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Difference between revisions of "Deuteronomy"

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== American Tract Society Bible Dictionary <ref name="term_15911" /> ==
== Hastings' Dictionary of the Bible <ref name="term_50561" /> ==
<p> Or the repetition of the law, the fifth book of the Pentateuch, so called by the Greeks, because in it [[Moses]] recapitulates what he had ordained in the preceding books, Deuteronomy 1:1-6 29:1 31:1 33:1-29 . This book contains the history of what passed in the wilderness from the beginning of the eleventh month, to the seventh day of the twelfth month, in the fortieth year after the Israelites' departure from Egypt, that is, about six weeks, B. C. 1451. That part which mentions the death of Moses was added afterwards, very probably by Joshua. </p> <p> The book of Deuteronomy is the sublime and precious valedictory address of the inspired "man of God," now venerable for his age and experience, and standing almost in the gate of heaven. He gives the people of [[God]] his fatherly counsel and blessing, and then goes up into mount [[Pisgah]] alone to die. He recounts the dealings of God with them; recapitulates his laws; shows them why they should love him, and how they should serve him. It is full of tender solicitude, wise instruction, faithful warning, and the zealous love of a patriot and a prophet for the people of God, whom he had borne on his heart so long. It is often quoted by later inspired writers, and by our Lord, Matthew 4:4,7,10 . </p>
<p> <strong> DEUTERONOMY </strong> </p> <p> 1. Structure, Origin, [[Influence]] . The book consists of three speeches ( Deuteronomy 1:6 to Deuteronomy 4:40; Deuteronomy 4:5-26; Deuteronomy 4:28; Deuteronomy 29:2 to Deuteronomy 30:20 ) and two poems (chs. 32, 33), all of which are represented as having been uttered by [[Moses]] on the plains of [[Moab]] before the crossing of Jordan. The slight narrative (chs. 27, 31, 34) is concerned mainly with the last days of Moses. [[Chapters]] 1 3, however, contain an historical sketch cast into the form of a speech. </p> <p> Chs. 5 26, Deuteronomy 28:1-46 are a unity with a formal opening ( Deuteronomy 4:44-49 ) and close ( Deuteronomy 29:1 ); and this section, apart from some later additions, is homogeneous. Thus chs. 5 11 elaborate those principles concerning [[Jahweh]] and His relation to His people which give a peculiar character to the [[Hebrew]] polity; chs. 12 26 develop these into a code of law; Deuteronomy 28:1-46 pronounces blessings on obedience, curses on disobedience. This section, it is now agreed, was the Law-book found in the [[Temple]] in the 18th year of [[Josiah]] (b.c. 622 621), which formed the basis of the reform described in 2 Kings 22:1-20 f. Thus Josiah abolished the high places in [[Judah]] and [[Jerusalem]] ( Deuteronomy 22:8; Deuteronomy 22:13 ), and confined legitimate worship to the sanctuary at Jerusalem; and this centralization of the cult is the dominating idea of Deuteronomy 5:1-33; Deuteronomy 6:1-25; Deuteronomy 7:1-26; Deuteronomy 8:1-20; Deuteronomy 9:1-29; Deuteronomy 10:1-22; Deuteronomy 11:1-32; Deuteronomy 12:1-32; Deuteronomy 13:1-18; Deuteronomy 14:1-29; Deuteronomy 15:1-23; Deuteronomy 16:1-22; Deuteronomy 17:1-20; Deuteronomy 18:1-22; Deuteronomy 19:1-21; Deuteronomy 20:1-20; Deuteronomy 21:1-23; Deuteronomy 22:1-30; Deuteronomy 23:1-25; Deuteronomy 24:1-22; Deuteronomy 25:1-19; Deuteronomy 26:1-19 . Again, Josiah purified the Jahweh-worship from baser elements, destroying the [[Asherah]] ( 2 Kings 23:6 , cf. Deuteronomy 16:21 f.) and the houses of sodomy ( 2 Kings 23:7 , cf. Deuteronomy 23:17 f.). His opposition to idolatry was directed against the same forms as those denounced in Deut. (cf. the sun-worship, 2 Kings 23:5; 2 Kings 23:11 , Deuteronomy 17:3; and the worship of Milcom, Deuteronomy 23:10; Deuteronomy 23:13 , Deuteronomy 12:31 ). The Passover, celebrated in his day at Jerusalem, is stated to have been unique ( 2 Kings 23:21 ff.); and Deut. forbids the celebration of the [[Passover]] elsewhere than in Jerusalem ( Deuteronomy 16:5 f.). The king abolished the superstitious means of learning the [[Divine]] will ( 2 Kings 23:24 ), which Deut. forbids ( Deuteronomy 18:10 ff.). The demands of the Law-book and the performance of the king are parallel. </p> <p> It is, however, a more difficult question how far the reforms which Josiah instituted in obedience to Deut. were new, and how far they were a return to older practices from which the nation had degenerated during the early monarchy. Three other codes can be distinguished in the Pentateuch, and a comparison of these with Deut. helps to determine its place in the development of Israel’s religion. An examination of the social legislation in Deut. leads to the conclusion that it is later than the [[Book]] of the [[Covenant]] (Exodus 20:1 to Exodus 23:33 ). Though we are not justified in calling Deut. a deliberate expansion of this legislation, it certainly represents a more developed state of society, as is seen, <em> e.g. </em> , in its numerous laws about contracts. And in one particular it controls the cult at a cardinal point which Exod. left vague: the ‘every place where Jahweh records his name’ ( Exodus 20:24 ) has become ‘the place which Jahweh shall choose to put his name there’ (Deut. <em> passim </em> ). When Deut. is compared with the Law of [[Holiness]] ( Leviticus 17:1-16; Leviticus 18:1-30; Leviticus 19:1-37; Leviticus 20:1-27; Leviticus 21:1-24; Leviticus 22:1-33; Leviticus 23:1-44; Leviticus 24:1-23; Leviticus 25:1-55; Leviticus 26:1-46 ), the codes are seen to be framed for different purposes Leviticus as a handbook for priests, Deut. as a layman’s manual. But their legislation is parallel. [[Compared]] with P [Note: Priestly Narrative.] , Deut. is earlier, for questions left uncertain in Deut. are decided in P [Note: Priestly Narrative.] . See further, art. Hexateuch. </p> <p> The few references in Deut. to events in Israel’s history bear out the conclusion thus reached, for they are dependent on JE [Note: [[Jewish]] Encyclopedia.] , but show no acquaintance with P [Note: Priestly Narrative.] ’s history. It is difficult, <em> e.g. </em> , to explain the absence of [[Korah]] in Deuteronomy 11:6 , if the author read Numbers 16:1-50 in its present form, where Korah from P [Note: Priestly Narrative.] has been woven into the early story. When chs. 1 3 (see below) are included in this scrutiny, they support the inference that Deut. was an independent book, before P [Note: Priestly Narrative.] was incorporated with JE [Note: Jewish Encyclopedia.] . </p> <p> There are further indications of the date at which this code was introduced. Thus Deut. insists throughout on one sanctuary, at which legitimate worship can be offered to Jahweh. </p> <p> The extent to which this dominates the code is not to be measured merely by the number of times the command is repeated. Older customs are recast in consequence of this change. The Passover alters its character from a family to a national festival (Deuteronomy 16:5 f.). A central tribunal is set up to replace the decisions at the local shrines ( Deuteronomy 17:8 f.). Asylums for the manslayer are needed ( Deuteronomy 19:1 ff.), since the village altars where he once found safety ( Exodus 21:14 ) are abolished, etc. </p> <p> Now this was an innovation in Israel. Elijah, far from condemning the high places, is indignant at the sacrilege which has thrown down the altars of Jahweh (1 Kings 19:10 ). When he leaves the polluted land to seek Jahweh, he makes his way not to Jerusalem, but to [[Horeb]] (contrast Isaiah 2:2 f.). Hosea and Amos find much to condemn in the worship which was practised at [[Bethel]] and Dan, but never suggest that any worship offered at these shrines was <em> ipso facto </em> illegitimate. Yet these were the religious teachers of the nation. Deut., again, forbids the erection of pillars beside Jahweh’s altars ( Deuteronomy 12:3 f.); it is difficult to understand how Isaiah ( Isaiah 19:19 ) could have associated a pillar with Jahweh-worship, had this law been accepted in his day. The worship of the host of heaven one of the few forms of idolatry specified in Deut. is not mentioned till it receives severe blame from the prophets of the 7th cent. ( Jeremiah 8:2; Jeremiah 19:13; Jeremiah 32:29 , Zephaniah 1:3 ). But this [[Assyrian]] cult became a real danger to Israel’s religion, when [[Manasseh]] came under [[Eastern]] influences. </p> <p> [[Hezekiah]] is the first king of whom we learn that he attempted to remove the high places (2 Kings 18:14 ). Evidently, however, this was an unpopular step, for the [[Rabshakeh]] was able to appeal to the conservative instincts of the nation against a king who practised such questionable innovations ( Deuteronomy 18:22 ). What impelled Hezekiah was a religious, not a political, motive. The splendid monotheistic teaching of Isaiah carried with it the Inference ‘One God, one sanctuary.’ Besides, the abuses which were associated with the local shrines compelled the religious leaders of the nation, who had been influenced by the teaching of Hosea and Amos, to go to the root and abolish such worship altogether. The one means of purifying their worship was to sever it from the high places with their [[Canaanite]] associations. Political events helped them. The fall of N. [[Israel]] (b.c. 722) carried with it the condemnation of the worship which was practised there, and swept away the worshippers who were attached to it. The deliverance of Jerusalem from [[Sennacherib]] threw a glory round the sanctuary of which Jahweh had so signally vindicated the inviolability. Probably a body of reformers framed their code in Hezekiah’s later years. They did not create a new legislation, they recast and put a new spirit into an older code. It would have been impossible to secure the acceptance of a brand-new code from a whole people. </p> <p> Efforts have been made to break up Deuteronomy 5:1-33; Deuteronomy 6:1-25; Deuteronomy 7:1-26; Deuteronomy 8:1-20; Deuteronomy 9:1-29; Deuteronomy 10:1-22; Deuteronomy 11:1-32; Deuteronomy 12:1-32; Deuteronomy 13:1-18; Deuteronomy 14:1-29; Deuteronomy 15:1-23; Deuteronomy 16:1-22; Deuteronomy 17:1-20; Deuteronomy 18:1-22; Deuteronomy 19:1-21; Deuteronomy 20:1-20; Deuteronomy 21:1-23; Deuteronomy 22:1-30; Deuteronomy 23:1-25; Deuteronomy 24:1-22; Deuteronomy 25:1-19; Deuteronomy 26:1-19 into several sections, and to trace their origin. These have not been very convincing: they have relied too much on a proof of difference of origin derived from the use of the singular or the plural number in forms of address to the people. But they have proved that older elements and varied elements have been fused together into this Law-book. </p> <p> Under Manasseh there followed a strong reaction, which resorted even to persecution. The reformers’ Law-book was forgotten, the reformers themselves may have been martyred. But the code itself survived to be discovered under Josiah, and to become the basis of a pregnant reform. </p> <p> [[Opinion]] is divided as to whether chs. 1 3 are by the hand which wrote the main work. The fact that in Deuteronomy 11:2 ff. Moses is represented as speaking to men who had witnessed the Exodus, while in Deuteronomy 2:14 ff. that generation is represented as dead, seems decisive that they are not. The chapters may have been added as an historical introduction to a separate edition of the code. The fact that their history is based on JE [Note: Jewish Encyclopedia.] proves that this must have been early. </p> <p> Chapters Deuteronomy 4:1-40; Deuteronomy 4:29 f. belong together, and are a later addition in view of new circumstances, viz., the prospect or the reality of exile. </p> <p> The [[Song]] (Deuteronomy 32:1-43 ), with its double introduction ( Deuteronomy 31:16-22; Deuteronomy 31:30 ) and close ( Deuteronomy 32:44 ), is a didactic poem, giving an interpretation of Israel’s entire history, and bearing traces of influence from the [[Wisdom]] literature. It may date from the 7th cent. or the Exile. </p> <p> The Blessing (ch. 33) dates from a time when N. Israel in the flush of its vigour could anticipate further conquests (Deuteronomy 32:17 ), since Eastern Israel had regained part of its lost territory ( Deuteronomy 32:20 ). It may belong to the reign of [[Jeroboam]] II. (b.c. 782 43), by whom the [[Syrians]] of [[Damascus]] were defeated. </p> <p> Ch. 27 is difficult to assign. It evidently breaks the connexion of 26 and 28, and as evidently is composite. The [[Levites]] in Leviticus 27:14 ff. carry out what in Leviticus 27:12 ff. the tribes are commissioned to do, and there are no blessings uttered at all. There may be early elements in Leviticus 27:4 ff., but it is best to confess that the chapter is still a <em> crux </em> . </p> <p> <strong> 2. Main principles </strong> . ( <em> a </em> ) The fundamental principle of the book is the <em> unity of Jahweh </em> , who is [[God]] of the whole earth ( Deuteronomy 10:14 ), and who is more than the God of Israel, since He has relations to other nations apart from their relations to Israel ( Deuteronomy 9:5 , Deuteronomy 12:31 ). This carries with it the consequence that idolatry is the supreme sin ( Deuteronomy 6:14 , Deuteronomy 17:2 ff. etc.). To avoid even the possibility of such a crime, intercourse with other nations is severely restrained ( Deuteronomy 7:1 ff. etc.), and older customs of worship are forbidden ( Deuteronomy 16:21 etc.). ( <em> b </em> ) As He is God of the whole earth, Jahweh’s <em> will </em> is the moral law, and in connexion with its requirements He rewards and punishes (cf. the teaching of Amos). As God of Israel, the fundamental principles of His relation to His people are also ethical. ( <em> c </em> ) Yet Jahweh is not merely a lifeless moral principle or glorified code. His <em> love </em> to His people was shown, before they could prove any desert ( Deuteronomy 9:4 f. etc.). He gave them their land a gift they must not imagine themselves to have merited ( Deuteronomy 8:7 ff.). Hence love is the supreme return for His love ( Deuteronomy 6:4 f. etc., and cf. Hosea). Hence also there is room for worship and for prayer. Their cult, an expression of their loving gratitude, is to be joyous in character, not like the darker superstitions to which national disaster and foreign rites were making them incline ( Deuteronomy 12:18 etc.). ( <em> d </em> ) A religion, the heart of which is loving gratitude, naturally expresses itself in <em> humanity </em> towards all with whom men live, and even towards the lower animals ( Deuteronomy 22:1 f. etc. Deuteronomy 22:6 f. etc.). A religion also with so strong a sense of the Divine personality brings with it respect for human personality ( Deuteronomy 24:10 f.). ( <em> e </em> ) As personal and loving, Jahweh can and does <em> reveal Himself </em> . Through His self-revelation He is the historic God of Israel. This is emphasized in contrast with the baalim, who, as gods of Canaan, had no historic connexion with Israel. Jahweh has made known Himself and His will by the deeds He has wrought for and among His people. (Hence it was a right instinct which led to the addition of chs. 1 3 with their record of Jahweh’s past guidance.) ( <em> f </em> ) This element enters now into the <em> cult </em> . It gives fresh historic associations to the national festivals and weds them to the great events of their past. See especially ch. 26, where all Israel’s past is made to enter into the worship of the individual Israelite, and where also emphasis is laid on the truth that the fruits of the land are not from the baalim, but from Jahweh’s bounty (cf. Hosea 2:8 ). ( <em> g </em> ) Such a religion, with its strong sense of the historic unity of God’s dealings with His nation, and its conviction of the reasonableness of God’s demands, can and ought to be <em> taught </em> . [[Children]] are to have it explained to them ( Deuteronomy 6:6 f., Deuteronomy 11:19 ); and means are to be used to bring it to men’s thoughts daily ( Deuteronomy 6:9 , Deuteronomy 11:20 ). Most of the outward observances are thus brought into connexion with great vivifying principles, so that this code becomes the finest illustration of an effort made to bring religious principles home to a nation in its entire work and life. </p> <p> A. C. Welch. </p>
          
