Moses is presented as the covenant mediator who blesses Israel before His death; the final form preserves this blessing at the close of the Torah.
Moses Blesses the Tribes Under the Lord's Eternal Refuge
Israel's future hope does not rest in Moses' continued presence or tribal strength but in the Lord who loves, instructs, reigns, blesses, shelters, and saves His covenant people.
Reading a chapter
What this page is: Each chapter page shows the big idea, the argument flow, key original-language terms, doctrine connections, and passage units, all in one place.
How to use it: Start with the Overview tab to get the chapter's main point. Then move to Passages to study individual units, or Language to trace key terms.
Going deeper: The Doctrines and Motifs tabs show how this chapter connects to the broader biblical story.
Israel's future hope does not rest in Moses' continued presence or tribal strength but in the Lord who loves, instructs, reigns, blesses, shelters, and saves His covenant people.
Deuteronomy 33 argues that Israel can face life after Moses because the Lord Himself remains Israel's King, teacher, refuge, and Savior. The tribal blessings do not celebrate autonomous tribal destiny; they distribute covenant hope under divine revelation and divine protection. The chapter shows that blessing is not detached prosperity but ordered life beneath the God who came from Sinai, loves His people, gives His word, sustains worship, grants provision, and secures His saved people against their enemies.
Israel gathered on the plains of Moab, poised to enter the land under Joshua after Moses' leadership ends.
The chapter stands between the Song of Moses in Deuteronomy 32 and Moses' death in Deuteronomy 34. The covenant witness-song has warned Israel, and now the covenant mediator blesses the tribes before departing.
Israel's future hope does not rest in Moses' continued presence or tribal strength but in the Lord who loves, instructs, reigns, blesses, shelters, and saves His covenant people.
Moses is presented as the covenant mediator who blesses Israel before His death; the final form preserves this blessing at the close of the Torah.
Israel gathered on the plains of Moab, poised to enter the land under Joshua after Moses' leadership ends.
The chapter stands between the Song of Moses in Deuteronomy 32 and Moses' death in Deuteronomy 34. The covenant witness-song has warned Israel, and now the covenant mediator blesses the tribes before departing.
- Israel faces transition, uncertainty, tribal distribution, enemy opposition, and the loss of Moses. The chapter speaks stability into that transition by locating Israel's future under the Lord's kingship, blessing, and protection.
Tribal blessings function as covenantal and familial pronouncements over Israel's future life in the land. The chapter echoes patriarchal blessing patterns while placing the tribes under Sinai revelation, priestly service, land allotment, and divine kingship.
Deuteronomy 33 belongs to the exodus-Sinai stage of redemptive history at the threshold of conquest. It closes Moses' covenant-renewal ministry by blessing the people who will soon live in the promised land without Moses but not without the Lord.
Moses blesses Israel before His death by first presenting the Lord as the covenant King who came from Sinai with instruction, then speaking tribe-specific blessings, and finally declaring Israel blessed because the eternal God is their refuge, help, shield, and sword.
Theological exposition and fulfillment
Deuteronomy 33 clarifies the gospel by showing the shape of need and hope before Christ: God's people need a mediator, a true word, priestly service, covenant blessing, divine refuge, and saving help that outlasts human leadership. The chapter is not itself the full gospel announcement, but it points canonically toward the God who saves His people and ultimately secures blessing through the greater Mediator and Priest-King, Jesus Christ.
The blessing is set in the shadow of Moses' death, making it a final covenant word over Israel's future.
Before naming tribes, Moses names the Lord's theophanic majesty, covenant love, word-giving authority, and kingship. The tribes are not independent destinies; they exist under the Lord's revealed rule.
Reuben's blessing asks for continued life, while Judah's asks for divine hearing, restoration, strength, and help against enemies.
Levi occupies a major central place because Israel's future requires preserved revelation, priestly discernment, teaching, worship, and guarded covenant loyalty.
Benjamin receives a tender security blessing, while Joseph receives the fullest material and martial blessing, including fertility, favor, and strength through Ephraim and Manasseh.
Their blessing links going out, dwelling in tents, summoning peoples, righteous sacrifice, and the abundance of seas and hidden treasures.
These blessings emphasize enlarged territory, lion-like strength, favor, land inheritance, brotherly acceptance, oil-rich abundance, and durable security.
Moses ends not with tribal achievement but with the incomparable Lord, who helps, protects, saves, shelters, and gives victory to His people.
- 33:1: The blessing is introduced as the final word of Moses the man of God before His death.
- 33:2-5: The Lord comes in splendor, loves His people, gives His word through Moses, and reigns as King in Jeshurun.
- 33:6-7: Moses prays for Reuben's continuance and Judah's answered cry, restored people, strengthened hands, and help against adversaries.
- 33:8-11: Levi receives blessing in relation to discernment, testing, covenant faithfulness, teaching, incense, sacrifice, strength, and protection from enemies.
- 33:12-17: Benjamin rests secure as the beloved of the Lord, and Joseph receives abundance, favor, honor, and strength through Ephraim and Manasseh.
- 33:18-19: Their blessing joins ordinary vocation, worship, communal summons, and provision from sea and hidden resources.
- 33:20-25: Moses speaks enlargement, strength, favor, inheritance, acceptance, abundance, and durable security over these tribes.
- 33:26-29: The chapter climaxes in the Lord Himself: Israel's incomparable God, heavenly helper, eternal refuge, everlasting arms, shield, sword, and saving deliverer.
Theological Argument
Deuteronomy 33 argues that Israel can face life after Moses because the Lord Himself remains Israel's King, teacher, refuge, and Savior. The tribal blessings do not celebrate autonomous tribal destiny; they distribute covenant hope under divine revelation and divine protection. The chapter shows that blessing is not detached prosperity but ordered life beneath the God who came from Sinai, loves His people, gives His word, sustains worship, grants provision, and secures His saved people against their enemies.
From Moses' final blessing to the LORD's Sinai kingship, from tribe-specific petitions and provisions to the climactic confession that Israel is blessed because the eternal God is their refuge and saving help.
- 1.Moses' blessing is final and covenantal because it is spoken before his death by the mediator who has led Israel under the LORD's word.
- 2.Israel's tribal future must be interpreted under the LORD's revealed majesty, not merely tribal politics or geography.
- 3.The LORD's love and word govern Israel's identity as His people.
- 4.The Torah given through Moses is Israel's covenant inheritance, not a disposable religious accessory.
- 5.The LORD's kingship unites Israel's tribes in covenant assembly.
- 6.Tribal blessing includes preservation, restored fellowship, strength for conflict, and dependence on divine help.
- 7.Israel's blessed future requires guarded worship and faithful instruction.
- 8.The LORD's nearness provides real security for His beloved people.
- 9.Material abundance is covenant gift when received under the favor of the LORD.
- 10.Strength and victory are derived blessings, subordinate to the LORD's favor and purpose.
- 11.Vocation, dwelling, provision, and worship belong together under covenant blessing.
- 12.Land, leadership, favor, abundance, and security are presented as gifts accountable to the LORD's righteous will.
- 13.The final ground of blessing is not the tribes themselves but the incomparable God who helps and saves Israel.
Theological Focus
- The Lord as covenant King over assembled Israel
- Blessing rooted in divine revelation and covenant love
- The Torah as Israel's covenant inheritance
- The necessity of priestly teaching and guarded worship
- Tribal diversity under one covenant Lord
- Security found in the Lord's nearness and everlasting arms
- Provision and strength as gifts accountable to covenant faithfulness
- Israel's blessedness as a saved people
- Covenant blessing
- Divine kingship
- Word and inheritance
- Priestly mediation and teaching
- Refuge and salvation
- Unity and distinction among the tribes
- Revelation and covenant instruction
- Priesthood and teaching
- Providence and provision
- Divine refuge and salvation
- Covenant peoplehood
Theological Themes
The chapter is explicitly a blessing over Israel, but the blessing is shaped by Sinai revelation, priestly service, land life, and dependence on the Lord.
The Lord is presented as King in Jeshurun, gathering the tribes under His authority before Moses blesses them individually.
The law commanded through Moses is called the inheritance of the assembly of Jacob, making revelation central to Israel's identity and future.
Levi's blessing emphasizes discernment, testing, covenant guarding, instruction, incense, and sacrifice, showing that worship and teaching are essential to covenant order.
The closing doxology names the eternal God as refuge, everlasting arms, shield, sword, helper, and Savior.
Each tribe receives distinct language, but all are gathered under one God, one covenant, and one blessing frame.
Covenant Significance
Deuteronomy 33 closes Moses' covenant-renewal ministry with blessing rather than mere warning. It does not erase Deuteronomy 32's witness against future apostasy, but it shows that the Lord's covenant purpose includes ordered life, tribal inheritance, priestly teaching, land provision, enemy defeat, and secure refuge for His people. The chapter presents covenant blessing as life under the Lord's kingship, word, worship, favor, and saving power.
- Covenant mediator's final blessing - Moses blesses Israel before death, functioning as the mediator whose final words orient the tribes toward life after His departure.
- Sinai revelation as covenant foundation - The blessing begins with the Lord's appearance from Sinai and the giving of His word, making revelation the foundation of Israel's future.
- Torah as inheritance - The law Moses commanded is described as the possession of Jacob's assembly, showing that Israel's inheritance is not land alone but revealed covenant instruction.
- The Lord's kingship in Jeshurun - Israel's leaders and tribes assemble under the Lord as King, making national and tribal identity derivative of divine rule.
- Priestly covenant stewardship - Levi is entrusted with discernment, teaching, incense, and sacrifice, showing that covenant continuity requires faithful worship and instruction.
- Land and abundance as covenant gift - Joseph, Naphtali, Asher, and others receive language of fertility, favor, fullness, oil, strength, and regional inheritance as gifts under the Lord.
- Security by divine refuge - The final blessing declares that Israel's safety depends on the eternal God, whose everlasting arms uphold His people and whose help secures them.
- Genesis 49:1-28 - Jacob's tribal blessings provide a patriarchal counterpart to Moses' final tribal blessings, with both looking toward Israel's future by tribe.
- Exodus 3:1-15 - The favor of the One who dwelt in the burning bush recalls the Lord's self-revelation to Moses as the God who would redeem Israel.
- Exodus 19:1-6 - The Sinai setting and Israel's holy calling stand behind the chapter's opening theophany and covenant identity.
- Exodus 28:30 - The Urim and Thummim background explains Levi's role in priestly discernment before the Lord.
- Numbers 20:1-13 - Massah and Meribah testing language stands in the background of Levi's tested fidelity and Moses' own exclusion from the land.
- Deuteronomy 32:1-52 - The Song of Moses warns against future rebellion · Deuteronomy 33 answers with blessing that locates hope in the Lord's covenant faithfulness and refuge.
- Deuteronomy 34:1-12 - Moses' death follows immediately after this blessing, confirming Deuteronomy 33 as His final blessing over Israel.
Canonical Connections
Deuteronomy 33 stands in canonical conversation with Jacob's blessings in Genesis 49 as another tribal future-pronouncement before the death of a covenant leader.
The Lord's coming from Sinai and the law as Jacob's inheritance tie the blessing directly to the covenant formed at Sinai.
Levi's blessing develops the priestly role of discernment, teaching, incense, and sacrifice that later Scripture continues to evaluate and develop.
Moses blesses before death, but later Scripture identifies Christ as superior to Moses and as the Son over God's house.
The closing confession of God as refuge, help, shield, and saving deliverer resonates across the Psalms and finds gospel resolution in God's saving action in Christ.
Cross References
Deuteronomy 33 clarifies the gospel by showing the shape of need and hope before Christ: God's people need a mediator, a true word, priestly service, covenant blessing, divine refuge, and saving help that outlasts human leadership. The chapter is not itself the full gospel announcement, but it points canonically toward the God who saves His people and ultimately secures blessing through the greater Mediator and Priest-King, Jesus Christ.
- Blessing requires mediation - Moses blesses Israel before death, but His mortality exposes the need for a mediator whose saving work does not end in death.
- The Word is inheritance - The Torah as Israel's inheritance prepares the way for understanding that God's people live by His revealed word, finally centered in Christ the incarnate Word.
- Priestly ministry exposes the need for final priesthood - Levi's teaching and sacrificial service are necessary but not ultimate · the canon moves toward the final priestly work of Christ.
- God Himself is refuge and Savior - The chapter's final hope is that Israel is saved by the Lord, which aligns with the gospel's announcement that salvation is God's work accomplished for His people.
- Blessing is not self-generated - The tribes receive blessing · they do not manufacture it. This guards the gospel truth that salvation and covenant life rest on God's gracious initiative.
- Do not preach the tribal blessings as direct promises of material prosperity to every believer apart from their covenant-historical setting.
