
Text -- Deuteronomy 6:13 (NET)




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collapse allCommentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per phrase)
Wesley -> Deu 6:13
Wesley: Deu 6:13 - -- When thou hast a call and just cause to swear, not by idols, or any creatures.
When thou hast a call and just cause to swear, not by idols, or any creatures.
Clarke: Deu 6:13 - -- Thou shalt fear the Lord thy God - Thou shalt respect and reverence him as thy Lawgiver and Judge; as thy Creator, Preserver, and the sole object of...
Thou shalt fear the Lord thy God - Thou shalt respect and reverence him as thy Lawgiver and Judge; as thy Creator, Preserver, and the sole object of thy religious adoration

Clarke: Deu 6:13 - -- And serve him - Our blessed Lord, in Mat 4:10; Luk 4:8, quotes these words thus: And him Only ( αυτῳ μονῳ ) shalt thou serve. It appears...
And serve him - Our blessed Lord, in Mat 4:10; Luk 4:8, quotes these words thus: And him Only (

Clarke: Deu 6:13 - -- Shalt swear by his name - תשבע tishshabea , from שבע shaba , he was full, satisfied, or gave that which was full or satisfactory. Hence an ...
Shalt swear by his name -
Calvin -> Deu 6:13
Calvin: Deu 6:13 - -- 13.Thou shalt fear the Lord thy God Hence it is more evident why He has just declared that there is One God, viz., that He alone may be undividedly w...
13.Thou shalt fear the Lord thy God Hence it is more evident why He has just declared that there is One God, viz., that He alone may be undividedly worshipped; for unless our minds are fixed on Him alone, religion is torn, as it were, into divers parts, and this is soon followed by a labyrinth of errors. But, first, he calls for reverence, and then for the worship which may testify and demonstrate it. “Fear” contains in it the idea of subjection, when men devote themselves to God, because His terrible majesty keeps them in their proper place. Hence results worship, which is the proof of piety. But we must observe that the fear enjoined in this passage is voluntary, so that men influenced by it desire nothing more than to obey God. When I stated, therefore, that God brings us under the yoke by a sense of His power and greatness, I did not understand that a violent and servile obedience is extorted from us; I only wished to affirm that men cannot be induced to obey God, before they have been subdued by fear; because their innate corruption always carries with it a contempt for religion, and a spirit of licentiousness. Therefore, in Jeremiah (Jer 5:22), in order to exhort men to fear, He sets forth His terrible power in restraining the strength of the sea; but this fear leads on His true worshippers further. In the other passage which we have subjoined from Deu 10:0, the word cleave again confirms the truth, that as soon as men decline from God in the least degree, His worship is corrupted. For this is the meaning of that union with Himself to which He calls His worshippers, that they should be, as it were, glued to Him, and should not look elsewhere.
TSK -> Deu 6:13
TSK: Deu 6:13 - -- fear : Deu 6:2, Deu 5:29, Deu 10:12, Deu 10:20, Deu 13:4; Mat 4:10; Luk 4:8
and serve him : Our Saviour quotes these words thus: ""And him only ( α...
fear : Deu 6:2, Deu 5:29, Deu 10:12, Deu 10:20, Deu 13:4; Mat 4:10; Luk 4:8
and serve him : Our Saviour quotes these words thus: ""And him only (
shalt swear : Lev 19:12; Jos 2:12; Psa 15:4, Psa 63:11; Isa 45:23, Isa 65:16; Jer 4:2, Jer 5:2, Jer 5:7; Jer 12:16

