| 
												
												Verse 1-2Leviticus 26:1-2. The substance 
												of their religious laws are here 
												recapitulated in two chief 
												articles, on which all the rest 
												very much depended; and God, by 
												Moses, inculcates upon them, 
												1st, A careful abhorrence of all 
												idolatrous worship, especially 
												that of image-worship of every 
												kind, which had often been 
												forbidden before; and, 2d, An 
												exact celebration of the sabbath, 
												and all other religious 
												festivals; and a punctual regard 
												to God’s worship, according to 
												the stated ordinances to be 
												observed in the tabernacle 
												service; and all this as a means 
												to preserve them from the 
												corruptions and superstitions of 
												the rest of the world.
 
 Ye shall make no idols — Hebrew, 
												אלילם elilim, things of naught; 
												the same word which occurs 
												Leviticus 19:4. Nor graven image 
												— פסל, phesel; which signifies 
												any image hewn out of wood or 
												stone. These images, being 
												consecrated by certain 
												ceremonies, were conceived to be 
												shrines or mansions of some 
												deity, and upon that account 
												were worshipped by the Gentiles. 
												A standing image — These were a 
												kind of rude stones or pillars 
												which the heathen erected to 
												their gods, and to which they 
												paid divine honours. Any image 
												of stone — אבן משׁכית, Eben 
												mashchith; stone of figure, 
												device, or portraiture; or 
												figured stone, or stone of 
												picture, as we read in the 
												margin; like those in use among 
												the Egyptians, which were full 
												of hieroglyphics, expressing 
												some fancied perfections of 
												their gods. Some, without any 
												authority from the original, 
												would render the words, a stone 
												set up. The simply setting up 
												pillars, or even images, was not 
												prohibited; but only the setting 
												them up to worship them.
 
 Reverence my sanctuary — By 
												purging and preserving it from 
												all uncleanness, by approaching 
												to it, and managing all the 
												services of it with reverence, 
												and in such manner only as God 
												hath appointed.
 
 Verse 3-4
 Leviticus 26:3-4. If ye walk in 
												my statutes, &c. — In reward of 
												their obedience, God promises 
												them temporal prosperity in 
												every instance that could render 
												a nation happy. And, first, he 
												assures them they should have 
												fruitful seasons, here expressed 
												by giving them rain in due time 
												— Because, in Canaan and Syria, 
												they were wont to have hardly 
												any rain but at two stated 
												seasons; in the end of autumn, 
												at seed-time; and in spring, 
												before harvest; termed the 
												former and latter rain, Jeremiah 
												5:24; without which, the year 
												was quite barren. For God did 
												not place his people in a land 
												where there were such rivers as 
												the Nile to water it, and render 
												it fruitful; but in a land which 
												depended wholly upon the rain of 
												heaven, the key whereof God kept 
												in his own hand, that so he 
												might the more effectually 
												oblige them to obedience, in 
												which their happiness consisted.
 
 Verse 5
 Leviticus 26:5. Threshing shall 
												reach unto the vintage, &c. — 
												That is, you shall have such 
												plenty of corn, that before you 
												shall have reaped and threshed 
												it out, the vintage will be 
												ready; and before you shall have 
												pressed out your wine it will be 
												time to sow again. Thus they 
												should scarcely have time enough 
												to receive one blessing before 
												another came upon them. A 
												similar promise is made Amos 
												9:13; The ploughman shall 
												overtake the reaper, and the 
												treader of grapes him that 
												soweth seed.
 
 Verse 6
 Leviticus 26:6. I will give 
												peace in the land, &c. — As God 
												promises to bless them with 
												plenty, so also to protect them 
												in the secure enjoyment of it. 
												None shall make you afraid — You 
												shall be kept from the invasions 
												of enemies from abroad, and from 
												the annoyance of man and beast 
												at home. A very beautiful and 
												striking picture this of 
												national tranquillity.
 
 Verse 8-9
 Leviticus 26:8-9. Five of you 
												shall chase a hundred — A 
												proverbial expression, 
												signifying that a small number 
												of them should be an over-match 
												for many of their enemies. I 
												will establish my covenant — 
												Will actually perform all that I 
												have promised in my covenant 
												made with you.
 
