Chapter 32:
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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 32
Complete Concise
In this chapter we have, I. The song which Moses, by the
appointment of God, delivered to the children of Israel, for a standing
admonition to them, to take heed of forsaking God. This takes up most of the
chapter, in which we have, 1. The preface (v. 1, 2). 2. A high character of God,
and, in opposition to that, a bad character of the people of Israel (v. 3-6). 3.
A rehearsal of the great things God had done for them, and in opposition to that
an account of their ill carriage towards him (v. 7-18). 4. A prediction of the
wasting destroying judgments which God would bring upon them for their sins, in
which God is here justified by the many aggravations of their impieties (v. 19-33).
5. A promise of the destruction of their enemies and oppressors at last, and the
glorious deliverance of a remnant of Israel (v. 36-43). II. The exhortation
with which Moses delivered this song to them (v. 41-47). III. The orders God
gives to Moses to go up to Mount Nebo and die (v. 48, etc.).
Verses 1-6
Here is, I. A commanding preface or introduction to this song of
Moses, v. 1, 2. He begins, 1. With a solemn appeal to heaven and earth
concerning the truth and importance of what he was about to say, and the justice
of the divine proceedings against a rebellious and backsliding people, for he
had said (ch. 31:28) that he would in this song call heaven and earth to record
against them. Heaven and earth would sooner hear than this perverse and
unthinking people; for they revolt not from the obedience to their Creator, but
continue
to this day, according to his ordinances, as his servants (Ps. 119:89-91),
and therefore will rise up in judgment against rebellious Israel. Heaven and
earth will be witnesses against sinners, witnesses of the warning given them and
of their refusal to take the warning (see Job 20:27); the
heaven shall reveal
his iniquity, and the earth shall rise up against him. Or heaven and earth
are here put for the inhabitants of both, angels and men; both shall agree to
justify God in his proceedings against Israel, and to
declare his
righteousness, Ps. 50:6; see Rev. 19:1, 2. 2. he begins with a solemn
application of what he was about to say to the people (v. 2):
My doctrine
shall drop as the rain. "It shall be a beating sweeping rain to the
rebellious;" so one of the Chaldee paraphrasts expounds the first clause.
Rain is sometimes sent for judgment, witness that with which the world was
deluged; and so the word of God, while to some it is reviving and refreshinga
savour of life unto life, is to others terrifying and killinga
savour
of death unto death. It shall be as a sweet and comfortable dew to those who
are rightly prepared to receive it. Observe, (1.) The subject of this song is
doctrine; he had given them a song of praise and thanksgiving (Ex. 15), but this
is a song of instruction, for in psalms, and hymns, and spiritual songs, we are
not only to give glory to god, but to
teach and admonish one another,
Col. 3:16. Hence many of David's psalms are entitled
Maschilto give
instruction. (2.) This doctrine is fitly compared to rain and showers which
come from above, to make the earth fruitful, and
accomplish that for which
they are sent. (Isa. 55:10, 11), and depend not upon the wisdom or will of
man, Mic. 5:7. It is a mercy to have this rain come often upon us, and our duty
to
drink it in, Heb. 6:7. (3.) He promises that his doctrine shall drop
and distil as the dew, and the small rain, which descend silently and without
noise. The word preached is likely to profit when it comes gently, and sweetly
insinuates itself into the hearts and affections of the hearers. (4.) He
bespeaks their acceptance and entertainment of it, and that it might be as
sweet, and pleasant, and welcome to them as rain to the
thirsty earth,
Ps. 72:6. And the word of God is likely to do us good when it is thus
acceptable. (5.) The learned bishop Patrick understands it as a prayer that his
words which were sent from heaven to them might sink into their hearts and
soften them, as the rain softens the earth, and so make them fruitful in
obedience.
II. An awful declaration of the greatness and righteousness of
God, v. 3, 4.
1. He begins with this, and lays it down as his first principle,
(1.) To preserve the honour of God, that no reproach might be cast upon him for
the sake of the wickedness of his people Israel; how wicked and corrupt soever
those are who are called by his name, he is just, and right, and all that is
good, and is not to be thought the worse of for their badness. (2.) To aggravate
the wickedness of Israel, who knew and worshipped such a holy god, and yet were
themselves so unholy. And, (3.) To justify God in his dealings with them; we
must abide by it, that God is righteous, even when his
judgments are a great
deep, Jer. 12:1; Ps. 36:6.
2. Moses here sets himself to
publish the name of the Lord
(v. 3), that Israel, knowing what a God he is whom they had avouched for theirs,
might never be such fools as to exchange him for a false god, a dunghill god. He
calls upon them therefore to ascribe greatness to him. It will be of great use
to us for the preventing of sin, and the preserving of us in the way of our
duty, always to keep up high and honourable thoughts of God, and to take all
occasions to express them:
Ascribe greatness to our God. We cannot add to
his greatness, for it is infinite; but we must acknowledge it, and give him the
glory of it. Now, when Moses would set forth the greatness of God, he does it,
not by explaining his eternity and immensity, or describing the brightness of
his glory in the upper world, but by showing the faithfulness of his word, the
perfection of his works, and the wisdom and equity of all the administrations of
his government; for in these his glory shines most clearly to us, and these are
the things revealed concerning him, which
belong to us and our children,
v. 4. (1.)
He is the rock. So he is called six times in this chapter, and
the Septuagint all along translates it
theos,
God. The learned Mr. Hugh Broughton reckons that God is called the
rock
eighteen times (besides in this chapter) in the Old Testament (though in some
places we translate it
strength), and charges it therefore upon the
papists that they make St. Peter a god when they make him the rock on which the
church is built. God is the rock, for he is in himself immutable immovable, and
he is to all that seek him and fly to him an impenetrable shelter, and to all
that trust in him an everlasting foundation. (2.)
His work is perfect.
His work of creation was so,
all very good; his works of providence are
so, or will be so in due time, and when the mystery of God shall be finished the
perfection of his works will appear to all the world. Nothing that God does can
be mended, Eccl. 3:14. God was now perfecting what he had promised and begun for
his people Israel, and from the perfection of this work they must take occasion
to give him the glory of the perfection of all his works. The best of men's
works are imperfect, they have their flaws and defects, and are left unfinished;
but,
as for God, his work is perfect; if he begin, he will make an end.
(3.)
All his ways are judgment. The ends of his ways are all righteous,
and he is wise in the choice of the means in order to those ends.