- Do not turn the chapter into moralism about earning blessing · the chapter begins with the Lord's love, word, and kingship and ends with His saving help.
- Do not bypass Israel's tribal and land context · gospel application must move through canonical fulfillment, not erase the original horizon.
- Do not present Moses as sufficient · the chapter itself places Israel's final security in the eternal God, not the dying mediator.
Primary Emphasis
Deuteronomy 33 does not present a direct messianic prediction in the narrow sense, but it contributes to the canonical hope that God's people need a faithful mediator, an enduring word, true priestly instruction, divine kingship, secure refuge, and saving help. The chapter's strongest Christological trajectory is covenantal and canonical: the blessings point beyond Moses' dying mediation toward the greater Mediator, Priest-King, and Savior in whom God's people finally receive secure blessing.
Chapter Contribution
Deuteronomy 33 argues that Israel can face life after Moses because the Lord Himself remains Israel's King, teacher, refuge, and Savior. The tribal blessings do not celebrate autonomous tribal destiny; they distribute covenant hope under divine revelation and divine protection. The chapter shows that blessing is not detached prosperity but ordered life beneath the God who came from Sinai, loves His people, gives His word, sustains worship, grants provision, and secures His saved people against their enemies.
Levi's priestly service contributes to the canonical pattern fulfilled and surpassed by Christ, whose priesthood is permanent and whose sacrifice is final.
Gad's chosen portion does not excuse separation from Israel's common calling; the tribe acts with the heads of the people and participates in the Lord's judgments concerning Israel.
The tribe's fullness is described as the Lord's blessing, showing that prosperity and inheritance must be interpreted theologically rather than as mere material circumstance.
The blessing must be read alongside Dan's later history, where movement and power are not enough if covenant loyalty and pure worship are abandoned.
The favor of the One who dwelt in the bush grounds Joseph's blessing in the Lord's redemptive self-revelation to Moses.
Judah's leadership trajectory is preserved but humbled; the tribe's strength must serve within the covenant people and under the Lord's help.
The blessing begins with the Lord's love for His people, showing that Israel's obedience and instruction are grounded in prior divine covenant affection.
The passage praises guarding the Lord's word and covenant above competing claims, even the claims of natural kinship when those claims stand against obedience.
Reuben's blessing is framed as a plea for preservation, showing that covenant life is grounded in the Lord's mercy rather than tribal entitlement.
Joseph's land, fruitfulness, and strength are presented as gifts from the Lord rather than as products of tribal self-sufficiency.
The prayer that the Lord bless Levi's skills and accept the work of His hands shows that sacred ministry depends on God's favor, not merely official position.
Naphtali's blessing begins with the Lord's favor, teaching that true covenant fullness rests on God's gracious regard rather than self-generated worthiness.
The blessing depends on the Lord as Judah's help against adversaries, showing that covenant victory rests on divine aid rather than human strength.
The Lord shields and covers His beloved, making security a gift of His guarding presence.
Gad's enlargement and portion are received under divine blessing, showing that land, place, and opportunity are not ultimate possessions but gifts governed by the Lord.
Dan's future is spoken within Moses' blessing, showing that tribal identity and destiny unfold under the Lord's covenant governance rather than random historical drift.
Abundance from the seas and hidden treasures of the sand are received as part of the Lord's blessing over tribal inheritance and regional resources.
The eternal God shelters His people, and His everlasting arms sustain them beneath every temporal insecurity.
The Lord discloses Himself to Israel in majestic covenant revelation, and His word is received rather than invented by the people.
The Lord is shield, helper, and glorious sword, defending His people and defeating enemies in keeping with His covenant purposes.
Moses' tribal blessings testify that the Lord orders Israel as a many-tribed people with distinct futures, responsibilities, vulnerabilities, and gifts.
The plea that Reuben live rather than die anticipates the broader biblical pattern that God's people survive by mercy, not merit.
The wider canonical background of Reuben warns that privilege can be damaged by sin, yet the Lord may still preserve where judgment could have meant disappearance.
The passage explicitly declares that no one is like the God of Jeshurun, grounding Israel's hope in the Lord's unique deity and majesty.
Naphtali's possession of land is framed as inheritance, a received gift within God's covenant ordering rather than a self-made achievement.
The blessing culminates in Gad carrying out the Lord's righteousness and judgments, placing tribal blessing inside the moral order of God's covenant rule.
The Lord reigns as King over Jeshurun, so Israel's tribal life and national assembly stand under divine rule rather than merely human leadership.
The law is given through Moses as a covenant possession for the assembly of Jacob, establishing Israel's life under the Lord's revealed instruction.
The passage contributes to Judah's canonical storyline, which later leads through David to Christ, though this verse itself remains an indirect trajectory rather than a full messianic oracle.
The promise that strength matches days highlights the Lord's sustaining provision for the life and responsibility He appoints.
Moses' word over Judah is a prayer addressed to the Lord, showing that blessing is received through dependence on God's hearing and favor.
Levi's blessing presents a priestly tribe entrusted with sacred discernment, altar service, incense, and offerings, showing that covenant worship required appointed mediation before the Lord.
Fruitfulness, security, and sufficient strength belong under the Lord's providential rule over tribal inheritance and daily life.
The passage assumes that heaven, dew, deep waters, sun, moon, mountains, hills, and land-yield are under the Lord's governing hand.
The tribe's continued existence depends on the Lord who governs the life, number, and place of His people.
Moses' tribal oracle places Naphtali's identity, geography, and future under the Lord's providential distribution among the tribes of Israel.
Benjamin's future is held by the Lord who governs each tribe's place and preservation within Israel.
The passage frames covenant blessing as secure rest in the Lord, anticipating the broader biblical theme that God's people find safety in Him.
Levi is commissioned to teach the Lord's judgments and law to Israel, establishing that covenant life depends on the faithful transmission of divine instruction.
The passage insists that sacrifices offered in worship must be righteous, guarding Israel's worship from mere ritual performance detached from covenant faithfulness.
Israel is called a people saved by the Lord, making deliverance and blessed identity the fruit of divine rescue rather than human achievement.
The lion-cub image presents strength and vigor as gifts that must remain accountable to the Lord's covenant will.
The lion imagery celebrates Gad's strength, but that strength is accountable to the Lord's righteous will and must serve covenant justice.
The blessing names Ephraim and Manasseh, showing the patriarchal promise taking concrete form in Israel's tribal future.
The passage blesses both going out and dwelling in tents, showing that diverse forms of labor, movement, household life, and place are to be lived before the Lord.
The abundance of Zebulun and Issachar is not presented as an end in itself, but is drawn toward the mountain, righteous sacrifice, and covenant worship.
The Lord is King in Jeshurun, ruling over the assembled leaders and tribes of Israel.
The law commanded through Moses is Israel's covenant inheritance, anchoring blessing in God's revealed word.
Levi's blessing highlights priestly discernment, instruction, worship, and covenant guarding as essential to Israel's life.
The tribal blessings repeatedly present land, fertility, strength, favor, and security as gifts under the Lord's ordering hand.
The chapter climaxes with the eternal God as refuge, everlasting arms, shield, sword, help, and Savior of Israel.
Distinct tribes are blessed as one people saved by the Lord, preserving unity and distinction under the covenant.
Theological exposition and fulfillment
- Deuteronomy 33 clarifies the gospel by showing the shape of need and hope before Christ: God's people need a mediator, a true word, priestly service, covenant blessing, divine refuge, and saving help that outlasts human leadership. The chapter is not itself the full gospel announcement, but it points canonically toward the God who saves His people and ultimately secures blessing through the greater Mediator and Priest-King, Jesus Christ.
Sense blessing; pronounced favor and benefit
Definition A blessing or pronouncement of favor, benefit, and well-being under God.
References Deuteronomy 33:1
Lexicon blessing; pronounced favor and benefit
Why it matters The entire chapter is framed as Moses' blessing over Israel before death, making this term central to the chapter's genre and purpose.
Cross-language bridge 1 link · View in lexicon
Form in passage Feminine · Singular · Absolute What is this?
Sense instruction; law; covenant teaching
Definition Instruction or law given by God for His people.
References Deuteronomy 33:4
Lexicon instruction; law; covenant teaching
Why it matters The law Moses commanded is called the inheritance of Jacob's assembly, making revelation central to Israel's blessed life.
Sense assembly; gathered congregation
Definition A gathered assembly or congregation of the people.
References Deuteronomy 33:4
Lexicon assembly; gathered congregation
Why it matters The law is described as the possession of the assembly of Jacob, emphasizing Israel's corporate identity under the word.
Cross-language bridge 1 link · View in lexicon
Sense king; ruler
Definition A ruler or sovereign king.
References Deuteronomy 33:5
Lexicon king; ruler
Why it matters The chapter identifies the Lord as King in Jeshurun when the leaders and tribes assemble, placing every tribal blessing under divine rule.
Cross-language bridge 2 links · View in lexicon
Sense upright one; poetic name for Israel
Definition A poetic covenant name for Israel, often carrying ideal or affectionate force.
References Deuteronomy 33:5, 26
Lexicon upright one; poetic name for Israel
Why it matters The name appears in both the opening kingship statement and closing praise, bracketing Israel's identity under the Lord.
Sense Urim; priestly discernment object
Definition A priestly means associated with discerning the LORD's judgment or decision.
References Deuteronomy 33:8
Lexicon Urim; priestly discernment object
Why it matters Levi's blessing begins with priestly discernment, showing that covenant life requires guidance before the Lord.
Sense Thummim; priestly discernment object
Definition A priestly object paired with the Urim in seeking the LORD's decision.
References Deuteronomy 33:8
Lexicon Thummim; priestly discernment object
Why it matters The term reinforces Levi's priestly role in discernment and covenant administration.
Sense faithful, godly, loyal one
Definition One characterized by covenant loyalty or godliness.
References Deuteronomy 33:8
Lexicon faithful, godly, loyal one
Why it matters Levi is described in terms of tested fidelity, fitting the chapter's concern with covenant guardianship and priestly loyalty.
Sense security; safety; confidence
Definition A state of secure dwelling or confident safety.
References Deuteronomy 33:12, 28
Lexicon security; safety; confidence
Why it matters Benjamin rests secure near the Lord, and Israel lives in safety at the chapter's conclusion, making security a major blessing motif.
Form in passage Both · Singular · Absolute What is this?
Sense dwelling place; refuge
Definition A dwelling place or refuge where safety is found.
References Deuteronomy 33:27
Lexicon dwelling place; refuge
Why it matters The closing confession that the eternal God is Israel's refuge is the theological climax of the chapter.
Form in passage Both · Plural · Construct What is this?
Sense arm; strength; power
Definition Arm, often used figuratively for strength or power.
References Deuteronomy 33:27
Lexicon arm; strength; power
Why it matters The everlasting arms under Israel picture sustaining divine strength beneath the covenant people.
Sense help; aid
Definition Help or aid given to one in need.
References Deuteronomy 33:26, 29
Lexicon help; aid
Why it matters The Lord rides the heavens to help Israel and is named as their helper, making salvation dependent on divine aid.
Form in passage Both · Singular · Construct What is this?
Sense shield; protection
Definition A shield or protective defense.
References Deuteronomy 33:29
Lexicon shield; protection
Why it matters Israel is blessed because the Lord is their shield, a martial image of divine protection and covenant security.
Form in passage Feminine · Singular · Construct What is this?
Sense sword; weapon of battle
Definition A sword or cutting weapon used in battle.
References Deuteronomy 33:29
Lexicon sword; weapon of battle
Why it matters The Lord is called Israel's glorious sword, emphasizing that victory belongs to the saving God rather than Israel's unaided strength.
Lexicon data: MorphGNT Strong's Dictionary XML (CC0) · Open Scriptures Hebrew Bible (CC BY 4.0) · Open Scriptures Hebrew Lexicon (CC BY 4.0) · STEPBible Data (CC BY 4.0) · Full details
C.F. Keil & F. Delitzsch, Commentary on the Old Testament (1861–91) — public domain
God's people must learn to receive blessing as life under the Lord's kingship, word, worship, favor, and saving refuge.
The chapter forms believers and churches to face transition, diversity, provision, and opposition with confidence in God rather than dependence on a single human leader or visible strength.
Humble confidence, covenant loyalty, gratitude for distinct callings, reverence for God's word, and secure trust beneath the everlasting arms of the Lord.
- Name the specific gifts God has entrusted to Your household, church, or ministry, and consciously return them to Him in gratitude and obedience.
- Pray for faithful teaching and worship leaders, recognizing that guarded instruction is essential to the health of God's people.
- Use the closing image of God's everlasting arms as a prayer frame for seasons of fear, grief, leadership change, or uncertainty.
