Chapter 26:
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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 26
Complete Concise
With this chapter Moses concludes the particular statutes which
he thought fit to give Israel in charge at his parting with them; what follows
is by way of sanction and ratification. In this chapter, I. Moses gives them a
form of confession to be made by him that offered the basket of his first-fruits
(v. 1-11). II. The protestation and prayer to be made after the disposal of
the third year's tithe (v. 12-15). III. He binds on all the precepts he had
given them, 1. By the divine authority: "Not I, but the Lord thy God has
commanded thee to do these statutes" (v. 16). 2. By the mutual covenant
between God and them (v. 17, etc.).
Verses 1-11
Here is, I. A good work ordered to be done, and that is the
presenting of a basket of their first-fruits to God every year, v. 1, 2. Besides
the
sheaf of first-fruits, which was offered for the whole land, on the
morrow after the passover (Lev. 23:10), every man was to bring for himself a
basket of first-fruits at the feast of pentecost, when the harvest was ended,
which is therefore called the
feast of first-fruits (Ex. 34:22), and is
said to be kept with a
tribute of free-will-offering, Deu. 16:10. But the
Jews say, "The first-fruits, if not brought then, might be brought any time
after, between that and winter." When a man went into the field or vineyard
at the time when the fruits were ripening, he was to mark that which he observed
most forward, and to lay it by for first-fruits, wheat, barley, grapes, figs,
pomegranates, olives, and dates, some of each sort must be put in the same
basket, with leaves between them, and presented to God in the place which he
should choose. Now from this law we may learn, 1. To acknowledge God as the
giver of all those good things which are the support and comfort of our natural
life, and therefore to serve and honour him with them. 2. To deny ourselves.
What is first ripe we are most fond of; those that are nice and curious expect
to be served with each fruit at its first coming in.
My soul desired the
first ripe fruits, Micah 7:1. When therefore God appointed them to lay those
by for him he taught them to prefer the glorifying of his name before the
gratifying of their own appetites and desires. 3. To give to God the first and
best we have, as those that believe him to be the first and best of beings.
Those that consecrate the days of their youth, and the prime of their time, to
the service and honour of God, bring him their first-fruits, and with such
offerings he is well pleased.
I remember the kindness of thy youth.
II. Good words put into their mouths to be said in the doing of
this good work, as an explication of the meaning of this ceremony, that it might
be a reasonable service. The offerer must begin his acknowledgment before he
delivered his basket to the priest, and then must go on with it, when the priest
had set down the basket before the altar, as a present to God their great
landlord, v. 3, 4.
1. He must begin with a receipt in full for the good land which
God had given them (v. 3):
I profess that I have come now at last, after
forty years' wandering,
unto the country which the Lord swore to give us.
This was most proper to be said when they came first into Canaan; probably when
they had been long settled there they varied from this form. Note, When God has
made good his promises to us he expects that we should own it, to the honour of
his faithfulness; this is like giving up the bond, as Solomon does, 1 Ki. 8:56,
There
has not failed one word of all his good promise. And our creature-comforts
are doubly sweet to us when we see them flowing from the fountain of the
promise.
2. He must remember and own the mean origin of that nation of
which he was a member. How great soever they were now, and he himself with them,
their beginning was very small, which ought thus to be kept in mind throughout
all the ages of their church by this public confession, that they might not be
proud of their privileges and advantages, but might for ever be thankful to that
God whose grace chose them when they were so low and raised them so high. Two
things they must own for this purpose:(1.) The meanness of their common
ancestor:
A Syrian ready to perish was my father, v. 5. Jacob is here
called an
Aramite, or
Syrian, because he lived twenty years in
Padan-Aram; his wives were of that country, and his children were all born
there, except Benjamin; and perhaps the confessor means not Jacob himself, but
that son of Jacob who was the father of his tribe. However it be, both father
and sons were more than once ready to perish, by Laban's severity, Esau's
cruelty, and the famine in the land, which last was the occasion of their going
down into Egypt.
Laban the Syrian sought to destroy my father (so the
Chaldee),
had almost destroyed him, so the Arabic. (2.) The miserable
condition of their nation in its infancy. They sojourned in Egypt as strangers,
they served there as slaves (v. 6), and that a great while: as their father was
called a
Syrian, they might be called
Egyptians; so that their
possession of Canaan being so long discontinued they could not pretend any
tenant-right to it. A poor, despised, oppressed people they were in Egypt, and
therefore, though now rich and great, had no reason to be proud, or secure, or
forgetful of God.
