Verse 1
Deuteronomy 29:1. These are the
words of the covenant — Having
thus repeated and enlarged upon
the laws formerly delivered at
Horeb, shown this new generation
the covenant they were under,
and the time and manner of their
renewing it after they had
entered Canaan; and having thus
pathetically expatiated on the
blessings and curses annexed to
it, Moses summoned again the
whole assembly, to press them to
a careful obedience by
considerations of the most
powerful nature. Besides the
covenant which he made with them
in Horeb — Not a different
covenant from that Exodus
24:3-8, but a renewal of the
same, with some additions.
Verse 2
Deuteronomy 29:2. Ye have seen
all that the Lord did — Some of
them had seen, when they were
young, the plagues which God had
brought upon Pharaoh and his
people, in order to accomplish
their deliverance; and others
from them had understood these
things, which is often termed
seeing, both in the Scriptures
and elsewhere.
Verse 4
Deuteronomy 29:4. The Lord hath
not given you a heart to
perceive — Which he would have
done had you sincerely and
earnestly desired and asked it
of him; and you are inexcusable
that you have not, considering
his signal mercies on the one
hand, and awful judgments on the
other, of which you have had
such great experience, and which
called loudly upon you to humble
yourselves before him in true
repentance, and seek his grace
to enable you to understand and
improve by such extraordinary
dispensations and wonderful
works. For he does not speak
thus to excuse their wickedness,
but to direct them to whom they
must have recourse for a good
understanding of God’s works;
and to intimate that although
the hearing ear, and the seeing
eye, be the workmanship of God,
yet their want of these was
their own fault, and the just
punishment of their former sins;
their present case being like
theirs in Isaiah’s time, who
first shut their own eyes and
ears that they might not see and
hear, and would not understand,
and then, by the righteous
judgment of God, had their eyes
and ears closed that they should
not see, and hear, and
understand. God’s readiness to
do us good in other things, is a
plain evidence, that if we have
not grace, that best of gifts,
it is our own fault and not his:
he would have gathered us, and
we would not.
Verse 5-6
Deuteronomy 29:5-6. Your clothes
waxed not old — See on
Deuteronomy 8:4.
Ye have not eaten bread — Common
bread purchased by your own
money, procured by your own
labour, or made by your own
hands, but heavenly and
angelical bread. Neither have ye
drunk wine — But only water out
of the rock, and the water was
made both pleasant and
refreshing. The meaning is, that
they were not nourished by the
ordinary means of sustenance,
but were constantly supported by
a miraculous supply from God,
who graciously fed them for a
course of years without any
labour of their own. That I am
the Lord — That I am Jehovah,
that is, the Being who can bring
to pass whatever I will, (see on
Exodus 6:3,) omnipotent and
all-sufficient to provide for
you without the help of any
creatures, and your God, in
covenant with you, who have a
true affection to you, and a
fatherly care of you.
Verses 10-12
Deuteronomy 29:10-12. Ye stand —
before the Lord your God — They
were assembled at the
tabernacle, from whence he
delivered these words to them by
the priests and Levites,
Deuteronomy 27:9; Deuteronomy
27:14. Thy stranger —
Such strangers as had embraced
their religion: all sorts of
persons, yea, even the meanest
of them. Into covenant, and into
his oath — A covenant confirmed
by a solemn oath. Hebrew, באלתו,
bealatho, his adjuration,
execration, or curse; for they
entered into this covenant with
imprecations upon themselves if
they did not perform faithfully
their engagements.
Verse 13
Deuteronomy 29:13. That he may
establish thee — Here is the
summary of that covenant whereof
Moses was the mediator; and in
the covenant relation between
God and them, all the precepts
and promises of the covenant are
included. That they should be
established for a people to him,
to fear, love, obey, and be
devoted to him, and that he
should be to them a God, to make
them holy and happy; and a due
sense of the relation we stand
in to God as our God, and the
obligation we are under to him
as his people, is enough to
bring us to all the duties and
all the comforts of the
covenant. And does this covenant
include nothing spiritual?
nothing that refers to eternity?
Verse 15
Deuteronomy 29:15. So also with
him that is not here — With your
posterity. For so the covenant
was made at first with Abraham
and his seed, by which, as God
engaged himself to continue the
blessing of Abraham upon his
posterity, so he also engaged
them to the same duties which
were required of Abraham. Thus
it is even among men: where a
king confers an estate upon a
subject and his heirs for ever,
upon some certain conditions,
all his heirs who enjoy that
benefit are obliged to the same
conditions. It may likewise
include those who were then
constrained to be absent by
sickness, or any necessary
occasion. Nay, one of the
Chaldee paraphrasts reads it,
“All the generations that have
been from the first days of the
world, and all that shall arise
to the end of the whole world,
stand with us here this day.”
And thus, taking this covenant
as a typical dispensation of the
covenant of grace, it is a noble
testimony to the Mediator of
that covenant, who is the same
yesterday, to-day, and forever.
Verse 16
Deuteronomy 29:16. Egypt — Where
you have seen their idolatries,
and learned too much of them, as
the golden calf showed, and
therefore have need to renew
your covenant with God; where
also we were in dreadful
bondage, whence God alone hath
delivered us; to whom therefore
we are deeply obliged, and have
all reason to renew our covenant
with him. We came through the
nations — With what hazard, if
God had not appeared for us!
Verse 18
Deuteronomy 29:18. Lest there be
among you man or woman — These
words are to be considered as
connected with Deuteronomy
29:14-15, and as signifying the
end for which he engaged them to
renew their covenant with God,
that none of them might revolt
from him to serve other gods.