 Verses 11-13
 Leviticus 26:11-13. I will set 
												my tabernacle among you — To 
												crown all their blessings, God 
												promises that his special 
												presence, whereof the tabernacle 
												was a symbol, should abide with 
												them. I will walk among you — As 
												I have hitherto done, both by my 
												pillar of cloud and fire, and by 
												my tabernacle, which have walked 
												or gone along with you in all 
												your journeys, and stayed among 
												you in all your stations, to 
												protect, conduct, instruct, and 
												comfort you. And I will own you 
												for that peculiar people which I 
												have singled out of mankind, to 
												bless you here, and to save you 
												hereafter. Made you go upright — 
												With heads lifted up, not 
												pressed down with a yoke. It 
												denotes their liberty, security, 
												confidence, and glory.
 
 Verse 14
 Leviticus 26:14. If ye will not 
												hearken, &c. — If, 
												notwithstanding these great 
												promises, which were designed to 
												work upon their gratitude and 
												obedience, they should generally 
												become transgressors of his 
												laws, God threatens that they 
												should be visited with as 
												extraordinary plagues; with 
												poverty and vexation at home, 
												and alarms of war and 
												destruction from foreign 
												enemies, such as would dispirit 
												and rob them of all true 
												comfort, even in the land of 
												promise.
 
 Verse 15
 Leviticus 26:15. Break my 
												covenant — That is, your part of 
												the covenant made between me and 
												you, and thereby discharge me 
												from giving you the blessings 
												promised on my part.
 
 Verse 16
 Leviticus 26:16. I will appoint 
												over you terror — The original 
												word, בהלה, behalah, properly 
												signifies a sudden and grievous 
												consternation, and may be 
												intended to denote that slavish 
												fear, pusillanimity, and 
												dejection which are consequent 
												on the loss of confidence in 
												God, and the testimony of a good 
												conscience. Consumption — The 
												word שׁחפת, shachpeth, thus 
												rendered here, and Deuteronomy 
												28:22, is of very uncertain 
												signification. In the Septuagint 
												it is translated ψωραν, psoran, 
												a scab, scall, the itch, or some 
												cutaneous eruption, perhaps the 
												small pox, or some such grievous 
												complaint. The burning ague (or 
												fever, as the word קדחת, 
												kaddachath evidently signifies) 
												that shall consume the eyes, and 
												cause sorrow of heart — Two 
												remarkable effects of this 
												distemper, when it continues 
												long. It eminently weakens the 
												sight, and sinks the spirits. 
												All chronical diseases are here 
												included in the consumption, all 
												acute in the burning ague or 
												fever.
 
 Verse 19-20
 Leviticus 26:19-20. The pride of 
												your power — That is, your 
												strength, of which you are 
												proud, your numerous and united 
												forces, your kingdom, yea, your 
												ark and sanctuary. I will make 
												your heaven as iron — The 
												heavens shall yield you no rain, 
												nor the earth, fruits. Your 
												strength shall be spent in vain 
												— In ploughing, and sowing, and 
												tilling the ground.
 
 Verse 21
 Leviticus 26:21. If ye walk 
												contrary to me — Hebrews קרי, 
												keri, from קרה, karah, it 
												happened. If ye walk with me by 
												accident, or chance, or, as it 
												happens. The ancient versions, 
												however, favour our translation: 
												according to which rendering, 
												the word implies contumacy, or 
												continuing to rebel against God 
												after he should chastise them 
												for their sins, Job 15:25. The 
												Jews follow the other sense, and 
												expound it of those who, when 
												they are afflicted by God, look 
												on their sufferings as casual 
												and contingent things, rather 
												than as divine chastisements, to 
												correct, amend, and bring them 
												to repentance. Seven times more 
												plagues — I will visit your 
												obstinate impenitence with new 
												and more grievous plagues.
 
 Verse 24
 Leviticus 26:24. I will walk 
												contrary to you — Hebrews I will 
												walk with you by chance; an 
												Hebraism, importing that God 
												would seem to leave their 
												affairs in apparent disorder, as 
												if they were no more the objects 
												of his providential care. To 
												those who regard not the 
												operation of God’s hands, he 
												appears unconcerned about human 
												affairs; but those who have 
												spiritual discernment, and 
												understand the secret ways of 
												providence, will see reason to 
												believe that there is a spirit 
												within, full of eyes, which 
												guides and directs the wheels of 
												that vast machine, even where 
												others discern nothing but 
												irregularity and confusion.
 
 Verse 25
 Leviticus 26:25. To avenge the 
												quarrel of my covenant — That 
												is, my quarrel with you for your 
												breach of your covenant made 
												with me. When you are gathered — 
												Hebrews And ye shall be gathered 
												into your cities, &c.; that is, 
												you shall not dare to abide in 
												the country, but shall be forced 
												to flee from the sword of your 
												enemies into your fortified 
												towns, and leave your villages a 
												prey to them.
 
