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Text -- Leviticus 26:26-46 (NET)
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Names, People and Places, Dictionary Themes and Topics
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collapse allCommentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per phrase)
Wesley: Lev 26:26 - -- By sending a famine or scarcity of bread, which is the staff and support of man's present life.
By sending a famine or scarcity of bread, which is the staff and support of man's present life.
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Wesley: Lev 26:26 - -- That is, ten or many families, for the women took care for the bread and food of all the family.
That is, ten or many families, for the women took care for the bread and food of all the family.
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Wesley: Lev 26:26 - -- This is a sign and consequence both of a famine, and of the baking of the bread of several families together in one oven, wherein each family took car...
This is a sign and consequence both of a famine, and of the baking of the bread of several families together in one oven, wherein each family took care to weigh their bread, and to receive the same proportion which they put in.
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In which you will sacrifice after the manner of the Heathens.
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Wesley: Lev 26:30 - -- So he calls them, either to signify that their idols how specious soever or glorious in their eyes, were in truth but lifeless and contemptible carcas...
So he calls them, either to signify that their idols how specious soever or glorious in their eyes, were in truth but lifeless and contemptible carcases; or to shew that their idols should be so far from helping them, that they should be thrown down and broken with them, and both should lie together in a forlorn and loathsome state.
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Wesley: Lev 26:31 - -- God's sanctuary, called sanctuaries here, as also Psa 73:17, Psa 74:7; Jer 51:51; Eze 28:18, because there were divers apartments in it, each of which...
God's sanctuary, called sanctuaries here, as also Psa 73:17, Psa 74:7; Jer 51:51; Eze 28:18, because there were divers apartments in it, each of which was a sanctuary, or, which is all one, an holy place, as they are severally called. And yours emphatically, not mine, for I disown and abhor it, and all the services you do in it, because you have defiled it.
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Wesley: Lev 26:31 - -- Either of the incense, or of your sacrifices, which when offered with faith and obedience, are sweet and acceptable to me.
Either of the incense, or of your sacrifices, which when offered with faith and obedience, are sweet and acceptable to me.
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Having driven you out and possessed your places.
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Wesley: Lev 26:33 - -- The sword shall follow you into strange lands, and you shall have no rest there.
The sword shall follow you into strange lands, and you shall have no rest there.
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Wesley: Lev 26:34 - -- It shall enjoy those sabbatical years of rest from tillage, which you through covetousness would not give it.
It shall enjoy those sabbatical years of rest from tillage, which you through covetousness would not give it.
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Wesley: Lev 26:37 - -- Your guilt and fear causing you to imagine that they do pursue when indeed they do not.
Your guilt and fear causing you to imagine that they do pursue when indeed they do not.
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Wesley: Lev 26:39 - -- Be consumed and melt away by degrees through diseases, oppressions, griefs, and manifold miseries.
Be consumed and melt away by degrees through diseases, oppressions, griefs, and manifold miseries.
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Wesley: Lev 26:40 - -- That is, with their prevarication with me and defection from me to idolatry, which by way of eminency he calls their trespass: and that also they have...
That is, with their prevarication with me and defection from me to idolatry, which by way of eminency he calls their trespass: and that also they have walked contrary to me, Lev 26:41, and that I also have walked contrary unto them, and have brought them into the land of their enemies - That is, that they are not come into these calamities by chance, nor by the misfortune of war, but by my just judgment upon them. And, if then their uncircumcised, that is, impure, carnal, profane, and impenitent hearts be humbled, that is, subdued, purged, reformed: if to this confession they add sincere humiliation and reformation, I will do what follows.
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Wesley: Lev 26:41 - -- The meaning is, if they sincerely acknowledge the righteousness of God and their own wickedness, and patiently submit to his correcting hand; if with ...
The meaning is, if they sincerely acknowledge the righteousness of God and their own wickedness, and patiently submit to his correcting hand; if with David they are ready to say, it is good for them that they are afflicted, that they may learn God's statutes, and yield obedience to them for the future, which is a good evidence of true repentance.
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Wesley: Lev 26:42 - -- So as to make good all that I have promised in it. For words of knowledge or remembrance in scripture, commonly denote affection and kindness.
So as to make good all that I have promised in it. For words of knowledge or remembrance in scripture, commonly denote affection and kindness.
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Wesley: Lev 26:42 - -- Which now seems to be forgotten and despised, as if I had never chosen it to be the peculiar place of my presence and blessing.
Which now seems to be forgotten and despised, as if I had never chosen it to be the peculiar place of my presence and blessing.
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Wesley: Lev 26:44 - -- Therefore neither the desperateness of their condition, nor the greatness of their sins, shall make me wholly make void my covenant with them and thei...
Therefore neither the desperateness of their condition, nor the greatness of their sins, shall make me wholly make void my covenant with them and their ancestors, but I will in due time remember them for good, and for my covenant's sake return to them in mercy. From this place the Jews take great comfort, and assure themselves of deliverance out of their present servitude and misery. And from this, and such other places, St. Paul concludes, that the Israelitish nation, tho' then rejected and ruined, should be gathered again and restored.
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Wesley: Lev 26:46 - -- Hereby his communion with his church is kept up. He manifests not only his dominion over them, but his favour to them, by giving them his law. And the...
Hereby his communion with his church is kept up. He manifests not only his dominion over them, but his favour to them, by giving them his law. And they manifest not only their holy fear, but their holy love by the observance of it. And thus it is made between them rather as a covenant than as a law: for he draws them with the cords of a man.
JFB: Lev 26:26 - -- The bread used in families is usually baked by women, and at home. But sometimes also, in times of scarcity, it is baked in public ovens for want of f...
The bread used in families is usually baked by women, and at home. But sometimes also, in times of scarcity, it is baked in public ovens for want of fuel; and the scarcity predicted here would be so great, that one oven would be sufficient to bake as much as ten women used in ordinary occasions to provide for family use; and even this scanty portion of bread would be distributed by weight (Eze 4:16).
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JFB: Lev 26:29 - -- The revolting picture was actually exhibited at the siege of Samaria, at the siege of Jerusalem by Nebuchadnezzar (Lam 4:10), and at the destruction o...
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JFB: Lev 26:30 - -- Consecrated enclosures on the tops of mountains, or on little hillocks, raised for practising the rites of idolatry.
Consecrated enclosures on the tops of mountains, or on little hillocks, raised for practising the rites of idolatry.
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JFB: Lev 26:30 - -- According to some, those images were made in the form of chariots (2Ki 23:11); according to others, they were of a conical form, like small pyramids. ...
According to some, those images were made in the form of chariots (2Ki 23:11); according to others, they were of a conical form, like small pyramids. Reared in honor of the sun, they were usually placed on a very high situation, to enable the worshippers to have a better view of the rising sun. They were forbidden to the Israelites, and when set up, ordered to be destroyed.
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JFB: Lev 26:30 - -- Like the statues of idols, which, when broken, lie neglected and contemned, the Jews during the sieges and subsequent captivity often wanted the rites...
Like the statues of idols, which, when broken, lie neglected and contemned, the Jews during the sieges and subsequent captivity often wanted the rites of sepulture.
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JFB: Lev 26:31 - -- This destruction of its numerous and flourishing cities, which was brought upon Judea through the sins of Israel, took place by the forced removal of ...
This destruction of its numerous and flourishing cities, which was brought upon Judea through the sins of Israel, took place by the forced removal of the people during, and long after, the captivity. But it is realized to a far greater extent now.
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JFB: Lev 26:31 - -- The tabernacle and temple, as is evident from the tenor of the subsequent clause, in which God announces that He will not accept or regard their sacri...
The tabernacle and temple, as is evident from the tenor of the subsequent clause, in which God announces that He will not accept or regard their sacrifices.
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JFB: Lev 26:33 - -- As was done when the elite of the nation were removed into Assyria and placed in various parts of the kingdom.
As was done when the elite of the nation were removed into Assyria and placed in various parts of the kingdom.
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JFB: Lev 26:34 - -- A long arrear of sabbatic years had accumulated through the avarice and apostasy of the Israelites, who had deprived their land of its appointed seaso...
A long arrear of sabbatic years had accumulated through the avarice and apostasy of the Israelites, who had deprived their land of its appointed season of rest. The number of those sabbatic years seems to have been seventy, as determined by the duration of the captivity. This early prediction is very remarkable, considering that the usual policy of the Assyrian conquerors was to send colonies to cultivate and inhabit their newly acquired provinces.
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JFB: Lev 26:38 - -- On the removal of the ten tribes into captivity, they never returned, and all traces of them were lost.
On the removal of the ten tribes into captivity, they never returned, and all traces of them were lost.
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JFB: Lev 26:40-45 - -- This passage holds out the gracious promise of divine forgiveness and favor on their repentance, and their happy restoration to their land, in memory ...
This passage holds out the gracious promise of divine forgiveness and favor on their repentance, and their happy restoration to their land, in memory of the covenant made with their fathers (Rom. 2:1-29).
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JFB: Lev 26:46 - -- It has been thought by some that the last chapter was originally placed after the twenty-fifth [ADAM CLARKE], while others consider that the next chap...
It has been thought by some that the last chapter was originally placed after the twenty-fifth [ADAM CLARKE], while others consider that the next chapter was added as an appendix, in consequence of many people being influenced by the promises and threats of the preceding one, to resolve that they would dedicate themselves and their possessions to the service of God [CALMET].
Clarke: Lev 26:26 - -- Ten women shall bake your bread in one oven - Though in general every family in the East bakes its own bread, yet there are some public bakehouses w...
Ten women shall bake your bread in one oven - Though in general every family in the East bakes its own bread, yet there are some public bakehouses where the bread of several families is baked at a certain price. Moses here foretells that the desolation should be so great and the want so pressing that there should be many idle hands to be employed, many mouths to be fed, and very little for each: Ten women shall bake your bread in one oven, etc.
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Clarke: Lev 26:29 - -- Ye shall eat the flesh of your sons, etc. - This was literally fulfilled at the siege of Jerusalem. Josephus, Wars of the Jews, book vii., chap. ii....
Ye shall eat the flesh of your sons, etc. - This was literally fulfilled at the siege of Jerusalem. Josephus, Wars of the Jews, book vii., chap. ii., gives us a particular instance in dreadful detail of a woman named Mary, who, in the extremity of the famine during the siege, killed her sucking child, roasted, and had eaten part of it when discovered by the soldiers! See this threatened, Jer 19:9 (note).
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Clarke: Lev 26:34 - -- Then shall the land enjoy her Sabbaths - This Houbigant observes to be a historical truth - "From Saul to the Babylonish captivity are numbered abou...
Then shall the land enjoy her Sabbaths - This Houbigant observes to be a historical truth - "From Saul to the Babylonish captivity are numbered about four hundred and ninety years, during which period there were seventy Sabbaths of years; for 7, multiplied by 70, make 490. Now the Babylonish captivity lasted seventy years, and during that time the land of Israel rested. Therefore the land rested just as many years in the Babylonish captivity, as it should have rested Sabbaths if the Jews had observed the laws relative to the Sabbaths of the land."This is a most remarkable fact, and deserves to be particularly noticed, as a most literal fulfillment of the prophetic declaration in this verse: Then shall the land enjoy her Sabbaths as long as it lieth desolate, and ye be in your enemies’ land. May it not be argued from this that the law concerning the Sabbatical year was observed till Saul’ s time, as it is only after this period the land enjoyed its rest in the seventy years’ captivity? And if that breach of the law was thus punished, may it not be presumed it had been fulfilled till then, or else the captivity would have lasted longer, i. e., till the land had enjoyed all its rests, of which it had ever been thus deprived?