Judgment
signifies both
prudence and
justice. The ways of the Lord are right,
Hos. 14:9. (4.) He is
a God of truth, whose word we may take and rely
upon, for he cannot lie who is faithful to all his promises, nor shall his
threatenings fall to the ground. (5.) He is
without iniquity, one who
never cheated any that trusted in him, never wronged any that appealed to his
justice, nor ever was hard upon any that cast themselves upon his mercy. (6.)
Just
and right is he. As he will not wrong any by punishing them more than they
deserve, so he will not fail to recompense all those that serve him or suffer
for him. He is indeed just and right; for he will effectually take care that
none shall lose by him. Now what a bright and amiable idea does this one verse
give us of the God whom we worship; and what reason have we then to love him and
fear him, to live a life of delight in him, dependence on him, and devotedness
to him! This is
our rock, and there is no unrighteousness in him; nor can
there be, Ps. 92:15.
III. A high charge exhibited against the Israel of God, whose
character was in all respects the reverse of that of the
God of Israel,
v. 5. 1.
They have corrupted themselves. Or,
It has corrupted itself;
the body of the people has:
the whole head sick, and the whole heart faint.
God did not corrupt them, for
just and right is he; but they are
themselves the sole authors of their own sin and ruin; and both are included in
this word.
They have debauched themselves; for every man is tempted when
he is drawn away of his own lust. And
they have destroyed themselves, Hos.
13:9. If thou scornest, thou alone shalt bear the guilt and grief, Prov. 9:12.
2.
Their spot is not the spot of his children. Even God's children have
their spots, while they are in this imperfect state; for if we say we have no
sin, no spot, we deceive ourselves. But the sin of Israel was none of those; it
was not an infirmity which they strove against, watched and prayed against, but
an evil which their hearts were fully set in them to do. For, 3. They were a
perverse
and crooked generation, that were actuated by a spirit of contradiction, and
therefore would do what was forbidden because it was forbidden, would set up
their own humour and fancy in opposition to the will of God, were impatient of
reproof, hated to be reformed, and
went on frowardly in the way of their
heart. The Chaldee paraphrase reads this verse thus:
They have scattered
or changed
themselves, and not him, even the children that served idols, a
generation that has depraved its own works, and alienated itself. Idolaters
cannot hurt God, nor do any damage to his works, nor make him a stranger to this
world. See Job 35:6. No, all the hurt they do is to themselves and their own
works. The learned bishop Patrick gives another reading of it:
Did he do him
any hurt? That is, "Is God the rock to be blamed for the evils that
should befal Israel? No,
His children are their blot," that is,
"All the evil that comes upon them is the fruit of their children's
wickedness; for the whole generation of them is crooked and perverse." All
that are ruined ruin themselves; they die because they will die.
IV. A pathetic expostulation with this provoking people for
their ingratitude (v. 6):
"Do you thus requite the Lord? Surely you
will not hereafter be so base and disingenuous in your carriage towards him as
you have been." 1. He reminds them of the obligations God had laid upon
them to serve him, and to cleave to him. He had been a Father to them, had
begotten them, fed them, carried them, nursed them, and borne their manners; and
would they spurn at the bowels of a Father? He had bought them, had been at a
vast expense of miracles to bring them out of Egypt, had given
men for them,
and
people for their life, Isa. 43:4.
"Is not he thy Father, thy
owner (so some), that has an incontestable propriety in thee?" and
the
ox knoweth his owner. "he has made thee, and brought thee into being,
established thee and kept thee in being; has he not done so? Can you deny the
engagements you lie under to him, in consideration of the great things he has
done and designed for you?" And are not our obligations, as baptized
Christians, equally great and strong to our Creator that made us, our Redeemer
that bought us, and our Sanctifier that has established us. 2. Hence he infers
the evil of deserting him and rebelling against him. For, (1.) It was base
ingratitude:
"Do you thus require the Lord? Are these the returns
you make him for all his favours to you? The powers you have from him will you
employ them against him?" See Mic. 6:3, 4; Jn. 10:32. This is such
monstrous villany as all the world will cry shame of: call a man ungrateful, and
you can call him no worse. (2.) It was prodigious madness:
O foolish people
and unwise! Fools, and double fools!
who has bewitched you? Gal. 3:1.
"Fools indeed, to disoblige one on whom you have such a necessary
dependence! To forsake your own mercies for lying vanities!" Note, All
wilful sinners, especially sinners in Israel, are the most unwise and the most
ungrateful people in the world.
Verses 7-14
Moses, having in general represented God to them as their great
benefactor, whom they were bound in gratitude to observe and obey, in these
verses gives particular instances of God's kindness to them and concern for
them. 1. Some instances were ancient, and for proof of them he appeals to the
records (v. 7):
Remember the days of old; that is, "Keep in
remembrance the history of those days, and of the wonderful providences of God
concerning the old world, and concerning your ancestors Abraham, Isaac, and
Jacob; you will find a constant series of mercies attending them, and how long
since things were working towards that which has now come to pass." Note,
The authentic histories of ancient times are of singular use, and especially the
history of the church in its infancy, both the Old-Testament and the
New-Testament church. 2. Others were more modern, and for proof of them he
appeals to their fathers and elders that were now alive and with them. Parents
must diligently teach their children, not only the word of God, his laws (ch.
6:7), and the meaning of his ordinances (Ex. 12:26, 27), but his works also, and
the methods of his providence. See Ps. 78:3, 4, 6, 7. And children should desire
the knowledge of those things which will be of use to engage them to their duty
and to direct them in it.
Three things are here enlarged upon as instances of God's
kindness to his people Israel, and strong obligations upon them never to forsake
him:
I. The early designation of the land of Canaan for their
inheritance; for herein it was a type and figure of our heavenly inheritance,
that it was of old ordained and prepared in the divine counsels, v. 8. Observe,
1. When the earth was divided among the sons of men, in the days
of Peleg, after the flood, and each family had its lot, in which it must settle,
and by degrees grow up into a nation, then God had Israel in his thoughts and in
his eye; for, designing this good land into which they were now going to be in
due time an inheritance for them, he ordered that the posterity of Canaan,
rather than any other of the families then in being, should be planted there in
the mean time, to keep possession, as it were, till Israel was ready for it,
because those families were under the curse of Noah, by which they were
condemned to servitude and ruin (Gen. 9:25), and therefore would be the more
justly, honourably, easily, and effectually, rooted out, when the fulness of
time should come that Israel should take possession. Thus he set the bounds of
that people with an eye to the designed number of the children of Israel, that
they might have just as much as would serve their turn. And some observe that
Canaan himself, and his eleven sons (Gen. 10:15, etc.), make up just the number
of the twelve tribes of Israel. Note, (1.) The wisdom of God has appointed the
bounds of men's habitation, and determined both the place and time of our
living in the world, Acts 17:26. When he
gave the earth to the children of
men (Ps. 115:16), it was not that every man might catch as he could; no, he
divides to nations their inheritance, and will have every one to know his own,
and not to invade another's property. (2.) Infinite wisdom has a vast reach,
and designs beforehand what is brought to pass long after.