          
== Bridgeway Bible Dictionary <ref name="term_18537" /> ==
== Bridgeway Bible Dictionary <ref name="term_18537" /> ==
<p> After receiving the law at Mt Sinai, [[Israel]] spent almost forty years in the wilderness region between [[Sinai]] and Canaan. During this time the adults died and a new generation grew up (cf. Numbers 14:28-35). Moses’ repetition of the law for this new generation is recorded in the book called Deuteronomy (from two [[Greek]] words, deuteros, meaning ‘second’, and nomos, meaning ‘law’). [[Concerning]] the authorship of the book and its relation to the previous four books see PENTATEUCH. </p> <p> Characteristic style </p> <p> Deuteronomy does more than simply repeat the law; it expounds the law, giving it a new emphasis. It shows that [[God]] wants more than legal correctness. He wants his people to obey him because they want to, not because they are forced to. He wants the relationship with his people to be one of warmth and love (Deuteronomy 6:3; Deuteronomy 6:5-7; Deuteronomy 7:7-8; Deuteronomy 7:11; Deuteronomy 8:5). The book’s style is that of the preacher rather than the lawgiver; its audience is the people as a whole rather than the priests and judges (Deuteronomy 6:8-9; Deuteronomy 8:6; Deuteronomy 10:12-13). </p> <p> The basis of Deuteronomy is the covenant between [[Yahweh]] and his people. In his sovereign grace, God chose Israel to be his people, and promised them [[Canaan]] for a national homeland (Deuteronomy 7:7; Deuteronomy 8:1; Deuteronomy 9:4-5). Israel could do nothing but accept God’s grace and promise to serve him with loving obedience (Deuteronomy 5:6-7; Deuteronomy 6:1-3; Deuteronomy 10:12-13; see COVENANT). </p> <p> In form Deuteronomy is similar to the normal covenant documents of the ancient [[Near]] East. When a sovereign overlord made a covenant with his subject peoples, he prepared a treaty document that declared his sovereignty over them and laid down the order of life he required of them. This is what God did with his people Israel, using [[Moses]] as his mediator. </p> <p> Contents of the covenant document </p> <p> Usually a treaty document began with an historical introduction in which the overlord, after announcing his name, recounted all he had done for his people. Deuteronomy opens with God’s recounting all he had done for Israel (1:1-3:29) and urging the people to be loyal to him in return (4:1-43). </p> <p> After the introduction came a statement of the covenant’s basic requirements. For Israel the basic principles were in the form of ten commandments (4:44-5:33). [[Love]] would enable the people to do God’s will. There was to be no treachery through forming alliances with foreign powers (foreign gods) (6:1-25). God was giving his people a good land, but they had to remember that life depends on more than the food people eat. It depends on spiritual forces found only in God (7:1-8:20). The people therefore were not to be stubborn (9:1-10:11), but were to have humble purity of heart towards God and towards their fellows (10:12-11:32). </p> <p> Having established the basic principles, the treaty document then set out the detailed laws. [[Ancient]] custom allowed treaties to be updated from time to time to suit changing circumstances. In the case of the Israelites, they would no longer be together as a vast crowd moving through the wilderness, but would split up, spread out and settle down in an agriculturally fertile country. Moses’ repetition of the law therefore included adjustments to fit in with the people’s new way of life (e.g. 11:10-11; 12:20-22; 14:24-27; 18:6-8). </p> <p> The updated covenant document dealt with a number of matters, including faithfulness in worship (12:1-13:18), honesty in religious and social matters (14:1-16:17), justice in government (16:18-19:21), respect for human life (20:1-21:23), sexual purity (22:1-23:25), protection for the disadvantaged in society (24:1-25:4), and integrity in family relations, business dealings and religious duties (25:5-26:15). The two parties then declared their loyalty to the covenant (26:16-19). </p> <p> In keeping with the form of ancient treaties, the covenant also listed the rewards and punishments (blessings and cursings) that people could expect. If they were obedient, they would enjoy increased benefits from the overlord; if they were disobedient, they would suffer severe penalties (27:1-28:68). Having stated the conditions under which the covenant operated, Moses then formally renewed it (29:1-30:20). A further feature of the covenant was the twofold provision for its maintenance. First, the people had to assemble periodically to hear it read; second, the document had to be kept in the central shrine, where it served as an absolute standard of reference (31:1-29). </p> <p> Moses summarized the covenant’s contents in a song that the people were to memorize and sing (31:30-32:47). He brought the ceremony, and his leadership of Israel, to a fitting close by announcing prophetic blessings on each of Israel’s twelve tribes (32:48-33:29). After viewing the promised land, he died peacefully (34:1-12). </p>
<p> After receiving the law at Mt Sinai, [[Israel]] spent almost forty years in the wilderness region between [[Sinai]] and Canaan. During this time the adults died and a new generation grew up (cf. Numbers 14:28-35). Moses’ repetition of the law for this new generation is recorded in the book called Deuteronomy (from two [[Greek]] words, deuteros, meaning ‘second’, and nomos, meaning ‘law’). [[Concerning]] the authorship of the book and its relation to the previous four books see PENTATEUCH. </p> <p> Characteristic style </p> <p> Deuteronomy does more than simply repeat the law; it expounds the law, giving it a new emphasis. It shows that [[God]] wants more than legal correctness. He wants his people to obey him because they want to, not because they are forced to. He wants the relationship with his people to be one of warmth and love (Deuteronomy 6:3; Deuteronomy 6:5-7; Deuteronomy 7:7-8; Deuteronomy 7:11; Deuteronomy 8:5). The book’s style is that of the preacher rather than the lawgiver; its audience is the people as a whole rather than the priests and judges (Deuteronomy 6:8-9; Deuteronomy 8:6; Deuteronomy 10:12-13). </p> <p> The basis of Deuteronomy is the covenant between [[Yahweh]] and his people. In his sovereign grace, God chose Israel to be his people, and promised them [[Canaan]] for a national homeland (Deuteronomy 7:7; Deuteronomy 8:1; Deuteronomy 9:4-5). Israel could do nothing but accept God’s grace and promise to serve him with loving obedience (Deuteronomy 5:6-7; Deuteronomy 6:1-3; Deuteronomy 10:12-13; see COVENANT). </p> <p> In form Deuteronomy is similar to the normal covenant documents of the ancient [[Near]] East. When a sovereign overlord made a covenant with his subject peoples, he prepared a treaty document that declared his sovereignty over them and laid down the order of life he required of them. This is what God did with his people Israel, using [[Moses]] as his mediator. </p> <p> Contents of the covenant document </p> <p> Usually a treaty document began with an historical introduction in which the overlord, after announcing his name, recounted all he had done for his people. Deuteronomy opens with God’s recounting all he had done for Israel (1:1-3:29) and urging the people to be loyal to him in return (4:1-43). </p> <p> After the introduction came a statement of the covenant’s basic requirements. For Israel the basic principles were in the form of ten commandments (4:44-5:33). [[Love]] would enable the people to do God’s will. There was to be no treachery through forming alliances with foreign powers (foreign gods) (6:1-25). God was giving his people a good land, but they had to remember that life depends on more than the food people eat. It depends on spiritual forces found only in God (7:1-8:20). The people therefore were not to be stubborn (9:1-10:11), but were to have humble purity of heart towards God and towards their fellows (10:12-11:32). </p> <p> Having established the basic principles, the treaty document then set out the detailed laws. [[Ancient]] custom allowed treaties to be updated from time to time to suit changing circumstances. In the case of the Israelites, they would no longer be together as a vast crowd moving through the wilderness, but would split up, spread out and settle down in an agriculturally fertile country. Moses’ repetition of the law therefore included adjustments to fit in with the people’s new way of life (e.g. 11:10-11; 12:20-22; 14:24-27; 18:6-8). </p> <p> The updated covenant document dealt with a number of matters, including faithfulness in worship (12:1-13:18), honesty in religious and social matters (14:1-16:17), justice in government (16:18-19:21), respect for human life (20:1-21:23), sexual purity (22:1-23:25), protection for the disadvantaged in society (24:1-25:4), and integrity in family relations, business dealings and religious duties (25:5-26:15). The two parties then declared their loyalty to the covenant (26:16-19). </p> <p> In keeping with the form of ancient treaties, the covenant also listed the rewards and punishments (blessings and cursings) that people could expect. If they were obedient, they would enjoy increased benefits from the overlord; if they were disobedient, they would suffer severe penalties (27:1-28:68). Having stated the conditions under which the covenant operated, Moses then formally renewed it (29:1-30:20). A further feature of the covenant was the twofold provision for its maintenance. First, the people had to assemble periodically to hear it read; second, the document had to be kept in the central shrine, where it served as an absolute standard of reference (31:1-29). </p> <p> Moses summarized the covenant’s contents in a song that the people were to memorize and sing (31:30-32:47). He brought the ceremony, and his leadership of Israel, to a fitting close by announcing prophetic blessings on each of Israel’s twelve tribes (32:48-33:29). After viewing the promised land, he died peacefully (34:1-12). </p>
          
          
== Easton's Bible Dictionary <ref name="term_31236" /> ==
== People's Dictionary of the Bible <ref name="term_69953" /> ==
<li> Its style and allusions are also strikingly consistent with the circumstances and position of [[Moses]] and of the people at that time. <p> This body of positive evidence cannot be set aside by the conjectures and reasonings of modern critics, who contended that the book was somewhat like a forgery, introduced among the [[Jews]] some seven or eight centuries after the Exodus. </p> <div> <p> [[Copyright]] StatementThese dictionary topics are from M.G. Easton M.A., D.D., Illustrated [[Bible]] Dictionary, [[Third]] Edition, published by [[Thomas]] Nelson, 1897. Public Domain. </p> <p> Bibliography InformationEaston, Matthew George. Entry for 'Deuteronomy'. Easton's Bible Dictionary. https://www.studylight.org/dictionaries/eng/ebd/d/deuteronomy.html. 1897. </p> </div> </li>
<p> Deuteronomy (deû'ter-ŏn'o-my), or the Second Law (so called from its repeating the law), is the fifth book of the Bible, and, except the last chapter, was probably written by Moses. Deuteronomy 1:5, comp. with Deuteronomy 34:1; 2 Chronicles 25:4; Daniel 9:13; Mark 12:19; Acts 3:22. This book contains three addresses of [[Moses]] to the [[Israelites]] in the plain of [[Moab]] in the 11th month of the 40th year of their journeyings. The first address. Deuteronomy 1:1 to Deu_4:40. is a brief rehearsal of the history of the "Wandering," and plea to obedience. The second address, Deuteronomy 5:1 to Deu_26:19, contains a recapitulation, with a few additions and alterations, of the law given on Sinai. The third part of Deuteronomy 27:1 to Deuteronomy 30:20, opens with the joint command of Moses and the elders to keep all the commandments, and, when they had crossed the Jordan, to write them upon the great plastered stones they were ordered to set up with appropriate ceremonies. Then follows the third address, Deuteronomy 27:11 to Deu_30:20, whose topic is, "The blessing and the curse." After these three addresses, in chapter 31 there follows the delivery of the law to Joshua and Moses' speech on the occasion, containing a command to read the law every seven years. In Deuteronomy 32:1-52 we have the song of Moses; in chapter 33 Moses' blessing of the twelve tribes. These were the last written words of Moses, and most beautifully do they set forth the majesty of [[God]] and the excellency of Israel. The final verses of the book give an account of the death of Moses, and were, of course, written by another hand. </p>
          
          
== Hitchcock's Bible Names <ref name="term_45436" /> ==
== American Tract Society Bible Dictionary <ref name="term_15911" /> ==
 
<p> Or the repetition of the law, the fifth book of the Pentateuch, so called by the Greeks, because in it [[Moses]] recapitulates what he had ordained in the preceding books, Deuteronomy 1:1-6 29:1 31:1 33:1-29 . This book contains the history of what passed in the wilderness from the beginning of the eleventh month, to the seventh day of the twelfth month, in the fortieth year after the Israelites' departure from Egypt, that is, about six weeks, B. C. 1451. That part which mentions the death of Moses was added afterwards, very probably by Joshua. </p> <p> The book of Deuteronomy is the sublime and precious valedictory address of the inspired "man of God," now venerable for his age and experience, and standing almost in the gate of heaven. He gives the people of [[God]] his fatherly counsel and blessing, and then goes up into mount [[Pisgah]] alone to die. He recounts the dealings of God with them; recapitulates his laws; shows them why they should love him, and how they should serve him. It is full of tender solicitude, wise instruction, faithful warning, and the zealous love of a patriot and a prophet for the people of God, whom he had borne on his heart so long. It is often quoted by later inspired writers, and by our Lord, Matthew 4:4,7,10 . </p>
       