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Clarke: Lev 26:38 - -- The land of your enemies shall eat you up - Does this refer to the total loss of the ten tribes? These are so completely swallowed up in some enemie...
The land of your enemies shall eat you up - Does this refer to the total loss of the ten tribes? These are so completely swallowed up in some enemies’ land, that nothing concerning their existence or place of residence remains but mere conjecture.
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Clarke: Lev 26:44 - -- Neither will I abhor them to destroy them utterly - Though God has literally fulfilled all his threatenings upon this people in dispossessing them o...
Neither will I abhor them to destroy them utterly - Though God has literally fulfilled all his threatenings upon this people in dispossessing them of their land, destroying their polity, overturning their city, demolishing their temple, and scattering themselves over the face of the whole earth; yet he has, in his providence, strangely preserved them as a distinct people, and in very considerable numbers also. He still remembers the covenant of their ancestors, and in his providence and grace he has some very important design in their favor. All Israel shall yet be saved, and, with the Gentiles, they shall all be restored to his favor; and under Christ Jesus, the great Shepherd; become, with them, one grand everlasting fold.
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Clarke: Lev 26:46 - -- These are the statutes, and judgments, etc. - See on Lev 26:15 (note). This verse appears to be the proper concluding verse of the whole book; and I...
These are the statutes, and judgments, etc. - See on Lev 26:15 (note). This verse appears to be the proper concluding verse of the whole book; and I rather think that the 27th chapter originally followed the 25th. As the law was anciently written upon skins of parchment, sheep or goat skins, pasted or stitched together, and all rolled up in one roll, the matter being written in columns, one of those columns might have been very easily displaced, and thus whole chapters might have been readily interchanged - It is likely that this might have been the case in the present instance. Others endeavor to solve this difficulty, by supposing that the 27th chapter was added after the book had been finished; and therefore there is apparently a double conclusion, one at the end of the 26th and the other at the end of the 27th chapter. However the above may have been, all the ancient versions agree in concluding both the chapters in nearly the same way; yet the 26th chapter must be allowed to be by far the most natural conclusion of the book. The most important points in this chapter have already been particularly noticed in the notes; and to those on the 15th, 34th, and 44th verses, the reader is especially referred. How unwilling is God to cast off his people! and yet how sure is their rejection if they refuse to obey and live to him! No nation has ever been so signally elected as the Jews; and yet no nation has ever been so signally and so awfully reprobated. O Britain, be not high-minded, but fear! Behold here the goodness and severity of God!
Calvin: Lev 26:26 - -- 26.And when I have broken the staff of your bread. By these words God implies, that although He should not punish them by the sterility of the land, ...
26.And when I have broken the staff of your bread. By these words God implies, that although He should not punish them by the sterility of the land, still He was prepared with other means for destroying them by famine. We shall indeed see hereafter that, when God was wroth, the earth in a manner shut up her bowels so as to produce no food; and that the heaven also grew hard so as not to fertilize it with dew or rain. In a word, all unseasonableness of weather and infertility of soil is a sign of the curse of God; but now He goes further, viz., that although there should be no scarcity of food, still they should suffer from hunger, when He had taken away its nourishing qualities from their bread. This curse confirms the instruction which we have seen elsewhere, that man does not live by bread, but by 227 the command of God, just as if the efficacy contained in the bread proceeded out of His mouth. (Deu 8:3.) And assuredly an inanimate thing could not give rigor to our senses except by the secret ordinance of God. He employs a very appropriate comparison, calling the support of bread, whereby man’s strength is refreshed, “the staff;” as we see the old and weak leaning on their sticks as they walk, when otherwise they would totter and fall. God says, then, that it is in His power to break this staff, so that their bread should only fill their stomachs without refreshing their strength. Ezekiel has borrowed from Moses this figure, which he makes use of in several places, (Eze 4:16,) although he there adverts to two sorts of punishment, like another Prophet, when He says, “Ye have sown much and bring in little; ye eat, but ye have not enough; ye drink, but ye are not filled with drink; ye clothe you, but there is none warm; and he that; earneth wages, earneth wages to put it into a bag with holes;” and again,
“Ye looked for much, and, lo, it came to little; and when ye brought it home, I did blow upon it;” (Hag 1:6;)
for he points out scarcity of food as one of God’s scourges, and the inability to profit by their abundance, as another; and with this Micah also accords, for after he has said, “Thou shalt eat, but not be satisfied,” he adds,
“Thou shalt sow, but thou shalt not reap; thou shalt tread the olives, but thou shalt not anoint thee with oil; and sweet wine, but shalt not drink wine.” (Mic 6:14.)
But Moses, in order that the curse may be more apparent, says that there shall be abundance of bread; and also that there shall be no deception practiced in kneading and baking it; for that two 228 women shall come to one oven together, who may mutually observe whether weight is duly given. He implies, therefore, that there shall be abundance in their hands, and yet, when they are filled, they shall not be satisfied.
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Calvin: Lev 26:29 - -- 29.And ye shall eat the flesh of your sons. This scourge is still more severe and terrible (than the others;) 229 yet we know that the Israelites wer...
29.And ye shall eat the flesh of your sons. This scourge is still more severe and terrible (than the others;) 229 yet we know that the Israelites were smitten with it more than once. This savage act would be incredible; but we gather from it how terrible it is to fall into the hands of God, when men, by adding crime to crime, cease not to provoke His wrath. Jeremiah 230 mentions this monstrous case among others: “The hands of the pitiful women have sodden their own children,” and prepared them for food, (Lam 4:10;) and hence, not without cause, he mourns that this had not been done elsewhere, that women should devour the offspring which they themselves had brought up. (Lam 2:20.) And 231 the last siege of Jerusalem, which in the fullness of their crimes was, as it were, the final act of God’s vengeance, reduced the wretched people who were then alive to such straits, that they commonly partook of this unholy food.
When He again declares that He “will cast their carcases upon those of their idols,” He shews by the very nature of the punishment that their impiety would be manifest; for apostates take marvelous delight in their superstitions, until God openly appears as the avenger of His service. But that their idols should be cast into a common heap with the bones of the dead, was as if the finger of God pointed out His abomination of their false worship. And then, because their last resource was in sacrifices, He declares that they should be of no avail for atonement; for, in the expression, “savour of peace,” 232 He embraces all the expiatory rites, by their confidence in which they were the more obstinate. Afterwards He threatens banishment as well as the desolation of the land; by which punishment He made it apparent that they were utterly renounced, as we shall again see a little further on.
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Calvin: Lev 26:34 - -- 34.Then shall the land enjoy her Sabbaths. In order that the observance of the Sabbath should be the more honored, God in a manner associated the lan...
34.Then shall the land enjoy her Sabbaths. In order that the observance of the Sabbath should be the more honored, God in a manner associated the land in it together with man; for whereas the land had rest every seventh year from sowing, and harvest, and all cultivation, He thus desired to stir up men more effectually to a greater reverence for the Sabbath. God now bitterly reproves the Israelites because they not only profane the Sabbath themselves, but do not even allow the land to enjoy its prescribed rest; for this repose of the seventh year did not hinder the land from continually groaning under a heavy burden as long as it nourished such ungodly inhabitants. He says, therefore, that the land was disturbed by ceaseless inquietude, and thus was deprived of its lawful Sabbaths, since it bore on its shoulders, as it were, and not without great distress, such impious despisers of God. Moreover, because the whole worship of God is sometimes included by synecdoche in the word Sabbath, (Jer 17:21; Eze 20:12,) He indirectly administers a sharp reproof to His people, because not only is He defrauded of His right by their impiety, but He cannot be duly honored in the Holy Land unless He expels them all from hence; as if He had said, that this was the only means that remained for the assertion of the honor due to His name, viz., that the land should be cleared of its inhabitants, and reduced to desolation; inasmuch as this extorted rest should be substituted in the room of the voluntary Sabbath.
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Calvin: Lev 26:39 - -- 39.And they that are left of you. This is another form of vengeance, that, although they may survive for a time, still they shall gradually pine away...
39.And they that are left of you. This is another form of vengeance, that, although they may survive for a time, still they shall gradually pine away; and this may be referred both to those who go into captivity, and to those who shall remain in the land. He had before threatened that they should be destroyed either by famine or sword; but now lest they should boast that they had escaped, if they had not perished by a violent death, He pronounces that they also should die a lingering death; and He also declares the manner of it, viz., that He will fill their hearts with trembling, so that they should fly when none pursued them, (as Solomon also says, Pro 28:1,) and fear at the sound of a falling leaf. Thus He signifies that the ungodly shall be no better off, although free from external troubles, because they are afflicted internally by hidden torments; for although their audacity may proceed even to madness, still it cannot be but that their evil conscience should smite them continually. Their forgetfulness of God may sometimes stupify them; nay, they may seek to shake off all feeling; but, after God has suffered them thus to become brutalized, He presently interrupts their lethargy, and hurries them on so that they are their own executioners. This passage shews us that, the more strait-hearted the wicked are in their contempt of God, the weaker they become, so as to tremble at their own shadow; and this condition is far more wretched than to be cut off at a single blow.
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Calvin: Lev 26:40 - -- 40.If they shall confess their iniquity. Although Moses has been discoursing of very severe and cruel punishments, still he declares that even in the...
40.If they shall confess their iniquity. Although Moses has been discoursing of very severe and cruel punishments, still he declares that even in the midst of this awful severity God is to be appeased if only the people should repent, notwithstanding that they may have stripped themselves of all hope of pardon by their long-continued sins. For he does not address sinners in general, but those who by their obstinacy and brutal impetuosity have come nearer and nearer to the vengeance of God; and even these he encourages to a good hope, if only they be converted from their hearts. Let us be assured, then, that God’s mercy is offered to the worst of men, who have been plunged by their guilt in the depths of despair, as though it reached even to hell itself. Whence, too, it follows, that all punishments are like spurs to rouse the inert and hesitating to repentance, whilst the sorer plagues are intended to break their hard hearts. Yet at the same time it must be observed that this favor is vouchsafed by special privilege to the Church of God; for Moses soon afterwards expressly assigns its cause, i e. , that God will remember His covenant. Whence it is plain that God, out of regard to His gratuitous adoption, will be gracious to the unworthy whom He has elected; and whence also it comes to pass, that, provided we do not close the gate of hope against ourselves, God will still voluntarily come forward to reconcile us to Himself, if only we lay hold of the covenant from which we have fallen by our own guilt, like ship-wrecked sailors seizing a plank to carry them safe into port. But it will be well for us earnestly to examine the fruits of repentance which Moses here enumerates. In the first place stands confession, not such as is exacted under the Papacy, that wretched men should unburden themselves in the ear of a priest ( sacrifici,) as if secretly disgorging their sins, but whereby they acknowledge themselves to be guilty before God. This confession stands contrasted both with the noisy complaints, and the subterfuges and evasions of the wicked. A memorable instance of it occurs in the case of David, who, when overwhelmed by the reproof of the Prophet Nathan, ingenuously confesses that he has sinned against God. (2Sa 12:13.) By the word “fathers” He magnifies the greatness of their sins, because for a long space of time they had not ceased to add sin to sin, as if the fathers had conspired with their children, and the children with their own descendants; and, since God is a just avenger even to the third and fourth generation, it is not without reason that posterity is commanded humbly to pray that God would pardon the guilt contracted long ago. Hence also it is plainly seen how little the imitation of their fathers will avail to extenuate the faults of the children, since we perceive that it renders them less excusable, so far is God from admitting this silly plea. It is further added, that their confession should correspond with the greatness of their transgressions, and that it should not be trifling and perfunctory; for although hypocrites, when convicted, do not deny that they have sinned, still in confessing they extenuate their guilt, as if they were only guilty of venial offenses. God, therefore, would have the circumstances of their sins taken into account, and this also He prescribes with respect to their obstinacy, lest they should pretend that their punishments were not deservedly redoubled, because they had walked 233 at adventures with God.
