance or necessity was attested by the unhappy examples of Solomon and others in the subsequent history of Israel.

JFB: Deu 7:5 - -- The removal of the temples, altars, and everything that had been enlisted in the service, or might tend to perpetuate the remembrance, of Canaanite id...
The removal of the temples, altars, and everything that had been enlisted in the service, or might tend to perpetuate the remembrance, of Canaanite idolatry, was likewise highly expedient for preserving the Israelites from all risk of contamination. It was imitated by the Scottish Reformers, and although many ardent lovers of architecture and the fine arts have anathematized their proceedings as vandalism, yet there was profound wisdom in the favorite maxim of Knox--"pull down the nests, and the rooks will disappear."

JFB: Deu 7:6-10 - -- That is, set apart to the service of God, or chosen to execute the important purposes of His providence. Their selection to this high destiny was neit...
That is, set apart to the service of God, or chosen to execute the important purposes of His providence. Their selection to this high destiny was neither on account of their numerical amount (for, till after the death of Joseph, they were but a handful of people); nor because of their extraordinary merits (for they had often pursued a most perverse and unworthy conduct); but it was in consequence of the covenant or promise made with their pious forefathers; and the motives that led to that special act were such as tended not only to vindicate God's wisdom, but to illustrate His glory in diffusing the best and most precious blessings to all mankind.|| 05123||1||16||0||@Thou shalt therefore keep the commandments, and the statutes, and the judgments, which I command thee this day==--In the covenant into which God entered with Israel, He promised to bestow upon them a variety of blessings so long as they continued obedient to Him as their heavenly King. He pledged His veracity that His infinite perfections would be exerted for this purpose, as well as for delivering them from every evil to which, as a people, they would be exposed. That people accordingly were truly happy as a nation, and found every promise which the faithful God made to them amply fulfilled, so long as they adhered to that obedience which was required of them. See a beautiful illustration of this in Psa 144:12-15.
Clarke: Deu 7:1 - -- Seven nations greater and mightier than thou - In several places of the Hebrew text, each of these seven nations is not enumerated, some one or othe...
Seven nations greater and mightier than thou - In several places of the Hebrew text, each of these seven nations is not enumerated, some one or other being left out, which the Septuagint in general supply. How these nations were distributed over the land of Canaan previously to the entering in of the Israelites, the reader may see in the note on Jos 3:10 (note).

Clarke: Deu 7:2 - -- Thou shalt smite them, etc. - These idolatrous nations were to be utterly destroyed, and all the others also which were contiguous to the boundaries...
Thou shalt smite them, etc. - These idolatrous nations were to be utterly destroyed, and all the others also which were contiguous to the boundaries of the promised land, provided they did not renounce their idolatry and receive the true faith: for if they did not, then no covenant was to be made with them on any secular or political consideration whatever; no mercy was to be shown to them, because the cup of their iniquity also was now full; and they must either embrace, heartily embrace, the true religion, or be cut off.

Clarke: Deu 7:3 - -- Neither shalt thou make marriages, etc. - The heart being naturally inclined to evil, there is more likelihood that the idolatrous wife should draw ...
Neither shalt thou make marriages, etc. - The heart being naturally inclined to evil, there is more likelihood that the idolatrous wife should draw aside the believing husband, than that the believing husband should be able to bring over his idolatrous wife to the true faith.

Clarke: Deu 7:6 - -- Thou art a holy people - And therefore should have no connection with the workers of iniquity
Thou art a holy people - And therefore should have no connection with the workers of iniquity

Clarke: Deu 7:6 - -- A special people - סגלה segullah , - Septuagint, λαον περιουσιον, - a peculiar people, a private property. The words as they sta...
A special people -