== Hastings' Dictionary of the Bible <ref name="term_50561" /> ==
<p> <strong> DEUTERONOMY </strong> </p> <p> 1. Structure, Origin, [[Influence]] . The book consists of three speeches ( Deuteronomy 1:6 to Deuteronomy 4:40; Deuteronomy 4:5-26; Deuteronomy 4:28; Deuteronomy 29:2 to Deuteronomy 30:20 ) and two poems (chs. 32, 33), all of which are represented as having been uttered by [[Moses]] on the plains of [[Moab]] before the crossing of Jordan. The slight narrative (chs. 27, 31, 34) is concerned mainly with the last days of Moses. [[Chapters]] 1 3, however, contain an historical sketch cast into the form of a speech. </p> <p> Chs. 5 26, Deuteronomy 28:1-46 are a unity with a formal opening ( Deuteronomy 4:44-49 ) and close ( Deuteronomy 29:1 ); and this section, apart from some later additions, is homogeneous. [[Thus]] chs. 5 11 elaborate those principles concerning [[Jahweh]] and His relation to His people which give a peculiar character to the [[Hebrew]] polity; chs. 12 26 develop these into a code of law; Deuteronomy 28:1-46 pronounces blessings on obedience, curses on disobedience. This section, it is now agreed, was the Law-book found in the [[Temple]] in the 18th year of [[Josiah]] (b.c. 622 621), which formed the basis of the reform described in 2 Kings 22:1-20 f. Thus Josiah abolished the high places in [[Judah]] and [[Jerusalem]] ( Deuteronomy 22:8; Deuteronomy 22:13 ), and confined legitimate worship to the sanctuary at Jerusalem; and this centralization of the cult is the dominating idea of Deuteronomy 5:1-33; Deuteronomy 6:1-25; Deuteronomy 7:1-26; Deuteronomy 8:1-20; Deuteronomy 9:1-29; Deuteronomy 10:1-22; Deuteronomy 11:1-32; Deuteronomy 12:1-32; Deuteronomy 13:1-18; Deuteronomy 14:1-29; Deuteronomy 15:1-23; Deuteronomy 16:1-22; Deuteronomy 17:1-20; Deuteronomy 18:1-22; Deuteronomy 19:1-21; Deuteronomy 20:1-20; Deuteronomy 21:1-23; Deuteronomy 22:1-30; Deuteronomy 23:1-25; Deuteronomy 24:1-22; Deuteronomy 25:1-19; Deuteronomy 26:1-19 . Again, Josiah purified the Jahweh-worship from baser elements, destroying the [[Asherah]] ( 2 Kings 23:6 , cf. Deuteronomy 16:21 f.) and the houses of sodomy ( 2 Kings 23:7 , cf. Deuteronomy 23:17 f.). His opposition to idolatry was directed against the same forms as those denounced in Deut. (cf. the sun-worship, 2 Kings 23:5; 2 Kings 23:11 , Deuteronomy 17:3; and the worship of Milcom, Deuteronomy 23:10; Deuteronomy 23:13 , Deuteronomy 12:31 ). The Passover, celebrated in his day at Jerusalem, is stated to have been unique ( 2 Kings 23:21 ff.); and Deut. forbids the celebration of the [[Passover]] elsewhere than in Jerusalem ( Deuteronomy 16:5 f.). The king abolished the superstitious means of learning the [[Divine]] will ( 2 Kings 23:24 ), which Deut. forbids ( Deuteronomy 18:10 ff.). The demands of the Law-book and the performance of the king are parallel. </p> <p> It is, however, a more difficult question how far the reforms which Josiah instituted in obedience to Deut. were new, and how far they were a return to older practices from which the nation had degenerated during the early monarchy. Three other codes can be distinguished in the Pentateuch, and a comparison of these with Deut. helps to determine its place in the development of Israel’s religion. An examination of the social legislation in Deut. leads to the conclusion that it is later than the [[Book]] of the [[Covenant]] (Exodus 20:1 to Exodus 23:33 ). [[Though]] we are not justified in calling Deut. a deliberate expansion of this legislation, it certainly represents a more developed state of society, as is seen, <em> e.g. </em> , in its numerous laws about contracts. And in one particular it controls the cult at a cardinal point which Exod. left vague: the ‘every place where Jahweh records his name’ ( Exodus 20:24 ) has become ‘the place which Jahweh shall choose to put his name there’ (Deut. <em> passim </em> ). When Deut. is compared with the Law of [[Holiness]] ( Leviticus 17:1-16; Leviticus 18:1-30; Leviticus 19:1-37; Leviticus 20:1-27; Leviticus 21:1-24; Leviticus 22:1-33; Leviticus 23:1-44; Leviticus 24:1-23; Leviticus 25:1-55; Leviticus 26:1-46 ), the codes are seen to be framed for different purposes Leviticus as a handbook for priests, Deut. as a layman’s manual. But their legislation is parallel. [[Compared]] with P [Note: Priestly Narrative.] , Deut. is earlier, for questions left uncertain in Deut. are decided in P [Note: Priestly Narrative.] . See further, art. Hexateuch. </p> <p> The few references in Deut. to events in Israel’s history bear out the conclusion thus reached, for they are dependent on JE [Note: [[Jewish]] Encyclopedia.] , but show no acquaintance with P [Note: Priestly Narrative.] ’s history. It is difficult, <em> e.g. </em> , to explain the absence of [[Korah]] in Deuteronomy 11:6 , if the author read Numbers 16:1-50 in its present form, where Korah from P [Note: Priestly Narrative.] has been woven into the early story. When chs. 1 3 (see below) are included in this scrutiny, they support the inference that Deut. was an independent book, before P [Note: Priestly Narrative.] was incorporated with JE [Note: Jewish Encyclopedia.] . </p> <p> There are further indications of the date at which this code was introduced. Thus Deut. insists throughout on one sanctuary, at which legitimate worship can be offered to Jahweh. </p> <p> The extent to which this dominates the code is not to be measured merely by the number of times the command is repeated. Older customs are recast in consequence of this change. The Passover alters its character from a family to a national festival (Deuteronomy 16:5 f.). A central tribunal is set up to replace the decisions at the local shrines ( Deuteronomy 17:8 f.). Asylums for the manslayer are needed ( Deuteronomy 19:1 ff.), since the village altars where he once found safety ( Exodus 21:14 ) are abolished, etc. </p> <p> Now this was an innovation in Israel. Elijah, far from condemning the high places, is indignant at the sacrilege which has thrown down the altars of Jahweh (1 Kings 19:10 ). When he leaves the polluted land to seek Jahweh, he makes his way not to Jerusalem, but to [[Horeb]] (contrast Isaiah 2:2 f.). Hosea and Amos find much to condemn in the worship which was practised at [[Bethel]] and Dan, but never suggest that any worship offered at these shrines was <em> ipso facto </em> illegitimate. [[Yet]] these were the religious teachers of the nation. Deut., again, forbids the erection of pillars beside Jahweh’s altars ( Deuteronomy 12:3 f.); it is difficult to understand how Isaiah ( Isaiah 19:19 ) could have associated a pillar with Jahweh-worship, had this law been accepted in his day. The worship of the host of heaven one of the few forms of idolatry specified in Deut. is not mentioned till it receives severe blame from the prophets of the 7th cent. ( Jeremiah 8:2; Jeremiah 19:13; Jeremiah 32:29 , Zephaniah 1:3 ). But this [[Assyrian]] cult became a real danger to Israel’s religion, when [[Manasseh]] came under [[Eastern]] influences. </p> <p> [[Hezekiah]] is the first king of whom we learn that he attempted to remove the high places (2 Kings 18:14 ). Evidently, however, this was an unpopular step, for the [[Rabshakeh]] was able to appeal to the conservative instincts of the nation against a king who practised such questionable innovations ( Deuteronomy 18:22 ). What impelled Hezekiah was a religious, not a political, motive. The splendid monotheistic teaching of Isaiah carried with it the Inference ‘One God, one sanctuary.’ Besides, the abuses which were associated with the local shrines compelled the religious leaders of the nation, who had been influenced by the teaching of Hosea and Amos, to go to the root and abolish such worship altogether. The one means of purifying their worship was to sever it from the high places with their [[Canaanite]] associations. Political events helped them. The fall of N. [[Israel]] (b.c. 722) carried with it the condemnation of the worship which was practised there, and swept away the worshippers who were attached to it. The deliverance of Jerusalem from [[Sennacherib]] threw a glory round the sanctuary of which Jahweh had so signally vindicated the inviolability. [[Probably]] a body of reformers framed their code in Hezekiah’s later years. They did not create a new legislation, they recast and put a new spirit into an older code. It would have been impossible to secure the acceptance of a brand-new code from a whole people. </p> <p> Efforts have been made to break up Deuteronomy 5:1-33; Deuteronomy 6:1-25; Deuteronomy 7:1-26; Deuteronomy 8:1-20; Deuteronomy 9:1-29; Deuteronomy 10:1-22; Deuteronomy 11:1-32; Deuteronomy 12:1-32; Deuteronomy 13:1-18; Deuteronomy 14:1-29; Deuteronomy 15:1-23; Deuteronomy 16:1-22; Deuteronomy 17:1-20; Deuteronomy 18:1-22; Deuteronomy 19:1-21; Deuteronomy 20:1-20; Deuteronomy 21:1-23; Deuteronomy 22:1-30; Deuteronomy 23:1-25; Deuteronomy 24:1-22; Deuteronomy 25:1-19; Deuteronomy 26:1-19 into several sections, and to trace their origin. These have not been very convincing: they have relied too much on a proof of difference of origin derived from the use of the singular or the plural number in forms of address to the people. But they have proved that older elements and varied elements have been fused together into this Law-book. </p> <p> Under Manasseh there followed a strong reaction, which resorted even to persecution. The reformers’ Law-book was forgotten, the reformers themselves may have been martyred. But the code itself survived to be discovered under Josiah, and to become the basis of a pregnant reform. </p> <p> [[Opinion]] is divided as to whether chs. 1 3 are by the hand which wrote the main work. The fact that in Deuteronomy 11:2 ff. Moses is represented as speaking to men who had witnessed the Exodus, while in Deuteronomy 2:14 ff. that generation is represented as dead, seems decisive that they are not. The chapters may have been added as an historical introduction to a separate edition of the code. The fact that their history is based on JE [Note: Jewish Encyclopedia.] proves that this must have been early. </p> <p> Chapters Deuteronomy 4:1-40; Deuteronomy 4:29 f. belong together, and are a later addition in view of new circumstances, viz., the prospect or the reality of exile. </p> <p> The [[Song]] (Deuteronomy 32:1-43 ), with its double introduction ( Deuteronomy 31:16-22; Deuteronomy 31:30 ) and close ( Deuteronomy 32:44 ), is a didactic poem, giving an interpretation of Israel’s entire history, and bearing traces of influence from the [[Wisdom]] literature. It may date from the 7th cent. or the Exile. </p> <p> The Blessing (ch. 33) dates from a time when N. Israel in the flush of its vigour could anticipate further conquests (Deuteronomy 32:17 ), since Eastern Israel had regained part of its lost territory ( Deuteronomy 32:20 ). It may belong to the reign of [[Jeroboam]] II. (b.c. 782 43), by whom the [[Syrians]] of [[Damascus]] were defeated. </p> <p> Ch. 27 is difficult to assign. It evidently breaks the connexion of 26 and 28, and as evidently is composite. The [[Levites]] in Leviticus 27:14 ff. carry out what in Leviticus 27:12 ff. the tribes are commissioned to do, and there are no blessings uttered at all. There may be early elements in Leviticus 27:4 ff., but it is best to confess that the chapter is still a <em> crux </em> . </p> <p> <strong> 2. Main principles </strong> . ( <em> a </em> ) The fundamental principle of the book is the <em> unity of Jahweh </em> , who is [[God]] of the whole earth ( Deuteronomy 10:14 ), and who is more than the God of Israel, since He has relations to other nations apart from their relations to Israel ( Deuteronomy 9:5 , Deuteronomy 12:31 ). This carries with it the consequence that idolatry is the supreme sin ( Deuteronomy 6:14 , Deuteronomy 17:2 ff. etc.). To avoid even the possibility of such a crime, intercourse with other nations is severely restrained ( Deuteronomy 7:1 ff. etc.), and older customs of worship are forbidden ( Deuteronomy 16:21 etc.). ( <em> b </em> ) As He is God of the whole earth, Jahweh’s <em> will </em> is the moral law, and in connexion with its requirements He rewards and punishes (cf. the teaching of Amos). As God of Israel, the fundamental principles of His relation to His people are also ethical. ( <em> c </em> ) Yet Jahweh is not merely a lifeless moral principle or glorified code. His <em> love </em> to His people was shown, before they could prove any desert ( Deuteronomy 9:4 f. etc.). He gave them their land a gift they must not imagine themselves to have merited ( Deuteronomy 8:7 ff.). Hence love is the supreme return for His love ( Deuteronomy 6:4 f. etc., and cf. Hosea). Hence also there is room for worship and for prayer. Their cult, an expression of their loving gratitude, is to be joyous in character, not like the darker superstitions to which national disaster and foreign rites were making them incline ( Deuteronomy 12:18 etc.). ( <em> d </em> ) A religion, the heart of which is loving gratitude, naturally expresses itself in <em> humanity </em> towards all with whom men live, and even towards the lower animals ( Deuteronomy 22:1 f. etc. Deuteronomy 22:6 f. etc.). A religion also with so strong a sense of the Divine personality brings with it respect for human personality ( Deuteronomy 24:10 f.). ( <em> e </em> ) As personal and loving, Jahweh can and does <em> reveal Himself </em> . Through His self-revelation He is the historic God of Israel. This is emphasized in contrast with the baalim, who, as gods of Canaan, had no historic connexion with Israel. Jahweh has made known Himself and His will by the deeds He has wrought for and among His people. (Hence it was a right instinct which led to the addition of chs. 1 3 with their record of Jahweh’s past guidance.) ( <em> f </em> ) This element enters now into the <em> cult </em> . It gives fresh historic associations to the national festivals and weds them to the great events of their past. See especially ch. 26, where all Israel’s past is made to enter into the worship of the individual Israelite, and where also emphasis is laid on the truth that the fruits of the land are not from the baalim, but from Jahweh’s bounty (cf. Hosea 2:8 ). ( <em> g </em> ) Such a religion, with its strong sense of the historic unity of God’s dealings with His nation, and its conviction of the reasonableness of God’s demands, can and ought to be <em> taught </em> . [[Children]] are to have it explained to them ( Deuteronomy 6:6 f., Deuteronomy 11:19 ); and means are to be used to bring it to men’s thoughts daily ( Deuteronomy 6:9 , Deuteronomy 11:20 ). Most of the outward observances are thus brought into connexion with great vivifying principles, so that this code becomes the finest illustration of an effort made to bring religious principles home to a nation in its entire work and life. </p> <p> A. C. Welch. </p>
       
== People's Dictionary of the Bible <ref name="term_69953" /> ==
<p> Deuteronomy (deû'ter-ŏn'o-my), or the [[Second]] Law (so called from its repeating the law), is the fifth book of the Bible, and, except the last chapter, was probably written by Moses. Deuteronomy 1:5, comp. with Deuteronomy 34:1; 2 Chronicles 25:4; Daniel 9:13; Mark 12:19; Acts 3:22. This book contains three addresses of [[Moses]] to the [[Israelites]] in the plain of [[Moab]] in the 11th month of the 40th year of their journeyings. The first address. Deuteronomy 1:1 to Deu_4:40. is a brief rehearsal of the history of the "Wandering," and plea to obedience. The second address, Deuteronomy 5:1 to Deu_26:19, contains a recapitulation, with a few additions and alterations, of the law given on Sinai. The third part of Deuteronomy 27:1 to Deuteronomy 30:20, opens with the joint command of Moses and the elders to keep all the commandments, and, when they had crossed the Jordan, to write them upon the great plastered stones they were ordered to set up with appropriate ceremonies. Then follows the third address, Deuteronomy 27:11 to Deu_30:20, whose topic is, "The blessing and the curse." After these three addresses, in chapter 31 there follows the delivery of the law to Joshua and Moses' speech on the occasion, containing a command to read the law every seven years. In Deuteronomy 32:1-52 we have the song of Moses; in chapter 33 Moses' blessing of the twelve tribes. These were the last written words of Moses, and most beautifully do they set forth the majesty of [[God]] and the excellency of Israel. The final verses of the book give an account of the death of Moses, and were, of course, written by another hand. </p>
          