 Verse 26
 Leviticus 26:26. When I have 
												broken the staff of your bread — 
												By sending a famine, or scarcity 
												of bread, which is the staff and 
												support of man’s present life. 
												Ten women — That is, ten or many 
												families, for the women took 
												care for the bread and food of 
												all the family. By weight — This 
												is a sign and consequence both 
												of a famine, and of the baking 
												of the bread of several families 
												together in one oven, wherein 
												each family took care to weigh 
												their bread, and to receive the 
												same proportion which they put 
												in.
 
 Verse 28
 Leviticus 26:28. I will walk 
												contrary to you in fury, &c. — 
												Your obstinate contempt of my 
												laws shall be punished with new 
												and more grievous plagues; which 
												was fulfilled in their captivity 
												in the days of Manasseh, 
												Jehoiakim, and Zedekiah. For 
												these latter calamities were at 
												least seven times greater, both 
												for extent and duration, than 
												the former which they suffered 
												from the Philistines and 
												neighbouring nations.
 
 Verse 29
 Leviticus 26:29. Ye shall eat 
												the flesh of your sons — Through 
												extreme hunger. This is the very 
												utmost calamity that could come 
												upon a people. See it described 
												at large, and in the most lively 
												colours, Deuteronomy 28:53-57. 
												It was fulfilled, first in the 
												siege of Samaria, 2 Kings 6:29; 
												next in the siege of Jerusalem 
												before the Babylonish captivity, 
												Lamentations 4:10; and finally, 
												in the last destruction of 
												Jerusalem by the Romans.
 
 Verse 30
 Leviticus 26:30. Your high 
												places — In which you will 
												sacrifice after the manner of 
												the heathen. And cut down your 
												images — חמניכם, chamanechem; 
												some would translate this, your 
												temples of the sun; from חמה, 
												chammah, heat, or the sun. But 
												although they worshipped the 
												host of heaven, 2
 
 Kings Leviticus 17:16; and 2 
												Chronicles 33:3-5; and we read 
												of altars dedicated to them, and 
												of horses and chariots of the 
												sun, 2 Kings 23:11; it does not 
												appear that they ever had any 
												temples dedicated to the sun, 
												unless the chariots of the sun 
												might be so called, which some 
												have understood to be domus vel 
												sacella facta instar curruum, 
												little chapels made after the 
												form of chariots. Buxtorf 
												renders the word, translated 
												images in this verse, subdiales 
												statuæ, statues placed in the 
												open air, and exposed to the 
												sun; and quotes R. Salomon as 
												describing them to be images 
												which they placed on the roofs 
												of their houses, and termed 
												חמנים, chammanim. Carcasses of 
												your idols — Hebrews your 
												dung-hill idols, from גללgalal, 
												dung. Le Clerc understands it of 
												those animals which the 
												Israelites had worshipped, in 
												imitation of the Egyptians; and 
												is of opinion, that God here 
												threatens, that if ever they 
												relapsed into that beastly 
												idolatry, their carcasses should 
												be shamefully exposed in the 
												streets with the carcasses of 
												their idols. But the word 
												carcasses may signify the ruins 
												of their idols in general; the 
												broken pieces of their images. 
												Or this word may be made use of 
												to signify that their idols, how 
												specious soever, or glorious in 
												their eyes, were in truth but 
												lifeless and contemptible 
												carcasses, and should be so far 
												from helping them, that they 
												should be thrown down and broken 
												with them, and both should lie 
												together in a forlorn and 
												loathsome state. See a similar 
												threatening, Ezekiel 6:4-13; and 
												Jeremiah 8:1-2. It was in part 
												fulfilled by Josiah, 2 
												Chronicles 34:5; and 2 Kings 
												23:20.
 