3. He must thankfully acknowledge God's great goodness, not
only to himself in particular, but to Israel in general. (1.) In bringing them
out of Egypt, v. 7, 8. It is spoken of here as an act of pity
he looked on
our affliction; and an act of powerhe
brought us forth with a mighty
hand. This was a great salvation, fit to be remembered upon all occasions,
and particularly upon this; they need not grudge to bring a basket of
first-fruits to God, for to him they owed it that they were not now bringing in
the tale of bricks to their cruel task-masters. (2.) In settling them in Canaan:
He hath given us this land, v. 9. Observe, He must not only give thanks
for his own lot, but for the land in general which was given to Israel; not only
for this year's profits, but for the ground itself which produced them, which
God had graciously granted to his ancestors and entailed upon his posterity.
Note, The comfort we have in particular enjoyments should lead us to be thankful
for our share in public peace and plenty; and with present mercies we should
bless God for the former mercies we remember and the further mercies we expect
and hope for.
4. He must offer to God his basket of first-fruits (v. 10):
"I have
brought the first-fruits of the land (like a pepper-corn) as
a quit-rent for
the land which thou hast given me." Note, Whatever
we give to God, it is but
of his own that we
give him, 1 Chr.
29:14. And it becomes us, who receive so much from him, to study what we shall
render to him. The basket he set before God; and the priests, as God's
receivers, had the first-fruits, as perquisites of their place and fees for
attending, Num. 18:12.
III. The offerer is here appointed, when he has finished the
service, 1. To give glory to God:
Thou shalt worship the Lord thy God.
His first-fruits were not accepted without further acts of adoration. A humble,
reverent, thankful heart is that which God looks at and requires, and, without
this, all we can put in a basket will not avail.
If a man would give all the
substance of his house to be excused from this, or in lieu of it,
it
would utterly be contemned. 2. To take the comfort of it to himself and
family:
Thou shalt rejoice in every good thing, v. 11. It is the will of
God that we should be cheerful, not only in our attendance upon his holy
ordinances, but in our enjoyments of the gifts of his providence. Whatever good
thing God gives us, it is his will that we should make the most comfortable use
we can of it, yet still tracing the streams to the fountain of all comfort and
consolation.
Verses 12-15
Concerning the disposal of their tithe the third year we had the
law before, ch. 14:28, 29. The second tithe, which in the other two years was to
be spent in extraordinaries at the feasts, was to be spent the third year at
home, in entertaining the poor. Now because this was done from under the eye of
the priests, and a great confidence was put in the people's honesty, that they
would dispose of it according to the law, to
the Levite, the stranger, and
the fatherless (v. 12), it is therefore required that when at the next feast
after they appeared
before the Lord they should there testify (as it
were) upon oath, in a religious manner, that they had fully administered, and
been true to their trust.
I. They must make a solemn protestation to this purport, v. 13,
14. 1. That no hallowed things were hoarded up:
"I have brought them
away out of my house, nothing now remains there but my own part." 2.
That the poor, and particularly poor ministers, poor strangers, and poor widows,
had had their part according to the commandment. It is fit that God, who by his
providence gives us all we have, should by his law direct the using of it, and,
though we are not now under such particular appropriations of our revenue as
they then were, yet, in general, we are commanded to give alms of such things as
we have; and then, and not otherwise, all things are clean to us.
Then we
may take the comfort of our enjoyments, when God has thus had his dues out of
them. This is a commandment which must not be transgressed, no, not with an
excuse of its being forgotten, v. 13. 3. That none of this tithe had been
misapplied to any common use, much less to any ill use. This seems to refer to
the tithe of the other two years, which was to be eaten by the owners
themselves; they must profess, (1.) That they had not eaten of it in their
mourning, when, by their mourning for the dead, they were commonly unclean; or
they had not eaten of it grudgingly, as those that all their days eat in
darkness. (2.) That they had not sacrilegiously alienated it to any common use,
for it was not their own. And, (3.) That they had not given it for the dead, for
the honour of their dead gods, or in hope of making it beneficial to their dead
friends. Now the obliging of them to make this solemn protestation at the three
years' end would be an obligation upon them to deal faithfully, knowing that
they must be called upon thus to purge themselves. It is our wisdom to keep
conscience clear at all times, that when we come to give up our account we may
lift up our face without spot. The Jews say that this protestation of their
integrity was to be made with a low voice, because it looked like a
self-commendation, but that the foregoing confession of God's goodness was to
be made with a loud voice to his glory. He that durst not make this protestation
must bring his
trespass-offering, Lev. 5:15.