Clarke: Deu 7:8 - -- But because the Lord loved you - It was no good in them that induced God to choose them at this time to be his peculiar people: he had his reasons, ...
But because the Lord loved you - It was no good in them that induced God to choose them at this time to be his peculiar people: he had his reasons, but these sprang from his infinite goodness. He intended to make a full discovery of his goodness to the world, and this must have a commencement in some particular place, and among some people. He chose that time, and he chose the Jewish people; but not because of their goodness or holiness.
Calvin: Deu 7:2 - -- 2.Thou shalt smite them and utterly destroy them Those who think that there was cruelty in this command, usurp too great authority in respect to Him ...
2.Thou shalt smite them and utterly destroy them Those who think that there was cruelty in this command, usurp too great authority in respect to Him who is the judge of all. The objection is specious that the people of God were unreasonably imbued with inhumanity, so that, advancing with murderous atrocity, they should spare neither sex nor age. But we must first remember what we shall see hereafter, i.e., that when God had destined the land for His people, He was at liberty utterly to destroy the former inhabitants, so that its possession might be free for them. We must then go further, and say that He desired the just demonstration of His vengeance to appear upon these nations. Four hundred years before He had justly punished their many sins, yet had He suspended His sentence and patiently borne with them, if haply they might repent. That sentence 303 is well known, “The iniquity of the Amorites is not yet full.” (Gen 15:16.) After God had shewn His mercy for four centuries, and this clemency had increased both their audacity and madness, so that they had not ceased to provoke His wrath, surely it was no act of cruelty to compensate for the delay by the grievousness of the punishment. And hence appears the foul and detestable perversity of the human intellect. We are indignant if He does not smile at once; if He delays punishment our zeal accuses Him of slackness and want of energy; yet, when He comes forth as the avenger of guilt, we either call Him cruel, or at least complain of His severity. Yet His justice will always absolve Him; and our calumnies and detractions will recoil upon our own heads. He commanded seven nations to be utterly destroyed; that is to say, after they had added sin to sin for 400 years, so that their accumulation was immense, and experience had taught that they were obstinate and incurable. It will therefore be said elsewhere, that the land “spewed them out,” (Lev 18:28,) as if it had eased itself, when burdened by their filthiness. If impiety is intolerable to the lifeless element, why should we wonder that God in His character of Judge exercised extreme severity? But if God’s wrath was just, He might surely choose whatever ministers and executioners of it He pleased; and when He had given this commission to His people, it was not unreasonable that He should forbid them to pity those whom He had appointed for destruction. For what can be more preposterous than for men to vie with God in clemency? and when it pleases the Master to be severe, for the servants to assume to themselves the right of shewing mercy? Therefore God often reproves the Israelites for being improperly merciful. And hence it came to pass that the people, whom they ought to have destroyed, became as thorns and briars to prick them. (Jos 23:13, and throughout the book of Judges.) Away, then, with all temerity, whereby we would presumptuously restrict God’s power to the puny measure of our reason; and rather let us learn reverently to regard those works of His, whose cause is concealed from us, than wantonly criticise them. Especially when He declares to us the just grounds of His vengeance, let us learn to subscribe to His decrees with the humility and modesty that becomes us, rather than to oppose them in vain, and indeed to our own confusion.

Calvin: Deu 7:6 - -- 6.For thou art a holy people He explains more distinctly what we have lately seen respecting God’s gratuitous love; for the comparison of the fewne...
6.For thou art a holy people He explains more distinctly what we have lately seen respecting God’s gratuitous love; for the comparison of the fewness of the people with the whole world and all nations, illustrates in no trifling degree the greatness of God’s grace; and this subject is considerably enlarged upon. Almost the same expressions will very soon be repeated, and also in the Song of Moses; but there by way of reproof, whilst here it is directed to a different object, as is plain from the context, viz., that they might be, by so great a blessing, laid under obligation to devote themselves and their services to God. He begins by declaring the end of their election, viz., that God had deigned to bestow this peculiar honor upon them that He might acquire unto Himself a holy people, pure from all pollutions, and then, by adding the circumstance I have adverted to, he magnifies the excellence of the benefit. From his argument drawn from their dignity, that they ought therefore to labor after holiness, we gather, that in proportion to the abundance of grace with which any one is endued, he is solemnly bound to live piously and justly. For God does not wish the gifts he bestows upon us to lie idle, but to produce their appropriate fruits; and we must especially remember that when He adopts us, and gathers us into His Church, we are not “called to uncleanness,” but to purity of life, and to shew forth the praises of him who hath called us out of darkness into his marvellous light.” ( 1Th 4:7, and 1Pe 2:9.) The Hebrew word

Calvin: Deu 7:7 - -- 7.The Lord did not set his love upon you He proves it to be of God’s gratuitous favor, that He has exalted them to such high honor, because He had ...
7.The Lord did not set his love upon you He proves it to be of God’s gratuitous favor, that He has exalted them to such high honor, because He had passed over all other nations, and deigned to embrace them alone. For an equal distribution of God’s gifts generally casts obscurity upon them in our eyes; thus the light of the sun, our common food, and other things, which all equally enjoy, either lose their value, or, at any rate, do not obtain their due honor; whilst what is peculiar is more conspicuous. Moreover, Moses takes it for granted, that there was nothing naturally in the people to cause their condition to be better or more distinguished; and hence infers, that there was no other reason why God should choose them, except His mere choice of them. We have elsewhere observed, that by this His love, whatever men would bring of their own is excluded or annihilated. It follows, therefore, that the Israelites could never be sufficiently grateful to God, since they had been thus liberally dealt with by Him, without any desert of their own.