- Practice honoring another believer's calling without comparison, remembering that differentiated blessing serves one covenant people.
- Read Deuteronomy 33 alongside Deuteronomy 32 so that hope is never detached from holy accountability.
- The chapter is primarily blessing rather than warning, but it carries implied warnings: Israel must not detach blessing from the Lord's word, priestly instruction, covenant worship, or divine kingship · nor should any tribe treat its distinct gift as autonomous from the God who gives and sustains it.
- Reading the tribal blessings as detached predictions of tribal superiority. - The chapter begins and ends with the Lord, not the tribes. Tribal blessing is real but derivative · the God of Jeshurun is the source and security of every blessing.
- Treating Deuteronomy 33 as a prosperity formula for any modern nation or individual. - The chapter addresses Israel's tribes in covenant context at the threshold of the land. Pastoral application must move through covenant and canonical fulfillment rather than direct national self-appropriation.
- Using the blessings to erase the warnings of Deuteronomy 32. - The blessing follows the witness-song, so hope and warning stand together. Blessing does not cancel covenant accountability.
- Reducing Levi's blessing to religious privilege. - Levi's blessing centers on tested fidelity, guarding the covenant, teaching God's precepts, and serving in worship · privilege is inseparable from responsibility.
- Making Moses the ultimate source of Israel's future security. - Moses blesses before death, but the chapter's climax is the eternal God whose arms uphold Israel after Moses is gone.
- Do I define blessing by comfort and increase, or by life ordered under the Lord's word, rule, worship, and refuge?
- Where am I tempted to separate God's gifts from God's authority?
- How does Moses' death before the land sharpen my confidence that God's work does not depend on one human leader?
- What does Levi's blessing teach me about the importance of faithful teaching and worship in the life of God's people?
- How does the image of the eternal God as refuge and everlasting arms confront my fear, control, or self-protection?
- Where do I need to rejoice in another person's or group's distinct calling rather than compare it with my own?
- How does the closing confession, 'a people saved by the Lord,' reshape my identity, gratitude, and obedience?
- Moses' blessing before death helps churches face leadership change without panic. God may remove servants, but He does not remove Himself from His people.
- The distinct tribal blessings can shepherd a congregation to honor different gifts, responsibilities, temperaments, and callings without envy or rivalry.
- Levi's blessing calls pastors, teachers, and church leaders to guard the Word, teach clearly, worship faithfully, and resist reducing ministry to personality or institutional maintenance.
- Benjamin's secure rest and the final refuge language speak directly to anxious believers who need to be shepherded from fear-driven living into confidence beneath God's everlasting arms.
- Joseph, Asher, Naphtali, and others receive provision and favor, but the chapter frames abundance as gift from the Lord, not entitlement or self-made prosperity.
- Zebulun and Issachar show that going out, dwelling in tents, calling peoples, righteous sacrifice, and provision can be understood together under God's covenant ordering of life.
- The final words of the chapter form a saved people who are not defined first by enemies, scarcity, leadership loss, or tribal weakness, but by the Lord who helps and saves.
Moses is about to die, but Israel's refuge is eternal. This trajectory is especially useful for grief, transition, succession, and congregational anxiety.
Each tribe is blessed distinctly, yet the chapter gathers all under one Lord. This helps churches handle differentiated callings without disunity.
Provision, land, strength, and abundance are interpreted under covenant worship and the Lord's favor, guarding against both entitlement and false guilt over receiving good gifts.
The closing verses teach God's people to face real opposition with confidence in the Lord as shield, sword, helper, and refuge.
The Biblical World
Chapter At A Glance
Moses blesses Israel before His death by first presenting the Lord as the covenant King who came from Sinai with instruction, then speaking tribe-specific blessings, and finally declaring Israel blessed because the eternal God is their refuge, help, shield, and sword.
Deuteronomy 33 closes Moses' covenant-renewal ministry with blessing rather than mere warning. It does not erase Deuteronomy 32's witness against future apostasy, but it shows that the Lord's covenant purpose includes ordered life, tribal inheritance, priestly teaching, land provision, enemy defeat, and secure refuge for His people. The chapter presents covenant blessing as life under the Lord's kingship, word, worship, favor, and saving power.
Deuteronomy 33 clarifies the gospel by showing the shape of need and hope before Christ: God's people need a mediator, a true word, priestly service, covenant blessing, divine refuge, and saving help that outlasts human leadership. The chapter is not itself the full gospel announcement, but it points canonically toward the God who saves His people and ultimately secures blessing through the greater Mediator and Priest-King, Jesus Christ.
Humble confidence, covenant loyalty, gratitude for distinct callings, reverence for God's word, and secure trust beneath the everlasting arms of the Lord.
Focus Points
- The Lord as covenant King over assembled Israel
- Blessing rooted in divine revelation and covenant love
- The Torah as Israel's covenant inheritance
- The necessity of priestly teaching and guarded worship
- Tribal diversity under one covenant Lord
- Security found in the Lord's nearness and everlasting arms
- Provision and strength as gifts accountable to covenant faithfulness
- Israel's blessedness as a saved people
- Covenant blessing
- Divine kingship
- Word and inheritance
- Priestly mediation and teaching
- Refuge and salvation
- Unity and distinction among the tribes
- Revelation and covenant instruction
- Priesthood and teaching
- Providence and provision
- Divine refuge and salvation
- Covenant peoplehood
Cross References
Biblical Theology
- Word and Revelation Trace the word and revelation thread from God's speaking and self-disclosure to the climactic revelation fulfilled in Christ and proclaimed through Scripture. Trace thread →
- Priesthood Trace the priesthood thread from consecrated mediation and sanctuary service to Christ's superior priestly ministry and the church's confident access to God. Trace thread →
- Divine Presence Trace the divine presence thread from covenant nearness and holy manifestation to God's abiding presence with His people through Christ. Trace thread →
- People of God Trace the people of God thread from covenant calling and gathered identity to the redeemed community united in Christ and gathered for God's name. Trace thread →
- Covenant Love and Obedience Trace the covenant love and obedience theme from God's commanded covenant fidelity to the new-covenant life of walking in truth, love, and obedience through Christ. Trace thread →
- Christ-Centered Preaching Christ-centered preaching is the faithful proclamation of Scripture in a way that is governed by the person and work of Jesus Christ and ordered by the gospel. It does not force Jesus artificially into every passage, but reads every text within the redemptive purpose of God that culminates in Christ. This kind of preaching refuses both moralistic reduction and personality-driven performance. It seeks to herald God's Word with exegetical integrity, gospel clarity, and pastoral urgency so that hearers encounter the living Christ in the truth of Scripture.
- Gospel and the Local Church The local church exists because of the gospel, is gathered by the gospel, is ordered by the gospel, and is sent by the gospel. It is not a voluntary religious club held together by preference, personality, tradition, or programming, but a redeemed people formed through the saving work of Jesus Christ and brought under His lordship through His Word. The gospel does not merely bring people into the church, it governs the church's worship, doctrine, fellowship, holiness, mission, leadership, and discipline. Where the gospel is central, the church becomes a visible community of truth, grace, repentance, love, and holy witness in Christ.
- Gospel Centrality Gospel centrality means the person and saving work of Jesus Christ stand at the governing center of Christian faith, preaching, holiness, leadership, and mission. The gospel is not a preliminary message we move beyond, but the living announcement of what God has accomplished in His Son through His obedient life, atoning death, and bodily resurrection. Because Christ Himself is central, ministry must be ruled by Scripture, shaped by the cross, and sustained by resurrection hope. Wherever the gospel is functionally displaced, the church drifts toward pride, confusion, performance, and spiritual weakness.
Deu 33:6 The blessings upon the tribes commence with this verse. “ Let Reuben live and not die, and there be a (small) number of his men . ” The rights of the first-born had been withheld from Reuben in the blessing of Jacob (Gen 49:3); Moses, however, promises this tribe continuance and prosperity. The words, “and let his men become a number,” have been explained in very different ways.
מספּר in this connection cannot mean a large number (πολὺς ἐν ἀριθμῷ, lxx), but, like מספּר מתי (Deu 4:27; Gen 34:30; Jer 44:28), simply a small number, that could easily be counted (cf. Deu 28:62). The negation must be carried on to the last clause. This the language will allow, as the rule that a negation can only be carried forward when it stands with emphatic force at the very beginning ( Ewald , §351) is not without exceptions; see for example Pro 30:2-3, where three negative clauses follow a positive one, and in the last the לא is omitted, without the particle of negation having been placed in any significant manner at the beginning.
- Simeon was the next in age to Reuben; but he is passed over entirely, because according to Jacob’s blessing (Gen 49:7) he was to be scattered abroad in Israel, and lost his individuality as a tribe in consequence of this dispersion, in accordance with which the Simeonites simply received a number of towns within the territory of Judah (Jos 19:2-9), and, “having no peculiar object of its own, took part, as far as possible, in the fate and objects of the other tribes, more especially of Judah” ( Schultz ). Although, therefore, it is by no means to be regarded as left without a blessing, but rather as included in the general blessings in Deu 33:1 and Deu 33:29, and still more in the blessing upon Judah, yet it could not receive a special blessing like the tribe of Reuben, because, as Ephraim Syrus observes, the Simeonites had not endeavoured to wipe out the stain of the crime which Jacob cursed, but had added to it by fresh crimes (more especially the audacious prostitution of Zimri, Num 25).
Even the Simeonites did not become extinct, but continued to live in the midst of the tribe of Judah, so that as late as the eighth century, in the reign of Hezekiah, thirteen princes are enumerated with their families, whose fathers’ houses had increased greatly (1Ch 4:34.) ; and these families effected conquests in the south, even penetrating into the mountains of Seir, for the purpose of seeking fresh pasture (1Ch 4:39-43).
Hence the assertion that the omission of Simeon is only conceivable from the circumstances of a later age, is as mistaken as the attempt made in some of the MSS of the Septuagint to interpolate the name of Simeon in the second clause of Deu 33:6.
Deu 33:7 The blessing upon Judah is introduced with the formula, “ And this for Judah, and he said: ” “ Hear, Jehovah, the voice of Judah, and bring him to his people; with his hands he fights for him; and help against his adversaries wilt Thou be . ” Judah, from whom the sceptre was not to depart (Gen 49:10), is mentioned before Levi as the royal tribe. The prayer, May Jehovah bring Judah to his people, can hardly be understood in any other way than it is by Onkelos and Hengstenberg (Christol.
i. 80), viz. , as founded upon the blessing of Jacob, and expressing the desire, that as Judah was to lead the way as the champion of his brethren in the wars of Israel against the nations, he might have a prosperous return to his people; for the thought, “introduce him to the kingdom of Israel and Judah” ( Luther ), or “give up to him the people which belongs to him according to Thine appointment” ( Schultz ), is hardly implied in the words, “bring to his people.
” Other explanations are not worth mentioning. What follows points to strife and war: “With his hands (ידיו accusative of the instrument, vid. , Ges. §138, 1, note 3; Ewald , §283, a .) is he fighting (רב participle of ריב) for it (the nation); Thou wilt grant him help, deliverance before his foes. ”
Deu 33:8-11 Levi. - Deu 33:8, Deu 33:9. “ Thy right and Thy light is to Thy godly man, whom Thou didst prove in Massah, and didst strive with him at the water of strife; who says to his father and his mother, I see him not; and does not regard his brethren, and does not know his sons: for they observed Thy word, and kept Thy covenant . ” This blessing is also addressed to God as a prayer.
The Urim and Thummim - that pledge, which the high priest wore upon his breast-plate, that the Lord would always give His people light to preserve His endangered right (vid. , Exo 28:29-30), - are here regarded as a prerogative of the whole of the tribe of Levi. Thummim is placed before Urim , to indicate at the outset that Levi had defended the right of the Lord, and that for that very reason the right of the Urim and Thummim had been given to him by the Lord.
“Thy holy one” is not Aaron, but Levi the tribe-father, who represents the whole tribe to which the blessing applies; hence in Deu 33:9 and Deu 33:10 the verb passes into the plural. To define more precisely the expression “Thy holy one,” reference is made to the trials at Massah and at the water of strife, on the principle that the Lord humbles His servants before He exalts them, and confirms those that are His by trying and proving them.
The proving at Massah refers to the murmuring of the people on account of the want of water at Rephidim (Exo 17:1-7, as in Deu 6:16 and Deu 9:22), from which the place received the name of Massah and Jeribah ; the striving at the water of strife, to the rebellion of the people against Moses and Aaron on account of the want of water at Kadesh (Num 20:1-13). At both places it was primarily the people who strove with Moses and Aaron, and thereby tempted God.