collapse allCommentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per Verse)
Barnes -> Deu 6:10-25
Barnes: Deu 6:10-25 - -- The Israelites were at the point of quitting a normal, life for a fixed and settled abode in the midst of other nations; they were exchanging a cond...
The Israelites were at the point of quitting a normal, life for a fixed and settled abode in the midst of other nations; they were exchanging a condition of comparative poverty for great and goodly cities, houses and vineyards. There was therefore before them a double danger;
(1) a God-forgetting worldliness, and
(2) a false tolerance of the idolatries practiced by those about to become their neighbors.
The former error Moses strives to guard against in the verses before us; the latter in Deu 7:1-11.
The command "to swear by His Name"is not inconsistent with the Lord’ s injunction Mat 5:34, "Swear not at all."Moses refers to legal swearing, our Lord to swearing in common conversation. It is not the purpose of Moses to encourage the practice of taking oaths, but to forbid that, when taken, they should be taken in any other name than that of Israel’ s God. The oath involves an invocation of Deity, and so a solemn recognition of Him whose Name is made use of in it. Hence, it comes especially within the scope of the commandment Moses is enforcing.
It shall be our righteousness - i. e., God will esteem us as righteous and deal with us accordingly. From the very beginning made Moses the whole righteousness of the Law to depend entirely on a right state of the heart, in one word, upon faith.
Poole -> Deu 6:13
Haydock -> Deu 6:13
Haydock: Deu 6:13 - -- Only. This is omitted in Hebrew; but the Septuagint and Jesus Christ retain it, (Matthew iv. 10,) as the sense requires. You cannot serve God and ...
Only. This is omitted in Hebrew; but the Septuagint and Jesus Christ retain it, (Matthew iv. 10,) as the sense requires. You cannot serve God and mammon, Luke xvi. 13. (Calmet) ---
Name, and not by that of idols, whenever you may be authorized to take an oath. (Haydock) ---
To swear by any other, is to acknowledge him in some sort for a god. When we take an oath on proper occasions, and with due respect and caution, we perform and act of religion. (Calmet)
Gill -> Deu 6:13
Gill: Deu 6:13 - -- Thou shalt fear the Lord thy God, and serve him,.... Serve him through fear; not through slavish fear, a fear of hell and damnation; but through filia...
Thou shalt fear the Lord thy God, and serve him,.... Serve him through fear; not through slavish fear, a fear of hell and damnation; but through filial fear, a reverential affection for that God that had brought them out of a state of bondage into great and glorious liberty, out of Egypt into Canaan's land, out of a place of misery into a land of plenty; and therefore should fear the Lord and his goodness, and from such a fear of him serve him, in every part of worship, public and private, enjoined; this passage Christ refers to Mat 4:10.
and shalt swear by his name; when they made a covenant with any, or were called to bear a testimony for the decision of any controversy which could not be otherwise finished; or whenever they took an oath on any account, which should never be taken rashly or on any trivial account, and much less falsely; it should be taken not in the name of any idol, or of any other but the true and living God; the Targum of Jonathan is,"in the name of the Word of the Lord, in truth ye shall swear.''

expand allCommentary -- Verse Notes / Footnotes

expand allCommentary -- Verse Range Notes
TSK Synopsis -> Deu 6:1-25
TSK Synopsis: Deu 6:1-25 - --1 The end of the law is obedience.3 An exhortation thereto.20 What they are to teach their children.
MHCC -> Deu 6:6-16
MHCC: Deu 6:6-16 - --Here are means for maintaining and keeping up religion in our hearts and houses. 1. Meditation. God's words must be laid up in our hearts, that our th...
Matthew Henry -> Deu 6:4-16
Matthew Henry: Deu 6:4-16 - -- Here is, I. A brief summary of religion, containing the first principles of faith and obedience, Deu 6:4, Deu 6:5. These two verses the Jews reckon ...
Keil-Delitzsch -> Deu 6:12-13
Keil-Delitzsch: Deu 6:12-13 - --
"House of bondage," as in Exo 13:3. " Not forgetting "is described from a positive point of view, as fearing God, serving Him , and swearing by Hi...
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 6:1-25 - --2. Exhortation to love Yahweh ch. 6
Another writer suggested that chapters 6-26 expand the Decal...