Calvin: Deu 7:8 - -- 8.Because he would keep the oath The love of God is here referred back from the children to the fathers; for he addressed the men of his own generati...
8.Because he would keep the oath The love of God is here referred back from the children to the fathers; for he addressed the men of his own generation, when he said that they were therefore God’s treasure, because He loved them; now he adds that God had not just begun to love them for the first time, but that He had originally loved their fathers, when He chose to adopt Abraham, Isaac, and Jacob. But although he more clearly proves that the descendants of Abraham had deserved nothing of the kind, because they are God’s peculiar people only by right of inheritance, still it must be remarked that God was induced to be kind to Abraham by no other cause than mere generosity. A little further on, therefore, he will say that those who then survived were dear to God, because He had already loved their fathers. But now he still further commends the goodness of God, because He had handed down His covenant from the fathers to the children, to shew that He is faithful and true to His promises. At the end of the verse, he teaches that the deliverance of the people was both an effect and a testimony of that grace.

Calvin: Deu 7:9 - -- 9.Know therefore that the Lord thy God, he is God. The verb 220 might have been as properly translated in the future tense; and, if this be preferred...
9.Know therefore that the Lord thy God, he is God. The verb 220 might have been as properly translated in the future tense; and, if this be preferred, an experimental knowledge, as it is called, is referred to, as if he had said that God would practically manifest how faithful a rewarder He is of His servants. But if the other reading is rather approved, Moses exhorts the people to be assured that God sits in heaven as the Judge of men, so that they may be both alarmed by the fear of His vengeance, and also attracted by the hope of reward. This declaration, however, 221 was appended to the Second Commandment, and there expounded; for since it is comprehended in the Decalogue, it was not right to separate it from thence; but since it is now repeated in confirmation of the whole Law, it is fitly inserted in this place. It will not be amiss, nevertheless, slightly to advert to what I there more fully explained. The promise stands first, because God chooses rather to invite His people by kindness than to compel them to obedience from terror. The word mercy is coupled with the covenant, that we may know that the reward which believers must expect, does not depend on the merit of their works, since they have need of God’s mercy. We may, however, thus resolve the phrase — keeping the covenant of mercy — or the covenant founded on mercy — or the mercy which He covenanted.
When it is required of believers that they should love God before they keep His Commandments, we are thus taught that the source and cause of obedience is the love wherewith we embrace God as our Father. With respect to the “thousand generations,” it is better that we should refer to the Second Commandment, because it is a point which cannot be hurried over in a few words.
Defender -> Deu 7:6
Defender: Deu 7:6 - -- This is perhaps the clearest statement of the election of the children of Israel as God's chosen people, clearly stating it was not because of human m...
This is perhaps the clearest statement of the election of the children of Israel as God's chosen people, clearly stating it was not because of human merit but because of His promise to their fathers. As the Israelites entered Canaan, they would encounter "seven nations greater and mightier than thou" (Deu 7:1), yet God promised to "deliver them before thee" (Deu 7:2)."
TSK: Deu 7:1 - -- the Lord : Deu 4:38, Deu 6:1, Deu 6:10, Deu 6:19, Deu 6:23, Deu 9:1, Deu 9:4, Deu 11:29, Deu 31:3, Deu 31:20; Exo 6:8, Exo 15:7; Num 14:31; Psa 44:2, ...
the Lord : Deu 4:38, Deu 6:1, Deu 6:10, Deu 6:19, Deu 6:23, Deu 9:1, Deu 9:4, Deu 11:29, Deu 31:3, Deu 31:20; Exo 6:8, Exo 15:7; Num 14:31; Psa 44:2, Psa 44:3, Psa 78:55
the Hittites : With respect to the situation of these nations in the land of Canaan, Calmet remarks, that the Canaanites chiefly inhabited Phoenecia; the Hittites, the mountains south of the promised land; the Hivites, mount Ebal, and Gerizim, and towards Hermon; the Girgashites, beyond Jordan, towards the lake of Gennesareth, the Jebusistes, about Jerusalem; the Amorites, the mountains west of the Dead Sea, and part of the land of Moab; and that the Perizzites were probably not a distinct nation, but villagers scattered through the country. Gen 15:18-21; Exo 23:28, Exo 33:2

TSK: Deu 7:2 - -- deliver : Deu 7:23, Deu 7:24, Deu 3:3, Deu 23:14; Gen 14:20; Jos 10:24, Jos 10:25, Jos 10:30, Jos 10:32, Jos 10:42, Jos 21:44; Jdg 1:4
utterly : Deu 2...
deliver : Deu 7:23, Deu 7:24, Deu 3:3, Deu 23:14; Gen 14:20; Jos 10:24, Jos 10:25, Jos 10:30, Jos 10:32, Jos 10:42, Jos 21:44; Jdg 1:4
utterly : Deu 20:16, Deu 20:17; Lev 27:28, Lev 27:29; Num 33:52; Jos 6:17-25, Jos 8:24, Jos 9:24, Jos 10:28, Jos 10:40; Jos 11:11, Jos 11:12
make no : Deu 20:10, Deu 20:11; Exo 23:32, Exo 23:33, Exo 34:12-16; Jos 2:14, Jos 9:18-21; Jdg 1:24, Jdg 2:2; 2Sa 21:2