          
== Watson's Biblical & Theological Dictionary <ref name="term_80565" /> ==
== Watson's Biblical & Theological Dictionary <ref name="term_80565" /> ==
<p> from δευτερος , <em> second, </em> and νομος ; <em> law; </em> the last book of the Pentateuch, or five books of Moses. As its name imports, it contains a repetition of the civil and moral law, which was a second time delivered by Moses, with some additions and explanations, as well to impress it more forcibly upon the [[Israelites]] in general, as in particular for the benefit of those who, being born in the wilderness, were not present at the first promulgation of the law. It contains also a recapitulation of the several events which had befallen the Israelites since their departure from Egypt, with severe reproaches for their past misconduct, and earnest exhortations to future obedience. The [[Messiah]] is explicitly foretold in this book; and there are many remarkable predictions interspersed in it, particularly in the twenty-eighth, thirtieth, thirty-second, and thirty-third chapters, relative to the future condition of the Jews. The book of Deuteronomy finishes with an account of the death of Moses, which is supposed to have been added by his successor, Joshua. </p>
<p> from δευτερος , <em> second, </em> and νομος ; <em> law; </em> the last book of the Pentateuch, or five books of Moses. As its name imports, it contains a repetition of the civil and moral law, which was a second time delivered by Moses, with some additions and explanations, as well to impress it more forcibly upon the [[Israelites]] in general, as in particular for the benefit of those who, being born in the wilderness, were not present at the first promulgation of the law. It contains also a recapitulation of the several events which had befallen the Israelites since their departure from Egypt, with severe reproaches for their past misconduct, and earnest exhortations to future obedience. The [[Messiah]] is explicitly foretold in this book; and there are many remarkable predictions interspersed in it, particularly in the twenty-eighth, thirtieth, thirty-second, and thirty-third chapters, relative to the future condition of the Jews. The book of Deuteronomy finishes with an account of the death of Moses, which is supposed to have been added by his successor, Joshua. </p>
       
== Easton's Bible Dictionary <ref name="term_31236" /> ==
<li> Its style and allusions are also strikingly consistent with the circumstances and position of [[Moses]] and of the people at that time. <p> This body of positive evidence cannot be set aside by the conjectures and reasonings of modern critics, who contended that the book was somewhat like a forgery, introduced among the [[Jews]] some seven or eight centuries after the Exodus. </p> <div> <p> [[Copyright]] StatementThese dictionary topics are from M.G. Easton M.A., D.D., Illustrated [[Bible]] Dictionary, Third Edition, published by [[Thomas]] Nelson, 1897. Public Domain. </p> <p> Bibliography InformationEaston, Matthew George. Entry for 'Deuteronomy'. Easton's Bible Dictionary. https://www.studylight.org/dictionaries/eng/ebd/d/deuteronomy.html. 1897. </p> </div> </li>
          
          
== Webster's Dictionary <ref name="term_110220" /> ==
== Webster's Dictionary <ref name="term_110220" /> ==
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== International Standard Bible Encyclopedia <ref name="term_3012" /> ==
== International Standard Bible Encyclopedia <ref name="term_3012" /> ==
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<p> '
          