Finally, in order to prove the reality of their conversion, all dissembling is excluded by the humbling of their hearts; for it is as if God would reject their prayers, until in sincere and heart-felt humility they should seek for pardon. This humiliation is contrasted with security as well as with contumacy and pride; and it is also compared with circumcision, where the heart is called uncircumcised before it is subdued and reduced to obedience. For, whereas circumcision was a mark of distinction between the people of God and heathen nations, it must needs have been also a sign of regeneration. 234 But since the Jews neglected the truth, and foolishly and improperly gloried only in the outward symbol, Moses, by reproving the uncircumcision of their hearts, refutes that empty boast. Thus, as Paul testifies, unless the Law be obeyed, literal circumcision is useless, and is made into uncircumcision. (Rom 2:25.) So Moses accuses the Israelites of unfaithfulness, because they profess to be God’s holy people, whilst they cherish filthiness and uncleanness in their heart. The Prophets also often reproach them with being uncircumcised in heart, or in ears; and in this Stephen followed them. (Jer 6:10; Eze 44:7; Act 7:51.)
Others elicit a very different meaning from the words 235 which we have translated, “let them atone ( propitient) for their iniquity.” The noun used is
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Calvin: Lev 26:43 - -- 43.The land also shall be left of them. He again refers to the punishment of banishment, which is equivalent to their being disinherited; and at the ...
43.The land also shall be left of them. He again refers to the punishment of banishment, which is equivalent to their being disinherited; and at the same time repeats that the worship of God could not be restored in the Holy Land, until it should be purified from their defilements; yet immediately afterwards He moderates this severity, inasmuch as, when He seemed to deal with them most rigorously, He still will not utterly cast them off. The verbs He uses 236 are in the past tense, though they have reference to the future; as much as to say, even then “they shall feel that they are not rejected.” He therefore stretches out His hand to them, as it were, in their miserable estate, to uplift them to confidence, and commands them, although afflicted with the extremity of trouble, nevertheless to put their trust in His Covenant. Herein His marvelous and inestimable goodness is displayed, in still retaining as His own those who are alienated from Him: thus, it is said in Hosea, (Hos 2:23,) “I will say to them that are not my people, Thou art my people.”
When He promises that He will remember His covenant “for their sakes,” He does not mean for their merit, or because they have acquired such a favor for themselves; but for their profit or salvation, in that the recollection of the Covenant shall extend even to them. Their deliverance (from Egypt) is also added in confirmation of the Covenant, as though He had said that He would be the more disposed to forgive them, not only because He always perseveres in His faithfulness to His promises, but because He would maintain His goodness towards them, and carry it on even to the end. Thus we see He refers the cause of His mercy only to Himself.
Defender: Lev 26:34 - -- There were approximately 490 years in Israel's monarchy, from Saul to Zedekiah, followed by the 70 years of Babylonian captivity (Jer 25:11, Jer 25:12...
There were approximately 490 years in Israel's monarchy, from Saul to Zedekiah, followed by the 70 years of Babylonian captivity (Jer 25:11, Jer 25:12). During all this period, they failed to observe God's commanded Sabbatical and Jubilee years; hence, the Lord enforced the seventy years of rest which were due His land."
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Defender: Lev 26:44 - -- The chosen people of Israel have continued to exist as a distinct people for 3500 years despite being without a homeland for most of that period. This...
The chosen people of Israel have continued to exist as a distinct people for 3500 years despite being without a homeland for most of that period. This constitutes an amazing testimony to divine inspiration and fulfilled prophecy. Before they had even entered their promised land, God had warned them they would be scattered away from it if they disobeyed. They were, indeed, scattered among the heathen again and again; yet God refused to "destroy them utterly" or to "break my covenant with them" for He had made this promise to Abraham before they were born (Gen 17:4-8)."
TSK: Lev 26:26 - -- Psa 105:16; Isa 3:1, Isa 9:20; Jer 14:12; Lam 4:3-9; Eze 4:10, Eze 4:16, Eze 5:16; Eze 14:13; Hos 4:10; Mic 6:14; Hag 1:6
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TSK: Lev 26:28 - -- in fury : Isa 27:4, Isa 59:18, Isa 63:3, Isa 66:15; Jer 21:5; Eze 5:13, Eze 5:15, Eze 8:18; Nah 1:2, Nah 1:6
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TSK: Lev 26:29 - -- This was literally fulfilled at the siege of Jerusalem. Josephus gives a dreadful detail respecting a woman named Mary, who, in the extremity of the f...
This was literally fulfilled at the siege of Jerusalem. Josephus gives a dreadful detail respecting a woman named Mary, who, in the extremity of the famine, during the seige, killed her sucking child, roasted, and had eaten part of it, when discovered by the soldiers!
Deu 28:53-57; 2Ki 6:28, 2Ki 6:29; Jer 19:9; Lam 2:20, Lam 4:10; Eze 5:10; Mat 24:19; Luk 23:29
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TSK: Lev 26:30 - -- I will destroy : 1Ki 13:2; 2Ki 23:8, 2Ki 23:16, 2Ki 23:20; 2Ch 14:3-5, 2Ch 23:17, 2Ch 31:1, 2Ch 34:3-7; Isa 27:9; Jer 8:1-3; Eze 6:3-6, Eze 6:13
my so...
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TSK: Lev 26:31 - -- And I will make : 2Ki 25:4-10; 2Ch 36:19; Neh 2:3, Neh 2:17; Isa 1:7, Isa 24:10-12; Jer 4:7, Jer 9:11; Lam 1:1, Lam 2:7; Eze 6:6, Eze 21:15; Mic 3:12
...
And I will make : 2Ki 25:4-10; 2Ch 36:19; Neh 2:3, Neh 2:17; Isa 1:7, Isa 24:10-12; Jer 4:7, Jer 9:11; Lam 1:1, Lam 2:7; Eze 6:6, Eze 21:15; Mic 3:12
and bring : Psa 74:3-8; Jer 22:5, Jer 26:6, Jer 26:9, Jer 52:13; Lam 1:10; Eze 9:6, Eze 21:7, Eze 24:21; Mat 24:1, Mat 24:2; Luk 21:5, Luk 21:6, Luk 21:24; Act 6:14
I will not smell : Gen 8:21; Isa 1:11-14, Isa 66:3; Amo 5:21-23; Heb 10:26
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TSK: Lev 26:32 - -- And I : Deu 29:23; Isa 1:7, Isa 1:8, Isa 5:6, Isa 5:9, Isa 6:11, Isa 24:1, Isa 32:13, Isa 32:14, Isa 64:10; Jer 9:11; Jer 25:11, Jer 25:18, Jer 25:38,...
And I : Deu 29:23; Isa 1:7, Isa 1:8, Isa 5:6, Isa 5:9, Isa 6:11, Isa 24:1, Isa 32:13, Isa 32:14, Isa 64:10; Jer 9:11; Jer 25:11, Jer 25:18, Jer 25:38, Jer 44:2, Jer 44:22; Lam 5:18; Eze 33:28, Eze 33:29; Dan 9:2, Dan 9:18; Hab 3:17; Luk 21:20
and your : Deu 28:37, Deu 29:24-28; 1Ki 9:8; Jer 18:16, Jer 19:8; Lam 4:12; Eze 5:15
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TSK: Lev 26:33 - -- Deu 4:27, Deu 28:64-66; Psa 44:11; Jer 9:16; Lam 1:3, Lam 4:15; Eze 12:14-16; Eze 20:23, Eze 22:15; Zec 7:14; Luk 21:24; Jam 1:1
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TSK: Lev 26:34 - -- This was fulfilled during the Babylonish captivitycaps1 . fcaps0 or, from Saul to the captivity are about 490 years, during which period there were 7...
This was fulfilled during the Babylonish captivitycaps1 . fcaps0 or, from Saul to the captivity are about 490 years, during which period there were 70 sabbaths of years neglected by the Hebrews. Now the Babylonish captivity lasted 70 years, and during that time the land of Israel rested.
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TSK: Lev 26:36 - -- I will send : Gen 35:5; Deu 28:65-67; Jos 2:9-11, Jos 5:1; 1Sa 17:24; 2Ki 7:6, 2Ki 7:7; 2Ch 14:14; Job 15:21, Job 15:22; Isa 7:2, Isa 7:4; Eze 21:7, E...
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TSK: Lev 26:37 - -- they shall : Jdg 7:22; 1Sa 14:15, 1Sa 14:16; Isa 10:4; Jer 37:10
and ye shall : Num 14:42; Jos 7:12, Jos 7:13; Jdg 2:14
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TSK: Lev 26:38 - -- Deu 4:27, Deu 28:48, Deu 28:68; Isa 27:13; Jer 42:17, Jer 42:18, Jer 42:22, Jer 44:12-14, Jer 44:27, Jer 44:28
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TSK: Lev 26:39 - -- shall pine : Deu 28:65, Deu 30:1; Neh 1:9; Psa 32:3, Psa 32:4; Jer 3:25, Jer 29:12; Lam 4:9; Eze 4:17; Eze 6:9, Eze 20:43, Eze 24:23, Eze 33:10, Eze 3...
shall pine : Deu 28:65, Deu 30:1; Neh 1:9; Psa 32:3, Psa 32:4; Jer 3:25, Jer 29:12; Lam 4:9; Eze 4:17; Eze 6:9, Eze 20:43, Eze 24:23, Eze 33:10, Eze 36:31; Hos 5:15; Zec 10:9
and also : Exo 20:5, Exo 34:7; Num 14:18; Deu 5:9; Jer 31:29; Eze 18:2, Eze 18:3, Eze 18:19; Mat 23:35, Mat 23:36; Rom 11:8-10
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TSK: Lev 26:40 - -- confess : Num 5:7; Deu 4:29-31, Deu 30:1-3; Jos 7:19; 1Ki 8:33-36, 1Ki 8:47; Neh 9:2-5; Job 33:27, Job 33:28; Psa 32:5; Pro 28:13; Jer 31:18-20; Eze 3...
