Moses in a third discourse Deut. 27–30, proceeds more specifically
to dwell upon the sanctions of the Law. In these chapters he sets
before Israel in striking and elaborate detail the blessings which
would ensue upon faithfulness to the covenant, and the curses which
disobedience would involve. Deut... [ Continue Reading ]
The stones here named are not those of which the altar Deuteronomy
27:5 was to be built, but are to serve as a separate monument
witnessing to the fact that the people took possession of the land by
virtue of the Law inscribed on them and with an acknowledgment of its
obligations.... [ Continue Reading ]
ALL THE WORDS OF THIS LAW - i. e. all the laws revealed from God to
the people by Moses, regarded by the Jews as 613 (compare Numbers
15:38 note). The exhibition of laws in this manner on stones, pillars,
or tables, was familiar to the ancients. The laws were probably graven
in the stone (“very plai... [ Continue Reading ]
IN MOUNT EBAL - Compare the marginal references. The Samaritan
Pentateuch and Version read here Gerizim instead of Ebal; but the
original text was probably, as nearly all modern authorities hold,
altered in order to lend a show of scriptural sanction to the
Samaritan temple on Mount Gerizim.
The ere... [ Continue Reading ]
Compare Joshua 8:32. The solemnity was apparently designed only for
the single occasion on which it actually took place.
Deuteronomy 27:12, Deuteronomy 27:13
The tribes appointed to stand on Gerizim to bless the people all
sprang from the two wives of Jacob, Leah and Rachel. All the four
tribes whi... [ Continue Reading ]