For it is evident that even at Massah the people murmured not only against Moses, but against their leaders generally, from the use of the plural verb, “ Give ye us water to drink” (Exo 17:2). This proving of the people, however, was at the same time a proof, to which the Lord subjected the heads and leaders of the nation, for the purpose of trying their faith.
And thus also, in Deu 8:2. , the whole of the guidance of Israel through the desert is described as a trial and humiliation of the people by the Lord. But in Moses and Aaron, the heads of the tribe of Levi, the whole of the tribe of Levi was proved. The two provings by means of water are selected, as Schultz observes, “because in their correlation they were the best adapted to represent the beginning and end, and therefore the whole of the temptations.
”
Deu 33:8-11 Levi. - Deu 33:8, Deu 33:9. “ Thy right and Thy light is to Thy godly man, whom Thou didst prove in Massah, and didst strive with him at the water of strife; who says to his father and his mother, I see him not; and does not regard his brethren, and does not know his sons: for they observed Thy word, and kept Thy covenant . ” This blessing is also addressed to God as a prayer.
The Urim and Thummim - that pledge, which the high priest wore upon his breast-plate, that the Lord would always give His people light to preserve His endangered right (vid. , Exo 28:29-30), - are here regarded as a prerogative of the whole of the tribe of Levi. Thummim is placed before Urim , to indicate at the outset that Levi had defended the right of the Lord, and that for that very reason the right of the Urim and Thummim had been given to him by the Lord.
“Thy holy one” is not Aaron, but Levi the tribe-father, who represents the whole tribe to which the blessing applies; hence in Deu 33:9 and Deu 33:10 the verb passes into the plural. To define more precisely the expression “Thy holy one,” reference is made to the trials at Massah and at the water of strife, on the principle that the Lord humbles His servants before He exalts them, and confirms those that are His by trying and proving them.
The proving at Massah refers to the murmuring of the people on account of the want of water at Rephidim (Exo 17:1-7, as in Deu 6:16 and Deu 9:22), from which the place received the name of Massah and Jeribah ; the striving at the water of strife, to the rebellion of the people against Moses and Aaron on account of the want of water at Kadesh (Num 20:1-13). At both places it was primarily the people who strove with Moses and Aaron, and thereby tempted God.
For it is evident that even at Massah the people murmured not only against Moses, but against their leaders generally, from the use of the plural verb, “ Give ye us water to drink” (Exo 17:2). This proving of the people, however, was at the same time a proof, to which the Lord subjected the heads and leaders of the nation, for the purpose of trying their faith.
And thus also, in Deu 8:2. , the whole of the guidance of Israel through the desert is described as a trial and humiliation of the people by the Lord. But in Moses and Aaron, the heads of the tribe of Levi, the whole of the tribe of Levi was proved. The two provings by means of water are selected, as Schultz observes, “because in their correlation they were the best adapted to represent the beginning and end, and therefore the whole of the temptations.
”
Deu 33:8-11 Levi. - Deu 33:8, Deu 33:9. “ Thy right and Thy light is to Thy godly man, whom Thou didst prove in Massah, and didst strive with him at the water of strife; who says to his father and his mother, I see him not; and does not regard his brethren, and does not know his sons: for they observed Thy word, and kept Thy covenant . ” This blessing is also addressed to God as a prayer.
The Urim and Thummim - that pledge, which the high priest wore upon his breast-plate, that the Lord would always give His people light to preserve His endangered right (vid. , Exo 28:29-30), - are here regarded as a prerogative of the whole of the tribe of Levi. Thummim is placed before Urim , to indicate at the outset that Levi had defended the right of the Lord, and that for that very reason the right of the Urim and Thummim had been given to him by the Lord.
“Thy holy one” is not Aaron, but Levi the tribe-father, who represents the whole tribe to which the blessing applies; hence in Deu 33:9 and Deu 33:10 the verb passes into the plural. To define more precisely the expression “Thy holy one,” reference is made to the trials at Massah and at the water of strife, on the principle that the Lord humbles His servants before He exalts them, and confirms those that are His by trying and proving them.
The proving at Massah refers to the murmuring of the people on account of the want of water at Rephidim (Exo 17:1-7, as in Deu 6:16 and Deu 9:22), from which the place received the name of Massah and Jeribah ; the striving at the water of strife, to the rebellion of the people against Moses and Aaron on account of the want of water at Kadesh (Num 20:1-13). At both places it was primarily the people who strove with Moses and Aaron, and thereby tempted God.
For it is evident that even at Massah the people murmured not only against Moses, but against their leaders generally, from the use of the plural verb, “ Give ye us water to drink” (Exo 17:2). This proving of the people, however, was at the same time a proof, to which the Lord subjected the heads and leaders of the nation, for the purpose of trying their faith.
And thus also, in Deu 8:2. , the whole of the guidance of Israel through the desert is described as a trial and humiliation of the people by the Lord. But in Moses and Aaron, the heads of the tribe of Levi, the whole of the tribe of Levi was proved. The two provings by means of water are selected, as Schultz observes, “because in their correlation they were the best adapted to represent the beginning and end, and therefore the whole of the temptations.
”
Deu 33:8-11 Levi. - Deu 33:8, Deu 33:9. “ Thy right and Thy light is to Thy godly man, whom Thou didst prove in Massah, and didst strive with him at the water of strife; who says to his father and his mother, I see him not; and does not regard his brethren, and does not know his sons: for they observed Thy word, and kept Thy covenant . ” This blessing is also addressed to God as a prayer.
The Urim and Thummim - that pledge, which the high priest wore upon his breast-plate, that the Lord would always give His people light to preserve His endangered right (vid. , Exo 28:29-30), - are here regarded as a prerogative of the whole of the tribe of Levi. Thummim is placed before Urim , to indicate at the outset that Levi had defended the right of the Lord, and that for that very reason the right of the Urim and Thummim had been given to him by the Lord.
“Thy holy one” is not Aaron, but Levi the tribe-father, who represents the whole tribe to which the blessing applies; hence in Deu 33:9 and Deu 33:10 the verb passes into the plural. To define more precisely the expression “Thy holy one,” reference is made to the trials at Massah and at the water of strife, on the principle that the Lord humbles His servants before He exalts them, and confirms those that are His by trying and proving them.
The proving at Massah refers to the murmuring of the people on account of the want of water at Rephidim (Exo 17:1-7, as in Deu 6:16 and Deu 9:22), from which the place received the name of Massah and Jeribah ; the striving at the water of strife, to the rebellion of the people against Moses and Aaron on account of the want of water at Kadesh (Num 20:1-13). At both places it was primarily the people who strove with Moses and Aaron, and thereby tempted God.
For it is evident that even at Massah the people murmured not only against Moses, but against their leaders generally, from the use of the plural verb, “ Give ye us water to drink” (Exo 17:2). This proving of the people, however, was at the same time a proof, to which the Lord subjected the heads and leaders of the nation, for the purpose of trying their faith.
And thus also, in Deu 8:2. , the whole of the guidance of Israel through the desert is described as a trial and humiliation of the people by the Lord. But in Moses and Aaron, the heads of the tribe of Levi, the whole of the tribe of Levi was proved. The two provings by means of water are selected, as Schultz observes, “because in their correlation they were the best adapted to represent the beginning and end, and therefore the whole of the temptations.
”
Deu 33:12 Benjamin. - “ The beloved of the Lord will dwell safely with Him; He shelters him at all times, and he dwells between His shoulders . ” Benjamin, the son of prosperity, and beloved of his father (Gen 35:18; Gen 44:20), should bear his name with right. He would be the beloved of the Lord, and as such would dwell in safety with the Lord (עליו, lit. , founded upon Him).
The Lord would shelter him continually. The participle expresses the permanence of the relation: is his shelterer. In the third clause Benjamin is the subject once more; he dwells between the shoulders of Jehovah. “Between the shoulders” is equivalent to “upon the back” (vid. , 1Sa 17:6). The expression is founded upon the figure of a father carrying his son (Deu 1:29).
This figure is by no means so bold as that of the eagle’s wings, upon which the Lord had carried His people, and brought them to Himself (Exo 19:4; vid. , Deu 32:11). There is nothing strange in the change of subject in all three clauses, since it is met with repeatedly even in plain prose (e. g. , 2Sa 11:13); and here it follows simply enough from the thoughts contained in the different clauses, whilst the suffix in all three clauses refers to the same noun, i.
e. , to Jehovah. There are some who regard Jehovah as the subject in the third clause, and explain the unheard-of figure which they thus obtain, viz. , that of Jehovah dwelling between the shoulders of Benjamin, as referring to the historical fact that God dwelt in the temple at Jerusalem, which was situated upon the border of the tribes of Benjamin and Judah.
To this application of the words Knobel has properly objected, that God did not dwell between ridges (= shoulders) of mountains there, but upon the top of Moriah; but, on the other hand, he has set up the much more untenable hypothesis, that the expression refers to Gibeon, where the tabernacle stood after the destruction of Nob by Saul. - Moreover, the whole nation participated in the blessing which Moses desired for Benjamin; and this applies to the blessings of the other tribes also.
All Israel was, like Benjamin, the beloved of the Lord (vid. , Jer 11:15; Psa 60:7), and dwelt with Him in safety (vid. , Deu 33:28).
Deu 33:13-16 Joseph. - Deu 33:13. “ Blessed of the Lord be his land, of (in) the most precious things of heaven, the dew, and of the flood which lies beneath, (Deu 33:14) and of the most precious of the produce of the sun, and of the most precious of the growth of the moons, (Deu 33:15) and of the head of the mountains of olden time, and of the most precious thing of the everlasting hills, (Deu 33:16) and of the most precious thing of the earth, and of its fulness, and the good-will of Him that dwelt in the bush: let it come upon the head of Joseph, and upon the crown of him that is illustrious among his brethren .
” What Jacob desired and solicited for his son Joseph, Moses also desires for this tribe, namely, the greatest possible abundance of earthly blessing, and a vigorous manifestation of power in conflict with the nations. But however unmistakeable may be the connection between these words and the blessing of Jacob (Gen 49:22.) , not only in the things desired, but even in particular expression, there is an important difference which equally strikes us, namely, that in the case of Jacob the main point of the blessing is the growth of Joseph into a powerful tribe, whereas with Moses it is the development of power on the part of this tribe in the land of its inheritance, in perfect harmony with the different times at which the blessings were pronounced.
Jacob described the growth of Joseph under the figure of the luxuriant branch of a fruit-tree planted by the water; whilst Moses fixes his eye primarily upon the land of Joseph, and desires for him the richest productions. “May his land be blessed by Jehovah from (מן of the cause of the blessing, whose author was Jehovah; vid. , Psa 28:7; Psa 104:3) the most precious thing of the heaven.
” מגד, which only occurs again in the Sol 4:13, Sol 4:16, and Sol 7:13, is applied to precious fruits. The most precious fruit which the heaven yields to the land is the dew. The “productions of the sun,” and גּרשׁ, ἅπ. λεγ. from גּרשׁ, “the produce of the moons,” are the fruits of the earth, which are matured by the influence of the sun and moon, by their light, their warmth.
At the same time, we can hardly so distinguish the one from the other as to understand by the former the fruits which ripen only once a year, and by the latter those which grow several times and in difference months; and Eze 47:12 and Rev 22:2 cannot be adduced as proofs of this. The plural “ moons ” in parallelism with the sun does not mean months, as in Exo 2:2, but the different phases which the moon shows in its revolution round the earth.
מראשׁ (from the head), in Deu 33:15, is a contracted expression signifying “from the most precious things of the head. ” The most precious things of the head of the mountains of old and the eternal hills, are the crops and forests with which the tops of the mountains and hills are covered. Moses sums up the whole in the words, “the earth, and the fulness thereof:” everything in the form of costly good that the earth and its productions can supply.
- To the blessings of the heaven and earth there are to be added the good-will of the Lord, who appeared to Moses in the thorn-bush to redeem His people out of the bondage and oppression of Egypt and bring it into the land of Canaan, the land flowing with milk and honey (Exo 3:2.) The expression “that dwells in the bush” is to be explained from the significance of this manifestation of God as shown at Ex 3, which shadowed forth a permanent relation between the Lord and His people.
The spiritual blessing of the covenant grace is very suitably added to the blessings of nature; and there is something no less suitable in the way in which the construction commencing with וּרצון is dropped, so that an anakolouthon ensues. This word cannot be taken as an accusative of more precise definition, as Schultz supposes; nor is מן to be supplied before it, as Knobel suggests.
Grammatically considered, it is a nominative to which the verb תּבואתה properly belongs, although, as a matter of fact, not only the good-will, but the natural blessings, of the Lord were also to come upon the head of Joseph. Consequently we have not יבוא ( masc .) , which רצון would require, but the lengthened poetical feminine form תּבואתה (vid. , Ewald , §191, c .)