Known unto God are
all his works from the beginning to the end (Acts 15:18), but they are not
so to us, Eccl. 3:11. (3.) The great God, in governing the world, and ordering
the affairs of states and kingdoms, has a special regard to his church and
people, and consults their good in all. See 2 Chr. 16:9, and Isa. 45:4. The
Canaanites thought they had as good and sure a title to their land as any of
their neighbours had to theirs; but God intended that they should only be
tenants, till the Israelites, their landlords, came. Thus God serves his own
purposes of kindness to his people, by those that neither know him nor love him,
who mean not so, neither doth their heart think so, Isa. 10:7; Mic. 4:12.
2. The reason given for the particular care God took for this
people, so long before they were either born or thought of (as I may say), in
our world, does yet more magnify the kindness, and make it obliging beyond
expression (v. 9):
For the Lord's portion is his people. All the world
is his. He is owner and possessor of heaven and earth, but his church is his in
a peculiar manner. It is his demesne, his vineyard, his garden enclosed. He has
a particular delight in it: it is the beloved of his soul, in it he walks, he
dwells, it is his rest for ever. He has a particular concern for it, keeps it as
the apple of his eye. He has particular expectations from it, as a man has from
his portion, has a much greater rent of honour, glory, and worship, from that
distinguished remnant, than from all the world besides. That God should be his
people's portion is easy to be accounted for, for he is their joy and
felicity; but how they should be his portion, who neither needs them nor can be
benefited by them, must be resolved into the wondrous condescensions of free
grace.
Even so, Father, because it seemed good in thy eyes so to call and
to account them.
II. The forming of them into a people, that they might be fit to
enter upon this inheritance, like an heir of age, at the time appointed of the
Father. And herein also Canaan was a figure of the heavenly inheritance; for, as
it was from eternity proposed and designed for all God's spiritual Israel, so
they are, in time (and it is a work of time), fitted and made meet for it, Col.
1:12. The deliverance of Israel out of slavery, by the destruction of their
oppressors, was attended with so many wonders obvious to sense, and had been so
often spoken of, that it needed not to be mentioned in this song; but the
gracious works God wrought upon them would be less taken notice of than the
glorious works he had wrought for them, and therefore he chooses rather to
advert to them. A great deal was done to model this people, to cast them into
some shape, and to fit them for the great things designed for them in the land
of promise; and it is here most elegantly described.
1.
He found him in a desert land, v. 10. This refers, no
doubt, to the wilderness through which God brought them to Canaan, and in which
he took so much pains with them; it is called
the church in the wilderness,
Acts 7:38. There it was born, and nursed, and educated, that all might appear to
be divine and from heaven, since they had there no communication with any part
of this earth either for food or learning. But, because he is said to
find
them there, it seems designed also to represent both the bad state and the bad
character of that people when God began first to appear for them. (1.) Their
condition was forlorn. Egypt was to them a desert land, and a waste howling
wilderness, for they were bond-slaves in it, and cried by reason of their
oppression, and were perfectly bewildered and at a loss for relief; there God
found them, and thence he fetched them. And, (2.) Their disposition was very
unpromising. So ignorant were the generality of them in divine things, so stupid
and unapt to receive the impressions of them, so peevish and humoursome, so
froward and quarrelsome, and withal so strangely addicted to the idolatries of
Egypt, that they might well be said to be found in a desert land; for one might
as reasonably expect a crop of corn from a barren wilderness as any good fruit
of service to God from a people of such a character. Those that are renewed and
sanctified by grace should often remember what they were by nature.
2.
He led him about and instructed him. When God had them
in the wilderness he did not bring them directly to Canaan, but made them go a
great way about, and so he instructed them; that is, (1.) by this means he took
time to instruct them, and gave them commandments as they were able to receive
them. Those whose business it is to instruct others must not expect it will be
done of a sudden; learners must have time to learn. (2.) By this means he tried
their faith, and patience, and dependence upon God, and inured them to the
hardships of the wilderness, and so instructed them. Every stage had something
in it that was instructive; even when he chastened them, he thereby
taught
them out of his law. It is said (Ps. 107:7) that he
led them forth by the
right way;. and yet here that he
led them about; for God always leads
his people the right way, however to us it may seem circuitous: so that the
furthest way about proves, if not the nearest way, yet the best way home to
Canaan. How God instructed them is explained long after (Neh. 9:13),
Thou
gavest them right judgments and true laws, good statutes, and commandments;
and especially (v. 20),
Thou gavest them also thy good Spirit to instruct
them; and he instructs effectually. We may well imagine how unfit that
people would have been for Canaan had they not first gone through the discipline
of the wilderness.
3.
He kept him as the apple of his eye, with all the care
and tenderness that could be, from the malignant influences of an open sky and
air, and all the perils of an inhospitable desert. The pillar of cloud and fire
was both a guide and a guard to them.
4. He did that for them which the eagle does for her nest of
young ones, v. 11, 12. The similitude was touched, Ex. 19:4,
I bore you on
eagles' wings; here it is enlarged upon. The eagle is observed to have a
strong affection for her young, and to show it, not only as other creatures by
protecting them and making provision for them, but by educating them and
teaching them to fly. For this purpose she stirs them out of the nest where they
lie dozing, flutters over them, to show them how they must use their wings, and
then accustoms them to fly upon her wings till they have learnt to fly upon
their own. This, by the way, is an example to parents to train up their children
to business, and not to indulge them in idleness and the love of ease. God did
thus by Israel; when they were in love with their slavery, and loth to leave it,
God, by Moses, stirred them up to aspire after liberty, and many a time kept
them from returning to the house of bondage. He carried them out of Egypt, led
them into the wilderness, and now at length had led them through it.
The Lord
alone did lead him, he needed not any assistance, nor did he take any to be
partner with him in the achievement, which was a good reason why they should
serve the Lord only and no other, so much as in partnership, much less in
rivalship with him. There was no strange god with him to contribute to Israel's
salvation, and therefore there should be none to share in Israel's homage and
adoration, Ps. 81:9.