          
== Kitto's Popular Cyclopedia of Biblial Literature <ref name="term_15482" /> ==
== Kitto's Popular Cyclopedia of Biblial Literature <ref name="term_15482" /> ==
<p> Deuteron´omy, the [[Greek]] name given by the [[Alexandrian]] [[Jews]] to the fifth book of Moses. It comprises that series of addresses which the [[Lawgiver]] delivered (orally and by writing,; , etc.) to assembled [[Israel]] in the second month of the fortieth year of their wandering through the desert, when the second generation was about to cross the Jordan, and when the parting hour of [[Moses]] had nearly arrived. </p> <p> The speeches begin with the enumeration of the wonderful dealings of [[God]] with the chosen people in the early period of their existence. Moses clearly proves to them the punishment of unbelief, the obduracy of Israel, and the faithfulness of [[Jehovah]] with regard to his promises, which were now on the point of being accomplished. [[Fully]] aware of the tendencies of the people, and foreseeing their alienations, Moses conjures them most impressively to hold fast the commands of the Lord, and not to forget his revelations, lest curses should befall them instead of blessings (Deuteronomy 1-4). The Lawgiver then expatiates on the spirit of the law, and its reception into the hearts of men, both in a positive and negative way. Fear, he says, is the primary effect of the law, as also its aim. As Israel had once listened to the announcement of the fundamental laws of the theocracy with a sacred fear, in like manner should man also receive, through the whole system of the law, a lively and awful impression of the holiness and majesty of God (Deuteronomy 5). But as the essence and sum of the law is love to Jehovah, the only and true God, man shall by the law be reminded of the [[Divine]] mercy, so variously manifested in deeds; and this reflection is calculated to rouse in man's heart love for God. This love is the only and true source from which proper respect and obedience to the law can proceed (Deuteronomy 6). </p> <p> There were, however, two tempting deviations, in following which the people were sure to be led astray. The law, in its strict rigor, was but too apt to tempt them to desert Jehovah, and to yield to idolatry (the very approval of which even in thought polluted the heart), by discontinuing to bear the heavy yoke of the law. Hence the most impressive warnings against Canaan's inhabitants and idols; and hence the declarations that Israel, in placing themselves on a par with the heathens, should have to endure an equal fate with them, and be repulsed from the presence of Jehovah . </p> <p> The other, not less dangerous, deviation is that of self-righteousness—the proud fancy that all the favors Jehovah had shown to his people were merely in consequence of their own deservings. [[Therefore]] Jehovah tells them that it was not through their own worthiness and purity of heart that they inherited the land of the heathens. It was only through His free favor; for their sins bore too strong and constant testimony how little they ought to take credit to themselves for it (Deuteronomy 9). </p> <p> The history of the people, before and after the exile, shows these two deviations in their fullest bearings. [[Idolatry]] we find to have been the besetting sin before that period, and presumptuous pride of heart after it; a proof how intimately acquainted the Lawgiver was with the character and disposition of his people, and how necessary therefore those warnings had been. </p> <p> Therefore, adds Moses, turn to that which Jehovah, in giving you the tables of the law, and establishing the [[Tabernacle]] and priesthood, has intimated as a significant symbol, 'to circumcise the foreskin of your heart,' and to cherish love in your inward soul. [[Think]] of Jehovah, the just and merciful, whose blessings and curses shall be set before your eyes as a lasting monument upon the mounts [[Ebal]] and [[Gerizim]] (Deuteronomy 10-11). </p> <p> The mention of that fact leads the Lawgiver to the domestic and practical life of the people when domesticated in their true home, the Land of Promise; which he further regulates by a fixed and solid rule, by new laws, which for this, their new design and purport, form a sort of complement to the laws already given. There, in the land of their forefathers, Jehovah will appoint one fixed place for His lasting sanctuary, when every other place dedicated to the worship of idols is to be destroyed. At that chosen spot alone are the sacrifices to be killed, while cattle in general, which are not destined for sacred purposes, but merely for food, may be slaughtered at all places according to convenience—a regulation which still leaves in full force the previous laws concerning the eating of blood, and the share of Jehovah in slaughtered cattle. This sanctuary was to be considered as the central point for all sacred objects. The whole land was, by means of the sanctuary established in the midst of it, consecrated and dedicated to Jehovah. This consecration was incompatible with any defilement whatsoever. On that account the [[Canaanites]] must be exterminated, and all idolatrous abominations destroyed, since nothing ought to be added to or taken from the laws of God (Deuteronomy 12). For the same reason (i.e. for the sake of the holiness of the land, diffused from the sacred center), no false prophets or soothsayers are to be tolerated, as they may turn the minds of the people from the law, by establishing a different one, and therefore even a whole town given to the worship of idols must be demolished by force of arms (Deuteronomy 13). Neither, in like manner, must the heathen customs of mourning be imitated, or unclean beasts eaten; but the people must always remain true to the previous laws concerning food, etc. and show their real attachment to Jehovah and his religion by willingly paying the tithe as ordained by the law (Deuteronomy 14). To the same end likewise shall the regulations concerning the years of release and the festivals of Jehovah (to be solemnized in the place of the new-chosen Sanctuary) be most scrupulously observed (Deuteronomy 15-16). Only unblemished sacrifices shall be offered, for all idol-worshippers must irrevocably be put to death by stoning. For the execution of due punishment, honest judges must govern the nation, while the highest tribunal shall exist in the place chosen for the Sanctuary, consisting of the priests and judges of the land. If a king be given by God to the people, he shall first of all accommodate himself to the laws of God, and not lead a heathen life. [[Next]] to the regal and judicial dignities, the ecclesiastical power shall exist in its full right; and again, next to it, the prophetic order (Deuteronomy 17-18). Of all these institutions, the duties of the judicial power are most clearly defined; for Jehovah does as little suffer that in His land the right of the innocent shall be turned aside, as that indulgence shall be shown to the evil-doer (Deuteronomy 19). The exposition of the civil law is followed by that of the martial law, which has some bearing upon the then impending war with Canaan, as the most important war and representing that with the heathen nations in general (Deuteronomy 20). These are again followed by a series of laws in reference to the preceding, and referring chiefly to hard cases in the judicial courts, by which Moses obviously designed to exhibit the whole of the civil life of his people in its strict application to the theocratic system of law and right. Therefore the form of prayer to be spoken at the offering up of the firstlings and tithe—the theocratic confession of faith—by which every [[Israelite]] acknowledges in person that he is what God has enjoined and called him to be, forms a beautiful conclusion of the whole legislation (Deuteronomy 21-26). </p> <p> The blessings and curses of Jehovah, the two opposite extremes which were to be impressed upon the minds of the people at their entrance into Canaan, and which have hitherto been spoken of only in general terms, are now set forth in their fullest detail, picturing in the most lively colors the delightful abundance of rich blessings on the one hand, and the awful visitations of Heaven's wrath on the other. The prophetic speeches visibly and gradually increase in energy and enthusiasm, until the perspective of the remotest future of the people of God lies open to the eye of the inspired Lawgiver in all its checkered details, when his words resolve themselves into a flight of poetical ecstasy, into the strains of a splendid triumphal song in which the tone of grief and lamentation is as heart-rending as the announcement of divine salvation therein is jubilant (Deuteronomy 27-28). The history of the law concludes with a supplement concerning him who was deemed worthy by the Lord to transmit his law to Israel (Deuteronomy 34). </p> <p> [[Thus]] much regarding the contents and connection of the book of Deuteronomy. </p> <p> The date, however, of the composition of the book, as well as its authenticity, has given rise to a great variety of opinion, more especially among those who are opposed to the authorship of Moses. The older critics considered Deuteronomy as the latest production of all the books of the Pentateuch; while the more recent critics have come to just the contrary opinion, and declare it to be the earliest of the [[Mosaic]] writings. </p> <p> A very strong proof of the genuineness of the book lies in its relation to the later writings of the prophets. Of all the books of the Pentateuch, Deuteronomy has been made most use of by the prophets, simply because it is best calculated to serve as a model for prophetic declarations, as also because of the inward harmony that exists between the prophecies and the laws upon which they are based. </p> <p> [[Among]] the arguments advanced against the authenticity of Deuteronomy, are: </p> <p> 1. The contradictions said to exist between this and the other books of Moses; </p> <p> 2. [[Certain]] anachronisms committed by the author. </p> <p> These contradictions are more especially alleged to exist in the festival laws, where but arbitrary and unwarranted views are mostly entertained by such critics with regard to the nature and original meaning of the festivals, which they identify altogether with natural or season festivals, and without lending to them a more spiritual character and signification. </p> <p> 3. That the [[Sinai]] of the other books is always called [[Horeb]] in Deuteronomy.—They forget, however, that Horeb is the general name of the whole mountain, while Sinai is the special name of a particular part of it. This distinction is, indeed, most scrupulously observed everywhere in the Pentateuch. </p> <p> 4. That in are mentioned the Amorites, instead of the Amalekites, as in .—Here also they have forgotten to notice that, in the sequel of the very passage alluded to in Deuteronomy, both the [[Amorites]] and [[Amalekites]] are mentioned. </p> <p> 5. That the cause of the punishment of Moses is differently stated in , and .—To this objection we reply, that both the guilt and punishment of Moses are described in both books as originating with the people; comp. also , etc. </p> <p> Among the anachronisms in Deuteronomy are reckoned the allusions made in it to the [[Temple]] (Deuteronomy 12; , sqq.), to the royal and prophetic powers (Deuteronomy 13; Deuteronomy 17-18), to the different modes of idol-worship , and to the exile (Deuteronomy 28, sq.). In suggesting these critical points, however, they do not consider that all these subjects are most closely and intimately connected with the spirit and principles of the law itself, and that all these regulations and prophecies appear here in Deuteronomy, as necessary finishing-points to the Law, so indispensable for the better consolidation of the subsequent and later relations of the theocracy. </p> <p> More anachronisms are said to be, </p> <p> 1. The sixty dwelling-places of [[Jair]] mentioned , sq. (comp. , sq.). We consider, however, that the men mentioned in the two passages are evidently different persons, though of the same name. Nor is it difficult to prove from other sources, that there really existed at the time of Moses a man by name Jair. </p> <p> 2. The notice concerning king Og, which looks more like a note of a subsequent writer in corroboration of the story told in the chapter. But this hypothesis falls to the ground when we consider that Moses did not write for his contemporaries merely, but also for late posterity. The book contains, moreover, not a small number of plain, though indirect traces, indicative of its Mosaic origin. We thus find in it: </p> <p> 1. Numerous notices concerning nations with whom the [[Israelites]] had then come in contact, but who, after the Mosaic period, entirely disappeared from the pages of history: such are the accounts of the residences of the kings of [[Bashan]] . </p> <p> 2. The appellation of 'mountain of the Amorites,' used throughout the whole book (;; ), while even in the book of Joshua, soon after the conquest of the land, the name is already exchanged for 'mountains of Judah' . </p> <p> 3. The observation , that the [[Emim]] had formerly dwelt in the plain of Moab: they were a great people, equal to the Anakim. This observation quite accords with . </p> <p> 4. A detailed account concerning the [[Horim]] and their relations to the Edomites. </p> <p> 5. An account of the [[Zamzummim]] , one of the earliest races of Canaan, though mentioned nowhere else. </p> <p> 6. A very circumstantial account of the [[Rephaim]] (, sq.), with whose concerns the author seems to have been well acquainted. </p> <p> The standing-point also of the author of Deuteronomy is altogether in the Mosaic time, and had it been assumed and fictitious, there must necessarily have been moments when the spurious author would have been off his guard, and unmindful of the part he had to play. But no discrepancies of this kind can be traced; and this is in itself an evidence of the genuineness of the book. </p> <p> A great number of other passages force us likewise to the conclusion, that the whole of Deuteronomy originated in the time of Moses. Such are the passages where </p> <p> 1. A comparison is drawn between [[Canaan]] and [[Egypt]] (, sq.), with the latter of which the author seems thoroughly acquainted. </p> <p> 2. Detailed descriptions are given of the fertility and productions of Egypt (, sq.). </p> <p> 3. Regulations are given relating to the conquest of Canaan (, sq.; 20:1, sq.), which cannot be understood otherwise than by assuming that they had been framed in the Mosaic time, since they could be of no use after that period. </p> <p> Besides, whole pieces and chapters in Deuteronomy, such as Deuteronomy 32-33, betray in form, language, and tenor, a very early period in [[Hebrew]] literature. Nor are the laws and regulations in Deuteronomy less decisive of the authenticity of the book. We are struck with the most remarkable phenomenon, that many laws from the previous books are here partly repeated and impressed with more energy, partly modified, and partly altogether abolished, according to the contingencies of the time, or as the new aspect of circumstances among the Jews rendered such steps necessary (comp. e.g. with; Deuteronomy 12 with Leviticus 17). Such pretensions to raise, or even to oppose his own private opinions to the authority of divine law, are found in no author of the subsequent periods, since the whole of the sacred literature of the later times is, on the contrary, rather the echo than otherwise of the Pentateuch, and is altogether founded on it. [[Add]] to this the fact, that the law itself forbids most impressively to add to, or take anything from it, a prohibition which is repeated even in Deuteronomy (comp.; ); and it is but too evident, that, if the opinion of the critics be correct, that this book contains nothing more than a gradual development of the law—it clashes too often with its own principles, and pronounces thus its own sentence of condemnation. </p> <p> The part of Deuteronomy (Deuteronomy 34) respecting the death of Moses requires a particular explanation. That the whole of this section is to be regarded as a piece altogether apart from what precedes it, or as a supplement from another writer, has already been maintained by the elder theologians; and this opinion is confirmed not only by the contents of the chapter, but also by the express declaration of the book itself on that event and its relations; for Deuteronomy 31 contains the conclusion of the work, where Moses describes himself as the author of the previous contents, as also of the [[Song]] (Deuteronomy 32), and the blessings (Deuteronomy 33) belonging to it. All that follows is, consequently, not from Moses, the work being completed and concluded with Deuteronomy 33. There is another circumstance which favors this opinion, namely, the close connection that exists between the last section of Deuteronomy and the beginning of Joshua (comp. with ), plainly shows that Deuteronomy 34 is intended to serve as a point of transition to the book of Joshua, and that it was written by the same author as the latter. The correct view of this chapter, therefore, is to consider it as a real supplement, but by no means as an interpolation. </p> <p> On the literature of Deuteronomy, compare the article Pentateuch. </p>
<p> Deuteron´omy, the [[Greek]] name given by the [[Alexandrian]] [[Jews]] to the fifth book of Moses. It comprises that series of addresses which the [[Lawgiver]] delivered (orally and by writing,; , etc.) to assembled [[Israel]] in the second month of the fortieth year of their wandering through the desert, when the second generation was about to cross the Jordan, and when the parting hour of [[Moses]] had nearly arrived. </p> <p> The speeches begin with the enumeration of the wonderful dealings of [[God]] with the chosen people in the early period of their existence. Moses clearly proves to them the punishment of unbelief, the obduracy of Israel, and the faithfulness of [[Jehovah]] with regard to his promises, which were now on the point of being accomplished. [[Fully]] aware of the tendencies of the people, and foreseeing their alienations, Moses conjures them most impressively to hold fast the commands of the Lord, and not to forget his revelations, lest curses should befall them instead of blessings (Deuteronomy 1-4). The Lawgiver then expatiates on the spirit of the law, and its reception into the hearts of men, both in a positive and negative way. Fear, he says, is the primary effect of the law, as also its aim. As Israel had once listened to the announcement of the fundamental laws of the theocracy with a sacred fear, in like manner should man also receive, through the whole system of the law, a lively and awful impression of the holiness and majesty of God (Deuteronomy 5). But as the essence and sum of the law is love to Jehovah, the only and true God, man shall by the law be reminded of the [[Divine]] mercy, so variously manifested in deeds; and this reflection is calculated to rouse in man's heart love for God. This love is the only and true source from which proper respect and obedience to the law can proceed (Deuteronomy 6). </p> <p> There were, however, two tempting deviations, in following which the people were sure to be led astray. The law, in its strict rigor, was but too apt to tempt them to desert Jehovah, and to yield to idolatry (the very approval of which even in thought polluted the heart), by discontinuing to bear the heavy yoke of the law. Hence the most impressive warnings against Canaan's inhabitants and idols; and hence the declarations that Israel, in placing themselves on a par with the heathens, should have to endure an equal fate with them, and be repulsed from the presence of Jehovah . </p> <p> The other, not less dangerous, deviation is that of self-righteousness—the proud fancy that all the favors Jehovah had shown to his people were merely in consequence of their own deservings. [[Therefore]] Jehovah tells them that it was not through their own worthiness and purity of heart that they inherited the land of the heathens. It was only through His free favor; for their sins bore too strong and constant testimony how little they ought to take credit to themselves for it (Deuteronomy 9). </p> <p> The history of the people, before and after the exile, shows these two deviations in their fullest bearings. [[Idolatry]] we find to have been the besetting sin before that period, and presumptuous pride of heart after it; a proof how intimately acquainted the Lawgiver was with the character and disposition of his people, and how necessary therefore those warnings had been. </p> <p> Therefore, adds Moses, turn to that which Jehovah, in giving you the tables of the law, and establishing the [[Tabernacle]] and priesthood, has intimated as a significant symbol, 'to circumcise the foreskin of your heart,' and to cherish love in your inward soul. [[Think]] of Jehovah, the just and merciful, whose blessings and curses shall be set before your eyes as a lasting monument upon the mounts [[Ebal]] and [[Gerizim]] (Deuteronomy 10-11). </p> <p> The mention of that fact leads the Lawgiver to the domestic and practical life of the people when domesticated in their true home, the Land of Promise; which he further regulates by a fixed and solid rule, by new laws, which for this, their new design and purport, form a sort of complement to the laws already given. There, in the land of their forefathers, Jehovah will appoint one fixed place for His lasting sanctuary, when every other place dedicated to the worship of idols is to be destroyed. At that chosen spot alone are the sacrifices to be killed, while cattle in general, which are not destined for sacred purposes, but merely for food, may be slaughtered at all places according to convenience—a regulation which still leaves in full force the previous laws concerning the eating of blood, and the share of Jehovah in slaughtered cattle. This sanctuary was to be considered as the central point for all sacred objects. The whole land was, by means of the sanctuary established in the midst of it, consecrated and dedicated to Jehovah. This consecration was incompatible with any defilement whatsoever. On that account the [[Canaanites]] must be exterminated, and all idolatrous abominations destroyed, since nothing ought to be added to or taken from the laws of God (Deuteronomy 12). For the same reason (i.e. for the sake of the holiness of the land, diffused from the sacred center), no false prophets or soothsayers are to be tolerated, as they may turn the minds of the people from the law, by establishing a different one, and therefore even a whole town given to the worship of idols must be demolished by force of arms (Deuteronomy 13). Neither, in like manner, must the heathen customs of mourning be imitated, or unclean beasts eaten; but the people must always remain true to the previous laws concerning food, etc. and show their real attachment to Jehovah and his religion by willingly paying the tithe as ordained by the law (Deuteronomy 14). To the same end likewise shall the regulations concerning the years of release and the festivals of Jehovah (to be solemnized in the place of the new-chosen Sanctuary) be most scrupulously observed (Deuteronomy 15-16). Only unblemished sacrifices shall be offered, for all idol-worshippers must irrevocably be put to death by stoning. For the execution of due punishment, honest judges must govern the nation, while the highest tribunal shall exist in the place chosen for the Sanctuary, consisting of the priests and judges of the land. If a king be given by God to the people, he shall first of all accommodate himself to the laws of God, and not lead a heathen life. [[Next]] to the regal and judicial dignities, the ecclesiastical power shall exist in its full right; and again, next to it, the prophetic order (Deuteronomy 17-18). Of all these institutions, the duties of the judicial power are most clearly defined; for Jehovah does as little suffer that in His land the right of the innocent shall be turned aside, as that indulgence shall be shown to the evil-doer (Deuteronomy 19). The exposition of the civil law is followed by that of the martial law, which has some bearing upon the then impending war with Canaan, as the most important war and representing that with the heathen nations in general (Deuteronomy 20). These are again followed by a series of laws in reference to the preceding, and referring chiefly to hard cases in the judicial courts, by which Moses obviously designed to exhibit the whole of the civil life of his people in its strict application to the theocratic system of law and right. Therefore the form of prayer to be spoken at the offering up of the firstlings and tithe—the theocratic confession of faith—by which every [[Israelite]] acknowledges in person that he is what God has enjoined and called him to be, forms a beautiful conclusion of the whole legislation (Deuteronomy 21-26). </p> <p> The blessings and curses of Jehovah, the two opposite extremes which were to be impressed upon the minds of the people at their entrance into Canaan, and which have hitherto been spoken of only in general terms, are now set forth in their fullest detail, picturing in the most lively colors the delightful abundance of rich blessings on the one hand, and the awful visitations of Heaven's wrath on the other. The prophetic speeches visibly and gradually increase in energy and enthusiasm, until the perspective of the remotest future of the people of God lies open to the eye of the inspired Lawgiver in all its checkered details, when his words resolve themselves into a flight of poetical ecstasy, into the strains of a splendid triumphal song in which the tone of grief and lamentation is as heart-rending as the announcement of divine salvation therein is jubilant (Deuteronomy 27-28). The history of the law concludes with a supplement concerning him who was deemed worthy by the Lord to transmit his law to Israel (Deuteronomy 34). </p> <p> Thus much regarding the contents and connection of the book of Deuteronomy. </p> <p> The date, however, of the composition of the book, as well as its authenticity, has given rise to a great variety of opinion, more especially among those who are opposed to the authorship of Moses. The older critics considered Deuteronomy as the latest production of all the books of the Pentateuch; while the more recent critics have come to just the contrary opinion, and declare it to be the earliest of the [[Mosaic]] writings. </p> <p> A very strong proof of the genuineness of the book lies in its relation to the later writings of the prophets. Of all the books of the Pentateuch, Deuteronomy has been made most use of by the prophets, simply because it is best calculated to serve as a model for prophetic declarations, as also because of the inward harmony that exists between the prophecies and the laws upon which they are based. </p> <p> Among the arguments advanced against the authenticity of Deuteronomy, are: </p> <p> 1. The contradictions said to exist between this and the other books of Moses; </p> <p> 2. [[Certain]] anachronisms committed by the author. </p> <p> These contradictions are more especially alleged to exist in the festival laws, where but arbitrary and unwarranted views are mostly entertained by such critics with regard to the nature and original meaning of the festivals, which they identify altogether with natural or season festivals, and without lending to them a more spiritual character and signification. </p> <p> 3. That the [[Sinai]] of the other books is always called [[Horeb]] in Deuteronomy.—They forget, however, that Horeb is the general name of the whole mountain, while Sinai is the special name of a particular part of it. This distinction is, indeed, most scrupulously observed everywhere in the Pentateuch. </p> <p> 4. That in are mentioned the Amorites, instead of the Amalekites, as in .—Here also they have forgotten to notice that, in the sequel of the very passage alluded to in Deuteronomy, both the [[Amorites]] and [[Amalekites]] are mentioned. </p> <p> 5. That the cause of the punishment of Moses is differently stated in , and .—To this objection we reply, that both the guilt and punishment of Moses are described in both books as originating with the people; comp. also , etc. </p> <p> Among the anachronisms in Deuteronomy are reckoned the allusions made in it to the [[Temple]] (Deuteronomy 12; , sqq.), to the royal and prophetic powers (Deuteronomy 13; Deuteronomy 17-18), to the different modes of idol-worship , and to the exile (Deuteronomy 28, sq.). In suggesting these critical points, however, they do not consider that all these subjects are most closely and intimately connected with the spirit and principles of the law itself, and that all these regulations and prophecies appear here in Deuteronomy, as necessary finishing-points to the Law, so indispensable for the better consolidation of the subsequent and later relations of the theocracy. </p> <p> More anachronisms are said to be, </p> <p> 1. The sixty dwelling-places of [[Jair]] mentioned , sq. (comp. , sq.). We consider, however, that the men mentioned in the two passages are evidently different persons, though of the same name. Nor is it difficult to prove from other sources, that there really existed at the time of Moses a man by name Jair. </p> <p> 2. The notice concerning king Og, which looks more like a note of a subsequent writer in corroboration of the story told in the chapter. But this hypothesis falls to the ground when we consider that Moses did not write for his contemporaries merely, but also for late posterity. The book contains, moreover, not a small number of plain, though indirect traces, indicative of its Mosaic origin. We thus find in it: </p> <p> 1. Numerous notices concerning nations with whom the [[Israelites]] had then come in contact, but who, after the Mosaic period, entirely disappeared from the pages of history: such are the accounts of the residences of the kings of [[Bashan]] . </p> <p> 2. The appellation of 'mountain of the Amorites,' used throughout the whole book (;; ), while even in the book of Joshua, soon after the conquest of the land, the name is already exchanged for 'mountains of Judah' . </p> <p> 3. The observation , that the [[Emim]] had formerly dwelt in the plain of Moab: they were a great people, equal to the Anakim. This observation quite accords with . </p> <p> 4. A detailed account concerning the [[Horim]] and their relations to the Edomites. </p> <p> 5. An account of the [[Zamzummim]] , one of the earliest races of Canaan, though mentioned nowhere else. </p> <p> 6. A very circumstantial account of the [[Rephaim]] (, sq.), with whose concerns the author seems to have been well acquainted. </p> <p> The standing-point also of the author of Deuteronomy is altogether in the Mosaic time, and had it been assumed and fictitious, there must necessarily have been moments when the spurious author would have been off his guard, and unmindful of the part he had to play. But no discrepancies of this kind can be traced; and this is in itself an evidence of the genuineness of the book. </p> <p> A great number of other passages force us likewise to the conclusion, that the whole of Deuteronomy originated in the time of Moses. Such are the passages where </p> <p> 1. A comparison is drawn between [[Canaan]] and [[Egypt]] (, sq.), with the latter of which the author seems thoroughly acquainted. </p> <p> 2. Detailed descriptions are given of the fertility and productions of Egypt (, sq.). </p> <p> 3. Regulations are given relating to the conquest of Canaan (, sq.; 20:1, sq.), which cannot be understood otherwise than by assuming that they had been framed in the Mosaic time, since they could be of no use after that period. </p> <p> Besides, whole pieces and chapters in Deuteronomy, such as Deuteronomy 32-33, betray in form, language, and tenor, a very early period in [[Hebrew]] literature. Nor are the laws and regulations in Deuteronomy less decisive of the authenticity of the book. We are struck with the most remarkable phenomenon, that many laws from the previous books are here partly repeated and impressed with more energy, partly modified, and partly altogether abolished, according to the contingencies of the time, or as the new aspect of circumstances among the Jews rendered such steps necessary (comp. e.g. with; Deuteronomy 12 with Leviticus 17). Such pretensions to raise, or even to oppose his own private opinions to the authority of divine law, are found in no author of the subsequent periods, since the whole of the sacred literature of the later times is, on the contrary, rather the echo than otherwise of the Pentateuch, and is altogether founded on it. [[Add]] to this the fact, that the law itself forbids most impressively to add to, or take anything from it, a prohibition which is repeated even in Deuteronomy (comp.; ); and it is but too evident, that, if the opinion of the critics be correct, that this book contains nothing more than a gradual development of the law—it clashes too often with its own principles, and pronounces thus its own sentence of condemnation. </p> <p> The part of Deuteronomy (Deuteronomy 34) respecting the death of Moses requires a particular explanation. That the whole of this section is to be regarded as a piece altogether apart from what precedes it, or as a supplement from another writer, has already been maintained by the elder theologians; and this opinion is confirmed not only by the contents of the chapter, but also by the express declaration of the book itself on that event and its relations; for Deuteronomy 31 contains the conclusion of the work, where Moses describes himself as the author of the previous contents, as also of the [[Song]] (Deuteronomy 32), and the blessings (Deuteronomy 33) belonging to it. All that follows is, consequently, not from Moses, the work being completed and concluded with Deuteronomy 33. There is another circumstance which favors this opinion, namely, the close connection that exists between the last section of Deuteronomy and the beginning of Joshua (comp. with ), plainly shows that Deuteronomy 34 is intended to serve as a point of transition to the book of Joshua, and that it was written by the same author as the latter. The correct view of this chapter, therefore, is to consider it as a real supplement, but by no means as an interpolation. </p> <p> On the literature of Deuteronomy, compare the article Pentateuch. </p>
       
