Chapter 19:
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Introduction 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 31 32 33 34 Numbers Joshua
Deuteronomy 19
Complete Concise
The laws which Moses had hitherto been repeating and urging
mostly concerned the acts of religion and devotion towards God; but here he
comes more fully to press the duties of righteousness between man and man. This
chapter relates, I. To the sixth commandment, "Thou shalt not kill"
(v. 1-13). II. To the eighth commandment, "Thou shalt not steal" (v.
14). III. To the ninth commandment, "Thou shalt not bear false witness,"
(v. 15, etc.).
Verses 1-13
It was one of the precepts given to the sons of Noah that
whoso
sheddeth man's blood by man shall his blood be shed, that is, by the
avenger of blood, Gen. 9:6. Now here we have the law settled between blood and
blood, between the blood of the murdered and the blood of the murderer, and
effectual provision made,
I. That the cities of refuge should be a protection to him that
slew another casually, so that he should not die for that as a crime which was
not his voluntary act, but only his unhappiness. The appointment of these cities
of refuge we had before (Ex. 21:13), and the law laid down concerning them at
large, Num. 35:10, etc. It is here repeated, and direction is given concerning
three things:
1. The appointing of three cities in Canaan for this purpose.
Moses had already appointed three on that side Jordan which he saw the conquest
of; and now he bids them, when they should be settled in the other part of the
country, to appoint three more, v. 1-3, 7. The country was to be divided into
three districts, as near by as might be equal, and a city of refuge in the
centre of each so that every corner of the land might have one within reach.
Thus Christ is not a refuge at a distance, which we must ascend to heaven or go
down to the deep for, but the word is nigh us, and Christ in the word, Rom.
10:8. The gospel brings salvation
to our door, and there it knocks for
admission. To make the flight of the delinquent the more easy, the way must be
prepared that led to the city of refuge. Probably they had causeways or
street-ways leading to those cities, and the Jews say that the magistrates of
Israel, upon one certain day in the year, sent out messengers to see that those
roads were in good repair, and they were to remove stumbling-blocks, mend
bridges that were broken, and, where two ways met, they were to set up a
Mercurial post, with a finger to point the right way, on which was engraven in
great letters,
Miklat, MiklatRefuge, Refuge. In allusion to this,
gospel ministers are to show people the way to Christ, and to assist and direct
them in flying by faith to him for refuge. They must be ready to remove their
prejudices, and help them over their difficulties. And, blessed be God,
the
way of holiness, to all that seek it faithfully, is a highway so plain that
the
wayfaring men, though fools, shall not err therein.
2. The use to be made of these cities, v. 4-6. (1.) It is
supposed that it might so happen that a man might be the death of his neighbour
without any design upon him either from a sudden passion or malice prepense, but
purely by accident, as by the flying off of an axe-head, which is the instance
here given, with which every case of this kind was to be compared, and by it
adjudged. See how human life lies exposed daily, and what deaths we are often
in, and what need therefore we have to be always ready, our souls being
continually in our hands. How are the sons of men
snared in an evil time,
when it falls suddenly upon them! Eccl. 9:12. An evil time indeed it is when
this happens not only to the slain but to the slayer. (2.) It is supposed that
the relations of the person slain would be forward to avenge the blood, in
affection to their friend and in zeal for public justice. Though the law did not
allow the avenging of any other affront or injury with death, yet the avenger of
blood, the blood of a relation, shall have great allowances made for the heat of
his heart upon such a provocation as that, and his killing only, should not be
accounted murder if he did it before he got to the city of refuge, though it is
owned he was not worthy of death. Thus would God possess people with a great
horror and dread of the sin of murder: if mere chance-medley did thus expose a
man, surely he that wilfully does violence to the blood of any person, whether
from an old grudge or upon a sudden provocation, must flee to the pit, and
let
no man stay him (Prov. 28:17); yet the New Testament represents the sin of
murder as more heinous and more dangerous than even this law does. 1 Jn. 3:15,
You
know that no murderer has eternal life abiding in him. (3.) It is provided
that, if an avenger of blood should be so unreasonable as to demand satisfaction
for blood shed by accident only, then the city of refuge should protect the
slayer. Sins of ignorance indeed do expose us to the wrath of God, but there is
relief provided, if by faith and repentance we make use of it. Paul that had
been a persecutor obtained mercy, because he did it ignorantly; and Christ
prayed for his crucifiers,
Father, forgive them, for they know not what they
do.