III. The settling of them in a good land. This was done in part
already, in the happy planting of the two tribes and a half, an earnest of what
would speedily and certainly be done for the rest of the tribes. 1. They were
blessed with glorious victories over their enemies (v. 13):
He made him ride
on the high places of the earth, that is, he brought him on with conquest,
and brought him home with triumph. he rode over the high places or strong holds
that were kept against him, sat in ease and honour upon the fruitful hills of
Canaan. In Egypt they looked mean, and were so, in poverty and disgrace; but in
Canaan they looked great, and were so, advanced and enriched; they rode in
state, as a people whom the King of kings delighted to honour. 2. With great
plenty of all good things. Not only the ordinary increase of the field, but,
which was uncommon,
Honey out of the rock, and oil out of the flinty rock,
which may refer either, (1.) To their miraculous supply of fresh water out of
the rock that followed them in the wilderness, which is called
honey and oil,
because the necessity they were reduced to made it as sweet and acceptable as
honey and oil at another time. Or, (2.) To the great abundance of honey and oil
they should find in Canaan, even in those parts that were least fertile. The
rocks in Canaan should yield a better increase than the fields and meadows of
other countries. Other productions of Canaan are mentioned, v. 14. Such
abundance and such variety of wholesome food (and every thing the best in its
kind) that every meal might be a feast if they pleased: excellent bread made of
the best corn, here called the
kidneys of the wheat (for a grain of wheat
is not unlike a kidney), butter and milk in abundance, the flesh of cattle well
fed, and for their drink, no worse than the
pure blood of the grape; so
indulgent a Father was God to them, and so kind a benefactor. Ainsworth makes
the plenty of good things in Canaan to be a figure of the fruitfulness of Christ's
kingdom, and the heavenly comforts of his word and Spirit: for the children of
his kingdom he has butter and milk, the sincere milk of the word; and strong
meat for strong men, with the wine that makes glad the heart.
Verses 15-18
We have here a description of the apostasy of Israel from God,
which would shortly come to pass, and to which already they had a disposition.
One would have thought that a people under so many obligations to their God, in
duty, gratitude, and interest, would never have turned from him; but, alas! they
turned aside quickly. Here are two great instances of their wickedness,
and each of them amounted to an apostasy from God:
I. Security and sensuality, pride and insolence, and the other
common abuses of plenty and prosperity, v. 15. These people were called
Jeshurunan
upright people (so some),
a seeing people, so others: but they soon
lost the reputation both of their knowledge and of their righteousness; for,
being well-fed, 1. They
waxed fat, and
grew thick, that is, they
indulged themselves in all manner of luxury and gratifications of their
appetites, as if they had nothing to do but to
make provision for the flesh,
to fulfil the lusts of it. They
grew fat, that is, they grew big and
unwieldy, unmindful of business, and unfit for it; dull and stupid, careless and
senseless; and this was the effect of their plenty. Thus
the prosperity of
fools destroys them, Prov. 1:32. Yet this was not the worst of it. 2. They
kicked;
they grew proud and insolent, and
lifted up the heel even against God
himself. If God rebuked them, either by his prophets or by his providence, they
kicked
against the goad, as an
untamed heifer, or a
bullock unaccustomed
to the yoke, and in their rage persecuted the prophets, and flew in the face
of providence itself. And thus he
forsook God that made him (not paying
due respect to his creator, nor answering the ends of his creation), and put an
intolerable contempt upon
the rock of his salvation, as if he were not
indebted to him for any past favours, nor had any dependence upon him for the
future. Those that make a god of themselves and a god of their bellies, in pride
and wantonness, and cannot bear to be told of it, certainly thereby forsake God
and show how lightly they esteem him.
II. Idolatry was the great instance of their apostasy, and which
the former led them to, as it made them sick of their religion, self-willed, and
fond of changes. Observe,
1. What sort of gods they chose and offered sacrifice to, when
they forsook the God that made them, v. 16, 17. This aggravated their sin that
those very services which they should have done to the true God they did, (1.)
To
strange gods, that could not pretend to have done them any kindness,
or laid them under any obligation to them, gods that they had no knowledge of,
nor could expect any benefit by, for they were strangers. Or they are called
strange
gods, because they were other than the one only true God, to whom they were
betrothed and ought to have been faithful. (2.) To
new gods, that came newly
up; for even in religion, the antiquity of which is one of its honours, vain
minds have strangely affected novelty, and, in contempt of the Ancient of days,
have been fond of new gods. A new god! can there be a more monstrous absurdity?
Would we find the right way to rest, we must ask for the
good old way,
Jer. 6:16. It was true their fathers had worshipped
other gods (Jos.
24:2), and perhaps it had been some little excuse if the children had returned
to them; but to serve
new gods whom their fathers feared not, and to like
them the better for being new, was to open a door to endless idolatries. (3.)
They were such as were no gods at all, but mere counterfeits and pretenders;
their names the invention of men's fancies, and their images the work of men's
hands. Nay, (4.) They were devils. So far from being
gods, fathers and
benefactors
to mankind, they really were
destroyers (so the word signifies), such as
aimed to do mischief. If there were any spirits or invisible powers that
possessed their idol-temples and images, they were evil spirits and malignant
powers, whom yet they did not need to worship for fear they should hurt them, as
they say the Indians do; for those that faithfully worship God are out of the
devil's reach: nay, the devil can destroy those only that sacrifice to him.
How mad are idolaters, who forsake the
rock of salvation to run
themselves upon the
rock of perdition!
2. What a great affront this was to Jehovah their God. (1.) It
was justly interpreted a forgetting of him (v. 18):
Of the Rock that begat
thee thou art unmindful. Mindfulness of God would prevent sin, but, when the
world is served and the flesh indulged, God is forgotten; and can any thing be
more base and unworthy than to forget the God that is the author of our being,
by whom we subsist, and in whom we live and move? And see what comes of it, Isa.
17:10,11,
Because thou hast forgotten the God of thy salvation, and hast not
been mindful of the Rock of thy strength, though the strange slips be
pleasant plants at first, yet the harvest at last
will be a heap in the day
of grief and of desperate sorrow. There is nothing got by forgetting God.
(2.) It was justly resented as an inexcusable offence:
They provoked him to
jealousy and to anger (v. 16), for their idols were abominations to him. See
here God's displeasure against idols, whether they be set up in the heart or
in the sanctuary. [1.] He is jealous of them, as rivals with him for the throne
in the heart. [2.] He hates them, as enemies to his crown and government. [3.]
He is, and will be, very angry with those that have any respect or affection for
them. Those consider not what they do that provoke God; for
who knows the
power of his anger?
