Deuteronomy 28
PooleDeuteronomy 28:1
CHAPTER 28
The blessings of obedience, . Curses for disobedience, .
i.e. Advance and honour thee with divers privileges and blessings, as it here follows.
Deuteronomy 28:2
Those blessings which others greedily follow after, and ofttimes never overtake, they shall follow after thee, and shall be thrown into thy lap by my special kindness.
Deuteronomy 28:5
i.e. It shall always be well replenished, and the provision thou hast there shall be preserved for, and in due time brought forth to, thy use and service. See ,10.
Deuteronomy 28:6
i.e. In all thy affairs and administrations, which are oft expressed by this phrase, as 9:28.
Deuteronomy 28:7
i.e. Many ways, as is usual when an army is totally overthrown and dissipated.
Deuteronomy 28:8
Shall command, i.e. shall by his sovereign and powerful providence give it, even when it seems furthest from thee, and not likely to come to time without a word of command from God himself.
Deuteronomy 28:9
Shall establish thee an holy people unto himself, i.e. shall confirm and establish his covenant with thee, by which he separated thee to himself as a holy and peculiar people, and shall publicly own thee for such, as it follows, .
Deuteronomy 28:10
i.e. That you are in deed and truth his people and children: see 26:18. For to be called ofttimes signifies to be, as ,5 56:7 ,19 21:13.
Deuteronomy 28:11
The same things which were said before are repeated, to show that God would repeat and multiply his blessings upon them.
Deuteronomy 28:12
His good treasure, to wit, the heaven or the air, as it here follows, which is God’ s storehouse, where he treasures up rain or wind or other things for man’ s use. See .
Deuteronomy 28:13
The head; the chief of all people in power, or at least in dignity and privileges; so that even they that are not under thine authority shall reverence thy greatness and excellency. So it was in David’ s and Solomon’ s time, and so it should have been much oftener and much more, if they had performed the conditions here required. For the phrase, see ,15 19:15.
Deuteronomy 28:15
So as thou shalt not be able to escape them, as thou shalt vainly hope and endeavour to do.
Deuteronomy 28:20
Vexation, or, disturbance. This seems chiefly to concern the mind, and its torment arising from the disappointment of hopes, the presages of its approaching miseries.
Rebuke, to wit, from God, not so much in words as by his actions, by cross providences, by sharp and sore afflictions, which are oft called rebukes, as 80:16 66:15 25:17.
Deuteronomy 28:22
With blasting, and with mildew; two plagues or evil affections of corn. See .
Deuteronomy 28:23
Be brass, i.e. like brass, hard and dry, and shut up from giving rain. See .
Be iron, hard, and chapt, and barren.
Deuteronomy 28:24
Either,
-
Thy rain shall be as unprofitable to thy ground and seed as if it were only so much dust. Or,
-
Instead of rain shall come nothing but dust from heaven, which being raised and carried up by the wind in great abundance, doth return and fall upon the earth as it were in clouds or showers.
Until thou be destroyed, to wit, by famine, following these great droughts.
Deuteronomy 28:25
Removed. Heb. for a removing; to be tossed like a football from place to place, and from people to people.
Deuteronomy 28:28
Blindness, to wit, of mind, so that they shall not know what to do; see ,14; so as they shall commonly choose and follow the worst counsels and courses, to their own ruin.
Astonishment of heart; they shall be filled with wonder and horror, because of the strangeness and soreness of their calamities.
Deuteronomy 28:29
At noon-day, i.e. in the most clear and evident matters thou shalt grossly mistake and miss thy way.
Thou shalt not prosper in thy ways; thy counsels and enterprises shall be frustrated, and turn to thy destruction.
Deuteronomy 28:30
Another man shall lie with her before thou canst consummate thy marriage, and enjoy her as thy wife. And so in the following branches.
Deuteronomy 28:32
Shall be given unto another people, by those who have conquered them, and taken them captives, who shall give or sell them to other persons, as the manner was.
Fail, or, be consumed, partly with grief and plentiful tears shed for them; and partly with earnest desire, and vain and long expectation of their return. See . No might, i.e. no power to rescue them, nor money to ransom them.
Deuteronomy 28:33
Which thou knowest not; which shall come from a far country, which thou didst not at all expect or fear and therefore will be the more dreadful when they come; a nation whose language thou understandest not, and therefore canst not plead with them for mercy, nor expect any favour from them.
Oppressed and crushed alway; not sometimes conquered, and sometimes conquering, as the course of war commonly is, but in all times, and in all thy actions and attempts, foiled and worsted.
Deuteronomy 28:36
Thee and thy king: the calamity shall be both universal, which even thy king shall not be able to avoid, much less the subjects, who have far less advantage and opportunity for escape; and irrecoverable, because he who should protect or rescue them is lost with them. See .