 Verse 31
 Leviticus 26:31. Your 
												sanctuaries into desolation — 
												The sanctuary of God, though but 
												one, is expressed in the plural 
												number here, as it is also 
												Psalms 73:17; and Psalms 84:7; 
												Jeremiah 51:51; and Ezekiel 
												28:18; because there were divers 
												apartments in it, each of which 
												was a sanctuary, or holy place. 
												God vouchsafes not to call it 
												his own, but theirs, to show 
												that by their wickedness it 
												would be polluted and rendered 
												unworthy of him, and that 
												therefore he would disown and 
												abhor it, and all the services 
												which they should perform in it; 
												which was most awfully 
												fulfilled. The savour of your 
												sweet odours — The incense made 
												of several sweet spices, which 
												was daily offered to God in the 
												sanctuary. These, though when 
												offered to God with faith and 
												obedience they were sweet and 
												acceptable to him, he here 
												threatens he will not smell, or 
												accept, as being presented in 
												hypocrisy and unbelief. The 
												expression is metaphorical, and 
												signifies that neither their 
												prayers nor sacrifices should be 
												accepted.
 
 Verse 32-33
 Leviticus 26:32-33. Your enemies 
												which dwell therein — Having 
												driven you out, and possessed 
												your places; shall be astonished 
												at it — A strong expression, to 
												denote the dreadfulness of their 
												calamity, at which their very 
												enemies should stand amazed. A 
												sword after you — The sword 
												shall follow you into strange 
												lands, and you shall have no 
												rest there.
 
 Verse 34
 Leviticus 26:34. The land shall 
												enjoy her sabbaths — It shall 
												enjoy those sabbatical years of 
												rest from tillage, which you, 
												through covetousness, would not 
												give it: a most seasonable 
												warning this. Jeremiah 
												complains, that in his time they 
												had contemned the ordinance of 
												God respecting the septennial 
												sabbaths, and had not given 
												their servants liberty, 
												(Jeremiah 34:17,) and gives this 
												as one cause of their being 
												delivered to slavery, 
												Lamentations 1:3. And this is 
												expressly mentioned as a 
												principal reason of their 
												seventy years captivity, 2 
												Chronicles 36:21.
 
 Verse 36
 Leviticus 26:36. The sound of a 
												shaken leaf shall chase them — A 
												very significant phrase, 
												importing that they should sink 
												into a state of the most slavish 
												fear and despicable cowardice.
 
 Verse 39
 Leviticus 26:39. Shall pine away 
												— Shall languish out the 
												remainder of their days in 
												bitter grief, and sad 
												reflections upon the miseries 
												which their own and their 
												fathers’ complicated guilt has 
												brought upon them; and hereby 
												shall be consumed and melt away.
 
 Verse 41
 Leviticus 26:41. If they accept 
												of — The meaning is, if they 
												sincerely acknowledge the 
												righteousness of God and their 
												own wickedness, and patiently 
												submit to his correcting hand; 
												if, with David, they are ready 
												to say, It is good for us that 
												we are afflicted, that we may 
												learn God’s statutes — And yield 
												obedience to them for the 
												future, which is a good evidence 
												of true repentance.
 
 Verse 42
 Leviticus 26:42. I will remember 
												my covenant — So as to make good 
												all that I have promised in it. 
												For words of knowledge or 
												remembrance, in Scripture, 
												commonly denote affection and 
												kindness. I will remember the 
												land — Which now seems to be 
												forgotten and despised, as if I 
												had never chosen it to be the 
												peculiar place of my presence 
												and blessing.
 
 Verse 44
 Leviticus 26:44. For I am the 
												Lord their God — Therefore 
												neither the desperateness of 
												their condition, nor the 
												greatness of their sins, shall 
												cause me wholly to make void my 
												covenant with them and their 
												ancestors, but I will in due 
												time remember them for good, and 
												for my covenant’s sake return to 
												them in mercy. From this place 
												the Jews take great comfort, and 
												assure themselves of deliverance 
												out of their present servitude 
												and misery. And from this, and 
												such other places, St. Paul 
												concludes that the Israelitish 
												nation, though then rejected and 
												ruined, should be gathered again 
												and restored.
 
 Verse 46
 Leviticus 26:46. These are the 
												statutes, &c. — This may 
												reasonably refer to the whole 
												body of laws contained in the 
												preceding history from Exodus 
												20. And then the sense will be, 
												that from that period to this, 
												we have a complete detail of all 
												the laws, with the promises and 
												threatenings annexed to them, 
												that were at that time delivered 
												from God to the Israelites, at 
												mount Sinai, by the ministry of 
												Moses. Between him and the 
												children of Israel — Hereby his 
												communion with his church is 
												kept up. He manifests not only 
												his dominion over them, but his 
												favour to them, by giving them 
												his law. And they manifest not 
												only their holy fear, but their 
												holy love, by the observance of 
												it. And thus it is made between 
												them rather as a covenant than 
												as a law: for he draws them with 
												the cords of a man.
 |