confess : Num 5:7; Deu 4:29-31, Deu 30:1-3; Jos 7:19; 1Ki 8:33-36, 1Ki 8:47; Neh 9:2-5; Job 33:27, Job 33:28; Psa 32:5; Pro 28:13; Jer 31:18-20; Eze 36:31; Dan. 9:3-20; Hos 5:15, Hos 6:1, Hos 6:2; Luk 15:18, Luk 15:19; 1Jo 1:8-10
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TSK: Lev 26:41 - -- their uncircumcised : Deu 30:6; Jer 4:4, Jer 6:10, Jer 9:25, Jer 9:26; Eze 44:7; Act 7:51; Rom 2:28, Rom 2:29; Gal 5:6; Phi 3:3; Col 2:11
humbled : Ex...
their uncircumcised : Deu 30:6; Jer 4:4, Jer 6:10, Jer 9:25, Jer 9:26; Eze 44:7; Act 7:51; Rom 2:28, Rom 2:29; Gal 5:6; Phi 3:3; Col 2:11
humbled : Exo 10:3; 1Ki 21:29; 2Ch 12:6, 2Ch 12:7, 2Ch 12:12, 2Ch 32:26, 2Ch 33:12, 2Ch 33:13, 2Ch 33:19, 2Ch 33:23; Eze 6:9; Eze 20:43; Mat 23:12; Luk 14:11, Luk 18:14; Jam 4:6-9; 1Pe 5:5, 1Pe 5:6
and they : Ezr 9:13, Ezr 9:15; Neh 9:33; Psa 39:9, Psa 51:3, Psa 51:4; Dan 9:7-14, Dan 9:18, Dan 9:19
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TSK: Lev 26:42 - -- will I : Gen 9:16; Exo 2:24, Exo 6:5; Deu 4:31; Psa 106:45; Eze 16:60; Luk 1:72
and I will : Psa 85:1, Psa 85:2, Psa 136:23; Eze 36:1-15, Eze 36:33, E...
will I : Gen 9:16; Exo 2:24, Exo 6:5; Deu 4:31; Psa 106:45; Eze 16:60; Luk 1:72
and I will : Psa 85:1, Psa 85:2, Psa 136:23; Eze 36:1-15, Eze 36:33, Eze 36:34; Joe 2:18
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TSK: Lev 26:43 - -- shall enjoy : Lev 26:34, Lev 26:35
and they : Lev 26:41; 1Ki 8:46-48; 2Ch 33:12; Job 5:17, Job 34:31, Job 34:32; Psa 50:15; Psa 119:67, Psa 119:71, Ps...
shall enjoy : Lev 26:34, Lev 26:35
and they : Lev 26:41; 1Ki 8:46-48; 2Ch 33:12; Job 5:17, Job 34:31, Job 34:32; Psa 50:15; Psa 119:67, Psa 119:71, Psa 119:75; Isa 26:16; Jer 31:19; Dan 9:7-9, Dan 9:14; Heb 12:5-11
they despised : Lev 26:15; 2Ki 17:7-17; 2Ch 36:14-16
their soul : Lev 26:15, Lev 26:30; Psa 50:17; Amo 5:10; Zec 11:8; Joh 7:7, Joh 15:23, Joh 15:24; Rom 8:7
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TSK: Lev 26:44 - -- I will : Deu 4:29-31; 2Ki 13:23; Neh 9:31; Psa 94:14; Eze 14:22, Eze 14:23; Rom 11:2, Rom 11:26
abhor : Lev 26:11
break : Psa 89:33; Jer 14:21, Jer 33...
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TSK: Lev 26:45 - -- Exo 20:2
for their : Gen 12:2, Gen 15:18, Gen 17:7, Gen 17:8; Exo 2:24, Exo 19:5, Exo 19:6; Luk 1:72, Luk 1:73; Rom 11:12, Rom 11:23-26, Rom 11:28, Ro...
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TSK: Lev 26:46 - -- As this verse appears to be the proper concluding verse of the whole book, Dr. A. Clarke thinks that the Lev 27:1 originally followed Lev 25:1. Other...
As this verse appears to be the proper concluding verse of the whole book, Dr. A. Clarke thinks that the Lev 27:1 originally followed Lev 25:1. Others suppose that the 27th chapter was added after the book was finished; and, therefore, there is apparently a double conclusion, one at the end of this, and another at the end of the 27th chapter. All the ancient versions agree in concluding both chapters in nearly the same way.
the statutes : Lev 27:34; Deu 6:1, Deu 12:1, Deu 13:4; Joh 1:17
in mount Sinai : Lev 25:1
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collapse allCommentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per Verse)
Barnes -> Lev 26:3-45
Barnes: Lev 26:3-45 - -- As "the book of the covenant"Exo. 20:22\endash 23:33 concludes with promises and warnings Exo 23:20-33, so does this collection of laws contained in...
As "the book of the covenant"Exo. 20:22\endash 23:33 concludes with promises and warnings Exo 23:20-33, so does this collection of laws contained in the Book of Leviticus. But the former passage relates to the conquest of the land of promise, this one to the subsequent history of the nation. The longer similar passage in Deuteronomy Deut. 27\endash 30 is marked by broader and deeper promises and denunciations having immediate reference not only to outward consequences, but to the spiritual death incurred by transgressing the divine will.
Rain in due season - The periodical rains, on which the fertility of the holy land so much depends, are here spoken of. There are two wet seasons, called in Scripture the former and the latter rain Deu 11:14; Jer 5:24; Joe 2:23; Hos 6:3; Jam 5:7. The former or Autumn rain falls in heavy showers in November and December. In March the latter or Spring rain comes on, which is precarious in quantity and duration, and rarely lasts more than two days.
Compare the margin reference; Joe 2:19; Job 11:18.
Five of you shall chase - A proverbial mode of expression for superiority in warlike prowess Deu 32:30; Isa 30:17.
Establish my covenant - All material blessings were to be regarded in the light of seals of the "everlasting covenant."Compare Gen 17:4-8; Neh 9:23.
Bring forth the old because of the new - Rather, clear away the old before the new; that is, in order to make room for the latter. Compare the margin reference.
The first warning for disobedience is disease. "Terror"(literally trembling) is rendered trouble in Psa 78:33; Isa 65:23. It seems here to denote that terrible affliction, an anxious temperament, the mental state ever at war with Faith and Hope. This might well be placed at the head of the visitations on a backslider who had broken the covenant with his God. Compare Deu 32:25; Jer 15:8; Pro 28:1; Job 24:17; Psa 23:4.
Consumption, and the burning ague - Compare the margin reference. The first of the words in the original comes from a root signifying to waste away; the latter (better, fever), from one signifying to kindle a fire. Consumption is common in Egypt and some parts of Asia Minor, but it is more rare in Syria. Fevers of different kinds are the commonest of all diseases in Syria and all the neighboring countries. The opposite promise to the threat is given in Exo 15:26; Exo 23:25.
For all this - i. e. for all the afflictions in Lev 26:16-17.
Seven times - The sabbatical number is here proverbially used to remind the people of the covenant. Compare Gen 4:15, Gen 4:24; Psa 119:164; Pro 24:16; Luk 17:4.
The second warning is utter sterility of the soil. Compare Deu 11:17; Deu 28:18; Eze 33:28; Eze 36:34-35.
The third warning is the multiplication of destructive animals, etc. Compare Deu 32:24; Eze 5:17; Eze 14:15; Jdg 5:6-7; Isa 33:8.
The fourth warning. Yahweh now places Himself as it were in a hostile position toward His people who "will not be reformed"(rather, brought unto God: Jer 2:30). He will avenge the outraged cause of His covenant, by the sword, pestilence, famine, and captivity.
Omit "and.""To break the staff of bread,"was a proverbial expression for cutting off the supply of bread, the staff of life (Psa 105:16; Eze 4:16; Eze 5:16; Eze 14:13; compare Isa 3:1). The supply was to be so reduced that one oven would suffice for baking the bread maple by ten women for ten families, and when made it was to be dealt out in sparing rations by weight. See 2Ki 6:25; Jer 14:18; Lam 4:9; Eze 5:12; Hos 4:10; Mic 6:14; Hag 1:6.
The fifth warning. For Lev 26:29 see 2Ki 6:28-29; Jer 19:8-9; Lam 2:20; Lam 4:10; Eze 5:10, for Lev 26:30 see 2Ch 34:3; Eze 6:4; Jer 14:19, for Lev 26:31 see 2Ki 25:9; Psa 74:6-7 : for Lev 26:32-33 see Deu 28:37; Psa 44:11; Jer 9:16; Jer 18:16; Ezek. 5:1-17; Jer 4:7; Eze 9:6; Eze 12:15; Zec 7:14.
High places - There is no doubt that the word here denotes elevated spots dedicated to false worship (see Deu 12:2), and especially, it would seem, to that of Baal Num 22:41; Jos 13:17. Such spots were, however, employed and approved for the worship of Yahweh, not only before the building of the temple, but afterward (Jdg 6:25-26; Jdg 13:16-23; 1Sa 7:10; 1Sa 16:5; 1Ki 3:2; 1Ki 18:30; 2Ki 12:3; 1Ch 21:26, etc.). The three altars built by Abraham at Shechem, between Bethel and Ai, and at Mamre, appear to have been on heights, and so was the temple.
The high places in the holy land may thus have been divided into those dedicated to the worship of Yahweh, and those which had been dedicated to idols. And it would seem as if there was a constant struggle going on. The high places polluted by idol worship were of course to be wholly condemned. They were probably resorted to only to gratify a degraded superstition. See Lev 19:31; Lev 20:2-5. The others might have been innocently used for prayer and religious teaching. But the temptation appears to have been too great for the temper of the people. They offered sacrifice and burnt incense on them; and hence, thorough reformers of the national religion, such as Hezekiah and Josiah, removed the high places altogether 2Ki 18:4; 2Ki 23:5.
Your images - The original word is rendered in the margin of our Bible sun images (2Ch 14:5; Isa 17:8; Eze 6:4, etc.). Phoenician inscriptions prove that the word was commonly applied to images of Baal and Astarte, the god of the sun and the goddess of the moon. This exactly explains 2Ch 34:4 following.
Idols - The Hebrew word here literally means things which could be rolled about, such as a block of wood or a lump of dirt. It was no doubt a name given in derision. Compare Isa 40:20; Isa 44:19; 2Ki 1:2.
Sanctuaries - The holy places in the tabernacle and the temple (Psa 68:35. Compare Psa 74:7).
I will not smell the savor ... - See Lev 1:9.
More literally: All the days of its desolation shall it rest that time which it rested not in your Sabbaths while ye dwelt upon it. That is, the periods of rest of which the land had been deprived would be made up to it. Compare 2Ch 36:20-21.
The land of your enemies shall eat you up - Compare Num 13:32; Eze 36:13.
Iniquity - The meaning here is, in the punishment of their iniquity, and, in the next clause, in the punishment of the iniquity (as in Lev 26:41, Lev 26:43) of their fathers. In the next verse the same Hebrew word is properly represented by "iniquity."Our translators have in several places put one of the English words in the text and the other in the margin (Gen 4:13; Gen 19:15; 2Ki 7:9; Psa 69:27, etc.). The language of Scripture does not make that trenchant division between sin and punishment which we are accustomed to do. Sin is its own punishment, having in itself, from its very commencement, the germ of death. "Sin, when it is finished, bringeth forth death"Jam 1:15; Rom 2:5; Rom 5:12.
trespass - The Hebrew word signifies an injury inflicted on the rights of a person, as distinguished from a sin or iniquity regarded as an outrage of the divine law. Every wrong act is of course both a sin and a trespass against God. In this place Yahweh takes the breach of the covenant as a personal trespass.
