Chapter 25:
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Introduction 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 31 32 33 34 Numbers Joshua
Deuteronomy 25
The following commentary covers Chapters 22, 23, 24, and 25.
Ordinances
to guard against want of benevolence and mercy, or
tenderness and purity
Chapter 22 appears
to contain ordinances to guard the people from want of
benevolence and mercy, and of that which would offend the
sensibilities of nature, either with regard to tenderness
or purity. So also all mixture was forbidden in ploughing
or sowing. We find the same with regard to women: they
were protected against the dishonour done to them by a
brutish, inconsiderate husband; whilst impurity was
punished with death.
Conducts and
sentiments according to God's goodness, tenderness and
kindness
Thus (
chap. 23)
the people are taught what sentiments became them,
according to God, with reference to the nations (taking
the ways and doings of those nations into consideration)
in case of war. They are also instructed in what was
proper, as to the purity of the camp in case of war,
seeing God was there. So with regard to all sorts of
things, such as the slave that was escaped from his
master; things morally impure; even the neighbour's
vineyard; and (
chap. 24) a more serious
thing, divorce, and everything relative to it; delicacy
towards the poor, the hire of labourers, the gleaning for
the poor.
The spirit of all these
ordinances is very instructive, and the goodness and the
tenderness of God, who deigns to take knowledge of all
these things, and to teach His people delicacy,
propriety, consideration for others, sensitiveness, and
those feelings which, by removing brutality, and
softening the hardness of the heart of man, fashion his
ways according to that love with which the Spirit of God
clothes Himself when He acts in the heart of man. Here,
it is true, everything is imperfect. There are things
taken for granted here, which form the basis of these
ordinances, which the full operation of the Spirit of
Christ would entirely take away; divorce, for instance,
and other things endured; owing their existence to the
hardness of man's heart. But the limitations and
conditions, assigned by the law of God, keep in check the
wickedness of that will which hardens itself, while it
oppresses others.
Care taken that no
family should perish, and for the maintenance of purity
and uprightness
Chapter 25
adds ordinances which are a continuation of what we have
already read; taking care that none of their brethren
should be dishonoured in their eyes, and that no family
should perish from among the people (there being, at the
same time, the maintenance of purity and uprightness).
Israel forbidden
to seek peace with Amalek, the inveterate enemy of God
As to the inveterate
enemies of God and His people, Israel was never to seek
peace with them. Human amiability is often enmity with
God. This ordinance is so much the more remarkable,
because it follows so many others which made provision
for kindness, even to a bird.
Forgetfulness of
what was due to God and indifference toward evil shown in
sparing Amalek
Jehovah had taken care
that an Egyptian should find the entrance into the
assembly of God; but those affections were to be in
exercise towards the Egyptians for the good of the souls
of the Israelites themselves. They were not to harden
their hearts against those in whose midst they had
sojourned. But to spare the Amalekites (who came to meet
Israel to shut up their way and destroy the feeble ones
among them) was to forget what was due to God, who
brought them back; and, as regarded the people, it would
have proved indifference of heart to evil, and not the
effusion of a natural affection; neither was it yielding
to remembrances, with which charity might mingle for
good, by a becoming forgetfulness of wrongs formerly
received. [
1]
Where there is nobleness of sentiment, men who know
(though they have injured) each other, still will own one
another when the evil is over.
The different
position of the Egyptian and of Amalek
But there is a spirit
which claims nothing but disgust: to tolerate it is only
sparing oneself, and admitting that very spirit into
one's heart so as to partake of it. What is in question
is not judging, but the state of one's own heart. The
distance of an Egyptian from God was recognised; but if
he were in relationship with Him during three
generations, why should he be kept at a distance? why
should he remain a stranger? But Amalek did not fear
Goddid not recognise Him. What then could be
recognised in such a nation? We must bring God into our
affairsour relationships; and charity, firmness,
justness in our judgments, will each find its place, and
be reproduced in all our ways.
[1] The Egyptians
were merely that in which Israel was held naturally. The
Amalekites were positive active enemies against them when
the redeemed people of God. One was really man, though
fallen man without GodI honour all men; the other,
the positive direct power of the enemy.
Chapter 25:
| Darby
| Geneva
| Gill
| Jamieson Faussett Brown
| Matthew Henry
| Matthew Henry Concise
| Wesley
| Index
| Bible Gateway |
Introduction 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 31 32 33 34 Numbers Joshua
This version of Darby's Synopsis of the Old Testament is a derivative of an electronic version, Copyright 1995 by L. Hodgett. Used by permission. The files of the Synopsis found on this site may not be reproduced without permission from L. J. L. Hodgett, Stem Publishing. A special thanks to L. J. L. Hodgett and Stem Publishing for permission to create and post this version of Darby's Synopsis of the Old Testament.
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