
Text -- Deuteronomy 17:12 (NET)




Names, People and Places, Dictionary Themes and Topics



collapse allCommentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per phrase)
That will proudly and obstinately oppose the sentence given against him.

The evil thing, that scandal, that pernicious example.
JFB -> Deu 17:8-13
JFB: Deu 17:8-13 - -- In all civil or criminal cases, where there was any doubt or difficulty in giving a decision, the local magistrates were to submit them by reference t...
In all civil or criminal cases, where there was any doubt or difficulty in giving a decision, the local magistrates were to submit them by reference to the tribunal of the Sanhedrim--the supreme council, which was composed partly of civil and partly of ecclesiastical persons. "The priests and Levites," should rather be "the priests--the Levites"; that is, the Levitical priests, including the high priest, who were members of the legislative assembly; and who, as forming one body, are called "the judge." Their sittings were held in the neighborhood of the sanctuary because in great emergencies the high priest had to consult God by Urim (Num 27:21). From their judgment there was no appeal; and if a person were so perverse and refractory as to refuse obedience to their sentences, his conduct, as inconsistent with the maintenance of order and good government, was then to be regarded and punished as a capital crime.
Clarke -> Deu 17:12
Clarke: Deu 17:12 - -- The man that will do presumptuously - The man who refused to abide by this final determination forfeited his life, as being then in a state of rebel...
The man that will do presumptuously - The man who refused to abide by this final determination forfeited his life, as being then in a state of rebellion against the highest authority, and consequently the public could have no pledge for his conduct.
Calvin -> Deu 17:12
Calvin: Deu 17:12 - -- He pronounces a similar punishment on those who shall have contumaciously rejected the judgment of the priests. We have already seen that the prophet...
He pronounces a similar punishment on those who shall have contumaciously rejected the judgment of the priests. We have already seen that the prophetical office was united with the priesthood; since, according to Mal 2:4, the covenant of God was with Levi, that his descendants might be the guardians of His knowledge, and the interpreters of His law: yet God often punished the laxity of the priests, by setting other teachers over his people. At any rate, both were ambassadors for Him. Since, therefore, the authority of the prophets had been sanctioned above, the same rights are now conferred upon the priests; nor is this surprising, for it was no trifling crime to despise God, the appointer of this order. Yet we must remember what I have elsewhere stated, that the priests were not armed with tyrannical authority, so that it was sinful to reject whatever they might have decreed according to their own fancy. For neither did God dethrone Himself when He appointed them, nor did He bind men’s consciences to obey their ordinances without distinction, but only would put reins on the audacity of those who have no scruple in undervaluing the government of the Church. For this must be considered, that foul and horrible would be the disorder, if men were promiscuously permitted to reject whatever the rulers of the Church may have appointed; and it would be ridiculous that persons should be called to govern, to whom no dignity should be accorded; and, therefore, natural reason itself shews and dictates, that the reverence, which is here demanded, is due to all lawful commands. God was the author of the priesthood: He, too, ordained judges. What could be more absurd than that they should be despised and laughed at with impunity, who presided in the name and by the command of God? But He has never exalted a mortal man so high as to abdicate His own rights; nay, it was often necessary boldly to reject what the priests had commanded. Urijah the priest built a profane altar in the fashion of that at Damascus, which Ahaz had sent, and offered a sacrifice thereon, 55 (2Kg 16:12,) was it necessary that Isaiah should acquiesce in this? Nay, detestable was the adulation of all who assented to the decree of a wicked and perfidious priest. Moreover, we see that the prophets were very often so far from agreeing with the priests, that they waged open war with them. But the whole of this matter is decided by the words of Moses, for he does not unreservedly condemn all who should not obey, but restricts his law by the addition of a special mark, viz., if the contempt should arise from presumption or arrogance. Therefore it was not else a capital crime to disobey the priest or the judge, unless any one should insolently and proudly oppose himself to the ordinance established by God. Otherwise this exception would have been interposed without reason. In fine, the priests of old were to be obeyed, as far as it concerned the public peace that the pastors ordained by God should be reverently honored; yet so as that there should be no departure from God Himself, the one Head and Prince of all pastors. We have elsewhere seen how foolishly the Papists take this to themselves 56
TSK -> Deu 17:12
TSK: Deu 17:12 - -- will do : Deu 13:5, Deu 13:11; Num 15:30; Ezr 10:8; Psa 19:13; Hos 4:4; Mat 10:14; Heb 10:26-29
and will not hearken : Heb. not to hearken, Jer 25:3-1...