Uncircumcised hearts - The outward sign of the covenant might be preserved, but the answering grace in the heart would be wanting (Act 7:51; Rom 2:28-29; Jer 6:10; Jer 9:26; compare Col 2:11).
Accept of the punishment of their iniquity - literally, enjoy their iniquity. The word here and in Lev 26:43 rendered "accept"in this phrase, is the same as is rendered "enjoy"in the expression "the land shall enjoy her sabbaths"Lev 26:34. The antithesis in Lev 26:43 is this: The land shall enjoy her sabbaths - and they shall enjoy the punishment of their iniquity. The meaning is, that the land being desolate shall have the blessing of rest, and they having repented shall have the blessing of chastisement. The feelings of a devout captive Israelite are beautifully expressed in Tobit 13:1-18.
Poole: Lev 26:26 - -- Broken the staff of your bread either,
1. By taking away that power and virtue of nourishing which I have put into bread or food, which when I withd...
Broken the staff of your bread either,
1. By taking away that power and virtue of nourishing which I have put into bread or food, which when I withdraw it will be unable to nourish. Or rather,
2. By sending a famine, or scarcity of bread, which is the staff and support of man’ s present life, Psa 104:15 ; for so this phrase is commonly used, and elsewhere explained, as Psa 105:16 Eze 4:16 , and so the following words expound it here. Ten women , i.e. ten or many families, for the women took care for the bread and food of all the family. Bread by weight : this is a sign and consequence both of a famine, and of the baking of the bread of several families together in one oven, wherein each family took care to weigh their bread, and to receive the same proportion which they put in. Compare Eze 4:16 .
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Poole: Lev 26:28 - -- Contrary unto you in fury or,
in fury of rashness or
carelessness with you or among you like a raging lion breaking into a multitude of people, a...
Contrary unto you in fury or,
in fury of rashness or
carelessness with you or among you like a raging lion breaking into a multitude of people, and destroying all he meets with promiscuously, or without any distinction, both righteous and wicked together, as is threatened Eze 21:3 . Or, in fury of contrariety , or meeting with you , or against you, like a man that meets his enemy in the fury of battle.
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Poole: Lev 26:30 - -- Your high places in which you will sacrifice after the manner of the heathens. See Lev 19:26 Num 33:52 .
Your images or, your images of the sun , ...
Your high places in which you will sacrifice after the manner of the heathens. See Lev 19:26 Num 33:52 .
Your images or, your images of the sun , made for the honour and worshipping of the sun, and having some resemblance to it. See 2Ch 34:7 . Under this one kind of idolatry, famous and frequent in those times and places, he contains all the rest. The carcasses of your idols ; so he calls them, either to signify that their idols, how specious soever or glorious in their eyes, were in truth but lifeless and contemptible carcasses, having eyes, but see not , &c., Psa 115:5 , or to show that their idols should be so far from helping them, that they should be thrown down and broken with them, and both should lie together in a forlorn and loathsome state.
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Poole: Lev 26:31 - -- Your sanctuaries either,
1. God’ s sanctuary, called sanctuaries here, as also Psa 73:17 74:7 Jer 51:51 Eze 28:18 , because there were divers a...
Your sanctuaries either,
1. God’ s sanctuary, called sanctuaries here, as also Psa 73:17 74:7 Jer 51:51 Eze 28:18 , because there were divers apartments in it, each of which was a sanctuary, or, which is all one, a holy place, as they are severally called. And your emphatically, not mine, for I disown and abhor it, and all the services you do in it, because you have defiled it. Or,
2. The temples built by you to idols, therefore called
their sanctuaries in opposition to God’ s. Or,
3. Your synagogues. But the first is most probable, because he speaks of the place where they used to offer their sweet odours here following.
I will not smell i.e. not own or accept them. See Gen 8:21 Isa 1:11 , &c.
Of your sweet odours either of the incense, or of your sacrifices, which when offered with faith and obedience, are very sweet and acceptable to me.
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Poole: Lev 26:33 - -- The sword shall follow you into strange lands, and you shall have no rest there.
The sword shall follow you into strange lands, and you shall have no rest there.
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Poole: Lev 26:34 - -- Either,
1. Because it shall be rid of you, who were the unprofitable and heavy burdens thereof, under whom it in a manner groaned. Or rather,
2. B...
Either,
1. Because it shall be rid of you, who were the unprofitable and heavy burdens thereof, under whom it in a manner groaned. Or rather,
2. Because it shall now enjoy those sabbatical years of rest from tillage, which you through covetousness ofttimes would not give it, as the next verse informs us, though God commanded it, Lev 25:4 .
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Poole: Lev 26:36 - -- Faintness: the word notes a tenderness and softness of mind, whereby they are disenabled from bearing the present miseries, and are in continual drea...
Faintness: the word notes a tenderness and softness of mind, whereby they are disenabled from bearing the present miseries, and are in continual dread of further and sorer miseries.
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Poole: Lev 26:37 - -- They shall fall one upon another as soldiers use to do when their ranks are broken, and they forced to flee away hastily from their pursuers.
When n...
They shall fall one upon another as soldiers use to do when their ranks are broken, and they forced to flee away hastily from their pursuers.
When non pursueth your guilt and fear causing you to imagine that they do pursue you when indeed they do not.
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Poole: Lev 26:39 - -- Shall pine away be consumed and melt away by degrees, through diseases, oppressions, griefs, and manifold miseries.
Shall pine away be consumed and melt away by degrees, through diseases, oppressions, griefs, and manifold miseries.
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Poole: Lev 26:40 - -- If they shall confess Heb. And they shall confess , where our translation and many others understand the particle if , which is also wanting and un...
If they shall confess Heb. And they shall confess , where our translation and many others understand the particle if , which is also wanting and understood, Exo 4:23 Mal 1:2 3:8 . So here, And if they shall confess , &c.
But there seems no necessity of any such supplement, but these and the following words may be taken as they lie in their plain and proper signification, to this purpose, Lev 26:40 , And through the heaviness and extraordinariness of their affliction, their consciences will force them to confess their iniquity, and the iniquity of their fathers, with their trespass which they have trespassed against me , i.e. with their prevarication with me and defection from me to idolatry, which by way of eminency he calls their trespass;
and that also they have walked contrary to me Lev 26:41 , and that I also have walked contrary unto them, and have brought them into the land of their enemies ; i.e. that they are not come into these calamities by chance, nor by the misfortune of war, but by my just judgment upon them. All which confession is no more than Pharaoh made in his distresses, and than hypocrites in their affliction use to make. And therefore he adds, if then their uncircumcised , i.e. impure, carnal, profane, and impenitent hearts be humbled , i.e. subdued, purged, reformed; if to this confession they add sincere humiliation and reformation, I will do what follows.
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Poole: Lev 26:41 - -- The Hebrew word avou commonly signifies iniquity , but it is oft used for
the punishment of iniquity as here and 1Sa 28:10 Psa 31:10 Isa 53:6,1...
The Hebrew word avou commonly signifies iniquity , but it is oft used for
the punishment of iniquity as here and 1Sa 28:10 Psa 31:10 Isa 53:6,11 . The meaning is, if they sincerely acknowledge the righteousness of God, and their own wickedness, and patiently submit to his correcting hand, and would rather be in their present suffering condition than in their former sinful, though prosperous estate; if with David they are ready to say, it is good for them that they are afflicted, that they may learn God’ s statutes , and obedience to them for the future, which is a good evidence of true repentance.
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Poole: Lev 26:42 - -- I will remember my covenant to wit, so as to perform it, and make good all that I have promised in it. For words of knowledge or remembrance in Scrip...
I will remember my covenant to wit, so as to perform it, and make good all that I have promised in it. For words of knowledge or remembrance in Scripture do most commonly connote affection and kindness; of which there are many instances, some given before, and more hereafter.
I will remember the land which now seems to be forgotten, and neglected, and despised, as if I had never chosen it to be the peculiar place of my presence and blessing.
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Poole: Lev 26:44 - -- Neither the desperateness of their condition, nor the greatness of their sins, shall make me wholly make void my covenant with them and their ancest...
Neither the desperateness of their condition, nor the greatness of their sins, shall make me wholly make void my covenant with them and their ancestors, but I will in due time remember them for good, and for my covenant’ s sake return to them in mercy. From this place the Jews take great comfort, and assure themselves of deliverance out of their present servitude and misery. And from this, and such other places, St. Paul concludes that the Israelitish nation, though then rejected and ruined, should be gathered again and restored.
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Poole: Lev 26:45 - -- For their sakes or rather, to or for them, i.e. for their good or benefit; for surely, if one considers what is said before concerning the wicked...
For their sakes or rather, to or for them, i.e. for their good or benefit; for surely, if one considers what is said before concerning the wickedness of this people, he cannot say this deliverance was given them for their sakes, but must rather say with the prophet, Eze 36:22,32 , not for your sake, O house of Israel , &c.
Haydock: Lev 26:26 - -- Bread; or that which supports you. You shall be deprived of the necessaries of life. ---
One oven shall be used by 10 families, so little bread sh...
Bread; or that which supports you. You shall be deprived of the necessaries of life. ---
One oven shall be used by 10 families, so little bread shall be baked, and even that little shall be delivered out by weight. I will also deprive it of its nutritive qualities, so that it shall not satisfy your craving appetite. (Calmet) See Psalm civ. 16., and Isaias iii. 1.
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Haydock: Lev 26:28 - -- Fury. You will gain nothing by opposing me, but your own destruction. I will treat you, as you would deal with me. (Haydock)
Fury. You will gain nothing by opposing me, but your own destruction. I will treat you, as you would deal with me. (Haydock)
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Haydock: Lev 26:29 - -- Daughters. To such extremities were the Jews reduced, at the sieges of Samaria and Jerusalem. (4 Kings vi. 28; Lamentations iv. 10.; Josephus, Jewi...
Daughters. To such extremities were the Jews reduced, at the sieges of Samaria and Jerusalem. (4 Kings vi. 28; Lamentations iv. 10.; Josephus, Jewish Wars vii. 8.)
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Haydock: Lev 26:30 - -- Places. The temple of Solomon was built on Mount Moria or Sion. The Persians sacrificed upon the mountains, and the Romans and Athenians built thei...
Places. The temple of Solomon was built on Mount Moria or Sion. The Persians sacrificed upon the mountains, and the Romans and Athenians built their most magnificent temples on the highest parts of their respective cities. ---
Idols. Hebrew chammanim, denotes the chariots dedicated to the sun; (4 Kings xxiii. 11,) or the pyreia, or enclosures for the sacred fire, in honour of the god Homanus, (Strabo xv.) whose name is probably derived from this Hebrew word, (Calmet) as well as Hammon, a title of Jupiter. (Menochius) ---
Ruins. Hebrew, "and cast your carcasses upon the carcasses of your gods of dirt, and my soul shall vomit you out." The Egyptians embalmed the carcasses of their sacred animals. God threatens that, if his people be so stupid as to adore them, they shall die, and be deprived of sepulture.