== Cyclopedia of Biblical, Theological and Ecclesiastical Literature <ref name="term_37058" /> ==
<p> (in Heb. the title is taken, like most of the other books, from the initial words, הִדְּבָרַים אֵלֶּה, "These are the words," or simply דְּבָרַים, "Words;" in the Sept. Δευτερονόμιον, second law, as being a repetition of the Law; Vulg. Deuteronium: called also by the later [[Jews]] מַשְׁנֵה הִתּוֹרָה, duplicate of the Law, and סֵפֶר תּוֹכָהוֹת, book of admonitions), the fifth book of Moses, or the last of the Pentateucho It gives an account of the sublime and dignified manner in which [[Moses]] terminated that work, the accomplishment of which was his peculiar mission, and intersperses several additional items of history in the recapitulation of his public career. It forms a sacred legacy which he here bequeathed to his people, and very different from those laws which he had announced to them at Sinai. The tone of the law falls here considerably in the background, and the subjectivity (individuality) of the Lawgiver, and his peculiar relation to his people, stand out more prominently. A thoroughly sublime and prophetic spirit pervades all its speeches from beginning to end. The thoughts of the man of [[God]] are entirely taken up with the inward concerns of his people, their relations, future fate, and eventful vicissitudes. The [[Lawgiver]] here stands amid Israel, warning and consoling, commanding and exhorting, surveying and proclaiming the future with marvelous discernment. </p> <p> I. Contents. — The book consists chiefly of three discourses delivered by Moses shortly before his death They were spoken to all [[Israel]] in the plains of Moab, on the eastern side of the [[Jordan]] (Deuteronomy 1:1), in the eleventh month of the last year of their wanderings, the fortieth year after their exodus from [[Egypt]] (Deuteronomy 1:3). Subjoined to these discourses are the [[Song]] of Moses, the Blessing of Moses, and the story of his death. </p> <p> 1. The first [[Discourse]] (Deuteronomy 1:1-4). — After a brief historical introduction (Deuteronomy 1:1-5), the speaker recapitulates the chief events of the past forty years in the wilderness, and especially those events which had the most immediate bearing on the entry of the people into the promised land. He enumerates the contests in which they had been engaged with the various tribes who came in their way, and in which their success had always depended upon their obedience; and reminds them of the exclusion from the promised land, first of the former generation because they had been disobedient in the matter of the spies, and next of himself, with whom the Lord was wroth for their sakes (Deuteronomy 3:26). On the appeal to the witness of this past history is then based an earnest and powerful exhortation to obedience; and especially a warning against idolatry as that which had brought God's judgment upon them in times past (Deuteronomy 4:3), and would yet bring sorer punishment in the future (Deuteronomy 4:26-28). To this discourse is appended a brief notice of the severing of the three cities of refuge on the east side of the Jordan (Deuteronomy 4:41-43). </p> <p> 2. The second Discourse is introduced, like the first, by an explanation of the circumstances under which it was delivered (Deuteronomy 4:44-49). It extends from Deuteronomy 5:1, to Deuteronomy 26:19, and contains a recapitulation, with some modifications and additions, of the Law already given on Mount Sinai. [[Yet]] it is no bare recapitulation or naked enactment, but every word shows the heart of the lawgiver full at once of zeal for God and of the most fervent desire for the welfare of his nation. It is the father no less than the legislator who speaks; and while obedience and life are throughout bound up together, it is the obedience of a loving heart, not a service of formal constraint which is the burden of his exhortations. The following are the principal heads of discourse: </p> <p> a. He begins with that which formed the basis of the whole [[Mosaic]] code — the [[Ten]] [[Commandments]] — and impressively repeats the circumstances under which they were given (Deuteronomy 5:1-6; Deuteronomy 5:3). </p> <p> 3. Then follows an exposition of the spirit of the First Table. The love of [[Jehovah]] who has done so great things for them (Deuteronomy 6), and the utter uprooting of all idol-worship (Deuteronomy 7), are the points chiefly insisted upon. But they are also reminded that if idolatry be a snare on the one hand, so is self-righteousness on the other (Deuteronomy 8:10 sq.), and therefore, lest they should be lifted up, the speaker enters at length on the history of their past rebellions (Deuteronomy 9:7; Deuteronomy 9:22-24), and especially of their sin in the matter of the golden calf (Deuteronomy 9:9-21). The true nature of obedience is again emphatically urged (Deuteronomy 10:12 to Deuteronomy 11:32), and the great motives to obedience set forth in God's love and mercy to them as a people (Deuteronomy 10:15; Deuteronomy 10:21-22), as also his signal punishment of the rebellious (Deuteronomy 11:3-6). The blessing and the curse (Deuteronomy 11:26-32) are further detailed. </p> <p> c. From the general spirit in which the law should be observed, Moses passes on to the several enactments. Even these are introduced by a solemn charge to the people to destroy all objects of idolatrous worship in the land (Deuteronomy 12:14). They are, upon the whole, arranged systematically. We have first the laws touching religion; then those which are to regulate the conduct of the government and the executive; and, lastly, those which concern the private and social life of the people. The whole are framed with express reference to the future occupation of the land of Canaan. </p> <p> (1.) [[Religious]] [[Statutes]] (Deuteronomy 12:1 to Deuteronomy 16:17). — There is to be but one sanctuary where all offerings are to be offered. [[Flesh]] may be eaten anywhere, but sacrifices may only be slain in "the place which the Lord thy God shall choose" (Deuteronomy 12:5-32). All idol prophets, all enticers to idolatry from among themselves, even whole cities if idolatrous, are to be cut off (Deuteronomy 13), and all idolatrous practices to be eschewed (Deuteronomy 14:1-2). [[Next]] come regulations respecting clean and unclean animals, tithe, the year of release, and the three feasts of the Passover, of Weeks, and of [[Tabernacles]] (Deuteronomy 14:3 to Deuteronomy 16:17). </p> <p> (2.) Governmental and Executive Functions (Deuteronomy 16:18 - Deuteronomy 21:23). — The laws affecting public personages and defining the authority of the judges (Deuteronomy 16:18-20) and the priests (Deuteronomy 17:8-13), the way of proceeding in courts of justice (Deuteronomy 17:1-13); the law of the king (Deuteronomy 17:14-20), of the priests, and Levites, and prophets (Deuteronomy 18); of the cities of refuge and of witnesses (Deuteronomy 19). The order is not very exact, but, on the whole, the section Deuteronomy 16:18 to Deuteronomy 19:21, is judicial in its character. The passage Deuteronomy 16:21 to Deuteronomy 17:1, seems strangely out of place. Baumgarten (Comm; in loc.) tries to account for it on the ground of the close connection which must subsist between the true worship of God and righteous rule and judgment. But who does not feel that this is said with more ingenuity than truth? </p> <p> Next come the laws of war (Deuteronomy 20), both as waged </p> <p> (a) generally with other nations, and </p> <p> (b) especially with the inhabitants of [[Canaan]] (Deuteronomy 20:17). </p> <p> (3.) [[Private]] and Social Injunctions, or laws touching domestic life and the relation of man to man (Deuteronomy 21:15 to Deuteronomy 26:19). So Ewald divides, assigning the former part of Deuteronomy 21 to the previous section. Havernick, on the other hand, includes it in the present. The fact is that Deuteronomy 21:10-14 belong to the laws of war, which are treated of in Deuteronomy 20, whereas 1-9 seem more naturally to come under the matters discussed in this section. It begins with the relations of the family, passes on to those of the friend and neighbor, and then touches on the general principles of justice and charity by which men should be actuated (Deuteronomy 24:16-22). It concludes with the following confession, which every [[Israelite]] is to make when he offers the first-fruits, and which reminds him of what he is as a member of the theocracy, as one in covenant with Jehovah, and greatly blessed by Jehovah. </p> <p> Finally, this whole long discourse is wound up by a brief but powerful appeal (Deuteronomy 26:16-19), which reminds us of the words with which it opened. It will be observed that no pains are taken here, or indeed genes ally in the Mosaic legislation, to keep the several portions of the law, considered as moral, ritual, and ceremonial, apart from each other by any clearly-marked line. But there is in this discourse a very manifest gradual descent from the higher ground to the lower. The speaker begins by setting forth Jehovah himself as the great object of love and worship; thence he passes [1.] to the Religious, [2.] to the Political, and [3.] to the Social economy of his people.. </p> <p> 3. In the third Discourse (Deuteronomy 27:1 to Deuteronomy 30:20), the elders of Israel are associated with Moses. The people are commanded to set up stones upon Mount Ebal, and on them to write "all the words of this law." Then follow the several curses to be pronounced by the [[Levites]] on [[Ebal]] (Deuteronomy 27:14-26), and the blessings on [[Gerizim]] (Deuteronomy 28:1-14). How terrible will be the punishment of any neglect of this law is further portrayed in the vivid words of a prophecy but too fearfully verified in the subsequent history of the people. The subject of this discourse is briefly "The Blessing and the Curse." The prophetic speeches visibly and gradually increase in energy and enthusiasm, until the perspective of the remotest future of the people of God lies open to the eye of the inspired lawgiver in all its checkered details, when his words resolve themselves into a flight of poetical ecstasy, into the strains of a splendid triumphal song, in which the tone of grief and lamentation is as heart- rending as the announcement of divine- salvation therein is jubilant (ch. 27, 28). </p> <p> 4. The delivery of the Law as written by Moses (for its still further preservation) to the custody of the Levites, and a charge to the people to hear it read once every seven years (Deuteronomy 31); the Song of Moses spoken in the ears of the people (Deuteronom 31:30-32:44); and the blessing of the twelve tribes (Deuteronomy 33). </p> <p> 5. The book closes (Deuteronomy 34) with an account of the death of Moses, which is first announced to him in Deuteronomy 32:48-52. On the authorship of the last chapter, see below. </p> <p> II. Relation of Deuteronomy to the preceding books. It has been an opinion very generally entertained by the more modern critics, as well as by the earlier, that the book of Deuteronomy forms a complete whole in itself, and that it was appended to the other books as a later addition. Only Deuteronomy 32, 33, 34 have been in whole or in part called in question by [[De]] Wette, Ewald, and Von Lengerke. De Wette thinks that Deuteronomy 32, 33 have been borrowed from other sources, and that Deuteronomy 34 is the work of the [[Elohist]] (q.v.). Ewald also supposes Deuteronomy 32 to have been borrowed from another writer, who lived, however (in accordance with his theory, which we shall notice lower down), after Solomon. On the other hand, he considers Deuteronomy 33 to be later, whilst Bleek (Repert. 1:25) and Tuch (Gen. p. 556) decide that it is Elohistic. Some of these critics imagine that these chapters originally formed the conclusion of the book of Numbers, and that the Deuteronomist tore them away from their proper position in order the better to incorporate his own work with the rest of the Pentateuch, and to give it a fitting conclusion. [[Gesenius]] and his followers are of opinion that the whole book, as it stands at present, is by the same hand. But it is a question of some interest and importance whether the book of Deuteronomy should be assigned to the author, or one of the authors, of the former portions of the Pentateuch, or whether it is a distinct and independent work. The more conservative critics of the school of [[Hengstenberg]] contend that Deuteronomy forms an integral part of the Pentateuch, which is throughout to be ascribed to Moses. Others, as Staihelin and Delitzsch, have given reasons for believing that it was written by the Jehovist; whilst others again, as Ewald and De Wette, are in favor of a different author. </p> <p> The chief grounds on which the last opinion rests on the many variations and additions to be found in Deuteronomy, both in the historical and legal portions, as well as the observable difference of style and phraseology. It is necessary, therefore, before we come to consider more directly the question of authorship, to take into account these alleged peculiarities; and it may be well to enumerate the principal discrepancies, additions, etc, as given by De Wette in the last edition of his Einleitung (many of his former objections he afterwards abandoned), and to subjoin the replies and explanations which they have called forth. </p> <p> (I.) Discrepancies. — The most important discrepancies alleged to exist between the historical portions of Deuteronomy and the earlier books are the following: </p> <p> (1.) The appointment of judges (Deuteronomy 1:6-18) is at variance with the account in Exodus 18 It is referred to a different time, being placed after the departure of the people from [[Horeb]] (Exodus 18:6), whereas in Exodus it is said to have occurred during their encampment before the mount (Exodus 18:5). The circumstances are different, and, apparently it is mixed up with the choosing of the seventy elders (Numbers 11:11-17). To this it has been answered, that although Deuteronomy 1:6 mentions the departure from Sinai, yet Deuteronomy 1:9-17 evidently refers to what took place during the abode there, as is shown by comparing the expression "at that time," Deuteronomy 1:9, with the same expression in Deuteronomy 1:18. The speaker, as is not unnatural in animated discourse, checks himself and goes back to take notice of an important circumstance prior to one which he has already mentioned. This is manifest, because Deuteronomy 1:19 is so clearly resumptive of Deuteronomy 1:6. Again, there is no force in the objection that Jethro's counsel is here passed over in silence. When making allusion to a well-known historical fact, it is unnecessary for the speaker to enter into details. This at most is an omission, not a contradiction. Lastly, the story in Exodus is perfectly distinct from that in Numbers 11, and there is no confusion of the two here. Nothing is said of the institution of the seventy in Deuteronomy, probably because the office was only temporary, and if it did not cease before the death of Moses, was not intended to be perpetuated in the promised land. (So in substance Ranke, Lengerke, Hengstenberg, Havernick, Stahelin.) </p> <p> (2.) Deuteronomy 1:22 is thought to be at variance with Numbers 13:2, because here Moses is said to have sent the spies into Canaan at the suggestion of the people, whereas there God is said to have commanded the measure. The explanation is obvious. The people make the request; Moses refers it to God, who then gives to it His sanction. In the historical book of Numbers the divine command only is mentioned. Here, where the lawgiver deals so largely with the feelings and conduct of the people themselves, he reminds them both that the request originated with themselves, and also of the circumstances out of which,hat request sprang (Numbers 13:20-21). These are not mentioned in the history. The objection, it may be remarked, is precisely of the same kind as that which in the N.T. is urged against the reconciliation of Galatians 2:2 with Acts 15:2-3. Both admit of a similar explanation. </p> <p> (3.) Deuteronomy 1:44, "And the [[Amorites]] which dwelt in that mountain," etc, whereas in the story of the same event, Numbers 14:43-45, [[Amalekites]] are mentioned. Answer: in this latter passage not only Amalekites, but Canaanites, are said to have come down against the Israelites. The Amorites stand here not for "Amalekites," but for "Canaanites," as being the most powerful of all the [[Canaanitish]] tribes (comp. [[Genesis]] 15:16; Deuteronomy 1:7); and the Amalekites are not named, but hinted at, when it is said, "they destroyed you in Seir," where, according to 1 Chronicles 4:42, they dwelt (so Hengst. 3, 421). </p> <p> (4.) Deuteronomy 2:2-8, confused and at variance with Numbers 20:14-21; Numbers 21:4. In the former we read (Numbers 21:4), "Ye are to pass through the coast of your brethren, the children of Esau." In the latter (Numbers 21:20), "And he said, [[Thou]] shalt not go through. And [[Edom]] came out against him," etc. But, according to Deuteronomy, that part of the Edomitish territory only was traversed which lay about [[Elath]] and Ezion-geber. In this exposed part of their territory any attempt to prevent the passage of the [[Israelites]] would have been useless, whereas at Kadesh, where, according to Numbers, the opposition was offered, the rocky nature of the country was in favor of the Edomites. (So Hengst. 3, 283 sq.). To this we may add, that in Deuteronomy 2:8, when it is said "we passed by from our brethren the children of Esau... through the way of the plain from Elath," the failure of an attempt to pass elsewhere is implied. Again, according to Deuteronomy, the Israelites purchased food and water of the [[Edomites]] and [[Moabites]] (Deuteronomy 2:6; Deuteronomy 2:28), which, it is said, contradicts the story in Numbers 20:19-20. But in both accounts the Israelites offer to pay for what they have (comp. Deuteronomy 2:6 with Numbers 20:19). And if in Deuteronomy 23:4 there seems to be a contradiction to Deuteronomy 2:29 with regard to the conduct of the Moabites, it may be removed by observing (with Hengst. 