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												Verse 1Deuteronomy 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.
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