Verses 19-25
The method of this song follows the method of the predictions in
the foregoing chapter, and therefore, after the revolt of Israel from God,
described in the foregoing verses, here follow immediately the resolves of
divine Justice concerning them; we deceive ourselves if we think that God will
be thus mocked by a foolish faithless people, that play fast and loose with him.
I. He had delighted in them, but now he would reject them with
detestation and disdain, v. 19. When the Lord saw their treachery, and folly,
and base ingratitude, he abhorred them, he despised them, so some read it. Sin
makes us odious in the sight of the holy God; and no sinners are so loathsome to
him as those that he has called, and that have called themselves, his sons and
his daughters, and yet have been provoking to him. Note, The nearer any are to
God in profession the more noisome are they to him if they are defiled in a
sinful way, Ps. 106:39, 40.
II. He had given them the tokens of his presence with them and
his favour to them; but now he would withdraw and
hide his face from them,
v. 20. His
hiding his face signifies his great displeasure; they had
turned
their back upon God, and now God would turn his back upon them (compare Jer.
18:17 with Jer. 2:27); but here it denotes also the slowness of God's
proceedings against them in a way of judgment. They began in their apostasy with
omissions of good, and so proceeded to commissions of evil. In like manner God
will first suspend his favours, and let them see what the issue of that will be,
what a friend they lose when they provoke God to depart, and will try whether
this will bring them to repentance. Thus we find God hiding himself, as it were,
in expectation of the event, Isa. 57:17. To justify himself in leaving them he
shows that they were such as there was no dealing with; for, 1. They were
froward and a people that could not be pleased, or obstinate in sin, and that
could not be convinced and reclaimed. 2. They were faithless, and a people that
could not be trusted. When he saved them, and took them into covenant, he said,
Surely
they are children that will not lie (Isa. 63:8); but when they proved
otherwise,
children in whom is no faith, they deserved to be abandoned,
and that the God of truth should have no more to do with them.
III. He had done every thing to make them easy and to please
them, but now he would do that against them which should be most vexatious to
them. The punishment here answers the sin, v. 21. 1. They had provoked God with
despicable deities which were not gods at all, but vanities, creatures of their
own imagination, that could not pretend either to merit or to repay the respects
of their worshippers; the more vain and vile the gods were after which they went
a whoring the greater was the offence to that great and good God whom they set
them up in competition with and contradiction to. This put two great evils into
their idolatry, Jer. 2:13. 2. God would therefore plague them with despicable
enemies, that were worthless, weak, and inconsiderable, and not deserving the
name of a people, which was a great mortification to them, and aggravated the
oppressions they groaned under The more base the people were that tyrannised
over them the more barbarous they would be (none so insolent as a beggar on
horseback), besides that it would be infamous to Israel, who had so often
triumphed over great and mighty nations, to be themselves trampled upon by the
weak and foolish, and to come under the curse of Canaan, who was to be a servant
of servants. But God can make the weakest instrument a scourge to the strongest
sinner; and those that by sin insult their might Creator are justly insulted by
the meanest of their fellow-creatures. This was remarkably fulfilled in the days
of the judges, when they were sometimes oppressed by the very Canaanites
themselves, whom they had subdued, Jdg. 4:2. But the apostle applies it to the
conversion of the Gentiles, who had been a people not in covenant with God, and
foolish in divine things, yet were brought into the church, sorely to the grief
of the Jews, who upon all occasions showed a great indignation at it, which was
both their sin and their punishment, as envy always is, Rom. 10:19.
IV. He had planted them in a good land, and replenished them
with all good things; but now he would strip them of all their comforts, and
bring them to ruin. The judgments threatened are very terrible, v. 22-25. 1.
The fire of God's anger shall consume them, v. 22. Are they proud of their
plenty? It shall burn up the increase of the earth. Are they confident of their
strength? It shall destroy the very foundations of their mountains: there is no
fence against the judgments of God when they come with commission to lay all
waste. It shall burn to the lowest hell, that is, it shall bring them to the
very depth of misery in this world, which yet would be but a faint resemblance
of the complete and endless misery of sinners in the other world. The damnation
of hell (as our Saviour calls it) is the fire of God's anger, fastening upon
the guilty conscience of a sinner, to its inexpressible and everlasting torment,
Isa. 30:33. 2. The arrows of God's judgments shall be spent upon them, till
his quiver is quite exhausted, v. 23. The judgments of God, like arrows, fly
swiftly (Ps. 64:7), reaching those at a distance who flatter themselves with
hopes of escaping them, Ps. 21:8, 12. They come from an unseen hand, but wound
mortally, for God never misses his mark, 1 Ki. 22:34. The particular judgments
here threatened are, (1.) Famine:
they shall be burnt, or
parched,
with hunger. (2.) Pestilence and other diseases, here called
burning heat
and bitter destruction. (3.) The insults of the inferior creatures:
the
teeth of beasts and the poison of serpents, v. 24. (4.) War and the fatal
consequences of it, v. 25. [1.] Perpetual frights. When the
sword is without,
there cannot but be
terror within. 2 Co. 7:5,
Without were fightings,
within were fears. Those who cast off the fear of God are justly exposed to
the fear of enemies. [2.] Universal deaths. The sword of the Lord, when it is
sent to lay all waste, will destroy without distinction; neither the strength of
the young man nor the beauty of the virgin, neither the innocency of the
suckling nor the gravity or infirmity of the man of gray hairs, will be their
security from the sword when it devours one as well as another. Such devastation
does war make, especially when it is pushed on by men as ravenous as wild beasts
and as venomous as serpents, v. 24. See here what mischief sin does, and reckon
those fools that make a mock at it.
Verses 26-38
After many terrible threatenings of deserved wrath and
vengeance, we have here surprising intimations of mercy, undeserved mercy, which
rejoices against judgment, and by which it appears that God has
no pleasure
in the death of sinners, but would rather they should
turn and live.
I. In jealousy for his own honour, he will not
make a full
end of them, v. 26-28. 1. It cannot be denied but that they deserved to be
utterly ruined, and that their
remembrance should be made to cease from among
men, so that the name of an Israelite should never be known but in history;
for
they were a nation void of counsel (v, 28), the most sottish inconsiderate
people that ever were, that would not believe the gory of God, though they saw
it, nor understand his loving kindness, though they tasted it and lived upon it.