3. The appointing of three cities more for this use in case God
should hereafter enlarge their territories and the dominion of their religion,
that all those places which came under the government of the law of Moses in
other instances might enjoy the benefit of that law in this instance, v. 8-10.
Here is, (1.) An intimation of God's gracious intention to enlarge their
coast, as he had promised to their fathers, if they did not by their
disobedience forfeit the promise, the condition of which is here carefully
repeated, that, if it were not performed, the reproach might lie upon them, and
not on God. He promised to give it,
if thou shalt keep all these
commandments; not otherwise. (2.) A direction to them to appoint three
cities more in their new conquests, which, the number intimates, should be as
large as their first conquests were; wherever the border of Israel went this
privilege must attend it, that
innocent blood be not shed, v. 10. Though
God is the saviour and preserver of all men, and has a tender regard to all
lives, yet the blood of Israelites is in a particular manner precious to him,
Ps. 72:14. The learned Ainsworth observes that the Jewish writers themselves own
that, the condition not being performed, the promise of the enlarging of their
coast was never fulfilled; so that there was no occasion for ever adding these
three cities of refuge; yet the holy blessed God (say they)
did not command
it in vain, for in the days of Messiah the prince three other cities shall
be added to these six: they expect it to be fulfilled in the letter, but we know
that in Christ it has its spiritual accomplishment, for the borders of the
gospel Israel are enlarged according to the promise, and in Christ,
the Lord
our righteousness, refuge is provided for those that by faith flee to him.
II. It is provided that the cities of refuge should be no
sanctuary or shelter to a wilful murderer, but even thence he should be fetched,
and delivered to the avenger of blood, v. 11-13. 1. This shows that wilful
murder must never be protected by the civil magistrate; he bears the sword of
justice in vain if he suffers those to escape the edge of it that lie under the
guilt of blood, which he by office is the avenger of. During the dominion of the
papacy in our own land, before the Reformation, there were some churches and
religious houses (as they called them) that were made sanctuaries for the
protection of all sorts of criminals that fled to them, wilful murderers not
excepted, so that (as Stamford says, in his
Pleas of the Crown, lib. II.
c.
38) the government follows not Moses but Romulus, and it was not till about the
latter end of Henry VIII's time that this privilege of sanctuary for wilful
murder was taken away, when in that, as in other cases, the word of God came to
be regarded more than the dictates of the see of Rome. And some have thought it
would be a completing of that instance of reformation if the benefit of clergy
were taken away for man-slaughter, that is, the killing of a man upon a small
provocation, since this law allowed refuge only in case of that which our law
calls chance-medley. 2. It may be alluded to to show that in Jesus Christ there
is no refuge for presumptuous sinners, that
go on still in their trespasses.
If we thus
sin wilfully, sin and go on in it, there
remains no
sacrifice, Heb. 10:26. Those that flee to Christ from their sins shall be
safe in him, but not those that expect to be sheltered by him in their sins.
Salvation itself cannot save such: divine justice will fetch them even from the
city of refuge, the protection of which they are not entitled to.
Verses 14-21
Here is a statute for the preventing of frauds and perjuries;
for the divine law takes care of men's rights and properties, and has made a
hedge about them. Such a friend is it to human society and men's civil
interest.
I. A law against frauds, v. 14. 1. Here is an implicit direction
given to the first planters of Canaan to fix land-marks, according to the
distribution of the land to the several tribes and families by lot. Note, It is
the will of God that every one should know his own, and that all good means
should be used to prevent encroachments and the doing and suffering of wrong.