There shalt thou serve other gods; either being corrupted by their examples and counsels, or compelled to it by their tyranny. So what formerly was their choice and delight now becomes their plague and misery. And this doubtless was the condition of many Israelites under the Assyrian and Babylonish captivities, as we may gather from , and other places, though many of them kept themselves free from that infection.
Deuteronomy 28:37
All other nations shall wonder to see such calamities befall such a people; and when they would express any dreadful affliction in a proverbial way, they shall make use of thy example: they shall also sport themselves in thy miseries, and say, These are the people of the Lord, the only saints upon earth, &c.
Deuteronomy 28:43
Within thee, i.e. within thy gates; who formerly honoured and served thee, and were some of them glad of the crumbs which fell from thy table.
Deuteronomy 28:46
They shall be, i.e. these curses now mentioned. For a wonder, i.e. signal and wonderful to all that hear of them.
Deuteronomy 28:47
Or,
in the abundance of all things; for this is opposed to in hunger, in thirst, &c., . And the Hebrew men oft signifies in, as .
Deuteronomy 28:48
A yoke of iron, which thou canst neither well bear, nor break. See ,14.
Deuteronomy 28:49
As the eagle flieth, Heb. as the eagle flies, i.e. not only swiftly, as is expressed in our translation, for which the Babylonian is noted and compared to an eagle, ; but also fiercely and greedily, as the eagle to its prey; also strongly and irresistibly. Possibly this may be understood of the Romans, who did come
from far, from the end of the earth, more truly and literally than the Chaldeans, whose country was not far from Judea, and this may allude to the eagle, which was in their ensigns.
Deuteronomy 28:50
Of fierce countenance, Heb. strong of face or countenance, i.e. bold and impudent, hardy and undaunted, cruel and uncompassionate and inflexible, sparing no age nor sex, &c.
Deuteronomy 28:54
Evil, i.e. unkind, envious, covetous, to monopolize these dainty bits to themselves, and grudging that their dearest relations should have any part of them.
Deuteronomy 28:56
Evil, i.e. unmerciful: she will desire or design their destruction for her food.
Deuteronomy 28:57
Her young one, Heb. after-birth; that which was loathsome to behold, will now be pleasant to eat; and together with it she shall eat the child which was wrapt up in it, and may be included in this expression.
Which she shall bear, or, which she shall have born, i.e. her more grown children.
Deuteronomy 28:58
Name, i. e. thing or person, to wit, this glorious God. Names are oft put for things, as 95:1 ; and for persons, as .
Deuteronomy 28:63
Rejoice over you to destroy you; his just indignation against you will be so great, that it will be a pleasure to him to take vengeance on you. For though he doth not delight in the death of a sinner in itself, yet he doth doubtless delight in the glorifying of his justice upon incorrigible sinners, seeing the exercise of all his attributes must needs please him, else he were not perfectly happy.
The land whither thou goest to possess it; which was no ordinary land, but a most pleasant land, a land of promise, a token of God’ s favour, and a pledge of their eternal inheritance, which was a great aggravation of their loss of it.
Deuteronomy 28:65
Neither shall the sole of thy foot have rest; ye shall have no settlement in the land whither you are banished, but there you shall be tossed about from place to place, and sold from person to person, or, Cain-like, wander about like a vagabond.
Deuteronomy 28:66
Either because thou art in the hands of thy enemies, that have power, and want not will, to destroy thee; or because of the terrors of thy own mind, and the guilt of thy conscience, making thee to fear, even where no great cause to fear is.
Deuteronomy 28:68
Into Egypt again, whence he hath now so gloriously delivered thee, as repenting of all his kindness to thee, and resolved to undo what he hath done for thee. And the remembrance of what they endured in Egypt could not but make the thoughts of returning thither again very terrible to them.
With ships; which was literally fulfilled under Titus, when multitudes of them were carried thither in ships, and sold there for slaves, as Josephus relates. And this expression seems to mind them of that time when they went over the sea without ships, God miraculously drying up the sea before them, &c., which now they would have occasion sadly to remember. By the way, or, to the way; the Hebrew beth here signifying to, as it doth 91:12 . And the
way seems not to be meant here of the usual road-way from Canaan to Egypt, which was wholly by land, but to be put for the end of the way or journey, even the land of Egypt; for to this, and not to the road-way between Canaan and Egypt, agree the words here following,
whereof I spake unto thee, Thou shalt see it (i.e. Egypt)
no more again. And so that way is put for to that land in a place parallel to this, where the very same words are used, , to which this place palpably alludes.
No man shall buy you; either because the number of you captives shall be so great, that the market shall be glutted with you; or because you shall be so loathsome and contemptible that men shall not be willing to have you for slaves. And this was the condition of the Jews after the destruction of Jerusalem, as Josephus the Jew hath left upon record.