, used in a neuter sense. It, i. e. , everything mentioned before, shall come upon Joseph. On the expression, “illustrious among his brethren,” see at Gen 49:26. In the strength of this blessing, the tribe of Joseph would attain to such a development of power, that it would be able to tread down all nations.
Deu 33:13-16 Joseph. - Deu 33:13. “ Blessed of the Lord be his land, of (in) the most precious things of heaven, the dew, and of the flood which lies beneath, (Deu 33:14) and of the most precious of the produce of the sun, and of the most precious of the growth of the moons, (Deu 33:15) and of the head of the mountains of olden time, and of the most precious thing of the everlasting hills, (Deu 33:16) and of the most precious thing of the earth, and of its fulness, and the good-will of Him that dwelt in the bush: let it come upon the head of Joseph, and upon the crown of him that is illustrious among his brethren .
” What Jacob desired and solicited for his son Joseph, Moses also desires for this tribe, namely, the greatest possible abundance of earthly blessing, and a vigorous manifestation of power in conflict with the nations. But however unmistakeable may be the connection between these words and the blessing of Jacob (Gen 49:22.) , not only in the things desired, but even in particular expression, there is an important difference which equally strikes us, namely, that in the case of Jacob the main point of the blessing is the growth of Joseph into a powerful tribe, whereas with Moses it is the development of power on the part of this tribe in the land of its inheritance, in perfect harmony with the different times at which the blessings were pronounced.
Jacob described the growth of Joseph under the figure of the luxuriant branch of a fruit-tree planted by the water; whilst Moses fixes his eye primarily upon the land of Joseph, and desires for him the richest productions. “May his land be blessed by Jehovah from (מן of the cause of the blessing, whose author was Jehovah; vid. , Psa 28:7; Psa 104:3) the most precious thing of the heaven.
” מגד, which only occurs again in the Sol 4:13, Sol 4:16, and Sol 7:13, is applied to precious fruits. The most precious fruit which the heaven yields to the land is the dew. The “productions of the sun,” and גּרשׁ, ἅπ. λεγ. from גּרשׁ, “the produce of the moons,” are the fruits of the earth, which are matured by the influence of the sun and moon, by their light, their warmth.
At the same time, we can hardly so distinguish the one from the other as to understand by the former the fruits which ripen only once a year, and by the latter those which grow several times and in difference months; and Eze 47:12 and Rev 22:2 cannot be adduced as proofs of this. The plural “ moons ” in parallelism with the sun does not mean months, as in Exo 2:2, but the different phases which the moon shows in its revolution round the earth.
מראשׁ (from the head), in Deu 33:15, is a contracted expression signifying “from the most precious things of the head. ” The most precious things of the head of the mountains of old and the eternal hills, are the crops and forests with which the tops of the mountains and hills are covered. Moses sums up the whole in the words, “the earth, and the fulness thereof:” everything in the form of costly good that the earth and its productions can supply.
- To the blessings of the heaven and earth there are to be added the good-will of the Lord, who appeared to Moses in the thorn-bush to redeem His people out of the bondage and oppression of Egypt and bring it into the land of Canaan, the land flowing with milk and honey (Exo 3:2.) The expression “that dwells in the bush” is to be explained from the significance of this manifestation of God as shown at Ex 3, which shadowed forth a permanent relation between the Lord and His people.
The spiritual blessing of the covenant grace is very suitably added to the blessings of nature; and there is something no less suitable in the way in which the construction commencing with וּרצון is dropped, so that an anakolouthon ensues. This word cannot be taken as an accusative of more precise definition, as Schultz supposes; nor is מן to be supplied before it, as Knobel suggests.
Grammatically considered, it is a nominative to which the verb תּבואתה properly belongs, although, as a matter of fact, not only the good-will, but the natural blessings, of the Lord were also to come upon the head of Joseph. Consequently we have not יבוא ( masc .) , which רצון would require, but the lengthened poetical feminine form תּבואתה (vid. , Ewald , §191, c .)
, used in a neuter sense. It, i. e. , everything mentioned before, shall come upon Joseph. On the expression, “illustrious among his brethren,” see at Gen 49:26. In the strength of this blessing, the tribe of Joseph would attain to such a development of power, that it would be able to tread down all nations.
Deu 33:13-16 Joseph. - Deu 33:13. “ Blessed of the Lord be his land, of (in) the most precious things of heaven, the dew, and of the flood which lies beneath, (Deu 33:14) and of the most precious of the produce of the sun, and of the most precious of the growth of the moons, (Deu 33:15) and of the head of the mountains of olden time, and of the most precious thing of the everlasting hills, (Deu 33:16) and of the most precious thing of the earth, and of its fulness, and the good-will of Him that dwelt in the bush: let it come upon the head of Joseph, and upon the crown of him that is illustrious among his brethren .
” What Jacob desired and solicited for his son Joseph, Moses also desires for this tribe, namely, the greatest possible abundance of earthly blessing, and a vigorous manifestation of power in conflict with the nations. But however unmistakeable may be the connection between these words and the blessing of Jacob (Gen 49:22.) , not only in the things desired, but even in particular expression, there is an important difference which equally strikes us, namely, that in the case of Jacob the main point of the blessing is the growth of Joseph into a powerful tribe, whereas with Moses it is the development of power on the part of this tribe in the land of its inheritance, in perfect harmony with the different times at which the blessings were pronounced.
Jacob described the growth of Joseph under the figure of the luxuriant branch of a fruit-tree planted by the water; whilst Moses fixes his eye primarily upon the land of Joseph, and desires for him the richest productions. “May his land be blessed by Jehovah from (מן of the cause of the blessing, whose author was Jehovah; vid. , Psa 28:7; Psa 104:3) the most precious thing of the heaven.
” מגד, which only occurs again in the Sol 4:13, Sol 4:16, and Sol 7:13, is applied to precious fruits. The most precious fruit which the heaven yields to the land is the dew. The “productions of the sun,” and גּרשׁ, ἅπ. λεγ. from גּרשׁ, “the produce of the moons,” are the fruits of the earth, which are matured by the influence of the sun and moon, by their light, their warmth.
At the same time, we can hardly so distinguish the one from the other as to understand by the former the fruits which ripen only once a year, and by the latter those which grow several times and in difference months; and Eze 47:12 and Rev 22:2 cannot be adduced as proofs of this. The plural “ moons ” in parallelism with the sun does not mean months, as in Exo 2:2, but the different phases which the moon shows in its revolution round the earth.
מראשׁ (from the head), in Deu 33:15, is a contracted expression signifying “from the most precious things of the head. ” The most precious things of the head of the mountains of old and the eternal hills, are the crops and forests with which the tops of the mountains and hills are covered. Moses sums up the whole in the words, “the earth, and the fulness thereof:” everything in the form of costly good that the earth and its productions can supply.
- To the blessings of the heaven and earth there are to be added the good-will of the Lord, who appeared to Moses in the thorn-bush to redeem His people out of the bondage and oppression of Egypt and bring it into the land of Canaan, the land flowing with milk and honey (Exo 3:2.) The expression “that dwells in the bush” is to be explained from the significance of this manifestation of God as shown at Ex 3, which shadowed forth a permanent relation between the Lord and His people.
The spiritual blessing of the covenant grace is very suitably added to the blessings of nature; and there is something no less suitable in the way in which the construction commencing with וּרצון is dropped, so that an anakolouthon ensues. This word cannot be taken as an accusative of more precise definition, as Schultz supposes; nor is מן to be supplied before it, as Knobel suggests.
Grammatically considered, it is a nominative to which the verb תּבואתה properly belongs, although, as a matter of fact, not only the good-will, but the natural blessings, of the Lord were also to come upon the head of Joseph. Consequently we have not יבוא ( masc .) , which רצון would require, but the lengthened poetical feminine form תּבואתה (vid. , Ewald , §191, c .)
, used in a neuter sense. It, i. e. , everything mentioned before, shall come upon Joseph. On the expression, “illustrious among his brethren,” see at Gen 49:26. In the strength of this blessing, the tribe of Joseph would attain to such a development of power, that it would be able to tread down all nations.
Deu 33:13-16 Joseph. - Deu 33:13. “ Blessed of the Lord be his land, of (in) the most precious things of heaven, the dew, and of the flood which lies beneath, (Deu 33:14) and of the most precious of the produce of the sun, and of the most precious of the growth of the moons, (Deu 33:15) and of the head of the mountains of olden time, and of the most precious thing of the everlasting hills, (Deu 33:16) and of the most precious thing of the earth, and of its fulness, and the good-will of Him that dwelt in the bush: let it come upon the head of Joseph, and upon the crown of him that is illustrious among his brethren .
” What Jacob desired and solicited for his son Joseph, Moses also desires for this tribe, namely, the greatest possible abundance of earthly blessing, and a vigorous manifestation of power in conflict with the nations. But however unmistakeable may be the connection between these words and the blessing of Jacob (Gen 49:22.) , not only in the things desired, but even in particular expression, there is an important difference which equally strikes us, namely, that in the case of Jacob the main point of the blessing is the growth of Joseph into a powerful tribe, whereas with Moses it is the development of power on the part of this tribe in the land of its inheritance, in perfect harmony with the different times at which the blessings were pronounced.
Jacob described the growth of Joseph under the figure of the luxuriant branch of a fruit-tree planted by the water; whilst Moses fixes his eye primarily upon the land of Joseph, and desires for him the richest productions. “May his land be blessed by Jehovah from (מן of the cause of the blessing, whose author was Jehovah; vid. , Psa 28:7; Psa 104:3) the most precious thing of the heaven.
” מגד, which only occurs again in the Sol 4:13, Sol 4:16, and Sol 7:13, is applied to precious fruits. The most precious fruit which the heaven yields to the land is the dew. The “productions of the sun,” and גּרשׁ, ἅπ. λεγ. from גּרשׁ, “the produce of the moons,” are the fruits of the earth, which are matured by the influence of the sun and moon, by their light, their warmth.
At the same time, we can hardly so distinguish the one from the other as to understand by the former the fruits which ripen only once a year, and by the latter those which grow several times and in difference months; and Eze 47:12 and Rev 22:2 cannot be adduced as proofs of this. The plural “ moons ” in parallelism with the sun does not mean months, as in Exo 2:2, but the different phases which the moon shows in its revolution round the earth.
מראשׁ (from the head), in Deu 33:15, is a contracted expression signifying “from the most precious things of the head. ” The most precious things of the head of the mountains of old and the eternal hills, are the crops and forests with which the tops of the mountains and hills are covered. Moses sums up the whole in the words, “the earth, and the fulness thereof:” everything in the form of costly good that the earth and its productions can supply.
- To the blessings of the heaven and earth there are to be added the good-will of the Lord, who appeared to Moses in the thorn-bush to redeem His people out of the bondage and oppression of Egypt and bring it into the land of Canaan, the land flowing with milk and honey (Exo 3:2.) The expression “that dwells in the bush” is to be explained from the significance of this manifestation of God as shown at Ex 3, which shadowed forth a permanent relation between the Lord and His people.
The spiritual blessing of the covenant grace is very suitably added to the blessings of nature; and there is something no less suitable in the way in which the construction commencing with וּרצון is dropped, so that an anakolouthon ensues. This word cannot be taken as an accusative of more precise definition, as Schultz supposes; nor is מן to be supplied before it, as Knobel suggests.
Grammatically considered, it is a nominative to which the verb תּבואתה properly belongs, although, as a matter of fact, not only the good-will, but the natural blessings, of the Lord were also to come upon the head of Joseph. Consequently we have not יבוא ( masc .) , which רצון would require, but the lengthened poetical feminine form תּבואתה (vid. , Ewald , §191, c .)
, used in a neuter sense. It, i. e. , everything mentioned before, shall come upon Joseph. On the expression, “illustrious among his brethren,” see at Gen 49:26. In the strength of this blessing, the tribe of Joseph would attain to such a development of power, that it would be able to tread down all nations.
Deu 33:17 “ The first-born of his ox, majesty is to him, and buffalo-horns his horns: with them he thrusts down nations, all at once the ends of the earth. These are the myriads of Ephraim, and these the thousands of Manasseh . ” The “first-born of his (Joseph’s) oxen” (shor, a collective noun, as in Deu 15:19) is not Joshua ( Rabb . , Schultz ); still less is it Joseph ( Bleek , Diestel ), in which case the pronoun his ox would be quite out of place; nor is it King Jeroboam II, as Graf supposes.
