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												Verse 1Deuteronomy 8:1. That ye may 
												live — Comfortably and 
												prosperously, for life, in the 
												Scripture phrase, signifies more 
												than bare life, namely, 
												happiness and prosperity, 
												Genesis 17:18; 1 Samuel 25:6; 
												Leviticus 25:36; 1 Thessalonians 
												3:8. On the other hand, 
												afflictions and calamities are 
												called death, Exodus 10:17, and 
												2 Corinthians 11:23.
 
 Verse 2
 Deuteronomy 8:2. Thou shalt 
												remember — Call to mind and 
												meditate upon the wisdom and 
												goodness of God toward thee, and 
												the power exerted on thy behalf. 
												All the way which the Lord led 
												thee — All the events which 
												befell thee in the way, the 
												miraculous protections, 
												deliverances, provisions, 
												instructions, which God gave 
												thee; and withal, the severe 
												punishments of thy disobedience. 
												To know what was in thy heart — 
												That thou mightest discover 
												thyself, and manifest to others, 
												the infidelity, inconstancy, 
												hypocrisy, and perverseness 
												which lay hid in thy heart; the 
												discovery and manifestation 
												whereof God saw would be of 
												peculiar use, both to them and 
												to his church in all succeeding 
												ages. It is well for us, 
												likewise, to remember all the 
												ways both of God’s providence 
												and grace, by which he has 
												hitherto led, and still leads us 
												through the wilderness, that we 
												may trust in him, and cheerfully 
												serve him.
 
 Verse 3
 Deuteronomy 8:3. By every word 
												of the Lord doth man live — By 
												every, or any thing which God 
												appoints and blesses for this 
												end, how unlikely soever it may 
												seem to be for the support and 
												nourishment of the human frame. 
												For it is not the creature, 
												without God, that is sufficient 
												for the support of life; it is 
												only his command and blessing 
												that makes it sufficient. We 
												ought not, therefore, to fix our 
												dependance, as we are prone to 
												do, on natural causes, but to 
												remember that we depend, 
												absolutely, entirely, and 
												immediately, on him for life and 
												all things.
 
 Verse 4
 Deuteronomy 8:4. Thy raiment 
												waxed not old upon thee — The 
												common interpretation of these 
												words is, that, by a constant 
												miracle, their clothes did not 
												so much as decay, nor their foot 
												swell, or, as some render it, 
												grow callous, by so long 
												travelling in hot and stony 
												places. But Le Clerc thinks “it 
												is hardly to be imagined that 
												Moses, whose principal intention 
												was to record the miracles which 
												God wrought for the Israelites 
												in the wilderness, should have 
												mentioned this so transiently, 
												and, as it were, by the by, if 
												it really had been wrought to 
												that extent, especially as it 
												would have been one of the 
												greatest of them. For there must 
												indeed have been as many 
												miracles wrought as there were 
												persons in the camp, and that 
												not only once, but daily, and 
												for the space of forty years. 
												And if we add to this, that 
												their clothes grew in proportion 
												to their stature, as in that 
												case they must have done, unless 
												they had more coats than one 
												apiece, a greater miracle can 
												hardly be conceived. He observes 
												further, that God is never wont 
												to work miracles unless they be 
												quite necessary; yet here is one 
												of the greatest miracles without 
												any necessity at all. For, as 
												the Israelites had flocks of 
												sheep and goats in the 
												wilderness, and certainly were 
												not ignorant of the art of 
												weaving, as appears from the 
												curious work of the tabernacle, 
												and as nothing hindered them 
												from trafficking with their 
												Arabian neighbours, it is 
												evident they might have been 
												supplied with clothes in the 
												common way, either by making or 
												purchasing them. This being the 
												case, is it not as reasonable to 
												believe that God would have fed 
												the Israelites with manna, after 
												their settlement in Canaan, as 
												that he would have preserved 
												their clothes from decay, during 
												their abode in the wilderness, 
												when there was no necessity for 
												their being thus clothed by a 
												miracle?” He therefore explains 
												Moses’s words thus: Thy raiment 
												waxed not old — That is, 
												“Providence has been so liberal 
												in supplying your wants in this 
												desert land, that you have never 
												been under the necessity of 
												letting your clothes grow old 
												upon your backs, but have always 
												been supplied with new before 
												the old were worn out. Nor did 
												your feet swell — Namely, for 
												want of shoes to defend them.” 
												Agreeably to this 
												interpretation, in Deuteronomy 
												29:5, instead of Thy foot did 
												not swell, it is, Thy shoe did 
												not wax old upon thy feet; that 
												is, “You were not reduced, 
												through poverty, to wear shoes 
												till they were grown so old and 
												torn that they could not defend 
												your feet against tumours, and 
												other inconveniences, arising 
												from heat and rugged ways.” This 
												interpretation, it must be 
												observed, is not peculiar to Le 
												Clerc; Spanheim, Burman, Bynĉus, 
												Budĉus, Calmet, and many others 
												have adopted it.
 