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Haydock: Lev 26:31 - -- Odours. Even the sanctuary of the Lord shall be destroyed, as you will be unworthy to have it among you, or to offer sacrifices to me. (Haydock)
Odours. Even the sanctuary of the Lord shall be destroyed, as you will be unworthy to have it among you, or to offer sacrifices to me. (Haydock)
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Haydock: Lev 26:34 - -- Desolation. It shall be uncultivated; and though you would not comply with my injunctions to let it rest one year out of seven, it shall now remain ...
Desolation. It shall be uncultivated; and though you would not comply with my injunctions to let it rest one year out of seven, it shall now remain desolate for many years together. (Haydock) ---
Theodoret (q. 37) says for 70 years; the number of sabbatic years, from the reign of Saul till the captivity of Babylon, during the space of 490 years. This verse seems evidently to allude to those days of distress. (Calmet) (2 Paralipomenon xxxvi. 21.) ---
But we can hardly suppose that none of the sabbatic years should have been duly observed during the reigns of David, Solomon, &c. (Haydock) ---
Instead of enjoy, Hebrew may be "shall expiate her sabbaths," or the neglect of them. The same term, tirtse, is used, (ver. 41, 43,) and the Vulgate generally renders it agreeable, speaking of sacrifices, chap. i. 4., and xxii. 20. (Calmet)
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Haydock: Lev 26:35 - -- Your sabbaths, holidays and years of rest, and of jubilee. The earth is represented as entering into the views of God, and rejoicing at his judgment...
Your sabbaths, holidays and years of rest, and of jubilee. The earth is represented as entering into the views of God, and rejoicing at his judgments. (Haydock)
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Haydock: Lev 26:36 - -- Fear. Septuagint, "timidity, or slavishness." Hebrew morec, "softness and inactivity." (Calmet) ---
Their haughty temper shall be broken; a...
Fear. Septuagint, "timidity, or slavishness." Hebrew morec, "softness and inactivity." (Calmet) ---
Their haughty temper shall be broken; and though they have dared to rebel against their God, the fall of a leaf shall now terrify them. (Haydock)
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Haydock: Lev 26:37 - -- Brethren, in their flight; while each one is endeavouring to save himself. The Rabbins say they shall be punished for the sins of their brethren, if...
Brethren, in their flight; while each one is endeavouring to save himself. The Rabbins say they shall be punished for the sins of their brethren, if they have not endeavoured to prevent them.
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Haydock: Lev 26:38 - -- Consume you. The Hebrew spies said that the land of Chanaan devoured its inhabitants. Such shall be in reality the enemies' country in your regard....
Consume you. The Hebrew spies said that the land of Chanaan devoured its inhabitants. Such shall be in reality the enemies' country in your regard. You shall not be able to establish yourselves or be happy there.
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Haydock: Lev 26:39 - -- Own. The sins of their fathers, which they have imitated, shall fall upon them; so that they shall pine away with remorse and misery.
Own. The sins of their fathers, which they have imitated, shall fall upon them; so that they shall pine away with remorse and misery.
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Haydock: Lev 26:41 - -- Mind. Hebrew, "heart," wicked, rebellious, and unclean. (Menochius) ---
Pray for. Hebrew and Syriac, "please themselves in," &c. They shall see...
Mind. Hebrew, "heart," wicked, rebellious, and unclean. (Menochius) ---
Pray for. Hebrew and Syriac, "please themselves in," &c. They shall see what advantage they have derived from their sins. (Calmet) ---
Then they shall enter into themselves, like the prodigal son. (Haydock)
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Haydock: Lev 26:42 - -- Jacob is placed first because he was the father of no other nation; as Abraham and Isaac were. (Worthington)
Jacob is placed first because he was the father of no other nation; as Abraham and Isaac were. (Worthington)
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Haydock: Lev 26:44 - -- I did not. He speaks of a future event, which he sees will certainly come to pass, as if it had already happened. As God had preserved his people, ...
I did not. He speaks of a future event, which he sees will certainly come to pass, as if it had already happened. As God had preserved his people, in Egypt, conformably to his covenant with the patriarchs, so he will be reconciled to them, after they shall have done penance, and acknowledged all their excesses, in the captivity of Babylon. (Haydock) ---
The church never ceases all together. (Worthington)
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Haydock: Lev 26:45 - -- Moses. What has been hitherto recorded, was mostly prescribed by God at Mount Sinai, as some of the following laws were also. (Calmet) ---
It woul...
Moses. What has been hitherto recorded, was mostly prescribed by God at Mount Sinai, as some of the following laws were also. (Calmet) ---
It would seem as if this were the conclusion of Leviticus. We must remember, however, that these divisions were not introduced by Moses, as he wrote his five books without any interruption, like one verse. So St. John seems to conclude his Gospel, (chap. xx. 31.) though he afterwards adds another chapter. (Haydock)
Gill: Lev 26:26 - -- And when I have broken the staff of your bread,.... Brought a famine, at least a scarcity of provisions upon them, deprived them of bread, the staff ...
And when I have broken the staff of your bread,.... Brought a famine, at least a scarcity of provisions upon them, deprived them of bread, the staff of life, by which it is supported; or however made it very scarce among them, so that they had hardly a sufficiency to sustain nature, and perhaps the blessing of nourishment withheld from that; see Isa 3:1,
ten women shall bake your bread in one oven; for want of wood, according to Jarchi; or rather through scarcity of bread corn, they should have so little to bake every week, that one oven would be sufficient for ten families, which in a time of plenty each made use of one for themselves; and so Aben Ezra says, it was a custom in Israel for every family to bake in an oven by themselves, which they ate the whole week. Ten is a certain number for an uncertain, and denotes many, as in Zec 8:23. Making and baking bread was the work of women in the eastern countries, as we find it was particularly among the Persians n, and continues to this day among the Moors and Arabs o:
and they shall deliver you your bread again by weight; there being not enough for everyone to eat what they pleased, but were obliged to a rationed allowance, therefore everyone in the family should have their share delivered to him by weight; see Eze 4:16,
and ye shall eat, and not be satisfied; not having enough to eat to satisfaction; or what they did eat, God would withhold a blessing from it for their nourishment, the reverse of Lev 26:5.
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Gill: Lev 26:27 - -- And if ye for all this will not hearken unto me,.... To his commands, and to his prophets sent unto them time after time, and all his corrections and ...
And if ye for all this will not hearken unto me,.... To his commands, and to his prophets sent unto them time after time, and all his corrections and chastisements being ineffectual to reform them, and make them obedient to him:
but walk contrary unto me; See Gill on Lev 26:21.
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Gill: Lev 26:28 - -- Then I will walk contrary to you also in fury,.... As in Lev 26:24; with this addition, in fury; being greatly provoked, and highly incensed, that no ...
Then I will walk contrary to you also in fury,.... As in Lev 26:24; with this addition, in fury; being greatly provoked, and highly incensed, that no regard was had to him, neither to his commands, nor to his corrections; and therefore would be determined to stir up his wrath, and pour out the fury of his indignation on them, which must be terrible:
and I, even I, will chastise you seven times for your sins; add new and many more chastisements, and that in hot displeasure, for their sins; and the repetition or doubling of the phrase, "I, even I, will do it", denotes the certainty of it, and that he will do it himself, and his hand should be visible in it; and they should feel the weight of it, and be obliged to own that these were punishments inflicted by him for their sins.
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Gill: Lev 26:29 - -- And ye shall eat the flesh of your sons,.... Which was fulfilled at the siege of Samaria, in the times of Joram, 2Ki 6:29; and at the siege of Jerusal...
And ye shall eat the flesh of your sons,.... Which was fulfilled at the siege of Samaria, in the times of Joram, 2Ki 6:29; and at the siege of Jerusalem by Nebuchadnezzar, Lam 4:10; and though there is no instance of it at that time in the sacred records, the Jews p tells us of one Doeg ben Joseph, who died and left a little one with his mother, who was very fond of him; but at this siege slew him with her own hands, and ate him, with respect to which they suppose Jeremiah makes the lamentation, Lam 2:2; and of this also there was an instance at the last siege of Jerusalem, by Titus, when a woman, named Mary, of a considerable family, boiled her son, and ate part of him, and the rest was found in her house when the seditious party broke in upon her, as Josephus q relates:
and the flesh of your daughters shall ye eat; of which, though no instances are given, it is as reasonable to suppose it was done as the former. Some of the Jewish writers r think, that in this prediction is included, that children should eat their parents, as well as parents their children, as in Eze 5:10.
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Gill: Lev 26:30 - -- And I will destroy your high places,.... Which Jarchi interprets of towers and palaces; but Aben Ezra of the place of sacrifices; for on high places, ...
And I will destroy your high places,.... Which Jarchi interprets of towers and palaces; but Aben Ezra of the place of sacrifices; for on high places, hills and mountains, they used to build altars, and there offer sacrifices, in imitation of the Heathens; See Gill on Eze 6:13,
and cut down your images; called Chammanim, either from Ham, the son of Noah, the first introducer of idolatrous worship after the flood, as some have thought; or from Jupiter Ammon, worshipped in Egypt, from whence the Jews might have these images; or rather from Chammah, the sun, so called from its heat; so Jarchi says, there were a sort of idols placed on the roofs of houses, and because they were set in the sun, they were called by this name; and Kimchi s observes they were made of wood, and made by the worshippers of the sun, see 2Ki 23:11; but Aben Ezra is of opinion that these were temples built for the worship of the sun, which is the most early sort of idolatry that appeared in the world, to which Job may be thought to refer, Job 31:26. Some take these to be the
and cast your carcasses upon the carcasses of your idols; or "dunghill gods" w; such as the beetle, the Egyptians worshipped, signifying that they and their idols should be destroyed together:
and my soul shall abhor you; the reverse of Lev 26:6; and by comparing it with that, this may signify the removal of the divine Presence from them, as a token of his abhorrence of them; and so Jarchi and Aben Ezra interpret it.
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Gill: Lev 26:31 - -- I will make your cities waste,.... By suffering the enemy to besiege them, enter into them, and plunder them, and destroy the houses in them, and redu...
I will make your cities waste,.... By suffering the enemy to besiege them, enter into them, and plunder them, and destroy the houses in them, and reduce them to the most desolate condition, as Jerusalem, their metropolis, was more than once:
and bring your sanctuaries unto desolation; the temple, so called from the several apartments in it, the court, the holy place, and the most holy; or rather both sanctuaries or temples are intended, the first built by Solomon, and destroyed by Nebuchadnezzar; the second rebuilt by Zerubbabel, and adorned by Herod, and reduced to ashes by Titus Vespasian: the Jews understand this of their synagogues, which were many both in Jerusalem, and in other parts of their country, but cannot be intended, since it follows:
and I will not smell the savour of your sweet odours: of their incense offered on the altar of incense; or the savour of their offerings, as the Targum of Jonathan, of their burnt offerings, and the fat of their other offerings burnt on the altar of burnt offering; signifying, that these would not be acceptable to him, or he smell a savour of rest in them; see Gen 8:21; now these were only offered in the temple, not in synagogues.
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Gill: Lev 26:32 - -- And I will bring the land into desolation,.... The whole country of Judea, cities, towns, villages, fields, vineyards, &c. through the ravage and plun...
