Boyd’s Bible Dictionary:
So called because it “repeats the law.”—Fifth book of O. T. and last of the Pentateuch. Authorship ascribed to Moses, except last chapter (Deut. 1:1-4:40), rehearse the wanderings (Deut. 5:1-26:19), recapitulate the law; the others deliver the law into keeping of the Levites, and describe the death of Moses.
Concise Bible Dictionary:
The name signifies “The Second Law,” but this does not properly describe it, as the ten commandments and Jehovah’s name and His covenant made in Horeb are the basis of its instructions. Neither does “Repetition of the Law” give the right thought, because some parts of this book were not given before. It rehearses God’s covenant, relationship with Israel under new circumstances: they had come to the border of the promised land, and were just about to enter into its possession, not on the ground of faithfulness to the law, but according to the covenant made with the fathers (Deut. 9:4-5). Some things are added which could have had no application in the wilderness, even referring to their having a king.
The style of the book is different from those preceding it: a vast typical system is portrayed in the three preceding books, while in this the Spirit of God is occupied with the actual circumstances connected with their possession of the land of promise. Nearly all of Deuteronomy is what Moses rehearsed in the hearing of the people. Thus, “Moses began to declare this law” (Deut. 1:5). He called all Israel, and said unto them, “Hear, O Israel, the statutes and judgments” (Deut. 5:1). The book may be otherwise divided into three parts, thus: Deuteronomy 1-11: Moses rehearses the way the Lord had led them, the covenant with them at Horeb, their disobedience, the resumption of God’s relationship with them on the ground of Moses’ mediation, and putting the law in the ark. Deuteronomy 12-29: various commandments are given with the results of obedience and disobedience fully stated. Deuteronomy 30-34: things to come, the song of Moses, and his blessing the tribes.
The fact is stated that from Horeb by the way of Mount Seir, unto Kadesh-barnea on the south border of the land, was only an eleven days’ journey, yet it had occupied them, going backwards and forwards, nearly forty years. Moses then reminded them of the burden and strife which fell on him consequent on their being so great a people, and of the system of government that had been appointed among them; also that it was themselves who were the instigators of sending the spies to search out the land. This appears to clash with Numbers 13:1-2, which says, “The Lord spake unto Moses, saying, Send thou men that they may search the land of Canaan.” The two passages show that the people proposed it; Moses consented (it pleased him well, he says here); and God commanded it. God’s first message was, “Go up and possess it”; but the people hesitated, and said they would send the spies (Deut. 1:21-23). Their rebellion and their wanderings were the result.
Deuteronomy 2-3. Moses continues their history after the many days of their wilderness wanderings. They had been told not to meddle with the Edomites—the descendants of Isaac through Esau; nor with the Moabites and Ammonites, for they were the descendants of Lot. Sihon the Amorite had been subdued. This was after they had traveled round to the east of the Dead Sea. Deuteronomy 10-12 and 20-23 should be read as parentheses: they are valuable historical notes. Og king of Bashan had been conquered and his cities taken, a pledge of the full victory which the Lord would give over the nations of Canaan. The two tribes and a half had had their portion assigned on the east of the Jordan. Moses should see the land, but was not to go over the Jordan, and Joshua was to be his successor.
Deuteronomy 4. Moses calls them to hearken to the commands he had given them, that they might live and go in and possess the land. The people must take heed unto themselves, that they make no similitude of Jehovah who had spoken to them, and so corrupt themselves.
Deuteronomy 5-6. The covenant at Horeb is rehearsed with exhortations to obedience, and the great truth pressed upon them of which they were the witnesses: “Jehovah our God is one Jehovah,” to whom every affection should flow.
Deuteronomy 7-8. The people are warned against making any covenant with the people of the land; for they themselves were a holy people. God had chosen them for a special people above all upon the face of the earth. They are reminded of all God’s goodness to them that they might not forget Him. He had humbled them and proved them, to do them good in their latter end.
Deuteronomy 9-11. Moses declares that God was not going to bring them into the land on account of their own righteousness or uprightness of heart; but because He would fulfill His promises to Abraham, Isaac, and Jacob. Moses plainly tells them “Ye have been rebellious against the Lord from the day that I knew you”; and he rehearses their failings, and God’s goodness, and His securing His covenant in the ark.
Deuteronomy 12-13. The idolatrous altars and groves found in the land were to be destroyed. There was but one place to which all the sacrifices were to be brought, where Jehovah would put His name, and there only were the consecrated things to be eaten. They were not to inquire after the heathen gods, lest they should be ensnared thereby. Strong delusion is guarded against — if a prophet’s sign came to pass, it might be to prove them. They must not follow such a one into idolatry, nor were they to spare the nearest relative who would lead them away from worshipping Jehovah their God.
Deuteronomy 14-19. Many of the laws which were given in the former part of the Pentateuch are rehearsed. If they would have a king, he must be the one whom God would choose, and the king’s duties are detailed.
