Deuteronomy 10

Deuteronomy 10  •  3 min. read  •  grade level: 12
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In Deuteronomy 10 we find the provision of Jehovah’s goodness is stated in a very striking way. Thus when the story of their rebellion is mentioned, it leads Moses to go back and to trace how this spirit betrayed itself even so early as at Horeb; for when it is a question of rebellion, we must go to the root of it. We are also shown the astonishing patience of Jehovah, and with that which might be difficult to understand if we did not look to the moral scope of the book – the destruction of the first tables, the writing out of fresh ones, and the place in which they were to be kept. At the same time we are told how the tribe of Levi was separated, after having brought in (in an episodical way) an allusion to Aaron’s death. It seems just a parenthesis, and not a question of chronology.1
A fair question arises for those who honor the divine word, why events so long severed in time are thus introduced seemingly together. No doubt the malicious mind of the skeptic takes occasion from it to turn what he does not seek to understand to the disparagement of inspiration. But there is no discrepancy whatever, nor confusion of Aaron’s death in the last year of the wilderness sojourn with the separation of Levi some thirty-eight years before. The truth is that the solemn circumstances appear to recall to the mind of Moses the awful lapse of Israel when “they made the calf which Aaron made,” and Levi, of old perfidious to the stranger for a sister’s sake, consecrated themselves to Jehovah in the blood of their idolatrous brethren; and Moses hews at Jehovah’s command tables of stone like the first, and put them, written as before, in the ark which he had made. It was not then and there that Aaron died, as he alas! deserved. The intercession of Moses prevailed so far for his brother and the people, that the one lived until near the end of the wanderings in the desert, and the others, instead of perishing as a whole at once, lived to take their journey from a land of wells (Beeroth) to Mosera where Aaron died at Mount Hor, and thence to Gudgodah, and to Jotbath, “a land of rivers of waters”; such was the patient goodness of God to both, as the long interval made the more marked.2
 
1. Dr. Davidson (Introduction to the Old Testament, 1:65) says: “From Deuteronomy 10:8 it is plain that the Levites were not appointed at Sinai but later; whereas we learn from Numbers 8 that their institution took place at Sinai.” A disgraceful perversion; for Deueronomy a. 6-7 is manifestly a parenthesis. Bearing this in mind, any reader can see that “at that time” in verse 8 really coalesces with “at that time” in verses 1-6, and therefore is in perfect accord with Num. 8; and yet is it repeated in page 336.
2. See Dr. Lightfoot, Works, 2, p. 136, Pitman’s Edition.