Bible Commentary

Deuteronomy 28:1-14

The Pulpit Commentary on Deuteronomy 28:1-14

The Pulpit Commentary · Joseph S. Exell and contributors · Public domain

The blessing.

Blessing and curse, as Keil says, are viewed in these verses "as actual powers, which follow in the footsteps of the nation, and overtake it" (, , ; ). The blessing of God is a vera causa in human life. It is not to be resolved entirely into natural tendencies. A cheerful mind conduces to health; virtuous habits tend to prosperity, etc. But this is not the whole. Conspiring with natural tendencies, we must recognize a special providence, a designed direction of the beneficent powers of nature and life, so as to pour treasures of goodness on the favored individual. Virtue has its natural reward in the approval of conscience; but it would not of itself suffice to bring about the exceptionally fortunate condition in the outward lot which these verses represent. So strongly was this felt by the philosopher Kant, that, as is well known, he postulates the existence of God, for the express purpose of bringing about an ultimate harmony between virtue and felicity.

I. THE SPHERE OF THE BLESSING. The covenant rested largely on temporal promises. Jehovah was doubtless felt by the believing soul to be a better portion than any of his gifts (.; 73.), and the relation which he sustained to his worshipper could not but be thought of as subsisting beyond death, and yielding its appropriate fruit in a future life (; ; ; , ; ). Yet, inasmuch as "life and immortality" had not been clearly brought to light (), his favor was specially exhibited in the abundant communication of earthly blessings. A higher order has supervened, and the temporal promises of these verses are swallowed up in better and more enduring ones (). The gospel does not sever the connection between godliness and prosperity. It gives it a new sanction (). Were the obedience of God's children more uniform and perfect, and piety more widely diffused in communities, the connection would be more manifest than it is. But on the whole, temporal prosperity occupies a lower relative place in the New Testament than in the Old.

1. The spiritual man, serving Christ, and witnessing for him amidst the evil of the world, is more frequently exposed to persecution (; , ; ). He has more occasion to take up the cross (). He may require to sacrifice all he has, with life itself, for Christ's sake and the gospel's.

2. Temporal prosperity is in every case subordinated to spiritual good (; ). Bacon's saying has, therefore, truth in it, "Prosperity is the blessing of the Old Testament; adversity is the blessing of the New, which carrieth the greater benediction, and the clearer revelation of God's favor." Adversity, however, even in the New Testament, is but a step to something higher. Spiritual compensations now; hereafter, "a far more exceeding and eternal weight of glory "(; ).

II. THE OPERATION OF THE BLESSING, It is viewed as pervading every department of the earthly life. It mingles itself with all the good man is, with all he does, with the circumstances of his lot, with the powers of the natural world which constitute his environment. It rests on his person, on his household, on his possessions. It helps him against his enemies, making him wealthy and powerful (Abraham, Job), and exalting him to a position in which others are dependent on him. It attends him in city and field, in his coming in and going out, so that whatever he does prospers (). These promises demonstrate:

1. That the providence of God, in the sphere of the outward life, is free, sovereign, all-embracing.

2. That there is under this providence a connection between outward events and circumstances and spiritual conditions.

3. That, subordinately to higher ends, piety and virtue, under this providence, will be rewarded by prosperity. (See a valuable treatment of this subject in M'Cosh's 'Method of the Divine Government,' bk. 2. .) Yet glorious as these promises are, they "have no glory in this respect, by reason of the glory that excelleth" of the promises of the New Testament.

Promises:

1. Of salvation (, ).

2. Of spiritual blessings ().

3. Of a heavenly inheritance (, ).

4. Of "riches" of goodness which will remain unexhausted through eternal ages (, ).

5. Of perfected transformation into the moral image of God (; :49; ; ).

III. THE CONDITION OF THE BLESSING. Obedience (, , ,, ).

1. Legally, perfect obedience.

2. Evangelically, obedience habitual and sincere, albeit imperfect.

The meritorious ground of a believer's acceptance, and of the blessings he receives, is the obedience unto death of Christ (). Christ expiates his sins, and fulfils de novo the condition of the covenant. It is well to remember, as explaining anomalies in the histories of righteous men under the old covenant, that the promises in these verses were primarily national. They could be realized to the individual only in connection with the obedience of the nation as a whole. When apostasy provoked God's judgments, pious individuals suffered in the general calamities. They suffered, too, as drawing upon themselves the hatred of the wicked. Hence the development in the Psalms and Prophets of the idea of the "Righteous Sufferer"—One whose afflictions are entailed on him by the hatred and injustice of the wicked, or who, innocent himself, suffers as a member of the body politic. This idea, which has throughout a Messianic reference, culminates in the prophecy of the" Servant of Jehovah" (; .), who, by the holy endurance of sufferings for others, makes their sin his own, and vicariously atones for it.—J.O.

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commentaryMatthew Henry on Deuteronomy 28:1-14This chapter is a very large exposition of two words, the blessing and the curse. They are real things and have real effects. The blessings are here put before the curses. God is slow to anger, but swift to show mercy.…Matthew HenrycommentaryPromises. (b. c. 1451.)PROMISES. (B. C. 1451.) The blessings are here put before the curses, to intimate, 1. That God is slow to anger, but swift to show mercy: he has said it, and sworn, that he would much rather we would obey and live than…Matthew HenrycommentaryThe Pulpit Commentary on Deuteronomy 28:1-14The present portion of a good man. The natural world may be fitly regarded as the visible symbol of the spiritual world, the earthly state a lower copy of the heavenly. The order of cause and effect is as uniform in the…Joseph S. Exell and contributorscommentaryThe Pulpit Commentary on Deuteronomy 28:1-68EXPOSITION THE BLESSING AND THE CURSE. Having enjoined the proclamations of the blessing and the curse on their entering into possession of Canaan, Moses, for the sake of impressing on the minds of the people both the b…Joseph S. Exell and contributorscommentaryThe Pulpit Commentary on Deuteronomy 28:1The blessing. The condition sine qua non of all enjoyment of the Divine bounty was obedience on the part of the people to the word and Law of Jehovah their God. This rendered, the blessing would come on them rich and fu…Joseph S. Exell and contributorscommentaryThe Pulpit Commentary on Deuteronomy 28:1-14God's blessing promised to the obedient. The aged lawgiver was finishing his course. Ere the end comes he would open up to the people once more the dread alternative of blessing and cursing, and would show them that the…Joseph S. Exell and contributorscommentaryThe Pulpit Commentary on Deuteronomy 28:1-14The purpose of temporal blessing. After the "Amens" from Mount Ebal had been faithfully given, the Levites turned to Gerizim with the detail of blessings, and received from the assembled thousands the grand "Amen." We h…Joseph S. Exell and contributorscommentaryThe Pulpit Commentary on Deuteronomy 28:2The blessings about to be specified are represented as personified, as actual agencies coming upon their objects and following them along their path.Joseph S. Exell and contributors