-
CHAPTER XII
_All monuments of idolatry in the promised land to be destroyed_,
1-3;
_and God's service to be duly performed_, 4-7.
_The difference between the performance of that service in the_
_...
-
Moses now passes on to apply Deut. 12–26 the leading principles of
the Decalogue to the ecclesiastical, civil, and social life of the
people. Particulars will be noticed which are unique to the Law as...
-
8. THE PLACE OF WORSHIP
CHAPTER 12
_ 1. The overthrow of false worship (Deuteronomy 12:1)_
2. The true place of worship (Deuteronomy 12:5)
3. Concerning eating and the blood (D
-
THE LAW OF ONE SANCTUARY. The local sanctuaries (originally Canaanite)
with everything belonging to them, are to be destroyed, and all
sacrifices are to be offered at the place which Yahweh should cho...
-
STATUTES AND JUDGMENTS. See note on Deuteronomy 4:1.
THE LORD. Hebrew. _Jehovah._ App-4.
GOD. Hebrew. _Elohim._ App-4.
EARTH. ground. Hebrew. _'adamah._...
-
_These are the statutes and the judgements_ As in Deuteronomy 6:1 but
_minus_the Commandment or Charge (Miṣwah) because this, the
introductory enforcement of the religious principles on which the laws...
-
LESSON NINE DEUTERONOMY 12:1-28
B. THE LAW (the Statutes and Ordinances) (Deuteronomy 12:1 to
Deuteronomy 26:19)
1. ONE SANCTUARY ...
-
_THESE ARE THE STATUTES AND JUDGMENTS, WHICH YE SHALL OBSERVE TO DO IN
THE LAND, WHICH THE LORD GOD OF THY FATHERS GIVETH THEE TO POSSESS IT,
ALL THE DAYS THAT YE LIVE UPON THE EARTH._
Deuteronomy 12...
-
THE ABOLITION OF IDOLATROUS PLACES. THE CENTRALISATION OF WORSHIP.
ABSTINENCE FROM BLOOD
The larger section of the Second Discourse begins here and extends to
the end of Deuteronomy 26. It consists of...
-
DEUTERONOMY: GOD’S LAW OF LOVE
LOVE AND OBEY THE *LORD YOUR GOD
DEUTERONOMY
_PHILIP SMITH_
CHAPTER 12
V1 ‘You must be careful to *keep these rules and laws for as long
as you live in the country...
-
XII.
(1) THESE ARE THE STATUTES AND JUDGMENTS. — The word _Mitzvah_ —
commandment, or duty — is not used here. Particular _institutions
and requirements_ are now before us....
-
אֵ֠לֶּה הַֽ חֻקִּ֣ים וְ הַ
מִּשְׁפָּטִים֮ אֲש
-
LAWS OF SACRIFICE
Deuteronomy 12:1.
IT is a characteristic of all the earlier codes of law-the Book of the
Covenant, the Deuteronomic Code, and the Law of Holiness-that at the
head of the series of l...
-
Having thus repeated the great words of the Law and called the people
to obedience, Moses now proceeded to deal with the statutes and
judgments, and, first, the statutes.
In dealing with these he com...
-
These [are] the statutes and judgments, which ye shall observe to do
in the land, which the LORD God (a) of thy fathers giveth thee to
possess it, all the days that ye live upon the earth.
(a) By whi...
-
_These. Having inculcated the general precepts, and the obligation of
loving God above all things, Moses now descends to particular duties.
(Calmet)_...
-
CONTENTS
This chapter differs in some degree from what went before. It is
certainly the continuation of Moses' Sermon, but is not so much in a
way of exhortation as in precept. He here directs to the...
-
In examining Exodus, Leviticus, and Numbers, we have found what may be
called an abstract typical system. That is, we see in them a number of
institutions laid down by Jehovah, the pattern of which wa...
-
THE FOLLOWING COMMENTARY COVERS CHAPTER S 12 AND 13.
The second division begins with chapter 12, and contains the statutes
and ordinances they were bound to observe. It is not a repetition of
the old...
-
THESE ARE THE STATUTES AND JUDGMENTS WHICH YE SHALL OBSERVE TO DO,....
Which are recorded in this and the following Chapter s; here a new
discourse begins, and which perhaps was delivered at another t...
-
These [are] the statutes and judgments, which ye shall observe to do
in the land, which the LORD God of thy fathers giveth thee to possess
it, all the days that ye live upon the earth.
Ver. 1. _These...
-
_These are the statutes_ Moses, being still deeply impressed with a
sense of the great danger his nation would be in of falling into
idolatrous practices, after their settlement in the promised land,...
-
1 Monuments of Idolatrie are to be destroyed.
5 The place of Gods seruice is to be kept. 15.23 Blood is forbidden.
17.20.26 Holy things must bee eaten in the Holy place.
19 The Leuite is not to be f...
-
These are the statutes and judgments which ye shall observe to do in
the land which the Lord God of thy fathers giveth thee to possess it,
all the days that ye live upon the earth, Deuteronomy 4:10. T...
-
CONCERNING THE PLACE OF WORSHIP AND SACRIFICES...
-
ONE CENTER OF WORSHIP
(vs.1-28)
To prepare for proper worship in the land, Israel must utterly destroy
those in which the nations before them served their idols. This was
commonly done in high places...
-
1-4 Moses comes to the statutes he had to give in charge to Israel;
and begins with such as relate to the worship of God. The Israelites
are charged not to bring the rites and usages of idolaters into...
-
DEUTERONOMY CHAPTER 12 They are commanded to destroy all the places of
idolatry, DEUTERONOMY 12:1; and must worship God in his own place, and
after his will, DEUTERONOMY 12:4. The eating of blood proh...
-
We now enter upon a new section of our marvellous book. The discourses
contained in the first eleven Chapter s having established the
all-important principle of obedience, we now come to the practical...
-
CONTENTS: Statements of conditions of blessing in the land.
CHARACTERS: God, Moses.
CONCLUSION: We must not think that our religion is only for our years
of servitude or our entertainment in the pla...
-
Deuteronomy 12:5. _The place which the Lord shall choose._ No place is
here named; for the Lord was content, and most significantly, to dwell
in the tent. He sojourned in the desert; and afterwards re...
-
_If there arise among you a prophet._
ON THE CRITERION OF A FALSE MIRACLE
I. The evidence drawn from miracles, in favour of any Divine
revelation, rests in general on the testimony of those who saw t...
-
DEUTERONOMY—NOTE ON DEUTERONOMY 12:1 Moses’ Second Speech:
Specific Covenant Stipulations. In this second part of Moses’ second
speech, he discusses in more detail the things he discussed in the
first...
-
CRITICAL NOTES.—Moses now begins an exposition of the principal laws
which must govern the people in their ecclesiastical, civil, and
domestic life in Canaan. The religious life of Israel is described...
-
EXPOSITION
ANNOUNCEMENT OF PARTICULAR LAWS.
CHAPTERS 12-26. Moses, having in his first address cast a glance at
the events which had transpired between Sinai and the plains of Moab,
and in his second...
-
In chapter twelve he gives the conditions whereby they should enjoy
the blessings within the land.
First of all they are to utterly destroy all of the places, where
there the people that inhabited the...
-
1 Kings 8:40; Deuteronomy 4:1; Deuteronomy 4:2; Deuteronomy 4:45;...