Verse 1
Deuteronomy 7:1. Seven nations —
Ten are mentioned, Genesis
15:19; but this being some
hundreds of years after, it is
not strange if three of them
were either destroyed by foreign
or domestic wars, or by
cohabitation and marriage united
with and swallowed up in the
rest.
Verse 2
Deuteronomy 7:2. Thou shalt
smite and utterly destroy them —
That is, in case they continued
obstinate in their idolatry,
they were to be destroyed, as
nations, or bodies politic. But
if they forsook their idolatry,
and became sincere proselytes to
the true religion, they would
then be proper objects of
forgiveness, as being true
penitents. For, says God
himself, by Jeremiah, (Jeremiah
7:8,) At what instant I shall
speak concerning a nation to
destroy it, if that nation turn
from their evil, I will repent
of the evil which I thought to
do unto them. Thou shalt make no
covenant with them — See Exodus
23:32; Exodus 24:12. To make a
covenant with and to spare such
incurable idolaters, would have
been cruelty to themselves and
their posterity.
Verse 3
Deuteronomy 7:3. Neither shalt
thou make marriages with them —
From this prohibition it has
been justly inferred that the
Canaanites, as individuals,
might be spared upon their
repentance and reformation from
idolatry. For on the supposition
that nothing that breathed was
to be saved alive, but that all
were to be utterly destroyed,
there could be no occasion for
this injunction. What end could
it answer to forbid all
intermarriages with a people
supposed not to exist?
Verse 4
Deuteronomy 7:4. To serve other
gods — That is, there is
manifest danger of apostacy and
idolatry from such matches.
Which reason doth both limit the
prohibition to such of these as
were unconverted, (otherwise
Salmon married Rachab, Matthew
1:5,) and also enlarges it to
other idolatrous nations, as
appears from 1 Kings 11:2; Ezra
9:2; Nehemiah 13:23.
Verse 5
Deuteronomy 7:5. Their groves —
Which idolaters planted about
the temples and altars of their
gods. Hereby God designed to
take away whatsoever might bring
their idolatry to remembrance,
or occasion the reviving of it.
Verse 7-8
Deuteronomy 7:7-8. The fewest —
To wit, at that time, when God
first declared his choice of you
for his peculiar people, which
was done to Abraham. For Abraham
had but one son concerned in
this choice and covenant,
namely, Isaac, and that was not
till he was in his hundredth
year; and Isaac was sixty years
old ere he had a child, and then
had only two children; and
though Jacob had twelve sons,
yet it was a long time before
they made any considerable
increase. Nor do we read of any
great multiplication of them
until after Joseph’s death. The
Lord loved you — It was his free
choice, without any cause or
motive on your part.
Verse 10
Deuteronomy 7:10. Them that hate
him — Not only those who hate
him directly and properly, (for
so did few or none of the
Israelites to whom he here
speaks,) but those who hate him
by implication and consequence;
those who hate and oppose his
people and word; those who
wilfully persist in the breach
of his commandments. To their
face — That is, openly, and so
as they shall see it, and not be
able to avoid it. Slack — So as
to delay it beyond the fit time
or season for vengeance, yet
withal he is long-suffering, and
slow to anger.
Verse 12-13
Deuteronomy 7:12-13. The
covenant and the mercy — That
is, the covenant of mercy, which
he, out of his own mere grace,
made with them. He will love
thee — He will continue to love
thee, and to manifest his love
to thee.
Verse 15
Deuteronomy 7:15. The diseases
of Egypt — Such as the Egyptians
were infected with, either
commonly, or miraculously. It
seems to refer not only to the
plagues of Egypt, but to some
other epidemic diseases, which
they remembered to have
prevailed among the Egyptians,
and by which God had chastised
them for their national sins.
The leprosy, and other cutaneous
distempers, were frequent in
Egypt. The Scriptures also
mention the botch of Egypt, as a
disease common in that country,
Deuteronomy 28:27. Diseases are
God’s servants, which go where
he sends them, and do what he
bids them.
Verse 18-19
Deuteronomy 7:18-19. Thou shalt
remember what the Lord thy God
did — Frequently and
considerately, for thy
encouragement; for people are
said to forget those things
which they do not remember to
good purpose. The great
temptations — The trials and
exercises of thy faith, and
obedience to my commands.
Verse 22
Deuteronomy 7:22. Thou mayest
not consume them at once — Thou
shalt not be able; I will not
assist thee with my omnipotence,
to crush them at one run of
success and victory; for you are
not yet numerous enough to
people the whole country at
once. But I will bless thee in
the use of ordinary means, and
thou shalt destroy them by
degrees, in several battles,
that thou mayest learn by
experience to put thy trust in
me.
Verse 24
Deuteronomy 7:24. No man shall
stand before thee — This promise
was conditional; they were to be
obedient and perform their duty,
and then it would be fulfilled;
but if they neglected to do
this, they would justly lose the
benefit of it.
Verse 25
Deuteronomy 7:25. The silver or
the gold — Wherewith the idols
were covered or adorned, nor
consequently any other of their
ornaments. This God commanded,
to show his utter detestation of
idolatry, and to cut off all
occasions of it.
Verse 26
Deuteronomy 7:26. Lest thou be a
cursed thing — Hebrew, חרם,
cherem, devoted to utter
destruction, as that and every
thing was that had been employed
to an idolatrous use. |