Of those who could cast off such a God, such a law, such a covenant, for vain
and dunghill-deities, it might truly be said, There is
no understanding in
them. 2. It would have been an easy thing with God to ruin them and blot out
the remembrance of them; when the greatest part of them were cut off by the
sword, it was but scattering the remnant into some remote obscure corners of the
earth, where they should never have been heard of any more, and the thing had
been done. See Eze. 5:12. God can destroy those that are most strongly
fortified, disperse those that are most closely united, and bury those names in
perpetual oblivion that have been most celebrated. 3. Justice demanded it:
I
said I would scatter them. It is fit those should be cut off from the earth
that have cut themselves off from their God; why should they not be dealt with
according to their deserts? 4. Wisdom considered the pride and insolence of the
enemy, which would take occasion from the ruin of a people that had been so dear
to God, and for whom he had done such great things, to reflect upon God and to
imagine that because they had got the better of Israel they had carried the day
against the God of Israel: The
adversaries will say, Our hand is high,
high indeed, when it has been too high for those whom God himself fought for;
nor will they consider that
the Lord has done all this, but will dream
that they have done it in despite of him, as if the God of Israel were as weak
and impotent, and as easily run down, as the pretended deities of other nations.
5. In consideration of this, Mercy prevails for the sparing of a remnant and the
saving of that unworthy people from utter ruin:
I feared the wrath of the
enemy. It is an expression after the manner of men; it is certain that God
fears no man's wrath, but he acted in this matter as if he had feared it.
Those few good people in Israel that had a concern for the honour of God's
name
feared the wrath of the enemy in this instance more than in any
other, as Joshua (Jos. 7:9), and David often; and, because they feared it, God
himself is said to fear it. He needed not Moses to plead it with him, but
reminded himself of it:
What will the Egyptians say? Let all those whose
hearts tremble for the ark of God and his Israel comfort themselves with this,
that God will
work for his own name, and will not suffer it to be
profaned and polluted: how much soever we deserve to be disgraced, God will
never
disgrace the throne of his glory.
II. In concern for their welfare, he earnestly desires their
conversion; and, in order to that, their serious consideration of their latter
end, v. 29. Observe, 1. Though God had pronounced them a foolish people and of
no understanding, yet he wishes they were wise, as Deu. 5:29,
O that there
were such a heart in them! and Ps. 94:8,
You fools, when will you be
wise? God delights not to see sinners ruin themselves, but desires they will
help themselves; and, if they will, he is ready to help them. 2. It is a great
piece of wisdom, and will contribute much to the return of sinners to God,
seriously to consider the latter end, or the future state. It is here meant
particularly of that which God by Moses had foretold concerning this people in
the latter days: but it may be applied more generally. We ought to understand
and consider, (1.) The latter end of life, and the future state of the soul. To
think of death as our removal from a world of sense to a world of spirits, the
final period of our state of trial and probation, and our entrance upon an
unchangeable state of recompence and retribution. (2.) The latter end of sin,
and the future state of those that live and die in it. O that men would consider
the happiness they will lose, and the misery they will certainly plunge
themselves into, if they
go on still in their trespasses, what will be in the
end thereof, Jer. 5:31. Jerusalem forgot this, and therefore
came down
wonderfully, Lam. 1:9.
III. He calls to mind the great things he had done for them
formerly, as a reason why he should not quite cast them off. This seems to be
the meaning of that (v. 30, 31), "How should one Israelite have been too
hard for a thousand Canaanites, as they have been many a time, but that God, who
is greater than all gods, fought for them!" And so it corresponds with
that, Isa. 63:10, 11. When he was
turned to be their enemy, as here,
and
fought against them for their sins,
then he remembered the days of old,
saying,
Where is he that brought them out of the sea? So here, his arm
begins to awake as in the days of old
against the wrath of the enemy, Ps.
138:7. there was a time when the enemies of Israel were sold by their own rock,
that is, their own idol-gods, who could not help them, but betrayed them,
because Jehovah, the God of Israel, had shut them up as sheep for the slaughter.
For the enemies themselves must own that their gods were a very unequal match
for the God of Israel.
For their vine is of the vine of Sodom, v. 32, 33.
This must be meant of the enemies of Israel, who fell so easily before the sword
of Israel because they were ripe for ruin, and the measure of their iniquity was
full. Yet these verses may be understood of the strange prevalency of the
enemies of Israel against them, when God made use of them as the
rod of his
anger, Isa. 10:5, 6. "How should one Canaanite chase a thousand
Israelites" (as it is threatened against those that trust to Egypt for
help, Isa. 30:17,
One thousand shall flee at the rebuke of one)
"unless Israel's rock had deserted them and given them up." For
otherwise, however they may impute their power
to their gods (Hab. 1:11),
as the Philistines imputed their victory to Dagon, it is certain the enemies'
rock could not have prevailed against the rock of Israel; God would soon have
subdued their enemies (Ps. 81:14), but that the wickedness of Israel delivered
them into their hands. For their vine, that is, Israel's, is of the
vine of
Sodom, v. 32, 33. They were planted a choice vine, wholly a right seed, but
by sin had become the
degenerate plant of a strange vine (Jer. 2:21), and
not only transcribed the iniquity of Sodom, but outdid it, Eze. 16:48. God
called them his
vineyard, his
pleasant plant, Isa. 5:7. But their
fruits were, 1. Very offensive, and displeasing to God, bitter as gall. 2 Very
malignant, and pernicious one to another,
like the cruel venom of asps.
Some understand this of their punishment; their sin would be
bitterness in
the latter end (2 Sa. 2:26), it would
bite like a serpent and sting like
an adder, Job 20:14, Prov. 23:32.
IV. He resolves upon the destruction of those at last that had
been their persecutors and oppressors. When the cup of trembling goes round, the
king of Babel shall pledge it at last, Jer. 25:26, and see Isa. 51:22, 23. The
day is coming when the judgment that began at the house of God shall end with
the sinner and ungodly, 1 Pt. 4:17, 18. God will in due time bring down the
church's enemies.
1. In displeasure against their wickedness, which he takes
notice of, and keeps an account of, v. 34, 35. "Is not this implacable fury
of theirs against Israel
laid up in store with me, to be reckoned for
hereafter, when it shall be made to appear that
to me belongs vengeance?"