collapse allCommentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per Verse)
Barnes -> Deu 17:8-13
Barnes: Deu 17:8-13 - -- The cases in question are such as the inferior judges did not feel able to decide satisfactorily, and which accordingly they remitted to their super...
The cases in question are such as the inferior judges did not feel able to decide satisfactorily, and which accordingly they remitted to their superiors (compare Exo 18:23-27).
The Supreme court Deu 17:9 is referred to in very general terms as sitting at the sanctuary Deu 17:8. "The judge"would no doubt usually be a layman, and thus the court would contain both an ecclesiastical and a civil element. Jehoshaphat 2Ch 19:4-11 organized his judicial system very closely upon the lines here laid down.
Poole -> Deu 17:12
Poole: Deu 17:12 - -- That will do presumptuously i.e. that will proudly and obstinately oppose the sentence given against him. This is opposite to ignorance and error, Ex...
That will do presumptuously i.e. that will proudly and obstinately oppose the sentence given against him. This is opposite to ignorance and error, Exo 21:13,14 .
The evil either,
1. The evil thing, that scandal, that pernicious example. Or,
2. That evil, refractory, pernicious person, whose practice herein tends to the dissolution of all government, and the ruin of the common-wealth of Israel.
Haydock -> Deu 17:12
Haydock: Deu 17:12 - -- And the decree. Some copies read with Sixtus V ex decreto, by &c., "decree," (Haydock) as if a lay-judge stood ready to put the sentence in execut...
And the decree. Some copies read with Sixtus V ex decreto, by &c., "decree," (Haydock) as if a lay-judge stood ready to put the sentence in execution. (Calmet) ---
But there was no necessity of any farther judgment after the high priest had spoken, who is here declared the sovereign judge. (St. Cyprian, ep. 55.) Hebrew, "or to the judge." Amama ridicules his friend, Ant. a Dominis, for saying that the Hebrew and Vulgate have et decreto. (Haydock) ---
The Rabbins inform us, that if any judge refused to acquiesce in the decision, and endeavoured to draw others into his opinion, in matters of consequence, (as those are where the guilty is ordered to be cut off,) he was to be strangled, on a festival day, at Jerusalem, that all the people hearing it might fear, ver. 13. (Selden, Syned. iii. 3.) (Calmet)
Gill -> Deu 17:12
Gill: Deu 17:12 - -- The judge of the country court that makes his application to that at Jerusalem for information and direction; if, after all, he is conceited in his ow...
The judge of the country court that makes his application to that at Jerusalem for information and direction; if, after all, he is conceited in his own opinion, and rejects theirs, and is obstinate, and will not be guided and directed, but will take his own way, and pursue his own sense of things, and act according to that:
and will not hearken to the priest that standeth to minister there before the Lord thy God; the priests of the tribe of Levi, of whom the court generally consisted, Deu 17:9, priest for priests; though some think the high priest is meant, to whom the character very well agrees; but he was not always at the head of the sanhedrim, nor indeed a member of it, unless he had the proper qualifications; see Deu 18:18.
or unto the judge; or judges; See Gill on Deu 17:9. L'Empereur g thinks, that the supreme senate, or grand sanhedrim, was twofold, according to the diversity of ecclesiastic and political matters; since where it treats of the supreme senators, or chief persons in the court, the priest is manifestly distinguished from the judge (i.e. priests or judges); now the man that has asked advice of them, and will not be directed by it, but takes his own way, this being so great a contempt of, and insult upon, the great senate of the nation:
even that man shall die; and this was by strangling, for so the rebellious older, as such an one is called, was to die according to the Misnah h; and it is said i, that the death spoken of in the law absolutely (without specifying what kind of death) is strangling:
and thou shall put away the evil from Israel; the evil man that is rebellious against the supreme legislature of the nation, and the evil of contumacy he is guilty of, deterring others from it by his death.

expand allCommentary -- Verse Notes / Footnotes

expand allCommentary -- Verse Range Notes
TSK Synopsis -> Deu 17:1-20
TSK Synopsis: Deu 17:1-20 - --1 The things sacrificed must be sound.2 Idolaters must be slain.8 Hard controversies are to be determined by the priests and judges.12 The contemner o...
MHCC -> Deu 17:8-13
MHCC: Deu 17:8-13 - --Courts of judgment were to be set up in every city. Though their judgment had not the Divine authority of an oracle, it was the judgment of wise, prud...
Matthew Henry -> Deu 17:8-13
Matthew Henry: Deu 17:8-13 - -- Courts of judgment were ordered to be erected in every city (Deu 16:18), and they were empowered to hear and determine causes according to law, both...
Keil-Delitzsch -> Deu 17:8-13
Keil-Delitzsch: Deu 17:8-13 - --
The Higher Judicial Court at the Place of the Sanctuary. - Just as the judges appointed at Sinai were to bring to Moses whatever cases were too diff...
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 12:1--25:19 - --B. An exposition of selected covenant laws 12-25
Moses' homiletical exposition of the law of Israel that...

Constable: Deu 16:18--19:1 - --5. Laws arising from the fifth commandment 16:18-18:22
The fifth commandment is, "Honor your fat...