Deuteronomy 20. Instructions as to going to battle; what cities were to be spared, and what people were to be utterly destroyed.
Deuteronomy 21-25. Divers commandments are rehearsed before the people.
Deuteronomy 26. When they were brought into the land, and one came to worship, he was to confess “A Syrian ready to perish was my father.” Then the goodness of God was to be confessed in the redemption from Egypt, and bringing into the promised land, and they were to rejoice in every good thing God had given them. Then grace should flow out to the fatherless and the widows. Obedience should follow, and all defilement be avoided. Blessing should be asked for all Israel.
Deuteronomy 27. The law was to be written on great stones, and set up on mount Ebal, where also an altar of whole stones was to be reared for both burnt offerings and peace offerings. Here, too, certain tribes were to stand to pronounce the curses which follow. Other tribes were to stand on mount Gerizim to bless. The blessings however are omitted, as in fact the people were under the curse, being under the law, as the apostle shows in the epistle to the Galatians when dealing with the principle of law.
Deuteronomy 28. The people being under the government of God, the consequences of obedience or disobedience are presented in blessings or cursings, the latter being realized in the subsequent history of the people.
Deuteronomy 29-30. The solemn fact is stated that, spite of all the signs and miracles they had seen, yet the Lord had not given eyes to see, nor ears to hear, nor a heart to understand (compare John 3:2-3). They all on that day stood before the Lord their God, and He made the covenant with them. Deuteronomy 30:15 expresses it in few words—it was “life and good, death and evil.” The secret purpose of God is referred to, and when all was ruined under law, the principle of righteousness by faith is introduced.
Deuteronomy 31-32. The law was to be read to the people every seven years. To Joshua the “charge” was committed to bring the people into the land. Moses taught the people a song. It is partly prophetic, for their future is foretold. God would provoke them to jealousy by the Gentiles, as in Romans 10:19; but would finally bless them. Moses longed to go over Jordan and see the land; but it was forbidden him because he had transgressed. (Dispensationally Moses represents the law and that could not bring them into the promised land.)
Deuteronomy 33. Moses blesses the twelve tribes. When Jacob blessed them in Genesis 49 it was rather their prophetic history in the then future; here it is more their relationship with God in His government over them for blessing, when they will sit down at His feet and hear His words. Simeon is omitted; his portion was in the extreme south-west, near the desert; we read very little of this tribe, as if they were lost in the land. The number twelve was made up by the two sons of Joseph; however, we find that Simeon is among the twelve tribes sealed in Revelation 7 and in the future division of the land (Ezek. 48:25).
Deuteronomy 34. The death of Moses is related and that God buried him in an unknown place, so his tomb could not be worshipped as a holy spot. There arose not a prophet since in Israel like unto Moses, whom the Lord knew face to face.
The Book of Deuteronomy is in a word characterized by exhortations to obedience by a people brought into God’s land. It is often quoted in the New Testament and the Lord three times quoted from it when tempted of the devil. It is cited as written by Moses (Rom. 10:19; 1 Cor. 9:9). The scripture thus fully refutes those who seek to attribute it to some unknown writer of a later date. Of course the last chapter is an exception: it may have been added by Joshua.
Bible Handbook:
1451 B.C. – 34 Chapters – 959 Verses
The previous books are on the whole well named, and, in general, describe their character. Thus Genesis, signifying production or origin, is a fitting title for the book of the beginnings. Exodus, meaning departure or going out, gives the root idea of redemption. Leviticus, so termed from the whole Jewish religious ritual carefully elaborated in the third book of Moses, and which was committed to and so far carried out by the tribe of Levi — hence Leviticus. The numbering of the people, preparatory to and at the close of wilderness walk and warfare, and of the Levites for tabernacle service, gave its name — we do not say character — to the fourth book. Deuteronomy, so termed by the Alexandrian transcribers, or seventy, and signifying the second law or law repeated, is a poor expression indeed of its contents. It is not at all the law or previous communications of God simply repeated to the new generation about to enter Canaan, but the book has a character peculiar to itself, as distinct and as important as any book in the whole canon. There is no repetition in the works of God — no two blades of grass of the countless millions adorning our fields are precisely alike — and the same principle equally obtains in the word of God. Our God never repeats Himself. If words and sentences verbally the same occur in different sections of the Holy Scriptures, it will be found that the moral purpose intended is different in each case.