3, 286) that the unfriendliness of the Moabites in not coming out to meet the Israelites with bread and water was the very reason why the latter were obliged to buy provisions. </p> <p> (5.) There is a difference in the account of the encampments of the Israelites as given Deuteronomy 10:6-7, compared with Numbers 20:23; Numbers 33:30; Numbers 33:37. In Deuteronomy it is said that the order of encampment was, </p> <p> 1. Bene-jaakan; </p> <p> 2. [[Mosera]] (where [[Aaron]] dies); </p> <p> 3. Gud. godah; </p> <p> 4. Jotbath. </p> <p> In Numbers it is, </p> <p> 1. Moseroth; </p> <p> 2. Bene-jaakan; </p> <p> 3. Hor-hagidgad; </p> <p> 4. Jotbath. </p> <p> Then follow the stations Ebronah, Ezion-geber, Kadesh, and Mount Hor, and it is at this last that Aaron dies. (It is remarkable here that no account is given of the stations between Ezion-geber and [[Kadesh]] on the return route.) Various attempts have been made to reconcile these accounts. The explanation given by Kurtz (Atlas zur Gesch. d. A. B. 20) is, on the whole, the most satisfactory. He says: "In the first month of the fortieth year the whole congregation comes a second time to the wilderness of Zin, which is Kadesh (Numbers 33:36). On the down-route to Ezion-geber they had encamped at the several stations [[Moseroth]] (or Moserah), Bene-jaakan, Chor-hagidgad, and Jotbath. But now, again departing from Kadesh, they go to Mount Hor, ‘ in the edge of the land of Edom' (Numbers 33:37-38), or to [[Moserah]] (Deuteronomy 10:6-7), this last being in the desert at the foot of the mountain. Bene-jaakan, Gudgodah, and [[Jotbath]] were also visited about this time, i.e. a second time, after the second halt at Kadesh." (See [[Exode]]). </p> <p> (6.) But this is not so much a discrepancy as a peculiarity of the writer: in Deuteronomy the usual name for the mountain on which the law was given is Horeb, only once (Deuteronomy 33:2) Sinai; whereas in the other books [[Sinai]] is far more common than Horeb. The answer given is that Horeb was the general name of the whole mountain range, Sinai the particular mountain on which the law was delivered; and that Horeb, the more general and well-known name, was employed in accordance with the rhetorical style of this book, in order to bring out the contrast between the Sinaitic giving of the law, and the giving of the law in the land of [[Moab]] (Deuteronomy 1:5; Deuteronomy 29:1). So Keil. (See [[Horeb]]). </p> <p> (II.) Additions. — </p> <p> 1. In the History. </p> <p> (a) The command of God to leave Horeb, Deuteronomy 1:6-7, not mentioned in Numbers 10:11. The repentance of the Israelites, Deuteronomy 1:45, omitted in Numbers 14:45. The intercession of Moses in behalf of Aaron, Deuteronomy 9:20, of which nothing is said in Exodus 32:33 : — These are so slight, however, that, as Keil suggests, they might have been passed over very naturally in the earlier books, supposing both accounts to be by the same hand. But of more note are: </p> <p> (b) The command not to fight with the Moabites and Ammonites, Deuteronomy 2:9; Deuteronomy 2:19, or with the Edomites, but to buy of them food and water, Deuteronomy 2:4-8; the valuable historical notices which are given respecting the earlier inhabitants of the countries of Moab, and Ammon, and of Mount Seir, Deuteronomy 2:10-12; Deuteronomy 2:20-23; the sixty fortified cities of Bashan, Deuteronomy 3:4; the king of the country who was "of the remnant of giants," Deuteronomy 3:11; the different names of Hermon, Deuteronomy 3:9; the wilderness of Kedemoth, Deuteronomy 2:26; and the more detailed account of the attack of the Amalekites, Deuteronomy 25:17-18, compared with Exodus 17:8. </p> <p> 2. In the Law. The appointment of the cities of refuge, Deuteronomy 19:7-9, as compared with Numbers 35:14 and Deuteronomy 4:41; of one particular place for the solemn worship of God, where all offerings, tithes, etc. are to be brought, Deuteronomy 12:5, etc., whilst the restriction with regard to the slaying of animals only at the door of the tabernacle of the congregation (Leviticus 17:3-4) is done away, 15, 20, 21; the regulations respecting tithes to be brought with the sacrifices and burnt-offerings to the appointed place, Deuteronomy 12:6; Deuteronomy 12:11; Deuteronomy 12:17; Deuteronomy 14:22, etc.; Deuteronomy 26:12; concerning false prophets and seducers to idolatry and those that hearken unto them, Deuteronomy 13; concerning the king and the manner of the kingdom, 17:14, etc.; the prophets, 18:15, etc.; war and military service, Deuteronomy 20; the expiation of secret murder; the law of female captives; of first-born sons by a double marriage; of disobedient sons; of those who suffer death by hanging, Deuteronomy 21; the laws in Deuteronomy 22:5-8; Deuteronomy 22:13-21; of divorce, Deuteronomy 24:1, and various lesser enactments, 23 and 25; the form of thanksgiving in offering the first-fruits, 26; the command to write the law upon stones, 27, and to read it before all Israel at the [[Feast]] of Tabernacles, Deuteronomy 31:10-13. </p> <p> [[Many]] others are rather extensions or modifications of, than additions to, existing laws, as, for instance, the law of the [[Hebrew]] slave, Deuteronomy 15:12, etc. compared with Exodus 21:2, etc. See also the fuller directions in Deuteronomy 15:19-23; Deuteronomy 26:1-11, as compared with the briefer notices, Exodus 13:12; Exodus 23:19. </p> <p> All these, however, afford no real difficulty in identifying the author with that of the preceding books, on the supposition that it was Moses himself, who, as the propounder of the law and the director of the history, was competent to expand and illustrate both, and, indeed, could hardly fail to do so, were he other than a mechanical copyist. </p> <p> III. [[Date]] of Composition. — Was the book really written, as its language certainly implies, before the entry of Israel into the [[Promised]] Land? Not only does the writer assert that the discourses contained in the book were delivered in the plains of Moab, in the last month of the 40 years' wandering, and when the people were just about to enter Canaan (Deuteronomy 1:1-5), but he tells us with still further exactness that all the words of this Law were written at the same time in the book (Deuteronomy 31:9). Moreover, the fact that the goodly land lay even now before their eyes seems everywhere to be uppermost in the thoughts of the legislator, and to lend a peculiar solemnity to his words. Hence we continually meet with such expressions as "when Jehovah thy God bringeth thee into the land which He hath sworn to thy fathers to give thee," or "whither thou goest in to possess it." This phraseology is so constant, and seems to fall in so naturally with the general tone and character of the book, that to suppose it was written long after the settlement of the Israelites in Canaan, in the reign of [[Solomon]] (De Wette, Lengerke, and others), or in that of [[Manasseh]] (Ewald, as above), is not only to make the book a historical romance, but to attribute very considerable inventive skill to the author (as Ewald in fact does). </p> <p> De Wette argues, indeed, that the character of the laws is such as of itself to presuppose a long residence in the land of Canaan. He instances the allusion to the temple (12, and Deuteronomy 16:1-7), the provision for the right discharge of the kingly and prophetical offices, the rules for civil and military organization and the state of the Levites, who are represented as living without cities (though such are granted to them in Numbers 35) and without tithes (allotted to them in Numbers 18:20, etc.). But in the passages cited the [[Temple]] is not named, much less is it spoken of as already existing: on the contrary, the phrase employed is "The place which the Lord your God shall choose." Again, to suppose that Moses was incapable of providing for the future and very different position of his people as settled in the land of Canaan, is to deny him even ordinary sagacity. [[Without]] raising the question about his divine commission, surely it is not too much to assume that so wise and great a legislator would foresee the growth of a polity, and would be anxious to regulate its due administration in the fear of God. Hence he would guard against false prophets and seducers to idolatry. As regards the Levites, Moses might have expected or even desired that, though possessing certain cities (which, however, were inhabited by others as well as themselves), they should not be confined to those cities, but scattered over the face of the country. This must have been the case at first, owing to the very gradual occupation of the new territory. The mere fact that, in giving them certain rights in Deuteronomy, nothing is said of an earlier provision in Numbers, does not by any means prove that this earlier provision was unknown or had ceased to be in force. </p> <p> Other reasons for a later date, such as the mention of the worship of the sun and moon (Deuteronomy 4:19; Deuteronomy 17:3); the punishment of stoning (Deuteronomy 17:5; Deuteronomy 22:21, etc.); the name Feast of Tabernacles; and the motive for keeping the Sabbath, are of little force. In Amos 5:26, [[Saturn]] is said to have been worshipped in the wilderness; the punishment of stoning is found also in the older documents; the Feast of Tabernacles agrees with Leviticus 23:34; and the motive alleged for the observance of the Sabbath, at least, does not exclude other motives. IV. Author. — </p> <p> 1. It is generally agreed that by far the greater portion of the book is the work of one author. The only parts which have been questioned as possible interpolations are, according to De Wette, 4:41-3; 10:6-9; 32 and 33. Internal evidence, indeed, is strongly decisive that this book of the [[Pentateuch]] was not the work of a compiler. </p> <p> 2. It cannot be denied that the style of Deuteronomy is very different from that of the other four books of the Pentateuch. It is more flowing, more rhetorical, more sustained. The rhythm is grand, and the diction more akin to the sublimer passages of the prophets than to the sober prose of the historians. </p> <p> 3. Who, then, was the author? This question, of course, is intimately connected with the preceding discussion. We will consider, first, the views of those who deny its authorship by Moses. On this point the following principal hypotheses have been maintained: </p> <p> a. The opinion of Stä helin (and, as it would seem, of Bleek), that the author is the same as the writer of the Jehovistic portions of the other books. He thinks that both the historical and legislative portions plainly show the hand of the supplementist (Krit. Unters. p. 76). Hence he attaches but little weight to the alleged discrepancies, as he considers them all to be the work of the reviser, going over, correcting, and adding to the older materials of the Elohistic document already in his hands. </p> <p> b. The opinion of De Wette, Gesenius, and others, that the Deuteronomist is a distinct writer from the Jehovist. De Wette's arguments are based </p> <p> (1) on the difference in style; </p> <p> (2) on the contradictions already referred to as existing in matters of history, as well as in the legislation, when compared with that in Exodus; </p> <p> (3) on the peculiarity noticeable in this book, that God does not speak by Moses, but that Moses himself speaks to the people, and that there is no mention of the angel of Jehovah (comp. 1:30; 7:20-23; 11:13-17, with Exodus 23:20-33); and </p> <p> (4) lastly, on the fact that the Deuteronomist ascribes his whole work to Moses, while the [[Jehovist]] assigns him only certain portions. </p> <p> c. From the fact that certain phases occurring in Deuteronomy are found also in the prophecy of Jeremiah, it has been too hastily concluded by some critics that both books were the work of the prophet. — So Von Bohlen, Gesenius (Gesch d. Hebr. Spr. p. 32), and [[Hartmann]] (Hist. Krit. Forsch. p. 660). Konig, on the other hand (Alttest. Stud. 2:12 sq.), has shown not only that this idiomatic resemblance has been made too much of (see also Keil, Einl. p. 117), but that there is the greatest possible difference of style between the two books. De Wette expresses himself similarly (Einl. p. 191). </p> <p> d. Ewald is of opinion that it was written by a [[Jew]] living in Egypt during the latter half of the reign of Manasseh (Gesch. des V. I. i, 171). He thinks that a pious Jew of that age, gifted with prophetic power, and fully alive to all the evils of his time, sought thus to revive and to impress more powerfully upon the minds of his countrymen the great lessons of that law which he saw they were in danger of forgetting. He avails himself, therefore, of the groundwork of the earlier history, and also of the Mosaic mode of expression. But as his object is to rouse a corrupt nation, he only makes use of historical notices for the purpose of introducing his warnings and exhortations with the more effect. This he does with great skill and as a master of his subject, while at the same time he gives fresh vigor and life to the old law by means of those new prophetic truths which had so lately become the heritage of his people. Ewald further considers that there are passages in Deuteronomy borrowed from the books of Job and Isaiah (Deuteronomy 4:32, from Job 8:8; and Deuteronomy 28:29-30; Deuteronomy 28:35, from Job 5:14; Job 31:10; Job 2:7; etc. from Isaiah 5:26 sq.; Isaiah 33:19), and much of it akin to Jeremiah (Gesch. 1:171, note). The song of Moses (32) is, according to him, not by the Deuteronomist, but is nevertheless later than the time of Solomon. </p> <p> e. The old traditional view that this book, like the other books of the Pentatench, is the work of Moses himself. Of the later critics, Hengstenberg, Havernick, Ranke, and others, have maintained this view. Moses Stuart writes: "Deuteronomy appears to my mind, as it did to that of [[Eichhorn]] and Herder, as the earnest outpourings and admonitions of a heart which felt the deepest interest in the welfare of the [[Jewish]] nation, and which realized that it must soon bid farewell to them... [[Instead]] of bearing upon its face, as is alleged by some, evidences of another authorship than that of Moses, I must regard this book as being so deeply fraught with holy and patriotic feeling as to convince any unprejudiced reader who is competent to judge of its style, that it cannot, with any tolerable degree of probability, be attributed to any pretender to legislation, or to any mere imitator of the great legislator. Such a glow as runs through all this book it is in vain to seek for in any artificial or supposititious composition" (Hist. of the O.T. Canon, § 3). </p> <p> In support of this opinion, it is said: </p> <p> 1. That, supposing the whole Pentateuch to have been written by Moses, the change in style is easily accounted for when we remember that the last book is hortatory in its character, that it consists chiefly of orations, and that these were delivered under very peculiar circumstances. </p> <p> 2. That the usus loquendi is not only generally in accordance with that of the earlier books, and that as well in their Elohistic as in their Jehovistic portions, but that there are certain peculiar forms of expression common only to these five books. </p> <p> 3. That the alleged variations in matters of fact between this and the earlier books may all be reconciled (see above), and that the amplifications and corrections in the legislation are only such as would necessarily be made when the people were just about to enter the promised land. [[Thus]] Bertheau observes: "It is hazardous to conclude from contradictions in the laws that they are to be ascribed to a different age... He who made additions must have known what it was he was making additions to, and would either have avoided all contradiction, or would have altered the earlier laws to make them agree with the later" (Die Sieben Gruppen Mos. Gesetze, p. 19, note). </p> <p> 4. That the book bears witness to its own authorship (31:19), and is expressly cited in the N.T. as the work of Moses (Matthew 19:7-8; Mark 10:3; Acts 3:22; Acts 7:37). </p> <p> The book contains, in addition, not a small number of plain, though indirect traces, indicative of its Mosaic origin (see Jour. Sac. Lit. Jan. 1858, p. 313 sq.). We thus find in it: </p> <p> 1. Numerous notices concerning nations with whom the Israelites had then come in contact, but who, after the Mosaic period, entirely disappeared from the pages of history: such are the accounts of the residences of the kings of [[Bashan]] (Deuteronomy 1:4). </p> <p> 2. The appellation of "mountain of the Amorites," used throughout the whole book (Deuteronomy 1:7; Deuteronomy 1:19-20; Deuteronomy 1:44), while even in the book Joshua, soon after the conquest of the land, the name is already exchanged for "mountains of Judah" (Joshua 11:16; Joshua 11:21). </p> <p> 3. The observation (Deuteronomy 2:10) that the [[Emim]] had formerly dwelt in the plain of Moab: they were a great people, equal to the Anakim. This observation quite accords with Genesis 14:5. </p> <p> 4. A detailed account (Deuteronomy 2:11) concerning the [[Horim]] and their relations to the Edomites. </p> <p> 5. An account of the [[Zamzummim]] (Deuteronomy 2:20-21), one of the earliest races of Canaan, though mentioned nowhere else. </p> <p> 6. A very circumstantial account of the [[Rephaim]] (Deuteronomy 3:3 sq.), with whose concerns the author seems to have been well acquainted. </p> <p> The standing-point also of the author of Deuteronomy is altogether in the Mosaic time, and, had it been assumed and fictitious, there must necessarily have been moments when the spurious author would have been off his guard, and unmindful of the part he had to play. But no discrepancies of this kind can be traced; and this is in itself an evidence of the genuineness of the book. </p> <p> A great number of other passages force us likewise to the conclusion that the whole of Deuteronomy originated in the time of Moses. Such are the passages where: </p> <p> 1. A comparison is drawn between Canaan and Egypt (Deuteronomy 11:10 sq.), with the latter of which the author seems thoroughly acquainted. </p> <p> 2. Detailed descriptions are given of the fertility and productions of Egypt (Deuteronomy 8:7 sq.). </p> <p> 3. Regulations are given relating to the conquest of Canaan (Deuteronomy 12:1 sq.; Deuteronomy 20:1 sq.), which cannot be understood otherwise than by assuming that they had been framed in the Mosaic time, since they could be of no use after that period. </p> <p> Besides, whole pieces and chapters in Deuteronomy, such as 32, 33, betray in form, language, and tenor, a very early period in Hebrew literature. Nor are the laws and regulations in Deuteronomy less decisive of the authenticity of the book. We are struck with the most remaikable phenomenon that many laws from the previous books are here partly repeated and impressed with more energy, partly modified, and partly altogether abolished, according to the contingencies of the time, or as the new aspect of circumstances among the Jews rendered such steps necessary (comp. e.g. Deuteronomy 15:17, with Exodus 21:7; Deuteronomy 12 with Leviticus 17). Such pretensions to raise, or even to oppose his own private opinions to the authority of divine law, are found in no author of the subsequent periods, since the whole of the sacred literature of the later times is, on the contrary, rather the echo than otherwise of the Pentateuch, and is altogether founded on it. [[Add]] to this the fact that the law itself forbids most impressively to add to, or take anything from it, a prohibition which is repeated even in Deuteronomy (comp. 4:2; 13:1); so that on the theory that this book contains nothing more than a gradual development of the law, it clashes too often with its own principles, and thus pronounces its own sentence of condemnation. </p> <p> The part of Deuteronomy (34) respecting the death of Moses requires a particular explanation. That the whole of this section is to be regarded as a piece altogether apart from what precedes it, or as a supplement by another writer, is a ready solution maintained by the older theologians (comp. e.g. Carpzov, Introd. in libr. V. T. 1:137); and this opinion is confirmed not only by the contents of the chapter, but also by the express declaration of the book itself on that event and its relations; for chapter 31 contains the conclusion of the work, where Moses describes himself as the author of the previous contents, as also of the Song (ch. 32), and the blessings (ch. 33) belonging to it. All that follows is, consequently, not from Moses, the work being completed and concluded with chapter 33. There is another circumstance which favors this opinion, namely, the close connection that exists between the last section of Deuteronomy and the beginning of Joshua (comp. Deuteronomy 34:9 with Joshua 1:1, where also the connective force of the term וִיְהַי "and it came to pass," in the latter passage, must not be overlooked), plainly showing that ch. 34 of Deuteronomy is intended to serve as a point of transition to the book of Joshua, and that it was written by the same author as the latter. The correct view of this chapter, therefore, is to consider it as a real supplement, but by no means as an interpolation (such as some critics erroneously suppose to exist in the Pentateuch in general). To apply to it the term interpolation would be as wrong as to give that appellation, e.g., to the 8th book of Caesar's work De Bello Gallico, simply because it was written by an unknown author, for the very purpose of serving as a supplement to the previous books. (See [[Pentateuch]]). </p> <p> V. [[Separate]] commentaries upon the book of Deuteronomy are not numerous; the most important are designated by an asterisk (*) prefixed: Origen, Selecta in Deuteronomy (in Opp. 2:386); Ephraem Syrus, Explanatio in Deuteronomy (in Opp. 4:269);, Theodoret,, Questiones in Deuteronomy (in Opp. i, pt. i); Isidorus Hispalensis, Commentaria in Deuteronomy (in Opera); Bede, In Deuteronomy Explanatio (in Opp. iv); id. Quaestiones super. Deuteronomy (ib. viii); [[Victor]] Hugo, annotatiunculae in Deuteronomy (in Opp. i); Rupertus Tuitienhis, In Deuteronomy (in Opp. 1:288); Luther, Deuteronomion castigatum (Viteb. 1524, 8vo; also in Opp. 3, 76; Exeg. Opp. xiii); Bugenhagen, Commentarius in Deuteronomy (Basil. t524, Viteb. 1525, 8vo); Macchabeus, Enarratio in Deuteronomy (London, 1563, 8vo); Chytraeus, Enarrationes in Deuteronomy (Viteb. 1575, 1590, 8vo); Calvin, Sermons upon Deuteronomy (from the French by Golding, Lond. 1583, fol.); I3rent, Comment. in Deuteronomy (in Opp. i); Bp. Babington, Votes upon Deuteronomy (in Works, p. 149); Lorinus, Commentarii in Deuteronomy (Lugd. 1625, 1629, 2 vols. fol.); Masius, Annotationes in cap. xviii et seq. (in the Critici Sacri, i, pt. ii); Franze, Disputationes per Deuteronomy (Viteb. 1608, 4to); *Gerhard, Commentarius super Deuteronomy (Jen. 1657, 4to); Cocceius, [[Note]] in Deuteronomy (in Opp. 1:186); id. De ult. Deuteronomy capita (ib. 1:201); Alting, Commentarius in cap. i-xix (in Opp. 1:121, Amst. 1687); Duquet, Explicatio de c. xxix-xxxiii (Par. 1734, 12mo); Vitringa, Comm. in cant. Mosis (Harl. 1734, 4to); Holt, Deuteron. illustratum (Lugd. 1768, 4to); Marck, Comment. in cap. xxix-xxxiii (in Partes Pentat.); Hagemann, Betrachtungen ü b. d.f. B. Mosis (Brunsw. 1744, 4to); Homberg, בְּאוּר לְסֵ 8 דְּבָרַים (in Mendelssohn's Pentateuch, Berlin, 1783, etc.); *Rosenmü ller, [[Scholia]] (in Schol. pt. ii); *Horsley, [[Notes]] on Deuteronomy (in Bib. Criticism, i); Riehm, Moses im lande Moab (Lpz. 1854, 8vo); Cumming, Readings on Deuteronomy (London, 1856, 12mo); *Graff, Der Segen Mosis erkldrt (Lpz. 1857, 8vo); Howard, Deut. fron the Sept. (Lond. 1857, 8vo); *Schultz Das Deuteron. erklrt (Berl. 1859, 8vo); *Knobel, Eklrung (in the Exeg. Handb. part xiv);* Schroder, Bearbeitung (in Lange's Bibelwerk, O.T. 3, Bielefeld, 1866, 8vo). (See [[Old Testament]]). </p>
          