TSK: Deu 7:3 - -- Gen 6:2, Gen 6:3; Exo 34:15, Exo 34:16; Jos 23:12, Jos 23:13; Jdg 3:6, Jdg 3:7; 1Ki 11:2; Ezr 9:1, Ezr 9:2; Neh 13:23-27; 2Co 6:14-17

TSK: Deu 7:4 - -- so will : Deu 6:15, Deu 32:16, Deu 32:17; Exo 20:5; Jdg 2:11, Jdg 2:20, Jdg 3:7, Jdg 3:8, Jdg 10:6, Jdg 10:7

TSK: Deu 7:5 - -- destroy : Deu 12:2, Deu 12:3; Exo 23:24, Exo 34:13; 2Ki 23:6-14
images : Heb. statues, or pillars, Deu 16:22; Lev 26:1
and cut : Jdg 6:25, Jdg 6:26
bu...

TSK: Deu 7:6 - -- an holy : Deu 14:2, Deu 26:19, Deu 28:9; Exo 19:5, Exo 19:6; Psa 50:5; Jer 2:3; Amo 3:2; 1Co 6:19, 1Co 6:20; Tit 2:14; 1Pe 2:5, 1Pe 2:9
to be a specia...

TSK: Deu 7:7 - -- The Lord : Psa 115:1; Rom 9:11-15, Rom 9:18, Rom 9:21, Rom 11:6; 1Jo 3:1, 1Jo 4:10
ye were : Deu 10:22; Isa 51:2; Mat 7:14; Luk 12:32; Rom 9:27-29

TSK: Deu 7:8 - -- because : Deu 4:37, Deu 9:4, Deu 9:5, Deu 10:15; 1Sa 12:22; 2Sa 22:20; Psa 44:3; Isa 43:4; Jer 31:3; Zep 3:17; Mat 11:26; Eph 2:4, Eph 2:5; 2Th 2:13, ...
because : Deu 4:37, Deu 9:4, Deu 9:5, Deu 10:15; 1Sa 12:22; 2Sa 22:20; Psa 44:3; Isa 43:4; Jer 31:3; Zep 3:17; Mat 11:26; Eph 2:4, Eph 2:5; 2Th 2:13, 2Th 2:14; Tit 3:3-7; 1Jo 4:19
oath : Gen 22:16-18; Exo 32:13; Psa 105:8-10, Psa 105:42; Luk 1:55, Luk 1:72, Luk 1:73; Heb 6:13-17
Lord brought : Deu 4:20, Deu 4:34; Exo 12:41, Exo 12:42, Exo 13:3, Exo 13:14, Exo 20:2

TSK: Deu 7:9 - -- the faithful : Exo 34:6, Exo 34:7; Psa 119:75, Psa 146:6; Isa 49:7; Lam 3:23; 1Co 1:9, 1Co 10:3; 2Co 1:18; 1Th 5:24; 2Th 3:3; 2Ti 2:13; Tit 1:2; Heb 6...

collapse allCommentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per Verse)
Barnes -> Deu 7:1-11
Barnes: Deu 7:1-11 - -- See Deu 6:10 note. Deu 7:5 Their groves - Render, their idols of wood: the reference is to the wooden trunk used as a representation of A...
See Deu 6:10 note.
Their groves - Render, their idols of wood: the reference is to the wooden trunk used as a representation of Ashtaroth; see Deu 7:13 and Exo 34:13 note.
The fewest of all people - God chose for Himself Israel, when as yet but a single family, or rather a single person, Abraham; though there were already numerous nations and powerful kingdoms in the earth. Increase Deu 1:10; Deu 10:22 had taken place because of the very blessing of God spoken of in Deu 7:8.
Repayeth them that hate him to their face - i. e., punishes His enemies in their own proper persons.
Poole: Deu 7:2 - -- No covenant with them to spare them, or permit them to dwell with thee in the land. Other nations had more favour, but these were for their great wic...
No covenant with them to spare them, or permit them to dwell with thee in the land. Other nations had more favour, but these were for their great wickedness, and for the good of Israel, devoted to utter destruction.

Poole: Deu 7:4 - -- i.e. There is manifest danger of apostacy and idolatry from such matches; which reason doth both limit the law to such of these as were unconverted,...

