Verse 1
Deuteronomy 17:1. Having spoken
of the principal services and
offerings prescribed in the law
for preventing the Israelites
from idolatrous practices, Moses
interposes a caution against
neglect or profaneness in their
own worship of the true God;
which might be committed by
offering any beast to him that
had a disease, blemish, or
defect in it. See in Leviticus
1:3. Bullock or sheep — Either
greater or smaller sacrifices,
all being comprehended under the
two most eminent kinds. All that
God receives he requires to be
perfect.
Verse 2
Deuteronomy 17:2. In
transgressing his covenant —
That is, in idolatry, as it is
explained Deuteronomy 17:3,
which is called a transgression
of God’s covenant made with
Israel, both because it was a
breach of their faith given to
God, and of that law which they
covenanted to keep; and because
it was a dissolution of that
matrimonial covenant with God, a
renouncing of God and his
worship, and a choosing other
gods.
Verse 3
Deuteronomy 17:3. The host of
heaven — Those glorious
creatures, which are to be
admired as the wonderful works
of God, but not to be set up in
God’s stead. By condemning the
most specious of all idolatries,
he intimates how absurd a thing
it is to worship stocks and
stones, the works of men’s
hands. I have not commanded —
That is, I have forbidden. Such
negative expressions are
emphatical.
Verse 6
Deuteronomy 17:6. Witnesses —
Namely, credible and competent
witnesses. The Jews rejected the
testimonies of children, women,
servants, familiar friends, or
enemies, persons of dissolute
lives or evil fame.
Verse 7
Deuteronomy 17:7. First upon him
— God thus ordered it, for the
caution of witnesses, that, if
they had, through malice or
wrath, accused him falsely, they
might now be afraid to imbrue
their hands in innocent blood;
and for the security and
satisfaction of the people in
the execution of this
punishment.
Verse 8
Deuteronomy 17:8. If there arise
a matter too hard for thee —
These words are to be considered
as addressed to the ordinary
judges, or inferior magistrates,
who were appointed in every
city. Between blood and blood —
That is, in capital causes,
whether a man hath committed
wilful or casual murder. Between
plea and plea — In civil causes,
about words or estates, when the
question is, whose cause or plea
is the better? Between stroke
and stroke — In criminal causes;
in the case of wounds or blows
inflicted by one man upon
another, of which see Exodus
21:20. Being matters of
controversy — That is, such
things being doubtful, and the
magistrates being divided in
their opinions about them. Thou
shalt get thee unto the place
which the Lord shall choose —
Namely, to set up his tabernacle
or temple there; because there
was the abode, both of their
sanhedrim, which was constituted
of priests and civil
magistrates, and of the
high-priests, who were to
consult God, by Urim, in matters
which could not be decided
otherwise.
Verse 9
Deuteronomy 17:9. Unto the
priests — That is, unto the
great council, which consisted
chiefly of the priests and
Levites, as being the best
expositors of the laws of God,
by which all those controversies
were to be decided. And the
high-priest was commonly one of
that number, comprehended here
under the priests, whereof he
was the chief. By judges, here,
seems to be meant those supreme
judges of the nation, whom God
raised up when the Israelites
were oppressed by their enemies,
such as Gideon, Jephthah,
Samson, Samuel, &c. Such judges
were, by their office, invested
with the highest authority,
civil as well as military; for
to judge Israel was to
administer justice, as well as
to command armies. Moses seems
to intimate, that the Hebrew
commonwealth was to retain,
after his death, the same form
as it had now when he was alive;
for he himself was the supreme
judge, or administrator of
justice, to whom the more
difficult causes were to be
referred, Deuteronomy 1:17. So
Joshua was judge after him, and
many other.
Verses 10-12
Deuteronomy 17:10-12. Thou shalt
do according to the sentence —
He speaks, 1st, To the inferior
magistrates, who, in the suits
here referred to between man and
man, were to give sentence in
their lower courts, according to
the decision of the great
council, or of the supreme
judge, and were to take care
that that sentence should be
carried into execution; and, 2d,
To private persons, who, in such
cases, are required to acquiesce
in the judgment of those whom
God had made the supreme
interpreters of his law, and to
conform themselves to the
sentence passed. The man that
will do presumptuously — If an
inferior judge should presume to
contradict the sentence of the
higher court, given according to
God’s law, and would not execute
the orders of it; or if a
private person should refuse to
conform himself to their
sentence, that contumacy was to
be punished with death, though
the matter were ever so small in
which the opposition was made.
For unless the parties concerned
had been strongly bound to obey
the definitive sentence of the
judge, priest, or great council,
in such matters, there would
have been no end of strife. And
thou shalt put away the evil —
The evil thing, that scandal,
that pernicious example.
Verse 13
Deuteronomy 17:13. When thou
shalt say, I will set a king
over me — He only foresees and
foretels what they would do, but
does not hereby signify that he
should approve of it. Yea, when
they did this thing, for the
very reason here assigned, God
declared his utter
disapprobation of it.
Verse 15
Deuteronomy 17:15. Whom the Lord
thy God shall choose — Approve
of, or appoint. So it was in
Saul and David. God reserved to
himself the nomination both of
the family and of the person.
Thy brethren — Of the same
nation and religion; because
such a person was most likely to
maintain true religion, and to
rule with righteousness,
gentleness, and kindness to his
subjects; and that he might be a
fit type of Christ, their
supreme king, who was to be one
of their brethren.
Verse 16
Deuteronomy 17:16. He shall not
multiply horses — Though he
might have horses for his own
use, yet he was not to have many
horses for his officers and
guard, much less for war, lest
he should trust in them. The
multiplying horses is also
forbidden, lest it should raise
too great a correspondence with
Egypt, which furnished Canaan
with them. The Lord hath said —
The Lord hath now said to me,
and I, by his command, declare
it to you. Ye shall no more
return that way — Into Egypt,
lest ye be again infected with
her idolatries.
Verse 17
Deuteronomy 17:17. Neither shall
he multiply wives to himself —
As the manner of other kings
was, contrary to the design of
God from the beginning. That his
heart turn not away — From God
and his law, as Solomon’s did.
Neither silver nor gold — Lest
this should lift up his heart in
confidence and pride, which God
abhors, and beget in him a
contempt of his people.
They are not simply forbidden to
be rich, if God made them so,
which was the case of David,
Solomon, Jehoshaphat, and some
others; but they are forbidden,
either inordinately to desire,
or irregularly to procure great
riches, by grinding the faces of
their own subjects, or
possessing themselves, contrary
to justice, of the property of
others.
Verse 18-19
Deuteronomy 17:18-19. He shall
write — With his own hand, say
the Jews. Out of that which is
before the priests — Out of that
original, which was carefully
kept by the priests in the
sanctuary, that it might be a
perfect copy, and that it might
have the greater influence upon
him, coming to him as from the
hand and presence of God. He
shall read therein — Diligently
and constantly: neither the
greatness of his place, nor the
weight and multitude of his
business, shall excuse or hinder
him; all the days of his life —
It is not enough to have Bibles,
but we must use them, yea, use
them daily. Our souls must have
constant meals of that manna,
which, if well digested, will
afford them true nourishment and
strength.
Verse 20
Deuteronomy 17:20. That his
heart be not lifted up — He
intimates, that the Scriptures,
diligently read, are a powerful
means to keep a person humble,
because they show him that,
though a king, he is subject to
a higher monarch, to whom he
must give an account of all his
administrations, and receive
from him his sentence, agreeably
to their quality, which is
sufficient to abate the pride of
the haughtiest person in the
world. |