          
== The Nuttall Encyclopedia <ref name="term_71830" /> ==
== The Nuttall Encyclopedia <ref name="term_71830" /> ==
<p> E . the [[Second]] Law), the fifth book of the Pentateuch, and so called as the re-statement and re-enforcement, as it were, by [[Moses]] of the [[Divine]] law proclaimed in the wilderness. The [[Mosaic]] authorship of this book is now called in question, though it is allowed to be instinct with the spirit of the religion instituted by Moses, and it is considered to have been conceived at a time when that religion with its ritual was established in Jerusalem, in order to confirm faith in the Divine origin and sanction of observances there. </p>
<p> E . the Second Law), the fifth book of the Pentateuch, and so called as the re-statement and re-enforcement, as it were, by [[Moses]] of the [[Divine]] law proclaimed in the wilderness. The [[Mosaic]] authorship of this book is now called in question, though it is allowed to be instinct with the spirit of the religion instituted by Moses, and it is considered to have been conceived at a time when that religion with its ritual was established in Jerusalem, in order to confirm faith in the Divine origin and sanction of observances there. </p>
          
          
==References ==
==References ==
<references>
<references>


<ref name="term_15911"> [https://bibleportal.com/dictionary/american-tract-society-bible-dictionary/deuteronomy Deuteronomy from American Tract Society Bible Dictionary]</ref>
<ref name="term_50561"> [https://bibleportal.com/dictionary/hastings-dictionary-of-the-bible/deuteronomy Deuteronomy from Hastings' Dictionary of the Bible]</ref>
          
          
<ref name="term_18537"> [https://bibleportal.com/dictionary/bridgeway-bible-dictionary/deuteronomy Deuteronomy from Bridgeway Bible Dictionary]</ref>
<ref name="term_18537"> [https://bibleportal.com/dictionary/bridgeway-bible-dictionary/deuteronomy Deuteronomy from Bridgeway Bible Dictionary]</ref>
          
          
<ref name="term_31236"> [https://bibleportal.com/dictionary/easton-s-bible-dictionary/deuteronomy Deuteronomy from Easton's Bible Dictionary]</ref>
<ref name="term_69953"> [https://bibleportal.com/dictionary/people-s-dictionary-of-the-bible/deuteronomy Deuteronomy from People's Dictionary of the Bible]</ref>
          
          
<ref name="term_45436"> [https://bibleportal.com/dictionary/hitchcock-s-bible-names/deuteronomy Deuteronomy from Hitchcock's Bible Names]</ref>
<ref name="term_15911"> [https://bibleportal.com/dictionary/american-tract-society-bible-dictionary/deuteronomy Deuteronomy from American Tract Society Bible Dictionary]</ref>
          
          
<ref name="term_50561"> [https://bibleportal.com/dictionary/hastings-dictionary-of-the-bible/deuteronomy Deuteronomy from Hastings' Dictionary of the Bible]</ref>
<ref name="term_80565"> [https://bibleportal.com/dictionary/watson-s-biblical-theological-dictionary/deuteronomy Deuteronomy from Watson's Biblical & Theological Dictionary]</ref>
          
          
<ref name="term_69953"> [https://bibleportal.com/dictionary/people-s-dictionary-of-the-bible/deuteronomy Deuteronomy from People's Dictionary of the Bible]</ref>
<ref name="term_31236"> [https://bibleportal.com/dictionary/easton-s-bible-dictionary/deuteronomy Deuteronomy from Easton's Bible Dictionary]</ref>
       
<ref name="term_80565"> [https://bibleportal.com/dictionary/watson-s-biblical-theological-dictionary/deuteronomy Deuteronomy from Watson's Biblical & Theological Dictionary]</ref>
          
          
<ref name="term_110220"> [https://bibleportal.com/dictionary/webster-s-dictionary/deuteronomy Deuteronomy from Webster's Dictionary]</ref>
<ref name="term_110220"> [https://bibleportal.com/dictionary/webster-s-dictionary/deuteronomy Deuteronomy from Webster's Dictionary]</ref>
          
          
<ref name="term_3012"> [https://bibleportal.com/encyclopedia/international-standard-bible-encyclopedia/deuteronomy Deuteronomy from International Standard Bible Encyclopedia]</ref>
<ref name="term_3012"> [https://bibleportal.com/encyclopedia/international-standard-bible-encyclopedia/deuteronomy Deuteronomy from International Standard Bible Encyclopedia]</ref>
       
<ref name="term_37058"> [https://bibleportal.com/encyclopedia/cyclopedia-of-biblical-theological-and-ecclesiastical-literature/deuteronomy Deuteronomy from Cyclopedia of Biblical, Theological and Ecclesiastical Literature]</ref>
          
          
<ref name="term_15482"> [https://bibleportal.com/encyclopedia/kitto-s-popular-cyclopedia-of-biblial-literature/deuteronomy Deuteronomy from Kitto's Popular Cyclopedia of Biblial Literature]</ref>
<ref name="term_15482"> [https://bibleportal.com/encyclopedia/kitto-s-popular-cyclopedia-of-biblial-literature/deuteronomy Deuteronomy from Kitto's Popular Cyclopedia of Biblial Literature]</ref>
       
<ref name="term_37058"> [https://bibleportal.com/encyclopedia/cyclopedia-of-biblical-theological-and-ecclesiastical-literature/deuteronomy Deuteronomy from Cyclopedia of Biblical, Theological and Ecclesiastical Literature]</ref>
          
          
<ref name="term_71830"> [https://bibleportal.com/encyclopedia/the-nuttall-encyclopedia/deuteronomy Deuteronomy from The Nuttall Encyclopedia]</ref>
<ref name="term_71830"> [https://bibleportal.com/encyclopedia/the-nuttall-encyclopedia/deuteronomy Deuteronomy from The Nuttall Encyclopedia]</ref>
          
          
</references>
</references>