Lest there should be a root — An
evil heart inclining you to such
cursed idolatry, and bringing
forth bitter fruits: or rather,
some secret or subtle apostate
from the true God and his
religion, secretly lurking and
working as a root under ground,
and spreading his poison to the
infection of others; for both
the foregoing and following
words speak of some particular
person. Gall and wormwood —
Which though for the present it
may please his fancy, yet in the
end will produce bitter fruits;
not only distasteful to God, but
also destructive to yourselves.
The word which we translate
gall, is thought to signify some
noxious and poisonous herb, but
what herb, is difficult to say.
It is rendered hemlock, (Hosea
10:4,) and is commonly joined
with wormwood, as here, Jeremiah
9:15; Lamentations 3:19; Amos
6:12. To this passage the
apostle alludes Hebrews 12:15,
Lest any root of bitterness
springing up trouble you.
Verse 19
Deuteronomy 29:19. The words of
this curse — This oath and
execration, wherein he swore he
would keep covenant with God,
and that with a curse pronounced
against himself if he did not
perform it. Bless himself —
Flatter himself in his own eyes
with vain hopes, as if God did
not mind such things, and either
could not, or would not punish
them. Peace — Safety and
prosperity. My own heart —
Though I do not follow God’s
command, but my own devices. To
add drunkenness to thirst — The
words may be rendered, to add
thirst to drunkenness, and so
the sense may be, that when he
hath multiplied his sins, and
made himself as it were drunk
with them, yet he is not
satisfied therewith, but still
whets his appetite, and provokes
his thirst after more, as
drunkards often use means to
make themselves thirst after
more drink. This is well
deserving of our most serious
consideration. Moses here
assures the Israelites that, how
much soever they might flatter
themselves with hopes of peace
and safety on account of their
privileges, none of these would
avail them at all if they
forsook the law of God, and
apostatized from his worship and
service. This people, however,
notwithstanding this solemn
warning, did, in after ages,
confide in those outward
privileges, and that at a time
when they lived in the open
violation of the divine
commands. The temple, the temple
of the Lord! was their cry and
their confidence, as if the
having that among them had been
sufficient to save and render
them prosperous and happy, even
although they defiled it with
their abominations. But they
found, by sad experience, that
the threatenings denounced by
Moses against the violators of
God’s law were fulfilled. Let us
all take warning by this, and
neither as a nation nor as
individuals dare to promise
ourselves security and peace
while we walk in the imagination
of our own hearts, and live in
sin and forgetfulness of God.
Verse 20-21
Deuteronomy 29:20-21. His
jealousy shall smoke against
that man — Shall burn and break
forth like flame and smoke from
a furnace. None shall be
punished more exemplarily than
those who abuse the goodness of
God, and turn his grace into
wantonness. Shall blot out his
name — Shall destroy his person
and the remembrance of him from
among men, suffering no
posterity to survive him, to
perpetuate his name or memory.
Shall separate him unto evil —
Unto some exemplary plague; he
will make him a monument of his
displeasure to the whole land.
According to all the curses of
the covenant — For the covenant
made with them, though a
covenant of grace, had curses as
well as blessings belonging to
it, however averse the person
here referred to might be to
believe it.
Verse 22-23
Deuteronomy 29:22-23. So that
the generation — Hebrew And the
generation: for it appears to be
a new paragraph, the sense
whereof is, Whenever your
wickedness shall arrive at such
a height as to bring upon your
nation the terrible desolations
before spoken of, all
considerate people around you
will be convinced that it is the
effect of the just judgment of
God upon your disobedience to
his laws, and a perfect
fulfilment of the very threats
now left on record. The whole
land is brimstone and salt — Is
burned up and made barren for
the sins of its inhabitants.
Verse 26
Deuteronomy 29:26. Whom he had
not given — For their worship,
but had divided unto all
nations, for their use and
service. So he speaks here of
the sun, and moon, and stars,
which were the principal gods
worshipped by the neighbouring
nations.
Verse 29
Deuteronomy 29:29. Secret things
belong unto the Lord our God —
That is, the counsels and
purposes of God concerning
persons or nations, and the
reasons of his dispensations
toward them, together with the
time and manner of inflicting
judgments or showing mercy, are
hidden in his own bosom, and not
to be pried into, much less
fathomed, by us. But those which
are revealed — Namely, that if
we rebel against him he will
pour out all these judgments
upon us, except by true
repentance and turning to him we
prevent it. Belong to us and to
our children — Are the proper
objects of our inquiries, that
thereby we may know our duty,
and, by complying with it, may
be kept from such terrible
calamities as these now
mentioned. To explain this a
little further: Having mentioned
the amazing judgments of God
upon the whole land and people
of Israel, and foreseeing the
utter extirpation which would
come upon them for their
wickedness, he makes this
declaration, either to check the
curiosity of such as would be
ready to inquire into the time
and manner of so great an event,
or to satisfy the scruples of
those who, perceiving God to
deal so severely with his own
people, when in the mean time he
suffered those nations which
were guilty of grosser idolatry
and impiety than the generality
of the Jews were, to live and
prosper in the world, might
thence take occasion to deny his
providence, or question the
equity of his proceedings. The
ways and judgments of God, he
says, though never unjust, are
often hidden from us,
unsearchable by our shallow
capacity, and matter for our
admiration, not our inquiry: but
the things which are revealed by
God in his word must be attended
to and considered, that we may
be duly influenced by them. Thus
Moses concludes his prophecy of
the rejection of the Jews, just
as St. Paul concludes his
discourse on the same subject,
when it began to be fulfilled,
exclaiming, in a manner equally
pathetical, How unsearchable are
his judgments, and his ways past
finding out! Romans 11:33. |