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Deuteronomy: the lawbook and the conclusion
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The lawbook
The laws are the central core and purport of the book of Deuteronomy. They are couched in a hortatory, sermonic style that has led to their being categorized as preached law. Emphatic statements of what must or must not be done are connected with exhortations to fulfill these injunctions, pointing to the motivations and spirit in which they should be carried out. There is a wide variety of laws here—ritual, criminal, social—but they are all set within this preaching context and aimed at the service of God. This is no dry legal code but, rather, a book written in fluent and moving prose. Scholars have seen duplications and parallels between the laws presented here and those in the Covenant Code in chapters 21–23 of Exodus; but to this a common source may be ascribed, and Deuteronomy may be considered a work in its own right and not a mere expansion of the Covenant Code.
The lawbook comprises chapters 12–26, supplemented by chapters 27–28. After an initial order to destroy the pagan cultic places and idols, the lawbook goes to its basic injunction: to set up a single central sanctuary in Canaan, where all Israel is to make their offerings, as distinct from the present unregulated practice, “every man doing whatever is right in his own eyes.” The spot is designated only “the place which the Lord your God will choose,” which some interpreters, following King Josiah, have understood to be Jerusalem and which others understand to be Shechem. (The blessing and curse passage immediately preceding in chapter 11 specifies Mts. Gerizim and Ebal, on either side of Shechem, as the places of blessing and curse, respectively; and an even more elaborate ritual is prescribed for the same locality in chapter 27.) Instructions are given for the proper killing of animals for food, previously connected with the sacrificial cult, and the people are admonished when they settle in Canaan not to inquire about how other nations serve their gods, possibly to follow their abominable practices. Inserted at this point is the striking exhortation, “Everything that I command you you shall be careful to do; you shall not add to it or take from it.”
Chapter 13 warns the people to beware of the temptations to apostasy arising from the urging or example of prophet-diviners, kinfolk or friends, or a whole town; they are to kill the tempters and destroy the towns. Chapter 14 is devoted mainly to a list of living things that may or may not be eaten, the “clean” and “unclean,” similar to the list in Leviticus, chapter 11; and to laws for tithes and first fruits to be brought annually to the central sanctuary and triennially to the Levites in the towns, who are specified as having no “portion” of their own (two years to the centre, the third year to the town Levites). Chapter 15 deals mainly with the releases to be granted every seventh year to debtors of their debts and Hebrew slaves of their bondage; lenders are exhorted and commanded not to refuse loans to the poor in the sabbatical year of release, and God’s redemption of Israel from Egypt is given as the reason for freeing one’s Hebrew slaves in the sabbatical release. The first section of chapter 16, verses 1–17, gives the rules for celebrating the three main festivals of the religious year: Unleavened Bread, Weeks, and Booths, which are to be observed at the central sanctuary (hence later called the three pilgrim festivals).
Beginning with verse 18 of chapter 16 there is a discussion of the appointment and character of judges, and of judicial procedures and punishments for apostasy, homicide, and other crimes; similarly, beginning with verse 14 of chapter 17 there are rules on the selection of a king and for his conduct, and the injunction that he read from “a copy of this law,” so that he may be edified and chastened. The first portion of chapter 18 deals with the office and support of priests, referred to here as “the Levitical priests…all the tribe of Levi,” not distinguishing the Aaronic priests from the lesser Levites. This is followed—after a passage inveighing against abominable cultic and divinatory practices of the nations of the land—by a promise that God will raise up prophets among the people and instructions on how to tell true from false prophets. Thus the offices of judge, king, priest, and prophet are considered in chapters 16–18.
Chapter 19 deals again with crime and punishment. It distinguishes between unintentional manslaughter and murder, setting up cities of refuge for the manslayer and ordering the murderer to be killed by the blood avengers. It also lays down the rules for witnesses and the punishment for perjury. It closes with the famous lex talionis: “Life for life, eye for eye, tooth for tooth, hand for hand, foot for foot,” which in context may spell out what is to happen to the false witness and even could be interpreted as a moderating, rather than an inhumane, precept (no more than an eye for an eye, etc.). Chapter 20 gives the rules for holy war, listing the situations that exempt men from military service (e.g., a newly married man) and distinguishing the treatment of non-Canaanite and Canaanite cities; the latter are to be utterly destroyed, yet it is forbidden to destroy fruit-bearing trees. There are also rules on holy war in 21:10–14; 23:9–14; 24:5; and 25:17–19. Chapters 20–25 contain a great variety of laws; the just treatment of women captives, sexual offenses, exclusions from the religious community, public hygiene in campgrounds, and many other things.