Poole: Deu 7:5 - -- Idolaters planted groves about the temples and altars of their gods. Hereby God designed to take away whatsoever might bring their idolatry to rem...
Idolaters planted groves about the temples and altars of their gods. Hereby God designed to take away whatsoever might bring their idolatry to remembrance, or occasion the reviving of it.

Poole: Deu 7:7 - -- To wit, at that time when God first declared his love to you, and choice of you for his peculiar people, which was done to Abraham. For Abraham had ...
To wit, at that time when God first declared his love to you, and choice of you for his peculiar people, which was done to Abraham. For Abraham had but one son concerned in this choice and covenant, to wit, Isaac, and that was in his hundredth year; and Isaac was sixty years old ere he had a child, and then they had only two children; and though Jacob had twelve sons, yet it was a long time ere they made any considerable increase. Nor do we read of any great multiplication of them till after Joseph’ s death, Exo 1:6,7 .

Poole: Deu 7:8 - -- Because the Lord loved you i.e. because it pleased him to love you; it was his free choice, without any cause or motive on your part. Compare Deu 10:...

The faithful God true to his word, and constant in performing all his promises.
Haydock: Deu 7:1 - -- Graven things. Idols, so called by contempt. (Challoner) ---
Made. Hebrew, "gold (plates) on them," to cover the wood, &c. See ver. 5.
Graven things. Idols, so called by contempt. (Challoner) ---
Made. Hebrew, "gold (plates) on them," to cover the wood, &c. See ver. 5.

Haydock: Deu 7:1 - -- Destroyed. So the Vulgate often expresses the Hebrew term, which signifies, "to cast out." ---
Seven. Ten are mentioned, Genesis xv. 9; but some ...
Destroyed. So the Vulgate often expresses the Hebrew term, which signifies, "to cast out." ---
Seven. Ten are mentioned, Genesis xv. 9; but some of the less powerful nations were either mixed with the others, or were exterminated. The Hevites are omitted in the passage of Genesis, and sometimes no notice is taken of the Gergezite or the Pherezite. The latter had been already conquered by Moses, as well as the Raphaim and Amorrhites, over whom Og and Sehon ruled, chap. iii. 5. (Calmet) ---
It seems, however, that some of the same nations, on the other side of the Jordan, remained to be subdued, and that any one of them was naturally too strong for the Hebrews, ver. 7. Hence the latter might be convinced, that their victories were to be attributed to God.

Haydock: Deu 7:2 - -- League. Yet Josue, (ix. 3,) by mistake, entered into one with the Gabaonites, and observed it; (Haydock) whence we may conclude, that only such leag...
League. Yet Josue, (ix. 3,) by mistake, entered into one with the Gabaonites, and observed it; (Haydock) whence we may conclude, that only such leagues are forbidden as would leave these nations in possession of their lands and idols, chap. xx. 10., and xxiii. 6. With foreign nations it was lawful to make leagues defensive and offensive, as David, Asa, and the Machabees did with Hiram, Benadad, and the Romans, 3 Kings xv. 18, &c. If the Hebrews were so hostile to the nations of Chanaan, it was in execution of God's decree, who had sentenced them to die; and Tacitus hence unjustly inferred, that they hated all but their own nation. See Grotius, Jur. ii. 15. ---
Them. This was ill executed. (Josephus, [Antiquities?] xiii. 13.) (Judges i.) (Menochius)

Haydock: Deu 7:3 - -- Marriages. Some believe that it was unlawful to marry the people of Chanaan, if they were even converted, and also those of other nations, as we fin...
Marriages. Some believe that it was unlawful to marry the people of Chanaan, if they were even converted, and also those of other nations, as we find that Esdras (1 Esdras x. 2, 12,) ordered such strange wives to be sent away. But the context shews, as well as the practice of most pious Hebrews, that it was only forbidden to marry with those who adhered to their idolatry, ver. 4. Salmon took to wife Rahab, of Jericho; Mahalon and Booz successively married Ruth, the Moabitess, and Moses himself allows the Hebrews to espouse their captives, and to preserve the lives of women and children, chap. xx. 14., and xxi. 11. (Calmet) See Exodus xxxiv. 15. ---
Hence all the Chanaanites were not necessarily to be slain. The few exceptions did not hinder the rule from being general. See ver. 16., and Numbers xiv. 23.