What a solemn period in Israel’s history we have arrived at! What a chequered life theirs had been! How fruitful in holy lessons to us! Does not their wilderness career emphatically tell out what man is in his self-confidence, and that too in presence of ever-abounding grace and love? What a patient, holy, gracious God was theirs; and Israel’s God is ours. The people now rest on the edge of the desert — the scene of their wanderings and murmurings. In a few weeks they will cross the Jordan and enter into possession of their inalienable inheritance — the land on which the heart and eye of Jehovah rest perpetually, and which floweth with milk and honey. The former generation had passed off the scene, a solemn witness to the unchanging truth that “our God is a consuming fire.” Moses, the aged legislator, at his earnest solicitation, feasted his eyes on the goodly land, while its glories successively passed before him, on Pisgah’s height — but his feet were not to tread its sacred soil until the resurrection morning, when “they shall walk with Me in white, for they are worthy”; and our Saviour and Divine Guide will conduct His ransomed through scenes of surpassing beauty. These and other considerations drawn from the people’s apostasy and the Divine faithfulness, stamp the spoken (Deut. 1:5) and written (Deut. 28:58) communications contained in the book with peculiar solemnity. The citations from Deuteronomy by the Apostle in discussing the great question of righteousness (Rom. 10), and by our blessed Lord, who three times quoted from it (Luke 4), are important as defining the moral condition of the people when these heart-searching and pathetic appeals, with which this book abounds, were addressed to them. The utter ruin of Israel was morally complete when Christ, driven into the wilderness, foiled Satan with the words of God drawn from our book; and the Lord’s quotations from the early part of the book were not more conclusive as to Israel’s utter alienation of heart from God than was Paul’s at another day, who cited from the latter part, and that too in view of Israel’s utter corruption and departure from God. Another point of importance to the due understanding of the scope and purpose of the book, is, that no intermediate links are recognized as existing between the people and God. The relationship is immediate and direct. Priests and Levites — the links between God and the people as to worship and service — are rarely spoken of. This principle of direct connection with God is one of supreme importance in these days. In chapter 16 we have three feasts compulsory upon all the males of the people, and which were intended to show the nation morally in relationship to Jehovah (verse 16); these were: — the Passover, Redemption by the blood of the Lamb; Pentecost, the Liberty of grace; and Tabernacles, the Glory to come.
Obedience to the Commandments of the Lord is made the ground on which the people were to enter Canaan and continue therein, and this obedience is urged after a recapitulation of God’s ways with them from their departure at Sinai nigh forty years before. The motives urging to this obedience are of the most touching character. The brief review of the wilderness, which serves as an introduction to the book (Deut. 1- 4), is not to supplement the history as given in the wilderness books of Exodus and Numbers: a higher object is in view, and one worthy of God and most useful to man. In these chapters we have the moral springs of action; the roots and sources opened up and laid bare. In the previous books we have the strictly historical course of events; while here we have the inner aspect of that history — its hidden workings. From the thirtieth chapter we have a revelation of the future in its present and future bearing upon Israel. There is very little typical instruction in the book, and in this respect it stands out in marked contrast to the preceding books. Deuteronomy is eminently practical, and abounds in appeals to the conscience, which characterizes it on the whole as a moral one, and one well fitted therefore to act upon the heart, life, and ways. God’s sovereign choice of a place (Jerusalem) as a center for His people — where He would record His name — is a marked feature of the book. The word choose in this connection occurs more than 20 times.
This book supposes the people settled in Canaan, and is their guide or direction book for Canaan conduct and ways; this is self-evident from any chapter in the central portion of the book. The priests’ guide-book is Leviticus, and that of the Levites, Numbers.
No book of late years has been so bitterly assailed (save perhaps Genesis) as Deuteronomy; but we would beg the reader to carefully note that the book is cited from or specifically referred to by Solomon (1 Kings 8:29) 450 years after Moses; in the days of Amaziah, king of Judah (2 Kings 14:6), nearly 200 years after Solomon; also by Jehovah (Jer. 34:14), after another 200 years and more; again, our Lord Himself thrice quoted from the early chapters in His memorable contest with Satan (Luke 4); Peter too quotes from the book, ascribing its authorship to Moses (Acts 3:22-23); the same Messianic prophecy is used by Stephen in his truly wonderful address in the presence of the assembled leaders of Judah (Acts 7:37); while Paul freely uses the book in discussing the great question of righteousness for Jew and Gentile (Rom. 10). The Lord put His seal upon the early part of the book; Peter and Stephen the central portion, and Paul the latter part. Thus the whole fabric of Divine revelation stands or falls with Deuteronomy. The authorship, inspiration and Divine authority of Deuteronomy are vouched for by Jehovah, the Holy Spirit, Christ; also by kings, prophets, apostles, and martyrs — all of whom directly cite from or refer to it. And yet, in face of this overwhelming evidence, so-called Christian men will dare to question its Divine authority. Alas! alas! for the deniers of inspiration, their judgment is rapidly nearing.
General Divisions
Chapters 1-4 — A brief summary of God’s ways with the people from their departure at Sinai, presenting the roots of their failure, which were want of confidence in God, and presumption of the flesh.
Chapters 5-11 — The ground and motives on which the people’s obedience to the law is urged on their entrance into the land.
Chapters 12-16:17 — Divers, statutes, and ordinances for observance in the land.
Chapters 16:18-26 — Holiness, and the civil and ecclesiastical blessing of the people divinely secured in the land.
Chapters 27-34 — The curse and blessing; the new covenant in the land of Moab; the people’s latter day blessing on the principle of faith.
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