Some understand it of the sin of Israel, especially their persecuting the
prophets, which was laid up in store against them from the
blood of righteous
Abel, Mt. 23:35. However it teaches us that the wickedness of the wicked is
all laid up in store with God. (1.) He observes it, Ps. 90:8. He knows both what
the vine is and what the grapes are, what is the temper of the mind and what are
the actions of life. (21.) He keeps a record of it both in his own omniscience
and in the sinner's conscience; and this is
sealed up among his treasures,
which denotes both safety and secresy: these books cannot be lost, nor will they
be opened till the great day. See Hos. 13:12. (3.) He often delays the
punishment of sin for a great while; it is laid up in store, till the measure be
full, and the day of divine patience has expired. See Job 21:28-30. (4.) There
is a day of reckoning coming, when all the treasures of guilt and wrath will be
broken up, and the sin of sinners shall surely find them out. [1.] The thing
itself will certainly be done, for the Lord is a
God to whom vengeance
belongs, and therefore he will repay, Isa. 59:18. This is quoted by the
apostle to show the severity of God's wrath against those that revolt from the
faith of Christ, Heb. 10:30. [2.] It will be done in due time, in the best time;
nay, it will be done in a short time.
The day of their calamity is at hand;
and, though it may seem to tarry, it lingers not, it slumbers not, but makes
haste.
In one hour, shall the judgment of Babylon come.
2. He will do it in compassion to his own people, who, though
they had greatly provoked him, yet stood in relation to him, and their misery
appealed to his mercy (v. 36):
The Lord shall judge his people,. that is,
judge for them against their enemies, plead their cause, and break the yoke of
oppression under which they had long groaned,
repenting himself for his
servants; not changing his mind, but changing his way, and fighting for
them, as he had fought against them,
when he sees that their power is gone.
This plainly points at the deliverances God wrought for Israel by the judges out
of the hands of those to whom he had sold them for their sins (see Jdg. 2:11-18),
and how
his soul was grieved for the misery of Israel (Jdg. 10:16), and
this when they were reduced to the last extremity. God helped them when they
could not help themselves; for there was
none shut up or left; that is,
none that dwelt either in cities or walled towns, in which they were shut up,
nor any that dwelt in scattered houses in the country, in which they were left
at a distance from neighbours. Note, God's time to appear for the deliverance
of his people is when things are at the worst with them. God tries his people's
faith, and stirs up prayer, by letting things go to the worst, and then
magnifies his own power, and fills the faces of his enemies with shame and the
hearts of his people with so much the greater joy, by rescuing them out of
extremity as
brands out of the burning.
3. He will do it in contempt and to the reproach of idol-gods,
v. 37, 38.
Where are their gods? Two ways it may be understood: (1.) That
God would do that for his people which the idols they had served could not do
for them. They had forsaken God, and been very liberal in their sacrifices to
idols, had brought to their altars the
fat of their sacrifices and the
wine
of their drink-offerings, which they supposed their deities to feed upon and
on which they feasted with them. "Now," says God, "will these
gods you have made your court to, at so great an expense, help you in your
distress, and so repay you for all your charges in their service?
Go get you
to the gods you have served, and let them deliver you, Jdg. 10:14. This is
intended to convince them of their folly in forsaking a God that could help them
for gods that could not, and so to bring them to repentance and qualify them for
deliverance. When the adulteress shall
follow after her lovers and
not
overtake them, pray to her idols and receive no kindness from them,
then
she shall say, I will go and return to my first husband, Hos. 2:7. See Isa.
16:12; Jer. 2:27, 28. Or, (2.) That God would do that against his enemies which
the idols they had served could not save them from, Sennacherib and
Nebuchadnezzar boldly challenged the God of Israel to deliver his worshippers (Isa.
37:10; Dan. 3:15), and he did deliver them, to the confusion of their enemies.
But the God of Israel challenged Bel and Nebo to deliver their worshippers, to
rise up and help them, and to be their protection (Isa. 47:12, 13); but they
were so far from helping them that they themselves, that is, their images, which
was all that was of them,
went into captivity, Isa. 46:1, 2. Note, Those
who trust to any rock but God will find it sand in the day of their distress; it
will fail them when they most need it.
Verses 39-43
This conclusion of the song speaks three things:
I. Glory to God, v. 39. "See now upon the whole matter,
that
I, even I, am he. Learn this from the destruction of idolaters, and the
inability of their idols to help them." The great God here demands the
glory, 1. Of a self-existence:
I, even I, am he. Thus Moses concludes
with that name of God by which he was first made to know him (Ex. 3:14),
"I
am that I am. I am he that I have been, that I will be, that I have promised
to be, that I have threatened to be; all shall find me true to my word."
The Targum of Uzzielides paraphrases it thus:
When the Word of the Lord shall
reveal himself to redeem his people, he shall say to all people, See that I now
am what I am, and have been, and I am what I will be, which we know very
well how to apply to him who said to John,
I am he who is, and was, and is to
come, Rev. 1:8. These words,
I even I, am he, we meet with often in
those chapters of Isaiah where God is encouraging his people to hope for their
deliverance out of Babylon, Isa. 41:4; 43:11, 13, 25, 46:4. 2. Of a sole
supremacy. "There
is no god with me. None to help with me, none to
cope with me." See Isa. 43:10, 11. 3. Of an absolute sovereignty, a
universal agency:
I kill, and I make alive; that is, all evil and all
good come from his hand to providence; he forms both the light of life and the
darkness of death, Isa. 45:7; Lam. 3:37, 38. Or, He kills and wounds his
enemies, but heals and makes alive his own people, kills and wounds with his
judgments those that revolt from him and rebel against him; but, when they
return and repent, he heals them, and makes them alive with his mercy and grace.
Or it denotes his incontestable authority to dispose of all his creatures, and
the beings he has given them, so as to serve his own purposes by them:
Whom
he will he slays, and whom he will he keeps alive, when his judgments are
abroad. Or thus, Though he kill, yet he makes alive again:
though he cause
grief, yet will he have compassion, Lam. 3:32. Though he have
torn,
he will
heal us, Hos. 6:1, 2. The Jerusalem Targum reads it,
I kill
those that are alive in this world, and make those alive in the other world that
are dead. And some of the Jewish doctors themselves have observed that
death, and a life after it, that is, eternal life, is intimated in these words.
4. Of an irresistible power, which cannot be controlled:
Neither is there any
that can deliver out of my hand those that I have marked for destruction. As
no exception can be made against the sentence of God's justice, so no escape
can be made from the executions of his power.
II. Terror to his enemies, v. 40-42. Terror indeed to those
that hate him, as all those do that serve other gods, that persist in wilful
disobedience to the divine law, and that malign and persecute his faithful
servants. These are those to whom God will render vengeance, those his enemies
that will not have him to reign over them. In order to alarm such in time to
repent and return to their allegiance, the wrath of God is here revealed from
heaven against them. 1. The divine sentence is ratified with an oath (v. 40): He
lifts up his hand to heaven, the habitation of his holiness; this was an
ancient and very significant sign used in swearing, Gen. 14:22. And, since he
could swear by no greater, he swears by himself and his own life. Those are
miserable without remedy that have the word and oath of God against them. The
Lord hath sworn, and will not repent, that the sin of sinners shall be their
ruin if they go on in it. 2. Preparation is made for the execution: The
glittering
sword is whet. See Ps. 7:12. It is a sword
bathed in heaven, Isa.