Haydock: Deu 7:4 - -- Gods. So great is the natural tendency to evil, that though a woman be generally inclined to follow the inclinations and religion of her husband, ye...
Gods. So great is the natural tendency to evil, that though a woman be generally inclined to follow the inclinations and religion of her husband, yet, when his method of living is more repugnant to flesh and blood, she is but to apt to influence him to glide smoothly with her down the hill of pleasure, into the very abyss of dissolution. The prediction, she will turn, &c., is so often verified, that those who marry with unbelievers ought to tremble. (Haydock)

Haydock: Deu 7:5 - -- Things. This was to be done with regard to the idols of Chanaan, when it was first conquered, ver. 25. Afterwards David made no scruple in wearing ...
Things. This was to be done with regard to the idols of Chanaan, when it was first conquered, ver. 25. Afterwards David made no scruple in wearing a crown, which had been taken from the spoils of Melchon, the idol of the Ammonites, 1 Paralipomenon xx. 2. (Calmet)

Haydock: Deu 7:6 - -- Peculiar. Hebrew sogula, laid up like something most precious and desirable. (Menochius) ---
God seemed to have abandoned other nations to the c...
Peculiar. Hebrew sogula, laid up like something most precious and desirable. (Menochius) ---
God seemed to have abandoned other nations to the corruption of their own heart. "This was, by a particular mystery, a prophetical nation." (St. Augustine, ep. cii.) (Exodus xix. 5.) (Calmet) ---
Therefore must they destroy every idol in their land, to set a pattern to all other less favoured nations how they ought also to treat them.

Haydock: Deu 7:7 - -- Joined. Hebrew, "has set his love upon you." God is the most disinterested lover. (Haydock)
Joined. Hebrew, "has set his love upon you." God is the most disinterested lover. (Haydock)

Haydock: Deu 7:9 - -- Strong. Hebrew el, means also God. He requires us to imitate his perfections as much as we are able. Being faithful, he will comply with his ...
Strong. Hebrew el, means also God. He requires us to imitate his perfections as much as we are able. Being faithful, he will comply with his covenant exactly, and will punish those who neglect it. (Calmet)
Gill: Deu 7:1 - -- When the Lord thy God shall bring thee into the land whither thou goest to possess it,.... The land of Canaan they were just now going into to take po...
When the Lord thy God shall bring thee into the land whither thou goest to possess it,.... The land of Canaan they were just now going into to take possession of; their introduction into which is here, as in many other places, ascribed not to themselves, or their leaders, but to the Lord as their covenant God:
and hath cast out many nations before thee; even all that were in it, the seven following:
the Hittites, and the Girgashites, and the Amorites, and the Canaanites, and the Perizzites, and the Hivites, and the Jebusites; the Canaanites were a particular nation in the land of Canaan, which had their name from Canaan himself; the rest were called from different sons of his; see Gen 10:15, the country of the Gergesenes, the same with the Girgashites, continued its name unto the times of Christ, Mat 8:28,
seven nations greater and mightier than thou; more in number, and more robust in body, some being of a gigantic stature; there were ten of these nations in Abraham's time, three of them were since sunk or swallowed up among the rest, the Kenites, and Kenizires, and the Rephaim; for instead of the Kadmonites the Hivites are here put, which seem to be the same.

Gill: Deu 7:2 - -- And when the Lord thy God shall deliver them before thee,.... Into their hands:
thou shalt smite them, and utterly destroy them; men, women, and ch...
And when the Lord thy God shall deliver them before thee,.... Into their hands:
thou shalt smite them, and utterly destroy them; men, women, and children; which was ordered not merely to make way and room for the people of Israel to inherit their land, but as a punishment for capital crimes they had been guilty of, such as idolatry, incest, murder, &c. wherefore though they were reprieved for a while for Israel's sake, till their time was come to possess the land, they were at length righteously punished; which observed, abates the seeming severity exercised upon them:
thou shalt make no covenant with them; to dwell in their cities and houses, and enjoy their lands and estates, on any condition whatever; and though they did make a league with the Gibeonites, that was obtained by fraud, they pretending not to be of the land of Canaan, but to come from a very distant country:
nor show mercy unto them; by sparing their lives, bestowing any favours upon them, or giving them any help and assistance when in distress: the Jews extend this to all other Heathen nations besides these seven; wherefore, if an Israelite, as Maimonides z says, should see a Gentile perishing, or plunged into a river, he may not take him out, nor administer medicine to a sick person. Hence Juvenal a the poet upbraids them with their unkindness and incivility; and says that Moses delivered it as a Jewish law, in a secret volume of his, perhaps referring to this book of Deuteronomy, that the Jews might not direct a poor traveller in his way unless he was one of their religion, nor one athirst to a fountain of water; and which led Tacitus b, the Heathen historian, to make this remark upon them, that they entertained an hostile hatred against all other people.