II. To this solemn protestation they must add a
solemn prayer
(v. 15), not particularly for themselves, but for
God's people Israel;
for in the common peace and prosperity every particular person prospers and has
peace. We must learn hence to be public-spirited in prayer, and to wrestle with
God for blessings for the land and nation, our English Israel, and for the
universal church, which we are directed to have an eye to in our prayers, as the
Israel of God, Gal. 6:16. In this prayer we are taught, 1. To look up to
God as in a holy habitation, and thence to infer that holiness becomes his
house, and that he will be sanctified in those that are about him. 2. To depend
upon the favour of God, and his gracious cognizance, as sufficient to make us
and our people happy. 3. To reckon it wonderful condescension in God to case an
eye even upon so great and honourable a body as Israel was. It is looking down.
4. To be earnest with God for a blessing upon his people Israel, and upon the
land
which he has given us. For how should the earth yield its increase, or, if
it does, what comfort can we take in it, unless therewith
God, even our own
God, gives us his blessing? Ps. 67:6.
Verses 16-19
Two things Moses here urges to enforce all these precepts:-1.
That they were the commands of God, v. 16. They were not the dictates of his own
wisdom, nor were they enacted by any authority of his own, but infinite wisdom
framed them, and the power of the King of kings made them binding to them:
"The
Lord thy God commands thee, therefore thou art bound in duty and gratitude
to obey him, and it is at thy peril if thou disobey. They are his laws,
therefore thou shalt do them, for to that end were they given thee: do them and
not dispute them, do them and not draw back from them; do them not carelessly
and hypocritically, but with thy heart and soul, thy whole heart and thy whole
soul." 2. That their covenant with God obliged them to keep these commands.
He insists not only upon God's sovereignty over them, but his propriety in
them, and the relation wherein they stood to him. The covenant is mutual, and it
binds to obedience both ways. (1.) That we may perform our part of the covenant,
and answer the intentions of that (v. 17):
"Thou hast avouched and
solemnly owned and confessed
the Lord Jehovah to be thy God, thy Prince
and Ruler. As he is so by an incontestable right, so he is by thy own consent."
They did this implicitly by their attendance on his word, had done it expressly
(Ex. 24), and were now to do it again before they parted, ch. 29:1. Now this
obliges us, in fidelity to our word, as well as in duty to our Sovereign, to
keep
his statutes and his commandments. We really forswear ourselves, and
perfidiously violate the most sacred engagements, if, when we have taken the
Lord to be our God, we do not make conscience of obeying his commands. (2.) That
God's part of the covenant also may be made good, and the intentions of that
answered (v. 18, 19): The
Lord has avouched, not only taken, but publicly
owned thee to be his
segullah, his
peculiar people, as he has promised
thee, that is, according to the true intent and meaning of the promise. Now
their obedience was not only the condition of this favour, and of the
continuance of it (if they were not obedient, God would disown them, and cast
them off), but it was also the principal design of this favour. "He has
avouched thee on purpose
that thou shouldest keep his commandments, that
thou mightest have both the best directions and the best encouragements in
religion." Thus we are
elected to obedience (1 Pt. 1:2),
chosen
that we should be holy (Eph. 1:4), purified, a peculiar people, that we
might not only do good works, but be zealous in them, Tit. 2:14. Two things God
is here said to design in avouching them to be his peculiar people (v. 19), to
make them high, and, in order to that, to make them holy; for holiness is true
honour, and the only way to everlasting honour. [1.] To make them high above all
nations. The greatest honour we are capable of in this world is to be taken into
covenant with God, and to live in his service. They should be,
First,
High
in praise; for God would accept them, which is true praise, Rom.
2:29. Their friends would admire them, Zep. 3:19, 20.
Secondly, High
in
name, which, some think, denotes the continuance and perpetuity of that
praise,
a name that shall not be cut off. Thirdly, High
in honour,
that is, in all the advantages of wealth and power, which would make them great
above their neighbours. See Jer. 13:11. [2.] That they might be a holy people,
separated for God, devoted to him, and employed continually in his service. This
God aimed at in taking them to be his people; so that, if they did not keep his
commandments, they received all this grace in vain.
Chapter 26:
| 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
Genesis
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