Verses 1-3
Deuteronomy 21:1-3. Lying in the
field — Or, in the city, or any
place: only the field is named
as the place where such murders
are most commonly committed. Thy
elders and judges — Those of thy
elders who are judges: the
judges or rulers of all the
neighbouring cities. Measure —
Unless it be evident which city
is nearest; for then measuring
was superfluous. Which hath not
drawn in the yoke — A fit
representation of the murderer,
in whose stead it was killed,
who would not bear the yoke of
God’s laws. A type also of
Christ, who was under no yoke
but what he had voluntarily
taken upon himself.
Verse 4
Deuteronomy 21:4. Unto a rough
valley — The Hebrew word נחל,
nachal, here used, signifies
either a valley or a torrent;
and most probably is here meant
of a valley with a brook running
through it. For (Deuteronomy
21:6) the elders are required to
wash their hands over the
heifer, which seems to intimate
that there was running water in
the place. Which is neither
eared nor sown — Rough,
uncultivated ground, fitly
representing the horribleness of
the murder. The Jews say, that
unless, after this, the murderer
was found, this valley was never
to be tilled nor sown, which
made the owners of the ground
employ their utmost diligence to
find out the murderer, that
their land might not be waste
for ever. But it is more natural
to suppose, that such a rough
and waste place was chosen
partly that the horridness of it
might beget a horror of the
murder, and of the murderer, and
partly because the blood of the
victim would have polluted
cultivated ground. For, though
not slain at the altar, this was
a kind of expiatory sacrifice,
whereby the land was to be
purged from the legal pollution
contracted by the murder; and
such sacrifices rendered every
person or thing unclean that
touched them. Shall strike off
the heifer’s neck — To show what
they should and would have done
to the murderer, if they had
found him.
Verse 5-6
Deuteronomy 21:5-6. By their
word shall every controversy be
tried — That is, every one of
this kind, every one that shall
arise about any stroke, whether
such a mortal stroke as is here
spoken of, or any other, or
wound given by one man to
another. In these matters they
shall give sentence, being
consulted by the elders or
judges of the cities,
Deuteronomy 17:9-12. The elders
shall wash their hands —
Protesting their innocence, says
a learned Jewish writer, (Chazkuni,)
in these words: “As our hands
are now clean, so are we
innocent of the blood which has
been shed.” See an allusion to
this, Psalms 26:6; Matthew
27:24.
Verse 7-8
Deuteronomy 21:7-8. They shall
answer — To the priests who
shall examine them. This blood —
This about which the present
inquiry is made; or this which
is here present: for it is
thought the corpse of the slain
man was brought into the same
place where the heifer was
slain. Nor have we seen or
understood how or by whom this
was done. Forgiven — Though
there was no moral guilt in this
people, yet there was a
ceremonial uncleanness in the
land, which was to be expiated
and forgiven.
Verse 9
Deuteronomy 21:9. So shalt thou
put away the guilt of innocent
blood — Till this was done, the
guilt was to be looked upon as
national; but upon this being
solemnly performed, the
government was deemed to have
done its duty, and the nation
cleared of all guilt in this
matter. No doubt the chief end
of the appointment of this
ceremony was to beget and
preserve in the minds of men an
abhorrence of murder, and a care
to prevent or detect it.
Verse 11
Deuteronomy 21:11. And hast a
desire unto her — Moses here
returning to the case of war
with the neighbouring nations,
directs that, if a Hebrew
soldier conceived a peculiar
regard for a captive woman, and
desired to marry her, he must
not do it immediately after she
became his prisoner, it being of
dangerous consequence for the
Israelites to marry Gentile
wives. He was first to keep the
woman in his house for a month,
at least, where she was to live
in the retirement and habit of a
mourner, for the loss of her
parents and her country; as also
to give her time to be
instructed in the knowledge of
the true God and his will, and
renounce her idolatrous worship,
and to allow him sufficient
space to try whether his
affection for her was calm and
steady, or might cool and wear
off. If this interval caused no
abatement of his love, but, upon
her turning proselyte, he still
desired to make her his wife, he
might then lawfully do it.
