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Exegetical and Hermeneutical Commentary of Deuteronomy 28:5

Exegetical and Hermeneutical Commentary of Deuteronomy 28:5

Blessed [shall be] thy basket and thy store.

5. basket ] See on Deu 26:2.

kneading bowl ] See Dri. on Exo 8:3. Cp. mill, Deu 24:6.

Fuente: The Cambridge Bible for Schools and Colleges

Deu 28:5

Blessed shall be thy basket and thy store.

A blessing on basket and store

Obedience brings a blessing on all the provisions which our industry earns for us. That which comes in and goes out at once, like fruit in the basket which is for immediate use, shall be blessed; and that which is laid by with us for a longer season shall equally receive a blessing. Perhaps ours is a hand basket portion. We have a little for breakfast, and a scanty bite for dinner in a basket when we go out to our work in the morning. This is well, for the blessing of God is promised to the basket. If we live from hand to mouth, getting each days supply in the day, we are as well off as Israel; for when the Lord entertained His favoured people He only gave them a days manna at a time. What more did they need? What more do we need? But if we have a store, how much we need the Lord to bless it! For there is the care of getting, the care of keeping, the care of managing, the care of using; and, unless the Lord bless it, these cares will eat into our hearts, till our goods become our gods, and our cares prove cankers. O Lord, bless our substance. Enable us to use it for Thy glory. Help us to keep worldly things in their proper places, and never may our savings endanger the saving of our souls. (C. H. Spurgeon.)

Fuente: Biblical Illustrator Edited by Joseph S. Exell

Verse 5. Thy basket] Thy olive gathering and vintage, as the basket was employed to collect those fruits.

Store.] mishereth, kneading-trough, or remainder; all that is laid up for future use, as well as what is prepared for present consumption. Some think that by basket all their property abroad may be meant, and by store all that they have at home, i. e., all that is in the fields, and all that is in the houses. The following note of Mr. Harmer is important: –

“Commentators seem to be at a great loss how to explain the basket and the store mentioned De 28:5; De 28:17. Why Moses, who in the other verses mentions things in general, should in this case be so minute as to mention baskets, seems strange; and they that interpret either the first or the second of these words of the repositories of their corn, c., forget that their barns or storehouses are spoken of presently after this in De 28:8. Might I be permitted to give my opinion here, I should say that the basket, tene, in this place means their travelling baskets, and the other word mishereth, (their store,) signifies their leathern bags, in both which they were wont to carry things in travelling. The first of these words occurs nowhere else in the Scriptures but in the account that is given us of the conveyance in which they were to carry their first-fruits to Jerusalem the other nowhere but in the description of the hurrying journey of Israel out of Egypt, where it means the utensils in which they then carried their dough, which I have shown elsewhere in these papers means a piece of leather drawn together by rings, and forming a kind of bag. Agreeably to this, Hasselquist informs us that the Eastern people use baskets in travelling; for, speaking of that species of the palm tree which produces dates, and its great usefulness to the people of those countries, he tells us that of the leaves of this tree they make baskets, or rather a kind of short bags, which are used in Turkey on journeys and in their houses; pages 261, 262. Hampers and panniers are English terms denoting travelling baskets, as tene seems to be a Hebrew word of the same general import, though their forms might very much differ, as it is certain that of the travelling baskets mentioned by Hasselquist now does.

“In like manner as they now carry meal, figs, and raisins, in a goat’s skin in Barbary for a viaticum, they might do the same anciently, and consequently might carry merchandise after the same manner, particularly their honey, oil, and balm, mentioned Eze 27:17. They were the proper vessels for such things. So Sir J. Chardin, who was so long in the East, and observed their customs with so much care, supposed, in a manuscript note on Ge 43:11, that the balm and the honey sent by Jacob into Egypt for a present were carried in a goat or kid’s skin, in which all sorts of things, both dry and liquid, are wont to be carried in the East.

“Understood after this manner, the passage promises Israel success in their commerce, as the next verse (the 6th) promises them personal safety in their going out and in their return. In this view the passage appears with due distinctness, and a noble extent.” – Observations, vol. 2:, p. 181.

Fuente: Adam Clarke’s Commentary and Critical Notes on the Bible

i.e. It shall always be well replenished, and the provision thou hast there shall be preserved for, and in due time brought forth to, thy use and service. See Deu 26:2,10.

Fuente: English Annotations on the Holy Bible by Matthew Poole

Blessed [shall be] thy basket,…. Which the Targums of Jonathan and Jerusalem restrain to the basket of firstfruits, and the cake of the first of their dough; but it intends any and every vessel in which they put their provisions for present use, and that that should never be empty of them, and that they should always have a sufficiency:

and thy store; what remained, and was laid up in their barns, cellars, and storehouses, for future use, or in proper places for seed.

Fuente: John Gill’s Exposition of the Entire Bible

(5) Thy basket(Only here and in Deu. 28:17, and Deu. 26:2; Deu. 26:4)i.e., the portion which is brought out for the present occasion. Thy store, that which is left, and put away for future use. But this view rests upon the LXX. translation of the word for store. All the Targums, and all the Jewish commentators I have been able to consult, and the lexicons also, take a different view. The word is identical in form with that used for kneading troughs in Exo. 8:3; Exo. 12:34. And so the contrast is taken to be, either (1) between firstfruits in their natural condition (Deu. 26:2) and the dough offered when already prepared for food, as in the wave-loaves (Lev. 23:17); or (2) between the basket in which the corn is carried and the receptacle for the meal or dough, or (as Rashi takes it) between the vessel for things moist and the vessel for things dry. But the view taken by the LXX. is as old as any, and the contrast indicated by basket and store is simpler and more comprehensive than that which is drawn from a reference to the details of the law. The Authorised Version is, therefore, distinctly to be preferred, in my opinion. There are other technical reasons, which cannot be given here.

Fuente: Ellicott’s Commentary for English Readers (Old and New Testaments)

Deu 28:5 Blessed [shall be] thy basket and thy store.

Ver. 5. Blessed shall be thy basket and thy store. ] Or, Thy dough trough. The Greek hath it, Thy barns and thy remainders. The meaning is, Thou shalt know no want. Cicero a saith, One friend should wish to another three things only, to enjoy health, to possess honour, and not suffer necessity. He that observeth God’s commands to do them, as Deu 28:1 , shall have all these and more.

a Ad Attic.

Fuente: John Trapp’s Complete Commentary (Old and New Testaments)

NASB (UPDATED) TEXT: Deu 28:5

5Blessed shall be your basket and your kneading bowl.

Deu 28:5 Blessed. ..basket This basket was used to carry fruit or grain (cf. Deu 26:2). This speaks of prosperity in agriculture.

Blessed. . .kneading bowl This was a bowl used to prepare family meals (i.e., daily bread). This was a way of saying, there will always be food on the table. The opposite is stated in Deu 28:17.

Fuente: You Can Understand the Bible: Study Guide Commentary Series by Bob Utley

basket. Put by Figure of speech Metonymy (of Subject) for its contents.

store = kneading-troughs, put for the dough in them.

Fuente: Companion Bible Notes, Appendices and Graphics

thy basket: By basket, may be understood the olive-gathering and vintage, in which it was employed; and by the store or remainder, all laid up for future use, or prepared for present consumption.

store: or, dough, or kneading troughs, Deu 28:5

Reciprocal: Exo 23:25 – he shall Deu 28:17 – General Deu 28:45 – Moreover

Fuente: The Treasury of Scripture Knowledge