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Deuteronomy 1:38

Context
1:38 However, Joshua son of Nun, your assistant, 1  will go. Encourage him, because he will enable Israel to inherit the land. 2 

Deuteronomy 8:4

Context
8:4 Your clothing did not wear out nor did your feet swell all these forty years.

Deuteronomy 33:18

Context
Blessing on Zebulun and Issachar

33:18 Of Zebulun he said:

Rejoice, Zebulun, when you go outside,

and Issachar, when you are in your tents.

Deuteronomy 33:26

Context
General Praise and Blessing

33:26 There is no one like God, O Jeshurun, 3 

who rides through the sky 4  to help you,

on the clouds in majesty.

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[1:38]  1 tn Heb “the one who stands before you”; NAB “your aide”; TEV “your helper.”

[1:38]  2 tn Heb “it”; the referent (the land) has been specified in the translation for clarity.

[33:26]  3 sn Jeshurun is a term of affection referring to Israel, derived from the Hebrew verb יָשַׁר (yashar, “be upright”). See note on the term in Deut 32:15.

[33:26]  4 tn Or “(who) rides (on) the heavens” (cf. NIV, NRSV, NLT). This title depicts Israel’s God as sovereign over the elements of the storm (cf. Ps 68:33). The use of the phrase here may be polemical; Moses may be asserting that Israel’s God, not Baal (called the “rider of the clouds” in the Ugaritic myths), is the true divine king (cf. v. 5) who controls the elements of the storm, grants agricultural prosperity, and delivers his people from their enemies. See R. B. Chisholm, Jr., “The Polemic against Baalism in Israel’s Early History and Literature,” BSac 151 (1994): 275.



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