Gill: Deu 7:3 - -- Neither shalt thou make marriages with them,.... Unless they became proselytes, as Rahab, who was married by Salmon, and so those of other nations, as...
Neither shalt thou make marriages with them,.... Unless they became proselytes, as Rahab, who was married by Salmon, and so those of other nations, as Ruth the Moabitess, and so any captive taken in war; otherwise it was not lawful, bad consequences have followed upon it, which it is the design of this law to prevent; that is, being snared and drawn aside into idolatry, which was the case of Solomon:
thy daughter thou shalt not give unto his son, nor his daughter shalt thou take unto thy son; for, according to the Targum of Jonathan, whosoever marries with them, it is as if he married with their idols: and this law, according to the Jewish writers c, is binding with respect to other nations besides the seven; and whosoever marries any Heathen, of whatsoever nation, is to be beaten.

Gill: Deu 7:4 - -- For they will turn away thy son from following me,.... From the pure worship of God, his word, statutes, and ordinances:
that they may serve other ...
For they will turn away thy son from following me,.... From the pure worship of God, his word, statutes, and ordinances:
that they may serve other gods; worship their idols; that is, the daughters of Heathens, married to the sons of Israelites, would entice them from the worship of the true God to idolatry; so the Targum of Jonathan; as Solomon's wives drew him aside: or "he will turn away thy son" d; meaning, as Jarchi observes, that the son of an Heathen, that marries the daughter of an Israelite, will turn away the son born of her to idolatry, called here the grandfather's son; though Aben Ezra says this respects the son mentioned in the preceding verse, that is, the son married to an Heathen woman, and not to a son born in such marriage:
so will the anger of the Lord be kindled against you, and destroy thee suddenly; by some immediate judgment striking dead at once; there being nothing more provoking to God than idolatry, that being directly contrary to his being, nature, perfections, honour, and glory, of which he is jealous.

Gill: Deu 7:5 - -- But thus shall ye deal with them,.... The inhabitants of the land of Canaan:
ye shall destroy their altars; on which they sacrificed to their idols...
But thus shall ye deal with them,.... The inhabitants of the land of Canaan:
ye shall destroy their altars; on which they sacrificed to their idols:
and break down their images; of their gods, and the statues and pillars erected to the honour of them:
and cut down their groves; sacred to idols, which were usually planted on hills, and about Heathen temples, and under which idols were placed to be worshipped. The Targum of Jonathan calls them trees of their adoration, under which they worshipped; though there was a worship paid to them, not indeed directly to them, or for their sakes, but for the sake of the idols they were sacred to, or were placed under them; so Maimonides e says, a tree which at first was planted to be worshipped is forbidden of any use (or profit); and this is the
and burn their graven images with fire; distinguished from their molten images, which may be meant in a preceding clause, and which are particularly mentioned as to be destroyed as well as these, Num 33:52.

Gill: Deu 7:6 - -- For thou art an holy people unto the Lord thy God,.... Not sanctified in a spiritual sense, or having principles of grace and holiness in them, from w...
For thou art an holy people unto the Lord thy God,.... Not sanctified in a spiritual sense, or having principles of grace and holiness in them, from whence holy actions sprang, at least not all of them; but they were separated from all other people in the world to the pure worship and service of God in an external manner, and therefore were to avoid all idolatry, and every appearance of it:
the Lord thy God hath chosen thee to be a special people unto himself above all people that are upon the face of the earth; for special service and worship, and to enjoy special privileges and benefits, civil and religious; though they were not chosen to special grace here, and eternal glory hereafter; at least not all of them, only a remnant, according to the election of grace; yet they were typical of the chosen people of God in a special sense; who are chosen out of the world to be a peculiar people, to be holy here and happy hereafter; to enjoy communion with God in this life and that to come, as well as to serve and glorify him now and for evermore.

Gill: Deu 7:7 - -- The Lord did not set his love upon you, nor choose you,.... He had done both, and the one as the effect and evidence of the other; he loved them, and ...
The Lord did not set his love upon you, nor choose you,.... He had done both, and the one as the effect and evidence of the other; he loved them, and therefore he chose them; but neither of them:
because ye were more in number than any people; not for the quantity of them, nor even for the quality of them:
for ye were the fewest of all people; fewer than the Egyptians, from whence they came, and than the Canaanites they were going to drive out and inherit their land, Deu 7:1. Those whom God has loved with an everlasting love, and as a fruit of it has chosen them in Christ before the world began to grace and glory, holiness and happiness, are but a small number, a little flock; though many are called, few are chosen; nor are they better than others, being by nature children of wrath even as others, and as to their outward circumstances the poor of this world.