Verse 12-13
Deuteronomy 21:12-13. She shall
shave her head — This was one of
the external signs of mourning,
Leviticus 19:27; Leviticus 21:5.
Shall pare her nails — This also
seems to have been done in
mourning. In the original it is,
Shall make her nails, which may
be understood of letting her
nails grow, which to us seems
more suitable to a state of
mourning. But this is to be
resolved entirely into the
fashion of countries. Poole
thinks that both of these things
were rather to be done in token
of her renouncing her heathenish
idolatry and superstition, and
of her becoming a new woman, and
embracing the true religion. She
shall put the raiment of her
captivity off from her —
That is, as the French renders
the words more clearly, the
raiment which she wore when she
was taken captive. Instead of
the fine clothes wherein she had
been taken captive, she was to
put on sordid apparel, which was
the habit of mourners. And shall
bewail her father and her mother
— Either their death, or, which
was in effect the same, her
final separation from them,
being now to forget all her
former relations.
Verse 14
Deuteronomy 21:14. If thou have
no delight in her — The sense
may either be, 1st, If, after he
had afflicted her, by making her
shave her head, change her
garments, &c., and keeping her a
full month in hope of marriage,
he should change his mind and
refuse to marry her: or, 2d, If,
after he had married her, and
she had been his wife some time,
he should conceive a dislike to
her, and resolve to part with
her; in either of these cases it
was not to be in his power to
use her as a prisoner of war, by
either selling her for money, or
making her a slave, but he was
to give her her liberty, and let
her dispose or herself as she
pleased. “The wisdom and
humanity of Moses,” says Philo,
“are very remarkable in this
law, whereby the soldiers are
forbidden to indulge a hasty and
brutal passion, are kept a whole
month in abstinence, and thereby
have an opportunity given them
of knowing the temper and
disposition of the woman, for
whose misfortune in captivity a
compassionate provision is made,
by allowing her so long a time
of separation and mourning.”
Verse 15
Deuteronomy 21:15. If a man have
two wives — This practice,
though tolerated, is not hereby
made lawful; but only provision
is made for the children in that
case. Hated — Comparatively,
that is, less loved.
Verse 19
Deuteronomy 21:19. His father
and mother — The consent of both
is required, to prevent the
abuse of this law to cruelty.
And it cannot reasonably be
supposed that both would agree
without the son’s abominable and
incorrigible wickedness, in
which case it seems a righteous
law, because the crime of
rebellion against his own
parents did so fully signify
what a pernicious member he
would be in the commonwealth of
Israel, who had dissolved all
his natural obligations. Unto
the elders — Which was a
sufficient caution to preserve
children from the malice of any
hard-hearted parents, because
these elders were first to
examine the cause with all
exactness, and then to pronounce
the sentence.
Verse 20
Deuteronomy 21:20. A glutton and
a drunkard — Under which two
offences others of a like or
worse nature are comprehended.
Verse 22
Deuteronomy 21:22. On a tree —
Which was done after the
malefactor was put to death some
other way; this public shame
being added to his former
punishment.
Verse 23
Deuteronomy 21:23. He is
accursed of God — He is in a
singular manner cursed and
punished by God’s appointment
with a most shameful kind of
punishment, as this was held
among the Jews and all nations;
and therefore this punishment
may suffice for him, and there
shall not be added to it that of
lying unburied. And this curse
is here appropriated to those
that are hanged, to signify
beforehand that Christ should
undergo this execrable
punishment, and be made a curse
for us, (Galatians 3:13,) which,
though it was future in respect
to men, yet was present unto
God. Defiled — Either by
inhumanity toward the dead, or
by suffering the monument of the
man’s wickedness, and of God’s
curse, to remain public a longer
time than God would have it;
whereas, it ought to be put out
of sight, and buried in
oblivion. |