It is rather Ephraim, whom the patriarch Jacob raised into the position of the first-born of Joseph (Gen 48:4.) All the sons of Joseph resembled oxen, but Ephraim was the most powerful of them all. He was endowed with majesty; his horns, the strong weapon of oxen, in which all their strength is concentrated, were not the horns of common oxen, but horns of the wild buffalo ( reem , Num 23:22), that strong indomitable beast (cf.
Job 39:9. ; Psa 22:22). With them he would thrust down nations, the ends of the earth, i. e. , the most distant nations (vid. , Psa 2:8; Psa 7:9; Psa 22:28). “ Together ,” i. e. , all at once, belongs rhythmically to “the ends of the earth. ” Such are the myriads of Ephraim, i. e. , in such might will the myriads of Ephraim arise. To the tribe of Ephraim, as the more numerous, the ten thousands are assigned; to the tribe of Manasseh, the thousands.
Deu 33:18-19 Zebulun and Issachar. - “ Rejoice, Zebulun, at thy going out; and, Issachar, at thy tents. Nations will they invite to the mountain; there offer the sacrifices of righteousness: for they suck the affluence of the seas, and the hidden treasures of the sand . ” The tribes of the last two sons of Leah Moses unites together, and, like Jacob in Gen 49:13, places Zebulun the younger first.
He first of all confirms the blessing which Jacob pronounced through simply interpreting their names as omnia , by calling upon them to rejoice in their undertakings abroad and at home. “At thy tents” corresponds to “at thy going out” (tents being used poetically for dwellings, as in Deu 16:7); like “sitting” to “going out and coming in” in 2Ki 19:27; Isa 37:28; Psa 139:2; and describes in its two aspects of work and production, rest and recreation.
Although “going out” (enterprise and labour) is attributed to Zebulun, and “remaining in tents” (the comfortable enjoyment of life) to Issachar, in accordance with the delineation of their respective characters in the blessing of Jacob, this is to be attributed to the poetical parallelism of the clauses, and the whole is to be understood as applying to both in the sense suggested by Graf , “Rejoice, Zebulun and Issachar, in your labour and your rest. ” This peculiarity, which is founded in the very nature of poetical parallelism, which is to individualize the thought by distributing it into parallel members, has been entirely overlooked by all the commentators who have given a historical interpretation to each, referring the “going out” to the shipping trade and commercial pursuits of the Zebulunites, and the expression “in thy tents” either to the spending of a nomad life in tents, for the purpose of performing a subordinate part in connection with trade ( Schultz ), or to the quiet pursuits of agriculture and grazing ( Knobel ).
They were to rejoice in their undertakings at home and abroad; for they would be successful. The good things of life would flow to them in rich abundance; they would not make them into mammon, however, but would invite nations to the mountain, and there offer sacrifices of righteousness. “The peoples” are nations generally, not the tribes of Israel, still less the members of their own tribes.
By the “ mountain ,” without any more precise definition, we are not to understand Tabor or Carmel any more than the mountain land of Canaan. It is rather “the mountain of the Lord’s inheritance” (Exo 15:17), upon which the Lord was about to plant His people, the mountain which the Lord had chosen for His sanctuary, and in which His people were to dwell with Him, and rejoice in sacrificial meals of fellowship with Him.
To this end the Lord had sanctified Moriah through the sacrifice of Isaac which He required of Abraham, though it had not been revealed to Moses that it was there that the temple, in which the name of the Lord in Israel would dwell, was afterwards to be built. There is no distinct or direct allusion to Morah or Zion, as the temple-mountain, involved in the words of Moses.
It was only by later revelations and appointments on the part of God that this was to be made known. The words simply contain the Messianic thought that Zebulun and Issachar would offer rich praise-offerings and thank-offerings to the Lord, from the abundant supply of earthly good that would flow to them, upon the mountain which He would make ready as the seat of His gracious presence, and would call, i.
e. , invite the nations to the sacrificial meals connected with them to delight themselves with them in the rich gifts of the Lord, and worship the Lord who blessed His people thus. For the explanation of this thought, see Psa 22:28-31. Sacrifice is mentioned here as an expression of divine worship, which culminated in sacrifice; and slain-offerings are mentioned, not burnt-offerings, to set forth the worship of God under the aspect of blessedness in fellowship with the Lord.
“Slain-offerings of righteousness’ are not merely outwardly legal sacrifices, in conformity with the ritual of the law, but such as were offered in a right spirit, which was well-pleasing to God (as in Psa 4:6; 51:21). It follows as a matter of course, therefore, that by the abundance of the seas we are not merely to understand the profits of trade upon the Mediterranean Sea; and that we are still less to understand by the hidden treasures of the sand “the fish, the purple snails, and sponges” ( Knobel ), or “tunny-fish, purple shells, and glass’ (Ps.
Jon.) ; but that the words receive their best exposition from Isa 60:5-6, Isa 60:16, and Isa 66:11-12, i. e. , that the thought expressed is, that the riches and treasures of both sea and land would flow to the tribes of Israel.
Deu 33:18-19 Zebulun and Issachar. - “ Rejoice, Zebulun, at thy going out; and, Issachar, at thy tents. Nations will they invite to the mountain; there offer the sacrifices of righteousness: for they suck the affluence of the seas, and the hidden treasures of the sand . ” The tribes of the last two sons of Leah Moses unites together, and, like Jacob in Gen 49:13, places Zebulun the younger first.
He first of all confirms the blessing which Jacob pronounced through simply interpreting their names as omnia , by calling upon them to rejoice in their undertakings abroad and at home. “At thy tents” corresponds to “at thy going out” (tents being used poetically for dwellings, as in Deu 16:7); like “sitting” to “going out and coming in” in 2Ki 19:27; Isa 37:28; Psa 139:2; and describes in its two aspects of work and production, rest and recreation.
Although “going out” (enterprise and labour) is attributed to Zebulun, and “remaining in tents” (the comfortable enjoyment of life) to Issachar, in accordance with the delineation of their respective characters in the blessing of Jacob, this is to be attributed to the poetical parallelism of the clauses, and the whole is to be understood as applying to both in the sense suggested by Graf , “Rejoice, Zebulun and Issachar, in your labour and your rest. ” This peculiarity, which is founded in the very nature of poetical parallelism, which is to individualize the thought by distributing it into parallel members, has been entirely overlooked by all the commentators who have given a historical interpretation to each, referring the “going out” to the shipping trade and commercial pursuits of the Zebulunites, and the expression “in thy tents” either to the spending of a nomad life in tents, for the purpose of performing a subordinate part in connection with trade ( Schultz ), or to the quiet pursuits of agriculture and grazing ( Knobel ).
They were to rejoice in their undertakings at home and abroad; for they would be successful. The good things of life would flow to them in rich abundance; they would not make them into mammon, however, but would invite nations to the mountain, and there offer sacrifices of righteousness. “The peoples” are nations generally, not the tribes of Israel, still less the members of their own tribes.
By the “ mountain ,” without any more precise definition, we are not to understand Tabor or Carmel any more than the mountain land of Canaan. It is rather “the mountain of the Lord’s inheritance” (Exo 15:17), upon which the Lord was about to plant His people, the mountain which the Lord had chosen for His sanctuary, and in which His people were to dwell with Him, and rejoice in sacrificial meals of fellowship with Him.
To this end the Lord had sanctified Moriah through the sacrifice of Isaac which He required of Abraham, though it had not been revealed to Moses that it was there that the temple, in which the name of the Lord in Israel would dwell, was afterwards to be built. There is no distinct or direct allusion to Morah or Zion, as the temple-mountain, involved in the words of Moses.
It was only by later revelations and appointments on the part of God that this was to be made known. The words simply contain the Messianic thought that Zebulun and Issachar would offer rich praise-offerings and thank-offerings to the Lord, from the abundant supply of earthly good that would flow to them, upon the mountain which He would make ready as the seat of His gracious presence, and would call, i.
e. , invite the nations to the sacrificial meals connected with them to delight themselves with them in the rich gifts of the Lord, and worship the Lord who blessed His people thus. For the explanation of this thought, see Psa 22:28-31. Sacrifice is mentioned here as an expression of divine worship, which culminated in sacrifice; and slain-offerings are mentioned, not burnt-offerings, to set forth the worship of God under the aspect of blessedness in fellowship with the Lord.
“Slain-offerings of righteousness’ are not merely outwardly legal sacrifices, in conformity with the ritual of the law, but such as were offered in a right spirit, which was well-pleasing to God (as in Psa 4:6; 51:21). It follows as a matter of course, therefore, that by the abundance of the seas we are not merely to understand the profits of trade upon the Mediterranean Sea; and that we are still less to understand by the hidden treasures of the sand “the fish, the purple snails, and sponges” ( Knobel ), or “tunny-fish, purple shells, and glass’ (Ps.
Jon.) ; but that the words receive their best exposition from Isa 60:5-6, Isa 60:16, and Isa 66:11-12, i. e. , that the thought expressed is, that the riches and treasures of both sea and land would flow to the tribes of Israel.
Deu 33:20-21 Gad. - “ Blessed be He that enlargeth Gad: like a lioness he lieth down, and teareth the arm, yea, the crown of the head. And he chose his first-fruit territory, for there was the leader’s portion kept; and he came to the heads of the people, he executed the justice of the Lord, and his rights with Israel . ” Just as in the blessing of Noah (Gen 9:26) the God of Shem is praised, to point out the salvation appointed by God for Shem, so here Moses praises the Lord, who enlarged Gad, i.
e. , who not only gave him a broad territory in the conquered kingdom of Sihon, but furnished generally an unlimited space for his development (vid. , Gen 26:22), so that he might unfold his lion-like nature in conflict with his foes. On the figure of a lioness, see Gen 49:9; and on the warlike character of the Gadites, the remarks on the blessing of Jacob upon Gad (Gen 49:19).
The second part of the blessing treats of the inheritance which Gad obtained from Moses at his own request beyond Jordan. ראה, with an accusative and ל, signifies to look out something for oneself (Gen 22:8; 1Sa 16:17). The “first-fruit” refers here to the first portion of the land which Israel received for a possession; this is evident from the reason assigned, חלקת שׁם כּי, whilst the statement that Gad chose the hereditary possession is in harmony with Num 32:2, Num 32:6, Num 32:25.
, where the children of Gad are described as being at the head of the tribes, who came before Moses to ask for the conquered land as their possession. The meaning of the next clause, of which very different explanations have been given, can only be, that Gad chose such a territory for its inheritance as became a leader of the tribes. מחקק, he who determines, commands, organizes; hence both a commander and also a leader in war.
It is in the latter sense that it occurs both here and in Jdg 5:14. מחקק חלקת, the field, or territory of the leader, may either be the territory appointed or assigned by the lawgiver, or the territory falling to the lot of the leader. According to the former view, Moses would be the mechokek . But the thought, that Moses appointed or assigned him his inheritance, could be no reason why Gad should choose it for himself.
Consequently מחקק חלקת can only mean the possession which the mechokek chose for himself, as befitting him, or specially adapted for him. Consequently the mechokek was not Moses, but the tribe of Gad, which was so called because it unfolded such activity and bravery at the head of the tribes in connection with the conquest of the land, that it could be regarded as their leaders.
This peculiar prominence on the part of the Gadites may be inferred from the fact, that they distinguished themselves above the Reubenites in the fortification of the conquered land (Num 32:34.) ספוּן, from ספן, to cover, hide, preserve, is a predicate, and construed as a noun, “a thing preserved. ” - On the other hand, the opinion has been very widely spread, from the time of Onkelos down to Baumgarten and Ewald , that this hemistich refers to Moses: “there is the portion of the lawgiver hidden,” or “the field of the hidden leader,” and that it contains an allusion to the fact that the grave of Moses was hidden in the inheritance of Gad.
But this is not only at variance with the circumstance, that a prophetic allusion to the grave of Moses such as Baumgarten assumes is apparently inconceivable, from the simple fact that we cannot imagine the Gadites to have foreseen the situation of Moses’ grave at the time when they selected their territory, but also with the fact that, according to Jos 13:20, the spot where this grave was situated (Deu 34:5) was not allotted to the tribe of Gad, but to that of Reuben; and lastly, with the use of the word chelkah , which does not signify a burial-ground or grave. - But although Gad chose out an inheritance for himself, he still went before his brethren, i.
e. , along with the rest of the tribes, into Canaan, to perform in connection with them, what the Lord demanded of His people as a right. This is the meaning of the second half of the verse. The clause, “he came to the heads of the people,” does not refer to the fact that the Gadites came to Moses and the heads of the congregation, to ask for the conquered land as a possession (Num 32:2), but expressed the thought that Gad joined the heads of the people to go at the head of the tribes of Israel (comp.