Gill: Deu 7:8 - -- But because the Lord loved you,.... With an unmerited love; he loved them, because he loved them; that is, because he would love them; his love was no...
But because the Lord loved you,.... With an unmerited love; he loved them, because he loved them; that is, because he would love them; his love was not owing to any goodness in them, or done by them, or any love in them to him, but to his own good will and pleasure:
and because he would keep the oath which he had sworn unto your fathers; the promise he had made, confirmed by an oath:
hath the Lord brought you out with a mighty hand; out of the land of Egypt:
and redeemed you out of the house of bondmen; where they were bondmen to the Egyptians:
from the hand of Pharaoh king of Egypt; who detained them, and refused to let them go.

Gill: Deu 7:9 - -- The only true and living God, and not the idols of the Gentiles, who are false and lifeless ones, and therefore not the proper objects of adoration:
...
The only true and living God, and not the idols of the Gentiles, who are false and lifeless ones, and therefore not the proper objects of adoration:
the faithful God, which keepeth covenant and mercy; as appeared by fulfilling the promise made to their fathers, in bringing them out of Egypt, and now them to the borders of the land of Canaan given them for an inheritance:
with them that love him, and keep his commandments, to a thousand generations; see Exo 20:6 which are not the causes or conditions of his covenant and mercy, nor of his keeping them, but descriptive of the persons that enjoy the benefit thereof.

expand allCommentary -- Verse Notes / Footnotes
NET Notes: Deu 7:1 Seven. This is an ideal number in the OT, one symbolizing fullness or completeness. Therefore, the intent of the text here is not to be precise and li...


NET Notes: Deu 7:5 Sacred Asherah poles. A leading deity of the Canaanite pantheon was Asherah, wife/sister of El and goddess of fertility. She was commonly worshiped at...

NET Notes: Deu 7:6 Or “treasured” (so NIV, NRSV); NLT “his own special treasure.” The Hebrew term סְגֻלּ...


NET Notes: Deu 7:9 Heb “who keeps covenant and loyalty.” The syndetic construction of בְּרִית (bÿrit) and ...
Geneva Bible: Deu 7:2 And when the LORD thy God shall deliver them ( a ) before thee; thou shalt smite them, [and] utterly destroy them; thou shalt make no covenant with th...

Geneva Bible: Deu 7:5 But thus shall ye deal with them; ( b ) ye shall destroy their altars, and break down their images, and cut down their groves, and burn their graven i...

Geneva Bible: Deu 7:8 But because the LORD ( c ) loved you, and because he would keep the oath which he had sworn unto your fathers, hath the LORD brought you out with a mi...

Geneva Bible: Deu 7:9 Know therefore ( d ) that the LORD thy God, he [is] God, the faithful God, which keepeth covenant and mercy with them that love him and keep his comma...

expand allCommentary -- Verse Range Notes
TSK Synopsis -> Deu 7:1-26
TSK Synopsis: Deu 7:1-26 - --1 All communion with the nations is forbidden;5 for fear of idolatry;6 for the holiness of the people;9 for the nature of God in his mercy and justice...
Maclaren -> Deu 7:9
Maclaren: Deu 7:9 - --Deut. 7:9
Faithful,' like most Hebrew words, has a picture in it. It means something that can be
(1) leant on, or
(2) builded on.
This leads to a doub...
MHCC -> Deu 7:1-11
MHCC: Deu 7:1-11 - --Here is a strict caution against all friendship and fellowship with idols and idolaters. Those who are in communion with God, must have no communicati...
Matthew Henry -> Deu 7:1-11
Matthew Henry: Deu 7:1-11 - -- Here is, I. A very strict caution against all friendship and fellowship with idols and idolaters. Those that are taken into communion with God must ...
Keil-Delitzsch: Deu 7:1-4 - --
As the Israelites were warned against idolatry in Deu 6:14, so here are they exhorted to beware of the false tolerance of sparing the Canaanites and...

Keil-Delitzsch: Deu 7:5 - --
The Israelites were rather to destroy the altars and idols of the Canaanites, according to the command in Exo 34:13; Exo 23:24.

Keil-Delitzsch: Deu 7:6-8 - --
They were bound to do this by virtue of their election as a holy nation, the nation of possession, which Jehovah had singled out from all other nati...

Keil-Delitzsch: Deu 7:9-10 - --
By this was Israel to know that Jehovah their God was the true God, the faithful God, who keeps His covenant, showing mercy to those who love Him, e...
Constable: Deu 5:1--26:19 - --IV. MOSES' SECOND MAJOR ADDRESS: AN EXPOSITION OF THE LAW chs. 5--26
". . . Deuteronomy contains the most compre...

Constable: Deu 5:1--11:32 - --A. The essence of the law and its fulfillment chs. 5-11
"In seven chapters the nature of Yahweh's demand...

Constable: Deu 7:1--11:32 - --3. Examples of the application of the principles chs. 7-11
"These clearly are not laws or comman...
