James Nisbet Commentary - Deuteronomy 5:33 - 5:33

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James Nisbet Commentary - Deuteronomy 5:33 - 5:33


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THE RIGHT WALK

‘Ye shall walk in all the ways which the Lord your God hath commanded you, that ye may live, and that it may be well with you, and that ye may prolong your days in the land which ye shall possess.’

Deu_5:33

I. One of these clauses is commonly said to enjoin a duty, the other to promise the blessings which those might confidently look for who performed it. This is not a satisfactory definition. Moses teaches his countrymen that God has conferred upon them the highest, prize which man can conceive, freely and without any merit on their part. Was the knowledge of the living and unseen God nothing in itself, but only valuable in virtue of some results that were to come of it? Moses tells his countrymen that it was everything. To hold it fast was to be a nation; to lose it was to sink back into that condition out of which they had been raised.

II. Is there no duty then assigned in the text?—Certainly when it is said, ‘Ye shall walk in all the ways which the Lord your God hath commanded you,’ it must be meant that there is something required on the part of the creature as well as something bestowed by the Creator. We cannot understand what is required unless we understand what is bestowed. If we believe that a way has been made for us, and that we have been put in that way, we can apprehend the force of the precept to walk in it, we can feel what is meant by transgression and revolt.

III. It is here signified in very simple, clear language that a people in a right, orderly, godly state shall be a well-doing people, a people with all the signs and tokens of strength, growth, triumph, a people marked for permanence and indefinite expansion.

IV. It cannot be true that the blessings of adversity were unknown to the Jews, were reserved for a later period. The more strong their feeling was that God had chosen their nation and made a covenant with it, the greater was their struggle with their individual selfishness, their desire of great things for themselves, the more need had they of God’s fires to purify them. No men could be more taught than the Jewish seers were that punishments are necessary for individuals and nations, and that ‘whom the Lord loveth He chasteneth.’

V. It is a perilous and an almost fatal notion that Christian men have less to do with the present than the Jews had, that their minds and their religion are to be projected into a region after death, because there only the Divine Presence is dwelling. The alternative is between a faith which shall belong to men as men, which shall concern all their ordinary pursuits, toils, relations—the alternative is between such a faith and absolute atheism.

Rev. F. D. Maurice.

Illustration

(1) ‘Man needs a mediator. Conscious of the evil of his heart and life, he dares not face the All Holy. But there is a Mediator, a Daysman; not a servant, however noble and faithful, but the Son, who can lay a hand upon each. He has gone near, and has heard all that the Father has to say, and has spoken it to us; but, oh, how eagerly He yearns that there were such a heart in us that we would keep those commandments always, then indeed it would be well with us. We should live in the power of life eternal. We should possess the land of rest and plenty. We should prolong our days as the days of heaven upon earth.’

(2) ‘The actual entrance into the New Covenant is not effected, unless there has been this personal meeting, this heart to heart contract between the sinner and his Saviour. This is necessary to that vital union to Him on which all Christian life depends. What does the hearer know of this experimentally?’