Jos 1:14; Jos 4:12, with Num 32:17, Num 32:21, Num 32:32), to conquer Canaan with the whole nation, and root out the Canaanites. The Gadites had promised this to Moses and the heads of the people; and this promise Moses regarded as an accomplished act, and praised in these words with prophetic foresight as having been already performed, and that not merely as one single manifestation of their obedience towards the word of the Lord, but rather as a pledge that Gad would always manifest the same disposition.
“To do the righteousness of Jehovah,” i. e. , to do what Jehovah requires of His people as righteousness - namely, to fulfil the commandments of God, in which the righteousness of Israel was to consist (Deu 6:25). יתא, imperfect Kal for יאהת or יאתּה; see Ges. §76, 2, c . , and Ewald , §142, c . “ With Israel: ” in fellowship with (the rest of) Israel.
Deu 33:20-21 Gad. - “ Blessed be He that enlargeth Gad: like a lioness he lieth down, and teareth the arm, yea, the crown of the head. And he chose his first-fruit territory, for there was the leader’s portion kept; and he came to the heads of the people, he executed the justice of the Lord, and his rights with Israel . ” Just as in the blessing of Noah (Gen 9:26) the God of Shem is praised, to point out the salvation appointed by God for Shem, so here Moses praises the Lord, who enlarged Gad, i.
e. , who not only gave him a broad territory in the conquered kingdom of Sihon, but furnished generally an unlimited space for his development (vid. , Gen 26:22), so that he might unfold his lion-like nature in conflict with his foes. On the figure of a lioness, see Gen 49:9; and on the warlike character of the Gadites, the remarks on the blessing of Jacob upon Gad (Gen 49:19).
The second part of the blessing treats of the inheritance which Gad obtained from Moses at his own request beyond Jordan. ראה, with an accusative and ל, signifies to look out something for oneself (Gen 22:8; 1Sa 16:17). The “first-fruit” refers here to the first portion of the land which Israel received for a possession; this is evident from the reason assigned, חלקת שׁם כּי, whilst the statement that Gad chose the hereditary possession is in harmony with Num 32:2, Num 32:6, Num 32:25.
, where the children of Gad are described as being at the head of the tribes, who came before Moses to ask for the conquered land as their possession. The meaning of the next clause, of which very different explanations have been given, can only be, that Gad chose such a territory for its inheritance as became a leader of the tribes. מחקק, he who determines, commands, organizes; hence both a commander and also a leader in war.
It is in the latter sense that it occurs both here and in Jdg 5:14. מחקק חלקת, the field, or territory of the leader, may either be the territory appointed or assigned by the lawgiver, or the territory falling to the lot of the leader. According to the former view, Moses would be the mechokek . But the thought, that Moses appointed or assigned him his inheritance, could be no reason why Gad should choose it for himself.
Consequently מחקק חלקת can only mean the possession which the mechokek chose for himself, as befitting him, or specially adapted for him. Consequently the mechokek was not Moses, but the tribe of Gad, which was so called because it unfolded such activity and bravery at the head of the tribes in connection with the conquest of the land, that it could be regarded as their leaders.
This peculiar prominence on the part of the Gadites may be inferred from the fact, that they distinguished themselves above the Reubenites in the fortification of the conquered land (Num 32:34.) ספוּן, from ספן, to cover, hide, preserve, is a predicate, and construed as a noun, “a thing preserved. ” - On the other hand, the opinion has been very widely spread, from the time of Onkelos down to Baumgarten and Ewald , that this hemistich refers to Moses: “there is the portion of the lawgiver hidden,” or “the field of the hidden leader,” and that it contains an allusion to the fact that the grave of Moses was hidden in the inheritance of Gad.
But this is not only at variance with the circumstance, that a prophetic allusion to the grave of Moses such as Baumgarten assumes is apparently inconceivable, from the simple fact that we cannot imagine the Gadites to have foreseen the situation of Moses’ grave at the time when they selected their territory, but also with the fact that, according to Jos 13:20, the spot where this grave was situated (Deu 34:5) was not allotted to the tribe of Gad, but to that of Reuben; and lastly, with the use of the word chelkah , which does not signify a burial-ground or grave. - But although Gad chose out an inheritance for himself, he still went before his brethren, i.
e. , along with the rest of the tribes, into Canaan, to perform in connection with them, what the Lord demanded of His people as a right. This is the meaning of the second half of the verse. The clause, “he came to the heads of the people,” does not refer to the fact that the Gadites came to Moses and the heads of the congregation, to ask for the conquered land as a possession (Num 32:2), but expressed the thought that Gad joined the heads of the people to go at the head of the tribes of Israel (comp.
Jos 1:14; Jos 4:12, with Num 32:17, Num 32:21, Num 32:32), to conquer Canaan with the whole nation, and root out the Canaanites. The Gadites had promised this to Moses and the heads of the people; and this promise Moses regarded as an accomplished act, and praised in these words with prophetic foresight as having been already performed, and that not merely as one single manifestation of their obedience towards the word of the Lord, but rather as a pledge that Gad would always manifest the same disposition.
“To do the righteousness of Jehovah,” i. e. , to do what Jehovah requires of His people as righteousness - namely, to fulfil the commandments of God, in which the righteousness of Israel was to consist (Deu 6:25). יתא, imperfect Kal for יאהת or יאתּה; see Ges. §76, 2, c . , and Ewald , §142, c . “ With Israel: ” in fellowship with (the rest of) Israel.
Deu 33:22 Dan is “ a young lion which springs out of Bashan . ” Whilst Jacob compared him to a serpent by the way, which suddenly bites a horse’s feet, so that its rider falls backward, Moses gives greater prominence to the strength which Dan would display in conflict with foes, by calling him a young lion which suddenly springs out of its ambush. The reference to Bashan has nothing to do with the expedition of the Danites against Laish, in the valley of Rehoboth (Jdg 18:28), as this valley did not belong to Bashan.
It is to be explained from the simple fact, that in the regions of eastern Bashan, which abound with caves, and more especially in the woody western slopes of Jebel Hauran, many lions harboured, which rushed forth from the thicket, and were very dangerous enemies to the herds of Bashan. Even if no other express testimonies to this fact are to be found it may be inferred from the description given of the eastern spurs of Antilibanus in the Song of Sol.
(Sol 4:8), as the abodes of lions and leopards. The meaning leap forth, spring out, is confirmed by both the context and dialects, though the word only occurs here.
Deu 33:23 Naphtali. - “ O Naphtali, satisfied with favour, and full of the blessing of Jehovah; of sea and south shall he take possession . ” If the gracefulness of Naphtali is set forth in the blessing of Jacob, by comparing it to a gazelle, here Moses assures the same tribe of satisfaction with the favour and blessing of God, and promises it the possession of the sea and of the south, i.
e. , an inheritance which should combine the advantages of the sea - a healthy sea-breeze - with the grateful warmth of the south. This blessing is expressed in far too general terms for it to be possible to interpret it historically, as relating to the natural characteristics of the inheritance of the Naphtalites in Canaan, or to regard it as based upon them, apart altogether from the fact, that the territory of Naphtali was situated in the north-east of Canaan, and reached as far as the sea of Galilee, and that it was for the most part mountainous, though it was a very fertile hill-country (Jos 19:32-39).
ירשׁה is a very unique form of the imperative, though this does not warrant an alteration of the text.
Deu 33:24-25 Asher. - “ Blessed before the sons be Asher; let him be the favoured among his brethren, and dipping his foot in oil. Iron and brass be thy castle; and as the days of thy life let thy rest continue . ” Asher, the prosperous (see at Gen 30:15), was justly to bear the name. He was to be a child of prosperity; blessed with earthly good, he was to enjoy rest all his life long in strong fortresses.
It is evident enough that this blessing is simply an exposition of the name Asher , and that Moses here promises the tribe a verification of the omen contained in its name. מבּנים בּרוּך does not mean “blessed with children,” or “praised because of his children,” in which case we should have בּניו; but “blessed before the sons” (cf. Jdg 5:24), i. e. , blessed before the sons of Jacob, who were peculiarly blessed, equivalent to the most blessed of all the sons of Israel.
אחיו רצוּי does not mean the beloved among his brethren, acceptable to his brethren, but the one who enjoyed the favour of the Lord, i. e. , the one peculiarly favoured by the Lord. Dipping the foot in oil points to a land flowing with oil (Job 29:6), i. e. , fat or fertile throughout, which Jacob had already promised to Asher (see Gen 49:20). To complete the prosperity, however, security and rest were required for the enjoyment of the blessings bestowed by God; and these are promised in Deu 33:25.
מנעל (ἅπ. λεγ.) does not mean a shoe, but is derived from נעל, to bolt (Jdg 3:23), and signifies either a bolt, or that which is shut fast; a poetical expression for a castle or fortress. Asher’s dwellings were to be castles, fortresses of iron and brass; i. e. , as strong and impregnable as if they were built of iron and brass. The pursuit of mining is not to be thought of as referred to here, even though the territory of Asher, which reached to Lebanon, may have contained brass and iron (see at Deu 8:9).
Luther follows the lxx and Vulgate, and renders this clause, “iron and brass be upon his shoes;” but this is undoubtedly wrong, as the custom of fastening the shoes or sandals with brass or iron was quite unknown to the Israelites; and even Goliath, who was clothed in brass from head to foot, and wore iron greaves, had no iron sandals, though the military shoes of the ancient Romans had nails in the soles. Moreover, the context contains no reference to war, so as to suggest the idea that the treading down and cursing of the foe are intended.
“As thy days,” i. e. , as long as the days of thy life last, let thy rest be (continue). Luther's rendering, “let thine old age be as thy youth,” which follows the Vulgate , cannot be sustained; for although דּבא, derived from דאב, to vanish away, certainly might signify old age, the expression “thy days” cannot possibly be understood as signifying youth. The conclusion of the blessing corresponds to the introduction.
As Moses commenced with the glorious fact of the founding of the kingdom of Jehovah in Israel, as the firm foundation of the salvation of His people, so he also concludes with a reference to the Lord their eternal refuge, and with a congratulation of Israel which could find refuge in such a God.
Deu 33:24-25 Asher. - “ Blessed before the sons be Asher; let him be the favoured among his brethren, and dipping his foot in oil. Iron and brass be thy castle; and as the days of thy life let thy rest continue . ” Asher, the prosperous (see at Gen 30:15), was justly to bear the name. He was to be a child of prosperity; blessed with earthly good, he was to enjoy rest all his life long in strong fortresses.
It is evident enough that this blessing is simply an exposition of the name Asher , and that Moses here promises the tribe a verification of the omen contained in its name. מבּנים בּרוּך does not mean “blessed with children,” or “praised because of his children,” in which case we should have בּניו; but “blessed before the sons” (cf. Jdg 5:24), i. e. , blessed before the sons of Jacob, who were peculiarly blessed, equivalent to the most blessed of all the sons of Israel.
אחיו רצוּי does not mean the beloved among his brethren, acceptable to his brethren, but the one who enjoyed the favour of the Lord, i. e. , the one peculiarly favoured by the Lord. Dipping the foot in oil points to a land flowing with oil (Job 29:6), i. e. , fat or fertile throughout, which Jacob had already promised to Asher (see Gen 49:20). To complete the prosperity, however, security and rest were required for the enjoyment of the blessings bestowed by God; and these are promised in Deu 33:25.
מנעל (ἅπ. λεγ.) does not mean a shoe, but is derived from נעל, to bolt (Jdg 3:23), and signifies either a bolt, or that which is shut fast; a poetical expression for a castle or fortress. Asher’s dwellings were to be castles, fortresses of iron and brass; i. e. , as strong and impregnable as if they were built of iron and brass. The pursuit of mining is not to be thought of as referred to here, even though the territory of Asher, which reached to Lebanon, may have contained brass and iron (see at Deu 8:9).
Luther follows the lxx and Vulgate, and renders this clause, “iron and brass be upon his shoes;” but this is undoubtedly wrong, as the custom of fastening the shoes or sandals with brass or iron was quite unknown to the Israelites; and even Goliath, who was clothed in brass from head to foot, and wore iron greaves, had no iron sandals, though the military shoes of the ancient Romans had nails in the soles. Moreover, the context contains no reference to war, so as to suggest the idea that the treading down and cursing of the foe are intended.
“As thy days,” i. e. , as long as the days of thy life last, let thy rest be (continue). Luther's rendering, “let thine old age be as thy youth,” which follows the Vulgate , cannot be sustained; for although דּבא, derived from דאב, to vanish away, certainly might signify old age, the expression “thy days” cannot possibly be understood as signifying youth. The conclusion of the blessing corresponds to the introduction.
As Moses commenced with the glorious fact of the founding of the kingdom of Jehovah in Israel, as the firm foundation of the salvation of His people, so he also concludes with a reference to the Lord their eternal refuge, and with a congratulation of Israel which could find refuge in such a God.