When right is settled, care must be taken that it be not afterwards unsettled,
and that, if possible, no occasion of dispute may arise. 2. An express law to
posterity not to remove those land-marks which were thus fixed at first, by
which a man secretly got that to himself which was his neighbour's. This,
without doubt, is a moral precept, and still binding, and to us it forbids, (1.)
The invading of any man's right, and taking to ourselves that which is not our
own, by any fraudulent arts or practices, as by forging, concealing, destroying,
or altering deeds and writings (which are our land-marks, to which appeals are
made), or by shifting hedges, meer-stones, and boundaries. Though the land-marks
were set by the hand of man, yet he was a thief and a robber by the law of God
that removed them. Let every man be content with his own lot, and just to his
neighbours, and then we shall have no land-marks removed. (2.) It forbids the
sowing of discord among neighbours, and doing any thing to occasion strife and
law-suits, which is done (and it is very ill done) by confounding those things
which should determine disputes and decide controversies. And, (3.) It forbids
breaking in upon the settled order and constitution of civil government, and the
altering of ancient usages without just cause. This law supports the honour of
prescriptions.
Consuetudo facit jusCustom is to be held as law.
II. A law against perjuries, which enacts two things:-1. That a
single witness should never be admitted to give evidence in a criminal cause, so
as that sentence should be passed upon his testimony, v. 15. This law we had
before, Num. 35:30, and in this book, ch. 17:6. This was enacted in favour to
the prisoner, whose life and honour should not lie at the mercy of a particular
person that had a pique against him, and for caution to the accuser not to say
that which he could not corroborate by the testimony of another. It is a just
shame which this law puts upon mankind as false and not to be trusted; every man
is by it suspected: and it is the honour of God's grace that the record he has
given concerning his Son is confirmed both in heaven and in earth by
three
witnesses, 1 Jn. 5:7.
Let God be true and every man a liar, Rom. 3:4.
2. That a false witness should incur the same punishment which was to have been
inflicted upon the person he accused.
If two, or three, or many
witnesses, concurred in a false testimony, they were all liable to be prosecuted
upon this law. (2.) The person wronged or brought into peril by the false
testimony is supposed to be the appellant, v. 17. And yet if the person were put
to death upon the evidence, and afterwards it appeared to be false, any other
person, or the judges themselves,
ex officioby virtue of their office,
might call the false witness to account. (3.) Causes of this kind, having more
than ordinary difficulty in them, were to be brought before the supreme court,
The
priests and judges, who are said to be
before the Lord, because, as
other judges sat in the gates of their cities, so these at the gate of the
sanctuary, ch. 17:12. (4.) There must be great care in the trial, v. 18. A
diligent inquisition must be made into the characters of the persons, and all
the circumstances of the case, which must be compared, that the truth might be
found out, which, where it is thus faithfully and impartially enquired into,
Providence, it may be hoped, will particularly advance the discovery of. (5.) If
it appeared that a man had knowingly and maliciously borne false witness against
his neighbour, though the mischief he designed him thereby was not effected, he
must undergo the same penalty which his evidence would have brought his
neighbour under, v. 19.
Nec lex est justior ullaNor could any law be more
just. If the crime he accused his neighbour of was to be punished with
death, the false witness must be put to death; if with stripes, he must be
beaten; if with a pecuniary mulct, he was to be fined the sum. And because to
those who considered not the heinousness of the crime, and the necessity of
making this provision against it, it might seem hard to punish a man so severely
for a few words' speaking, especially when no mischief did actually follow, it
is added:
Thy eye shall not pity, v. 21. No man needs to be more merciful
than God. The benefit that will accrue to the public from this severity will
abundantly recompense it:
Those that remain shall hear and fear, v. 20.
Such exemplary punishments will be warnings to others not to attempt any such
mischief, when they see how he that
made the pit and digged it has fallen
into the ditch which he made.
Chapter 19:
| Darby
| Geneva
| Gill
| Jamieson Faussett Brown
| Matthew Henry
| Matthew Henry Concise
| Wesley
| Index
| Bible Gateway |
Introduction 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 31 32 33 34 Numbers Joshua
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