The last of the laws are set forth in chapter 26, dealing with the first fruits offering and tithes. At the annual offering (or soon after entering Canaan), in the central sanctuary, the worshipper is to recite a piece beginning, “A wandering Aramaean was my father,” affirming his link with the patriarchs and extolling God’s wondrous deeds on behalf of Israel. And every third year he is to set aside his tithe “to the Levite, the sojourner, the fatherless, and the widow” and make an affirmation “before the Lord” that he has complied and avoided any ritual stain.
The final passage in chapter 26 proclaims that “this day” God has proclaimed his law, Israel has affirmed its commitment to God and his law, and God has affirmed his choice of Israel as his special, holy people, to be set up high above all the nations. This is the hortatory conclusion to chapters 12–26 and to the “second law,” or Covenant, contained therein.
The emphasis on the laws given on “this day” is continued in the supplementary chapters 27–28, which deal with Covenant ratification and renewal ceremonies, apparently a reference to an original ceremony in Moab, one in Canaan on the first day in the land, and subsequent, possibly annual, renewal ceremonies. Blessings and curses are to be pronounced from Mts. Gerizim and Ebal for respectively fulfilling or disobeying the Covenant: all good things or all bad things will befall the people, as they keep or fail to keep the Covenant. Some of the curse consequences in chapter 28, referring to siege, subjugation, and exile, are believed by some scholars to reflect late pre-exilic or exilic situations. The curse consequences fill up the bulk of these chapters and are recounted in powerful, moving language, ending with a threat to return the people to Egypt.
Concluding exhortation and traditions about the last days of Moses
Chapters 29–31 comprise the third and last address of Moses to the people of Israel. They are preceded by an introductory verse referring to “these words” as a covenant made in Moab, in addition to the one made at Horeb (Sinai). After reminding them of all that God has done for them, Moses calls on the whole people to enter into the sworn Covenant made this day that they may be his people and he may be their God, warning the secret apostate of the calamities that will befall him. Yet the possibility of a return to God and the land is held out to those who will suffer exile and persecution as punishment for their apostasy, again presumably a reflection of the exilic situation (chapter 30 verses 1–10 seems clearly to be an interpolation inspired by the actual experience of exile). This law, it is emphasized, is no recondite, remote thing up in the sky but is, rather, very close to men, “in your mouth and in your heart”; what is revealed is made plain, it is not the secret things of God. Moses sets before them the classic Deuteronomic choice: “life and good” over “death and evil.” The people are given that choice and told the consequences of loving the Lord and keeping the Covenant or of going the other way.
The final chapters are concerned with the last words and acts of Moses: directing Joshua to lead Israel after his death, writing down “this law,” calling for a sabbatical renewal ceremony of it on the Feast of Booths, ordering that it be put beside the ark of the Covenant, and uttering two poems. The first, “The Song of Moses” (chapter 32), praises the faithfulness and power of the Lord, decries the faithlessness and wickedness of Israel, and predicts the consequent divine punishment; it adds, however, that in the end the Lord will relent and will vindicate his people. The second poem, “The Blessing of Moses” (chapter 33), blesses each of the tribes of Israel, one by one, and the blessings are associated with God’s love, the law commanded by Moses, and the kingship of God over his people. There are indications in both poems of a considerably later date (after Joshua’s time, perhaps in the period of the Judges); Moses is spoken of in the third person in “The Blessing” poem.
The narrative of Deuteronomy, and thus of the Pentateuch, ends with Moses’ ascent to the top of Mt. Pisgah, his being shown the Promised Land by God, and his death there in the land of Moab, buried by God in an unknown grave. It is emphasized in the closing words that Moses was a unique prophet “whom the Lord knew face to face” and through whom the Lord wrought unique “signs and wonders” and “great and terrible deeds.” Thus end the Five Books of Moses.
Seymour Cain