Deu 33:26-27 “ Who is as God, a righteous nation, who rides in heaven to thy help, and in His exaltation upon the clouds. Abiding is the God of olden time, and beneath are everlasting arms: and He drives the enemy before thee, and says, Destroy . ” The meaning is: No other nation has a God who rules in heaven with almighty power, and is a refuge and help to his people against every foe.
Jeshurun is a vocative, and the alteration of כּאל into כּאל, “as the God of Jeshurun,” according to the ancient versions, is to be rejected on the simple ground that the expression “in thy help,” which follows immediately afterwards, is an address to Israel. Riding upon the heaven and the clouds is a figure used to denote the unlimited omnipotence with which God rules the world out of heaven, and is the helper of His people.
“In thy help,” i. e. , as thy helper. This God is a dwelling to His people. מענה, like the masculine מעון in Psa 90:1, and Psa 91:9, signifies “dwelling,” - a genuine Mosaic figure, to which, in all probability, the houseless wandering of the people in the desert, which made them feel the full worth of a dwelling, first gave rise. The figure not only implies that God grants protection and a refuge to His people in the storms of life (Psa 91:1-2, cf.
Isa 4:6), but also that He supplies His people with everything that can afford a safe abode. “The God of old,” i. e. , who has proved Himself to be God from the very beginning of the world (vid. , Psa 90:1; Hab 1:12). The expression “underneath” is to be explained from the antithesis to the heaven where God is enthroned above mankind. He who is enthroned in heaven above is also the God who is with His people upon the earth below, and holds and bars them in His arms.
“Everlasting arms” are arms whose strength is never exhausted. There is no need to supply “thee” after “underneath;” the expression should rather be left in its general form, “upon the earth beneath. ” The reference to Israel is obvious from the context. The driving of the enemy before Israel is not to be restricted to the rooting out of the Canaanites, but applies to every enemy of the congregation of the Lord.
Deu 33:26-27 “ Who is as God, a righteous nation, who rides in heaven to thy help, and in His exaltation upon the clouds. Abiding is the God of olden time, and beneath are everlasting arms: and He drives the enemy before thee, and says, Destroy . ” The meaning is: No other nation has a God who rules in heaven with almighty power, and is a refuge and help to his people against every foe.
Jeshurun is a vocative, and the alteration of כּאל into כּאל, “as the God of Jeshurun,” according to the ancient versions, is to be rejected on the simple ground that the expression “in thy help,” which follows immediately afterwards, is an address to Israel. Riding upon the heaven and the clouds is a figure used to denote the unlimited omnipotence with which God rules the world out of heaven, and is the helper of His people.
“In thy help,” i. e. , as thy helper. This God is a dwelling to His people. מענה, like the masculine מעון in Psa 90:1, and Psa 91:9, signifies “dwelling,” - a genuine Mosaic figure, to which, in all probability, the houseless wandering of the people in the desert, which made them feel the full worth of a dwelling, first gave rise. The figure not only implies that God grants protection and a refuge to His people in the storms of life (Psa 91:1-2, cf.
Isa 4:6), but also that He supplies His people with everything that can afford a safe abode. “The God of old,” i. e. , who has proved Himself to be God from the very beginning of the world (vid. , Psa 90:1; Hab 1:12). The expression “underneath” is to be explained from the antithesis to the heaven where God is enthroned above mankind. He who is enthroned in heaven above is also the God who is with His people upon the earth below, and holds and bars them in His arms.
“Everlasting arms” are arms whose strength is never exhausted. There is no need to supply “thee” after “underneath;” the expression should rather be left in its general form, “upon the earth beneath. ” The reference to Israel is obvious from the context. The driving of the enemy before Israel is not to be restricted to the rooting out of the Canaanites, but applies to every enemy of the congregation of the Lord.
Deu 33:28 “ And Israel dwells safely, alone the fountain of Jacob, in a land full of corn and wine; his heavens also drop down dew . ” Because the God of old was the dwelling and help of Israel, it dwelt safely and separate from the other nations, in a land abounding with corn and wine. “The fountain of Jacob” is parallel to “Israel;” “ alone (separate) dwells the fountain of Jacob .
” This title is given to Israel as having sprung from the patriarch Jacob, in whom it had its source. A similar expression occurs in Psa 68:27. It completely destroys the symmetry of the clauses of the verse to connect the words, as Luther does, with what follows, in the sense of “the eye of Jacob is directed upon a land. ” The construction of שׁכן with אל, to dwell into a land, may be explained on the ground that the dwelling involves the idea of spreading out over the land.
On the “land of corn,” etc. , see Deu 8:7 and Deu 8:8. אף is emphatic: yea his heaven, i. e. , the heaven of this land drops down dew (vid. , Gen 27:28). Israel was to be congratulated upon this.
Deu 33:29 “ Hail to thee, O Israel! who is like thee, a people saved in the Lord, the shield of thy help, and who (is) the sword of thine eminence. Thine enemies will deny themselves to thee, and thou ridest upon their heights . ” “Saved;” not merely delivered from danger and distress, but in general endowed with salvation (like Zec 9:9; see also Isa 45:17).
The salvation of Israel rested in the Lord, as the ground out of which it grew, from which it descended, because the Lord was its help and shield, as He had already promised Abraham (Gen 15:1), and “the sword of his eminence,” i. e. , the sword which had fought for the eminence of Israel. But because the Lord was Israel’s shield and sword, or, so to speak, both an offensive and defensive weapon, his enemies denied themselves to him, i.
e. , feigned friendship, did not venture to appear openly as enemies (for the meaning “feign,” act the hypocrite, see Psa 18:45; Psa 81:16). But Israel would ride upon their heights, the high places of their land, i. e. , would triumph over all its foes (see at Deu 32:13).
Deu 34:1-4 And Moses went up from the plains of Moab unto the mountain of Nebo, to the top of Pisgah, that is over against Jericho. And the LORD shewed him all the land of Gilead, unto Dan, After blessing the people, Moses ascended Mount Nebo, according to the command of God (Deu 32:48-51), and there the Lord showed him, in all its length and breadth, that promised land into which he was not to enter.
From Nebo, a peak of Pisgah, which affords a very extensive prospect on all sides, he saw the land of Gilead, the land to the east of the Jordan as far as Dan, i. e. , not Laish-Dan near the central source of the Jordan (Jdg 18:27), which did not belong to Gilead, but a Dan in northern Peraea, which has not yet been discovered (see at Gen 14:14); and the whole of the land on the west of the Jordan, Canaan proper, in all its different districts, namely, “ the whole of Naphtali ,” i.
e. , the later Galilee on the north, “ the land of Ephraim and Manasseh ” in the centre, and “ the whole of the land of Judah ,” the southern portion of Canaan, in all its breadth, “ to the hinder (Mediterranean) sea ” (see Deu 11:24); also “ the south land ” ( Negeb : see at Num 13:17), the southern land of steppe towards the Arabian desert, and “ the valley of the Jordan ” (see Gen 13:10), i.
e. , the deep valley from Jericho the palm-city (so called from the palms which grew there, in the valley of the Jordan: Jdg 1:16; Jdg 3:13; 2Ch 28:15) “ to Zoar ” at the southern extremity of the Dead Sea (see at Gen 19:22). This sight of every part of the land on the east and west was not an ecstatic vision, but a sight with the bodily eyes, whose natural power of vision was miraculously increased by God, to give Moses a glimpse at least of the glorious land which he was not to tread, and delight his eye with a view of the inheritance intended for his people.
Deu 34:1-4 And Moses went up from the plains of Moab unto the mountain of Nebo, to the top of Pisgah, that is over against Jericho. And the LORD shewed him all the land of Gilead, unto Dan, After blessing the people, Moses ascended Mount Nebo, according to the command of God (Deu 32:48-51), and there the Lord showed him, in all its length and breadth, that promised land into which he was not to enter.
From Nebo, a peak of Pisgah, which affords a very extensive prospect on all sides, he saw the land of Gilead, the land to the east of the Jordan as far as Dan, i. e. , not Laish-Dan near the central source of the Jordan (Jdg 18:27), which did not belong to Gilead, but a Dan in northern Peraea, which has not yet been discovered (see at Gen 14:14); and the whole of the land on the west of the Jordan, Canaan proper, in all its different districts, namely, “ the whole of Naphtali ,” i.
e. , the later Galilee on the north, “ the land of Ephraim and Manasseh ” in the centre, and “ the whole of the land of Judah ,” the southern portion of Canaan, in all its breadth, “ to the hinder (Mediterranean) sea ” (see Deu 11:24); also “ the south land ” ( Negeb : see at Num 13:17), the southern land of steppe towards the Arabian desert, and “ the valley of the Jordan ” (see Gen 13:10), i.
e. , the deep valley from Jericho the palm-city (so called from the palms which grew there, in the valley of the Jordan: Jdg 1:16; Jdg 3:13; 2Ch 28:15) “ to Zoar ” at the southern extremity of the Dead Sea (see at Gen 19:22). This sight of every part of the land on the east and west was not an ecstatic vision, but a sight with the bodily eyes, whose natural power of vision was miraculously increased by God, to give Moses a glimpse at least of the glorious land which he was not to tread, and delight his eye with a view of the inheritance intended for his people.
Deu 34:1-4 And Moses went up from the plains of Moab unto the mountain of Nebo, to the top of Pisgah, that is over against Jericho. And the LORD shewed him all the land of Gilead, unto Dan, After blessing the people, Moses ascended Mount Nebo, according to the command of God (Deu 32:48-51), and there the Lord showed him, in all its length and breadth, that promised land into which he was not to enter.
From Nebo, a peak of Pisgah, which affords a very extensive prospect on all sides, he saw the land of Gilead, the land to the east of the Jordan as far as Dan, i. e. , not Laish-Dan near the central source of the Jordan (Jdg 18:27), which did not belong to Gilead, but a Dan in northern Peraea, which has not yet been discovered (see at Gen 14:14); and the whole of the land on the west of the Jordan, Canaan proper, in all its different districts, namely, “ the whole of Naphtali ,” i.
e. , the later Galilee on the north, “ the land of Ephraim and Manasseh ” in the centre, and “ the whole of the land of Judah ,” the southern portion of Canaan, in all its breadth, “ to the hinder (Mediterranean) sea ” (see Deu 11:24); also “ the south land ” ( Negeb : see at Num 13:17), the southern land of steppe towards the Arabian desert, and “ the valley of the Jordan ” (see Gen 13:10), i.
e. , the deep valley from Jericho the palm-city (so called from the palms which grew there, in the valley of the Jordan: Jdg 1:16; Jdg 3:13; 2Ch 28:15) “ to Zoar ” at the southern extremity of the Dead Sea (see at Gen 19:22). This sight of every part of the land on the east and west was not an ecstatic vision, but a sight with the bodily eyes, whose natural power of vision was miraculously increased by God, to give Moses a glimpse at least of the glorious land which he was not to tread, and delight his eye with a view of the inheritance intended for his people.
Deu 34:1-4 And Moses went up from the plains of Moab unto the mountain of Nebo, to the top of Pisgah, that is over against Jericho. And the LORD shewed him all the land of Gilead, unto Dan, After blessing the people, Moses ascended Mount Nebo, according to the command of God (Deu 32:48-51), and there the Lord showed him, in all its length and breadth, that promised land into which he was not to enter.
From Nebo, a peak of Pisgah, which affords a very extensive prospect on all sides, he saw the land of Gilead, the land to the east of the Jordan as far as Dan, i. e. , not Laish-Dan near the central source of the Jordan (Jdg 18:27), which did not belong to Gilead, but a Dan in northern Peraea, which has not yet been discovered (see at Gen 14:14); and the whole of the land on the west of the Jordan, Canaan proper, in all its different districts, namely, “ the whole of Naphtali ,” i.
e. , the later Galilee on the north, “ the land of Ephraim and Manasseh ” in the centre, and “ the whole of the land of Judah ,” the southern portion of Canaan, in all its breadth, “ to the hinder (Mediterranean) sea ” (see Deu 11:24); also “ the south land ” ( Negeb : see at Num 13:17), the southern land of steppe towards the Arabian desert, and “ the valley of the Jordan ” (see Gen 13:10), i.
e. , the deep valley from Jericho the palm-city (so called from the palms which grew there, in the valley of the Jordan: Jdg 1:16; Jdg 3:13; 2Ch 28:15) “ to Zoar ” at the southern extremity of the Dead Sea (see at Gen 19:22). This sight of every part of the land on the east and west was not an ecstatic vision, but a sight with the bodily eyes, whose natural power of vision was miraculously increased by God, to give Moses a glimpse at least of the glorious land which he was not to tread, and delight his eye with a view of the inheritance intended for his people.