34:5. While the sword is in whetting, space is given to the sinner to repent and
make his peace, which, if he neglects, will render the wound the deeper. And, as
the sword is whet, so the hand that is to wield it takes hold on judgment with a
resolution to go through with it. 3. The execution itself will be very terrible:
The
sword shall devour flesh in abundance, and the
arrows be made
drunk
with blood, such vast quantities of it shall be shed, the blood of the slain
in battle, and of the captives, to whom no quarter shall be given, but who shall
be put under military execution. When he begins revenge he will make an end; for
in this also his work is perfect. The critics are much perplexed with the last
clause,
From the beginning of revenges upon the enemy. The learned bishop
Patrick (that great master) thinks it may admit this reading,
From the king
to the slave of the enemies, Jer. 50:35-37. When the sword of God's
wrath is drawn it will make bloody work, blood to the horse-bridles, Rev. 14:20.
III. Comfort to his own people (v. 43):
Rejoice, O you
nations, with his people. He concludes the song with words of joy; for in
God's Israel there is a remnant whose end will be peace. God's people will
rejoice at last, will rejoice everlastingly. Three things are here mentioned as
the matter of joy:-1. The enlarging of the church's bounds. The apostle
applies the first words of this verse to the conversion of the Gentiles. Rom.
15:10,
Rejoice you Gentiles with his people. See what the grace of God
does in the conversion of souls, it brings them to rejoice with the people of
God; for true religion brings us acquainted with true joy, so great a mistake
are those under that think it tends to make men melancholy. 2. The avenging of
the church's controversies upon her adversaries. He will make inquisition for
the
blood of his servants, and it shall appear how precious it is to him; for
those that spilt it shall have blood given them to drink. 3. The mercy God has
in store for his church, and for all that belong to it: He will be
merciful
to his land, and to his people, that is, to all every where that fear and
serve him. Whatever judgments are brought upon sinners, it shall go well with
the people of God; in this let Jews and Gentiles rejoice together.
Verses 44-52
Here is, I. The solemn delivery of this song to the children of
Israel, v. 44, 45. Moses spoke it to as many as could hear him, while Joshua, in
another assembly, at the same time, delivered it to as many as his voice would
reach. Thus coming to them from the mouth of both their governors, Moses who was
laying down the government, and Joshua who was taking it up, they would see they
were both in the same mind, and that, though they changed their commander, there
was no change in the divine command; Joshua, as well as Moses, would be a
witness against them if ever they forsook God.
II. An earnest charge to them to mind these and all the rest of
the good words that Moses had said to them. How earnestly does he long after
them all, how very desirous that the word of God might make deep and lasting
impressions upon them, how jealous over them with a godly jealousy, lest they
should at any time let slip these great things!
1. The duties he charges upon them are, (1.) Carefully to attend
to these themselves: "Set your hearts both to the laws, and to the promises
and threatenings, the blessings and curses, and now at last to this song. Let
the mind be closely applied to the consideration of these things; be affected
with them; be intent upon your duty, and cleave to it with full purpose of
heart." (2.) Faithfully to transmit these things to those that should come
after them: "What interest you have in your children, or influence upon
them, use it for this purpose; and
command them (as your father Abraham
did, Gen. 18:19)
to observe to do all the words of this law." Those
that are good themselves cannot but desire that their children may be so
likewise, and that posterity may keep up religion in their day and the entail of
it may not be cut off.
2. The arguments he uses to persuade them to make religion their
business and to persevere in it are, (1.) The vast importance of the things
themselves which he had charged upon them (v. 47):
"It is not a vain
thing, because it is your life. It is not an indifferent thing, but of
absolute necessity; it is not a trifle, but a matter of consequence, a matter of
life and death; mind it, and you are made for ever; neglect it, and you are for
ever undone." O that men were but fully persuaded of this, that religion is
their life, even the life of their souls! (2.) The vast advantage it would be of
to them:
Through this thing you shall prolong your days in Canaan, which
is a typical promise of that eternal life which Christ has assured us those
shall enter into that keep the commandments of God, Mt. 19:17.
III. Orders given to Moses concerning his death. Now that this
renowned witness for God had finished his testimony, he must go up to Mount Nebo
and die; in the prophecy of Christ's two witnesses there is a plain allusion
to Moses and Elias (Rev. 11:6), and perhaps their removal, being by martyrdom,
is no less glorious than the removal either of Moses or Elias. Orders were given
to Moses that self-same day, v. 48. Now that he had done his work, why should he
desire to live a day longer? He had indeed formerly prayed that he might go over
Jordan, but now he is entirely satisfied, and, as God had bidden him,
saith
no more of that matter. 1. God here reminds him of the sin he had been
guilty of, for which he was excluded Canaan (v. 51), that he might the more
patiently bear the rebuke because he had sinned, and that now he might renew his
sorrow for that unadvised word, for it is good for the best of men to die
repenting of the infirmities they are conscious to themselves of. It was an
omission that was thus displeasing to God; he did
not sanctify God, as he
ought to have done,
before the children of Israel, he did not carry
himself with a due decorum in executing the orders he had then received. 2. He
reminds him of the death of his brother Aaron (v. 50), to make his own the more
familiar and the less formidable. Note, It is a great encouragement to us, when
we die, to think of our friends that have gone before us through that darksome
valley, especially of Christ, our elder brother and great high priest. 3. He
sends him up to a high hill, thence to take a view of the land of Canaan and
then die, v. 49, 50. The remembrance of his sin might make death terrible, but
the sight God gave him of Canaan took off the terror of it, as it was a token of
God's being reconciled to him, and a plain indication to him that though his
sin shut him out of the earthly Canaan, yet it should not deprive him of that
better country which in this world can only be seen, and that with an eye of
faith. Note, Those may die with comfort and ease whenever God calls for them
(notwithstanding the sins they remember against themselves) who have a believing
prospect and a well-grounded hope of eternal life beyond death.
Chapter 32:
| Darby
| Geneva
| Gill
| Jamieson Faussett Brown
| Matthew Henry
| Matthew Henry Concise
| Wesley
| Index
| Bible Gateway |
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