And I will bring the land into desolation,.... The whole country of Judea, cities, towns, villages, fields, vineyards, &c. through the ravage and plunder of the enemy; and they being driven out of it, and carried captive from it, and so the land left untilled, and become barren and unfruitful:
and your enemies which dwell therein; having destroyed them, or cast them out, and sent them into other countries, and took possession of theirs in their room:
shall be astonished at it; at the desolation of the land, that such a fruitful country, a land flowing with milk and honey, should be turned into barrenness, for the wickedness of its inhabitants, and shall be amazed at the judgments of God upon them and that.
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Gill: Lev 26:33 - -- And I will scatter you among the Heathen,.... As with a fan, Jer 15:7; so they were at the time of the Assyrian and Babylonish captivities, some were ...
And I will scatter you among the Heathen,.... As with a fan, Jer 15:7; so they were at the time of the Assyrian and Babylonish captivities, some were carried to one place, and some to another, some fled to one place, and some to another, and they are at this day scattered among the several nations of the world:
and will draw out a sword after you; draw it out of its scabbard, and with it pursue after them, when fleeing or going whither they should not; as the remainder of the Jews in Judea sought to go to Egypt, contrary to the will of God, Jer 42:16; see Lev 26:25,
and your land shall be desolate, and your cities waste; for want of men to till the one, and inhabit the other.
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Gill: Lev 26:34 - -- Then shall the land enjoy her sabbaths,.... The sabbatical years, or seventh year sabbaths, when, according to the law in the preceding chapter, it wa...
Then shall the land enjoy her sabbaths,.... The sabbatical years, or seventh year sabbaths, when, according to the law in the preceding chapter, it was to rest from tillage, Lev 25:2,
as long as it lieth desolate, and ye be in your enemies' land; so long it should lie uncultivated, at least in part, there not being a sufficient number left to till it in general, or as it should be; this was the case during the seventy years' captivity in Babylon:
even then shall the land rest, and enjoy her sabbaths; or complete them, as Aben Ezra, which is a bitter sarcasm upon them for their neglect of observance of the law concerning the sabbatical years; but now the land should have its sabbaths of rest whether they would or not; and it seems as if it was on account of this sin, as well as others, that they were carried captive; and it is remarkable, if what Maimonides x says is right, that it was at the going out or end of a sabbatical year, that the first temple was destroyed, and the Jews carried captive, and endured a seventy years' captivity; which some say was because they had neglected seventy sabbatical years; see 2Ch 36:21.
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Gill: Lev 26:35 - -- As long as it lieth desolate it shall rest,.... From tillage, neither man nor beast working upon it; for which reason such a space of time was called ...
As long as it lieth desolate it shall rest,.... From tillage, neither man nor beast working upon it; for which reason such a space of time was called a sabbath:
because it did not rest in your sabbaths, when you dwelt upon it; they manured and tilled it on the seventh years, as on others, neglecting the command which God had given them; and this they did not once or twice, but many times, while they were dwellers in the land; which seems to confirm pretty much the notion of their having omitted so many years, though that cannot be affirmed with certainty; see Jarchi on the place.
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Gill: Lev 26:36 - -- And upon them that are left alive of you,.... In the land of Judea, or rather scattered about among the nations, suggesting that these would be compa...
And upon them that are left alive of you,.... In the land of Judea, or rather scattered about among the nations, suggesting that these would be comparatively few:
I will send a faintness into their hearts in the lands of their enemies; or "a softness" y; so that they should be effeminate, pusillanimous, and cowardly, have nothing of a manly spirit and courage in them; but be mean spirited and faint hearted, as the Jews are noted to be at this day, as Bishop Patrick observes; who also adds,"it being scarce ever heard, that a Jew listed himself for a soldier, or engaged in the defence of his country where he lives:"
and the sound of a shaken leaf shall chase them; either the sound of a leaf that falls from the tree, as the Targum of Jonathan, or which the wind beats one against another, as Jarchi, which makes some little noise; even this should terrify them, taking it to be the noise of some enemy near at hand, just ready to fall on them; such poor faint hearted creatures should they be:
and they shall flee as fleeing from the sword; as if there were an army of soldiers with their swords drawn pursuing them:
and they shall fall when none pursueth; fall upon the ground, and into a fit, and drop down as if dead, as if they had been really wounded with a sword and slain, see Pro 28:1.
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Gill: Lev 26:37 - -- And they shall fall one upon another,.... In their hurry and confusion, everyone making all the haste he can to escape the imaginary danger; or "a man...
And they shall fall one upon another,.... In their hurry and confusion, everyone making all the haste he can to escape the imaginary danger; or "a man upon his brother" z; his friend, as Aben Ezra interprets it, having no regard to relation and friendship, every one endeavouring to save himself. There is another sense which some Jewish writers a give of this phrase, and is observed by Jarchi, which is, that everyone shall fall for the iniquities of his brother; for all the Israelites say, they are sureties for one another; but the former sense is best:
as it were before a sword, when none pursueth: as if a sword was drawn and brandished at them, just ready to be thrust in them, filling them with the utmost dread and terror, and yet at the same time none in pursuit of them:
and ye shall have no power to stand before your enemies; no heart to resist them, no strength nor spirit to oppose them, and defend themselves but be obliged to surrender their cities, themselves, their families and goods, into the hand of the enemy.
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Gill: Lev 26:38 - -- And ye shall perish among the Heathen,.... Not utterly, but great numbers of them, through change of air, and different diet, as Aben Ezra, and throug...
And ye shall perish among the Heathen,.... Not utterly, but great numbers of them, through change of air, and different diet, as Aben Ezra, and through the cruel usage of their enemies; for there is a body of them which continues unto this day; unless this is to be understood of the ten tribes, as R. Akiba b interprets it, who are supposed to be entirely lost and swallowed up among the nations where they were carried captive:
and the land of your enemies shall eat you up; they should die in it through one disease or another; by the pestilence, as the Targum of Jonathan, and so be buried in it; in which sense it may be said to eat them up, or consume them, for the grave swallows up and consumes all that are put into it; Jarchi says, this is to be understood of those that die in captivity.
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Gill: Lev 26:39 - -- And they that are left of you shall pine away in their iniquity in your enemies' lands,.... Such as were not taken off by any public calamity, as the ...
And they that are left of you shall pine away in their iniquity in your enemies' lands,.... Such as were not taken off by any public calamity, as the sword or pestilence should gradually diminish and melt away like wax before the fire, and die in and for their iniquities in an enemy's country, see Eze 24:23,
and also in the iniquities of their fathers shall they pine away with them; or for the iniquities of their evil fathers, as the Targums of Onkelos and Jonathan; they treading in their steps, and doing the same evil deeds, whereby they filled up the measure of their fathers' sins, and brought upon them deserved punishment. Mat 23:32.
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Gill: Lev 26:40 - -- If they shall confess their iniquity, and the iniquity of their fathers,.... The Targum of Jonathan adds,"in the time of their distress;''which might ...
If they shall confess their iniquity, and the iniquity of their fathers,.... The Targum of Jonathan adds,"in the time of their distress;''which might serve to bring their sins to remembrance, and them to a confession of them, not only of their own sins, but of their fathers' also; acknowledging thereby that they had been guilty of sinning against God for a long course of years past; and that God had been long suffering towards them, and bore much with them before he brought his judgments on them, which were just, and what they righteously deserved; and such a confession Daniel made, Dan 9:4; and the words may as well be rendered absolute as conditional, or better, and as a prediction of what would be done by them when in captivity and distress, "and they shall confess their iniquity" c; with shame and sorrow, with repentance for it, and abhorrence of it; or otherwise, if the confession was only verbal and hypocritical, it would not be acceptable:
with their trespass which they trespassed against me; along with their own iniquities, and those of their fathers, they should confess, their trespass against the Lord would be acknowledged by them; which seems to design some particular and grievous sin committed by them, by which perhaps is meant their idolatry, a capital sin, directly against God, and what those people were prone unto:
and that also they have walked contrary unto me; to his mind and will, to his laws, commands, statutes, and ordinances, disregarding him and them, as if enemies to him; or "by chance"; See Gill on Lev 26:21.
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Gill: Lev 26:41 - -- And that I also have walked contrary unto them,.... Showed no regard unto them, as if he took no care of them, or in a providential way concerned him...
And that I also have walked contrary unto them,.... Showed no regard unto them, as if he took no care of them, or in a providential way concerned himself for them, but let what would befall them; yea, came out in the way of his judgments against them, as if he was an enemy to them; see Gill on Lev 26:24,
and have brought them into the land of their enemies; should acknowledge the hand of God in it, that he himself brought them out of their own country into an enemy's land, as Assyria, Babylon, and other nations: and that this was not the chance of war, or owing to the superior power or skill of their enemies, but to the just judgment of God upon them for their sins, who on that account delivered them up into the hands of their enemies:
if then their uncircumcised heart be humbled; their foolish proud heart, as the Targums of Onkelos and Jonathan; it signifies a sinful, wicked, hard, and impenitent heart, brought to a sense of sin, to repentance and humiliation for it. Jarchi interprets it, "or if their uncircumcised heart", &c. as in Exo 2:23; and observes another sense of the word, "perhaps their uncircumcised heart", &c. not only would in words confess their sins, but be truly humbled at heart for them:
and they then accept of the punishment of their iniquity; take it well at the hand of God, bear it patiently without murmuring, or thinking themselves hardly dealt by, but freely owning it is less than their iniquities deserve; or complete and finish the punishment of their sins, as Aben Ezra, which upon their humiliation should be put an end to, and cease. Jarchi takes the word in the sense of atonement and pacification, as if by their chastisement their sins were expiated d, and God was pacified toward them: but rather it denotes the free and full pardon of their sins, manifested to them upon their repentance and humiliation for sin.
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Gill: Lev 26:42 - -- Then i will also remember my covenant with Jacob,.... Would fulfil and make good all that he had promised in covenant with Jacob, and his posterity: t...
Then i will also remember my covenant with Jacob,.... Would fulfil and make good all that he had promised in covenant with Jacob, and his posterity: the account begins with him, and rises upwards to Abraham, whereas it usually begins with Abraham, and descends to Jacob; no sufficient reason is given for this alteration, though several are attempted by the Jewish writers e:
and also my covenant with Isaac, and also my covenant with Abraham will I remember; which chiefly respects the multiplication of their seed, the continuance of them, and the Messiah springing from them; which is the mercy promised to these fathers, and the principal part of the covenant made with them, and which was remembered and performed when God visited and redeemed his people by him, Luk 1:68,
and I will remember the land; the land of Judea, and return the Jews to it, and make it fruitful, after he had given it rest from tillage for many years, which was fulfilled at their return from the captivity of Babylon.
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Gill: Lev 26:43 - -- The land also shall be left of them,.... This seems to refer to a second time, when this should be the case of the land of Judea again, as it was when...
The land also shall be left of them,.... This seems to refer to a second time, when this should be the case of the land of Judea again, as it was when subdued by the Romans, and the Jews were carried captive from it, and so it was left by them, as it has been ever since:
and shall enjoy her sabbaths, while lieth desolate without them; shall be as in the sabbatical years, uncultivated, neither ploughed nor sown, nor reaped; and thus the land of Canaan, though once so very fruitful, is now desolate and barren, being without its former inhabitants, and so it is like to be until it is restored to them again:
and they shall accept of the punishment of their iniquity; that is, when made sensible of their sins, and particularly of their iniquity of rejecting the Messiah; they will not think it hard that they have been punished in so severe a manner, but own the righteous hand of God in it, and be humble under it; and confessing their sins with true sorrow and repentance for them, looking at him whom they have pierced, and mourn, shall have the free and full remission of their sins applied unto them:
because, even, because they despised my judgments, and because their soul abhorred my statutes; despised and abhorred Christ, his doctrines and ordinances, which was the reason of their being carried captive out of their land, when it was forsaken by them, and lay desolate as to this day, especially with respect to any benefit of it enjoyed by them; and which, when they are sensible of, will be a reason of their accepting the punishment of their iniquity so readily, and not murmur at the hand of God upon them, or reflect on his dealings with them, but freely and fully confess their sins, that he may be justified in all that he has done.
