Verse 1
Deuteronomy 2:1. We compassed
mount Seir — The mountainous
part of Edom, or Idumea. Many
days — Even for thirty-eight
years, which time they spent in
tedious marches to and fro
through that desert country,
reaching from Kadesh to the Red
sea, and in various encampments,
till that race of murmurers was
quite extinct, and then orders
were given them to bend their
course again toward Canaan,
Deuteronomy 2:3.
Verse 6
Deuteronomy 2:6. Buy meat of
them for money — For though the
manna did yet rain upon them,
they were not forbidden to buy
other meats when they had
opportunity, but only were
forbidden greedily to hunger
after them when they could not
obtain them. Buy water — For
water in those parts was scarce,
and therefore private persons
did severally dig pits for their
particular use.
Verse 7
Deuteronomy 2:7. The Lord hath
blessed thee — By God’s blessing
thou art able to buy thy
conveniences, and therefore thy
theft and rapine will be
inexcusable, because without any
pretence of necessity. He
knoweth — Hebrew, He hath known;
that is, observed, or regarded
with care and kindness, which
that word often denotes. Which
experience of God’s singular
goodness to thee should make
thee rely on him still, and not
use any unjust practice to
procure what thou wantest or
desirest.
Verse 8-9
Deuteronomy 2:8-9. We turned —
From our direct road, which lay
through Edom. Ar — The chief
city of the Moabites, here put
for the whole country which
depended upon it. The children
of Lot — So called to signify
that this preservation was not
for their sakes, for they were a
wicked people, but for Lot’s
sake, whose memory God yet
honoured.
Verses 10-12
Deuteronomy 2:10-12. The Emims —
Men terrible for stature and
strength, as their very name
imports, whose expulsion by the
Moabites is here noted as a
great encouragement to the
Israelites, for whose sake he
would much more drive out the
wicked and accursed Canaanites.
Which the Lord gave —
The past tense is here put for
the future, will give, after the
manner of the prophets.
Verse 16-17
Deuteronomy 2:16-17. When all
the men of war were consumed —
Israel is not called to march
against and attack the
Canaanites till the men most fit
for war, and who probably had
learned the art of it in Egypt,
and had been used to hardship,
were all wasted and dead from
among the people, and only a
host of new raised men, trained
up in a wilderness, were left,
in whom, as being possessed of
little knowledge, experience, or
natural fortitude, no great
dependance could be placed. Thus
it became more fully manifest
that the excellency of the power
which subdued the warlike
Canaanites, was of God and not
of man. On the same principle,
and with the same design, long
after this, were the following
words spoken by the Lord to
Gideon: The people that are with
thee are too many for me to give
the Midianites into their hands,
lest Israel vaunt themselves
against me, saying, Mine own
hand hath saved me. And thus, to
subdue the enemies of God’s
church, and bring sinners to the
obedience of the faith, he hath
chosen the weak things of the
world, and things that are
despised, and things that are
not, to bring to naught the
things that are, that no flesh
may glory in his presence.
Verse 23
Deuteronomy 2:23. And the Avims
which dwelt in Hazerim — This is
another instance of God’s
disposal of countries unto what
people he pleases. The Avims are
mentioned Joshua 13:3, as the
ancient inhabitants of
Palestine. The Caphtorims — A
people akin to, or a branch of,
the Philistines, so called,
probably, from their founder,
who settled in Caphtor, a
country in or about Egypt, see
Genesis 10:14. By producing
these instances of God’s
displacing one people, and
settling another in their stead,
Moses designed to strengthen the
faith of the Israelites in the
divine promise of giving them
the victory over all their
enemies, and settling them in
the land of Canaan.
Verse 25
Deuteronomy 2:25. Upon the
nations that are under the whole
heaven — That is, upon as many
as shall hear of these
conquests, for to such the
following words restrain the
sentence; especially upon the
Canaanites, whose courage would
droop at the news of such an
absolute victory gained so near
them, Joshua 2:10-11.
Verse 26
Deuteronomy 2:26. I sent
messengers unto Sihon — To show
the prince of the Amorites that
we were not aggressors, and
offered no violence, and that,
if he refused to grant us a
passage through his land, his
destruction would be of himself.
Kedemoth was a city of that
tract which fell to the lot of
the Reubenites.
Verse 28
Deuteronomy 2:28. On my feet —
Or, with my company who are on
foot, which is added
significantly, because, if their
army had consisted as much of
horsemen as many other armies
did, their passage through this
land might have been more
mischievous and dangerous.
Verse 29-30
Deuteronomy 2:29-30. As the
children of Esau did — They did
permit them to pass quietly by
the borders, though not through
the heart of their land, and in
their passage the people sold
them meat and drink, being, it
seems, more kind to them than
their king would have had them;
and therefore they here ascribe
this favour not to the king,
though they are now treating
with a king, but to the people,
the children of Esau. Hardened
his spirit — That is, suffered
it to be hardened.
Verse 34
Deuteronomy 2:34. Utterly
destroyed — By God’s command,
these being a part of those
people who were devoted by the
Lord of life and death to utter
destruction for their abominable
wickedness.
Verse 37
Deuteronomy 2:37. Of Jabbok —
That is, beyond Jabbok; for that
was the border of the Ammonites. |