 Verse 5
 Deuteronomy 8:5. As a man 
												chasteneth his son — That is, 
												unwillingly, being constrained 
												by necessity; moderately, in 
												judgment remembering mercy; and 
												for his reformation, not his 
												destruction.
 
 Verses 7-9
 Deuteronomy 8:7-9. Depths — Deep 
												wells, or springs, or lakes, 
												which were numerous and large. 
												Whose stones are iron — Where 
												iron mines are as plentiful as 
												quarries of stone are in other 
												places. Thou mayest dig brass — 
												That is, copper, of which brass 
												is made.
 
 Verse 10
 Deuteronomy 8:10. Bless the Lord 
												— Solemnly praise him for thy 
												food; which is a debt both of 
												gratitude and justice, because 
												it is from his providence and 
												favour that thou receivest both 
												thy food and refreshment, and 
												strength by it. The more 
												unworthy and absurd is that too 
												common profaneness of them, who, 
												professing to believe in God, 
												from whom all their comforts 
												come, grudge to own him at their 
												meals, either by desiring his 
												blessing before them, or by 
												offering due praise to God after 
												them.
 
 Verse 14
 Deuteronomy 8:14. Lifted up — As 
												if thou didst receive and enjoy 
												these things, either by thy own 
												wisdom, and valour, and 
												industry, or by thy own merit.
 
 Verse 16
 Deuteronomy 8:16. That he might 
												humble thee — By keeping thee in 
												constant dependance upon himself 
												for every day’s food, and 
												convincing thee what an 
												impotent, helpless creature thou 
												art, having nothing whereon to 
												subsist, and being supported 
												wholly by the alms of divine 
												goodness from day to day. The 
												mercies of God, if duly 
												considered, are as powerful a 
												means to humble us as the 
												greatest afflictions, because 
												they increase our debts to God, 
												and manifest our dependance upon 
												him, and by making God great, 
												they make us little in our own 
												eyes. To do thee good — That is, 
												that after he hath purged and 
												prepared thee by afflictions, 
												thou mayest receive and enjoy 
												his blessings with less 
												disadvantage, while by the 
												remembrance of former 
												afflictions thou art made 
												thankful for those blessings, 
												and more cautious not to abuse 
												them.
 
 Verse 20
 Deuteronomy 8:20. So shall ye 
												perish — Assure yourselves, if 
												you apostatize from the worship 
												and service of God, and relapse 
												into idolatry, irreligion, or 
												vice, your nation will be 
												involved in the same ruin and 
												destruction that you are now 
												going to execute upon the 
												Canaanites for the like national 
												sins. These cautions and 
												exhortations which Moses here so 
												forcibly and pathetically gives 
												to the Israelites ought to be 
												well observed and laid to heart 
												by us all, to every one of whom 
												they are equally necessary.
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