Matthew Henry
The charge here given them is the same as before, to keep and do all God’s commandments. Their obedience must be,
Observe to do.
do all the commandments, Deut 8:1. And,
live and multiply, and all should be well with them, Deut 8:1), he directs them,
Thou shalt remember all the way which the Lord thy God led thee these forty years in the wilderness, Deut 8:2. Now that they had come of age, and were entering upon their inheritance, they must be reminded of the discipline they had been under during their minority and the method God had taken to train them up for himself. The wilderness was the school in which they had been for forty years boarded and taught, under tutors and governors; and this was a time to bring it all to remembrance. The occurrences of these last forty years were very memorable and well worthy to be remembered, very useful and profitable to be remembered, as yielding a complication of arguments for obedience; and they were recorded on purpose that they might be remembered. As the feast of the passover was a memorial of their deliverance out of Egypt, so was the feast of tabernacles of their passage through the wilderness. Note, It is very good for us to remember all the ways both of God’s providence and grace, by which he has led us hitherto through this wilderness, that we may be prevailed with cheerfully to serve him and trust in him. Here let us set up our Ebenezer.
humblethem, that they might not be exalted above measure with the abundance of miracles that were wrought in their favor, and that they might not be secure, and confident of being in Canaan immediately.
provethem, that they and others might know (for God himself perfectly knew it before) all that was in their heart, and might see that God chose them not for any thing in them that might recommend them to his favour, for their whole carriage was untoward and provoking. Many commandments God gave them which there would have been no occasion for if they had not been led through the wilderness, as those relating to the manna (Exod 16:28); and God thereby tried them, as our first parents were tried by the trees of the garden, whether they would keep God’s commandments or not. Or God thereby proved them whether they would trust his promises, the word which he commanded to a thousand generations, and, in dependence on his promises, obey his precepts.
God suffered them to hunger, and the
fed them with manna, that the extremity of their want might make the supply the more acceptable, and God’s goodness to them therein the more remarkable. God often brings his people low, that he may have the honour of helping them. And thus the manna of heavenly comforts is given to those that
hunger and thirst after righteousness, Matt 5:6.
To the hungry soul every bitter thing is sweet. It is said of the manna that it was a sort of food which neither
they nor their fathers knew. And again, Deut 8:16. If they knew there was such a thing that fell sometimes with the dew in those countries, as some think they did, yet it was never known to fall in such vast quantities, so constantly, and at all seasons of the year, so long, and only about a certain place. These things were altogether miraculous, and without precedent;
the Lord created a new thingfor their supply. And hereby he taught them the
man liveth not by bread alone. Though God has appointed bread for the strengthening of man’s heart, and that is ordinarily made the staff of life, yet God can, when he pleases, command support and nourishment without it, and make something else, very unlikely, to answer the intention as well. We might live upon air if it were sanctified for that use by
the word of God; for the means God ordinarily uses he is not tied to, but can perform his kind purposes to his people without them. Our Saviour quotes this scripture in answer to that temptation of Satan,
Command that these stones be made bread. “What need of that?” says Christ; “my heavenly Father can keep me alive without bread,” Matt 4:3, Matt 4:4. Let none of God’s children distrust their Father, nor take any sinful indirect course for the supply of their own necessities; some way or other, God will provide for them in the way of duty and honest diligence,
and verily they shall be fed. It may be applied spiritually; the
word of God, as it is the revelation of God’s will and grace duly received and entertained by faith, is the food of the soul, the life which is supported by that is the life of the man, and not only that life which is supported by bread. The manna typified Christ,
the bread of life. He is
the Word of God; by him we live. The Lord evermore give us that bread which endures to eternal life, and let us not be put off with the
meat that perisheth!
purple or fine linen, and in
faring sumptuously every day, but in being taken into covenant and communion with God, and in
learning his righteous judgements. God’s law, which was given to Israel in the wilderness, must be to them instead of food and raiment.
what they should eat and drink, and
wherewithal they should be clothed. Christ would have his disciples learn the same lesson (Matt 6:25), and took a like method to teach it to them, when he
sent them out without purse or scrip, and yet took care that they
lacked nothing, Luke 22:35.
feet swelled not. God preserved them from taking hurt by the inconveniences of their journey; and mercies of this kind we ought to acknowledge. Note, Those that follow God’s conduct are not only safe but easy. Our feet swell not while we keep in the way of duty; it is the
way of transgressionthat
is hard, Prov 13:15. God had promised to
keep the feet of his saints, 1Sam 2:9.
As a man chasteneth his son, for his good, and because he loves him,
so the Lord thy God chasteneth thee. God is a loving tender Father to all his children, yet when there is occasion they shall feel the smart of the rod. Israel did so: they were chastened that they might not be condemned, chastened with the rod of men. Not as a man wounds and slays his enemies whose destruction he aims at, but as a man chastens his son whose happiness and welfare he designs: so did their God chasten them; he chastened and taught them, Ps 94:12. This they must
consider in their heart, that is, they must own it from their own experience that God had corrected them with a fatherly love, for which they must return to him a filial reverence and compliance. Because God has chastened thee as a father,
therefore(Deut 8:6)
thou shalt keep his commandments. This use we should make of all our afflictions; by them let us be engaged and quickened to our duty. Thus they are directed to look back upon the wilderness.
well-watered, like Eden, the garden of the Lord. It was
a land of brooks of water, of fountains and depths, which contributed to the fruitfulness of the soil. Perhaps there was a greater plenty of water there now than in Abraham’s time, the Canaanites having found and digged wells; so that Israel reaped the fruit of their industry as well as of God’s bounty.
date-trees, as some think it should be read.
silver and gold they had none; of these the princes of Sheba should bring presents (Ps 72:10, Ps 72:15); yet they had plenty of those more serviceable metals, iron and brass. Iron-stone and mines of brass were found in their hills. See Job 28:2.