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Gill: Lev 26:44 - -- And yet for all that,.... I will have on them, in or through my Word, as the Targum of Jonathan; notwithstanding their many and great sins and transgr...
And yet for all that,.... I will have on them, in or through my Word, as the Targum of Jonathan; notwithstanding their many and great sins and transgressions, and the sad and miserable condition they were brought into by them, the Lord would have mercy on them and be gracious to them, through Christ and for his sake, and convert and save them, see Rom 11:26; the Jews, as Fagius tells us, wonderfully delight themselves with this passage, and read it with the greatest joy and pleasure, and with an elevated voice; concluding from hence that they shall certainly return to their own land; and because the first word in this verse is in sound the same as the Germans use for an "ape", they call this paragraph "the golden ape", and say, when this shall be fulfilled the golden age will take place with them: a very learned man f has wrote a dissertation upon it: when
they shall be in the land of their enemies; of the Romans and other nations, among whom they have been disposed ever since the destruction of Jerusalem by Titus:
I will not cast them away, neither will I abhor them, to destroy them utterly; for though they have been cast away by the Lord out of their land, and from being his people, and enjoying either the civil or religious privileges they formerly did; and though they have been cast off with abhorrence, and had in great detestation by him, for their sin of rejecting the Messiah, as appears by the punishment inflicted on them; yet not so as to make an utter end of them as a body of people, for, notwithstanding their dispersion everywhere, and their long captivity, they remain a distinct people from all others, which seems to forebode something favourable to them:
and to break my covenant with them; which he will not do, even his promise of the future call and conversion of them, and of their return to their own land:
for I am the Lord their God; their covenant God, and a covenant keeping God, Rom 11:27.
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Gill: Lev 26:45 - -- But I will for their sakes remember the covenant of their ancestors,.... Or rather, "remember to them" g, to their good and benefit, for their profit ...
But I will for their sakes remember the covenant of their ancestors,.... Or rather, "remember to them" g, to their good and benefit, for their profit and advantage, not for their desert and merit, for any worth or worthiness in them; this covenant respects not the covenant made with Abraham, Isaac, and Jacob, as in Lev 26:42; but with their fathers, either at Sinai, or rather in the plains of Moab, Deu 29:1, for it follows:
whom I brought forth out of the land of Egypt in the sight of the Heathen, that I might be their God; whom he brought out of great bondage and distress in Egypt, with an high hand and outstretched arm, and in the sight of the Egyptians, who were not able to oppose it, yea, because of their plagues, were urgent for it; and in the sight of all the nations round about, who heard of the wonderful power of God in the deliverance of his people; and this he did that he might appear to be their covenant God, who had taken them into covenant with him, and had taken them under his care and protection, and would be still their King and their God; and who also, in like manner, it may be here suggested, would deliver the people of the Jews out of their present exiled and captive state and condition in the sight of the whole world, and declare himself their covenant God and Father:
I am the Lord; whose will is sovereign, whose power is uncontrollable, who is a covenant keeping God, faithful to his promises, and able to perform them.
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Gill: Lev 26:46 - -- These are the statutes, and judgments, and laws,.... Which refer not only to those in this chapter, but in all the preceding chapters in this book, a...
These are the statutes, and judgments, and laws,.... Which refer not only to those in this chapter, but in all the preceding chapters in this book, and respect them all, whether ceremonial, moral, or judicial, which may be signified by these three words:
which the Lord made between him and the children of Israel; the Targums of Onkelos and Jonathan are,"between his Word and the children of Israel:"
in Mount Sinai; or near it, in the wilderness of it, while the children of Israel lay encamped about it:
by the hand of Moses; they were first delivered to him, and by means of him to the people.
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expand allCommentary -- Verse Notes / Footnotes
NET Notes -> Lev 26:26; Lev 26:26; Lev 26:27; Lev 26:27; Lev 26:28; Lev 26:29; Lev 26:30; Lev 26:30; Lev 26:30; Lev 26:31; Lev 26:33; Lev 26:34; Lev 26:35; Lev 26:36; Lev 26:37; Lev 26:37; Lev 26:39; Lev 26:39; Lev 26:40; Lev 26:40; Lev 26:40; Lev 26:40; Lev 26:41; Lev 26:41; Lev 26:42; Lev 26:43; Lev 26:43; Lev 26:43; Lev 26:43; Lev 26:43; Lev 26:43; Lev 26:45; Lev 26:45; Lev 26:46; Lev 26:46
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NET Notes: Lev 26:28 Heb “in rage of hostility with you”; NASB “with wrathful hostility”; NRSV “I will continue hostile to you in fury”...
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NET Notes: Lev 26:29 Heb “and the flesh of your daughters you will eat.” The phrase “you will eat” has not been repeated in the translation for sty...
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NET Notes: Lev 26:34 There are two Hebrew roots רָצָה (ratsah), one meaning “to be pleased with; to take pleasure” (HALOT 1280-81...
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NET Notes: Lev 26:37 The term rendered “to stand up” is a noun, not an infinitive. It occurs only here and appears to designate someone who would take a powerf...
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NET Notes: Lev 26:41 Heb “and then they make up for.” On the verb “make up for” see the note on v. 34 above.
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NET Notes: Lev 26:42 Heb “my covenant with Abraham I will remember.” The phrase “I will remember” has not been repeated in the translation for styl...
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NET Notes: Lev 26:45 For similar expressions referring back to the ancestors who refused to follow the stipulations of the Mosaic covenant see, for example, Deut 19:14, Je...
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Geneva Bible: Lev 26:26 [And] when I have broken the ( n ) staff of your bread, ten women shall bake your bread in one ( o ) oven, and they shall deliver [you] your bread aga...
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Geneva Bible: Lev 26:31 And I will make your cities waste, and bring your sanctuaries unto desolation, and I ( p ) will not smell the savour of your sweet odours.
( p ) I wi...
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Geneva Bible: Lev 26:35 As long as it lieth desolate it shall rest; because it did not rest in your ( r ) sabbaths, when ye dwelt upon it.
( r ) Which I commanded you to kee...
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Geneva Bible: Lev 26:36 And upon them that are left [alive] of you I will send a faintness into their hearts in the lands of their enemies; and the sound of a shaken leaf sha...
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Geneva Bible: Lev 26:39 And they that are left of you shall pine away in their iniquity in your enemies' lands; and also in the iniquities of their fathers shall they pine aw...
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Geneva Bible: Lev 26:43 ( u ) The land also shall be left of them, and shall enjoy her sabbaths, while she lieth desolate without them: and they shall accept of the punishmen...
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Geneva Bible: Lev 26:45 But I will for their sakes remember the ( x ) covenant of their ancestors, whom I brought forth out of the land of Egypt in the sight of the heathen, ...
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Geneva Bible: Lev 26:46 These [are] the statutes and judgments and laws, which the LORD made between him and the children of Israel in mount ( y ) Sinai by the hand of Moses....
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expand allCommentary -- Verse Range Notes
TSK Synopsis -> Lev 26:1-46
TSK Synopsis: Lev 26:1-46 - --1 Of idolatry.2 Religiousness.3 A blessing to them that keep the commandments.14 A curse to those that break them.40 God promises to remember them tha...
MHCC -> Lev 26:14-39; Lev 26:40-46
MHCC: Lev 26:14-39 - --After God has set the blessing before them which would make them a happy people if they would be obedient, he here sets the curse before them, the evi...
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MHCC: Lev 26:40-46 - --Among the Israelites, persons were not always prosperous or afflicted according to their obedience or disobedience. But national prosperity was the ef...
Matthew Henry -> Lev 26:14-39; Lev 26:40-46
Matthew Henry: Lev 26:14-39 - -- After God had set the blessing before them (the life and good which would make them a happy people if they would be obedient), he here sets the curs...
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Matthew Henry: Lev 26:40-46 - -- Here the chapter concludes with gracious promises of the return of God's favour to them upon their repentance, that they might not (unless it were t...
Keil-Delitzsch -> Lev 26:25-26; Lev 26:27-30; Lev 26:31; Lev 26:32-33; Lev 26:34-35; Lev 26:36-38; Lev 26:39; Lev 26:40-43; Lev 26:44; Lev 26:45; Lev 26:46
Keil-Delitzsch: Lev 26:25-26 - --
He would bring over them "the sword avenging (i.e., executing) the covenant vengeance."The " covenant vengeance "was punishment inflicted for a brea...
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Keil-Delitzsch: Lev 26:27-30 - --
Fourth and severest stage. - If they should still persist in their opposition, God would chastise them with wrathful meeting, yea, punish them so s...
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Keil-Delitzsch: Lev 26:31 - --
Their towns and their sanctuaries He would destroy, because He took no pleasure in their sacrificial worship. מקדּשׁים are the holy things of...
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Keil-Delitzsch: Lev 26:32-33 - --
The land was to become a wilderness, so that even the enemies who dwelt therein would be terrified in consequence (cf. Jer 18:16; Jer 19:8); and the...
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Keil-Delitzsch: Lev 26:34-35 - --
Object of the Divine Judgments in Relation to the Land and Nation of Israel. - Lev 26:34 and Lev 26:35. The land would then enjoy and keep its Sabba...
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Keil-Delitzsch: Lev 26:36-38 - --
So far as the nation was concerned, those who were left when the kingdom was overthrown would find no rest in the land of their enemies, but would ...
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Keil-Delitzsch: Lev 26:39 - --
But those who still remained under this oppression would pine away in their iniquities ( ימּקּוּ , lit., to rot, moulder away), and "also in the...
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Keil-Delitzsch: Lev 26:40-43 - --
In this state of pining away under their enemies, they would confess to themselves their own and their fathers' sins, i.e., would make the discovery...
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Keil-Delitzsch: Lev 26:44 - --
"And yet, even with regard to this, when they shall be in the land of their enemies, have I not despised them."That is to say, if it shall have come...
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Keil-Delitzsch: Lev 26:45 - --
He would therefore remember the covenant with the forefathers, whom He had brought out of Egypt before the eyes of the nations, to be a God to them;...
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Keil-Delitzsch: Lev 26:46 - --
Lev 26:46 contains the close of the entire book, or rather of the whole of the covenant legislation from Ex 25 onwards, although the expression "in ...
Constable: Lev 17:1--27:34 - --II. The private worship of the Israelites chs. 17--27
The second major division of Leviticus deals with how the ...
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Constable: Lev 26:1-46 - --G. PROMISES AND WARNINGS ch. 26
"In the ancient Near East it was customary for legal treaties to conclud...
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Constable: Lev 26:14-33 - --3. The warning for contempt of the law 26:14-33
These punishments would come on the Israelites not for individual errors and sins but for a settled co...
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