Exegetical and Hermeneutical Commentary of Deuteronomy 29:4
Yet the LORD hath not given you a heart to perceive, and eyes to see, and ears to hear, unto this day.
4. an heart to know ] The heart the seat of the practical understanding; ‘not the seat of the affections, but the mind itself, the intellectual faculty of the soul’ (Calvin), yet always in a moral aspect; see on Deu 4:39, Deu 6:6. Eyes and ears, figures here of the spiritual senses, cp. Jer 5:21.
In form the connection with the preceding v. is difficult to trace, but the substance is clear. The deeds in which the Divine revelation consists are of no avail without the inward power to recognise and appreciate them, which is also, equally with them, of the gift of God; ‘Men are ever blind even in the brightest light, until they have been enlightened of God’ (Calvin). The speaker is made to express the truth in this negative way in order to emphasise to the people the urgent need of their at last, after so much neglect, awakening to the meaning of Jehovah’s Providence. The awkwardness of the construction is due to the effort to express both the grace of God and the responsibility of man.
Fuente: The Cambridge Bible for Schools and Colleges
Ability to understand the things of God is the gift of God (compare 1Co 2:13-14); yet man is not guiltless if he lacks that ability. The people had it not because they had not felt their want of it, nor asked for it. Compare 2Co 3:14-15.
Fuente: Albert Barnes’ Notes on the Bible
Deu 29:4
The Lord hath not given you an heart to perceive.
Men without heart, sight, or hearing
Feeling, sight, hearing! What wonderful things these are! If we could exist without them, what a wretched condition ours would be! The outer world would be unknown to us if the gates of the senses were shut, and the soul would be famished, like Samaria when it was straitly shut up, and there was no going in nor coming out. When any one of the senses is gone it involves great deprivation, and subjects the person enduring it to the pity of his fellows, but if all were absent what wretchedness must ensue! Transfer your thoughts now from these external senses by which we become conscious of the external world to those spiritual senses by which we perceive the spiritual world, the kingdom of heaven, the Lord of that kingdom, and all the powers of the world to come. There is a heart which should be tender, by which we perceive the presence of God and feel His operations, and even behold the Lord Himself, as it is written, Blessed are the pure in heart, for they shall see God. There is a spiritual eye by which the things invisible are discerned; blessed are they to whom the Lord has given to see the things of His kingdom, which to the unrenewed remain hidden in parables. There is a spiritual ear by which we hear the gentle whispers of the Spirit, which frequently come to us internally, without the medium of sounds that can affect the ear. Blessed are those who have the ear which the Lord has purged, and cleansed, and opened, so that it listens to the Divine call But there is no blessedness in the case of men devoid of spiritual feeling, sight, and hearing. Theirs is a miserable plight.
I. We shall think upon a mournful fact. Here was a whole nation, with but very few exceptions, of whom their leader, who knew and loved them best, was obliged to say, The Lord hath not given you a heart to perceive, unto this day.
1. The mournful part of it was, that this was the nation that had been specially favoured of God above all others.
2. Note again, that not only were they a highly favoured people, but they had seen very wonderful acts performed by the Lord Himself.
3. In addition to this, these people had passed through a very remarkable experience.
4. In addition to all this sight and experience, the Israelites had received remarkable instruction.
5. One thing else is worth notice, that these people had been associated with remarkable characters. They were not all blinded, there were a few among them who were gracious, and so were made to perceive. Caleb and Joshua were there, and Aaron and Miriam; but chiefly there was Moses, grandest of men, true father of the nation
II. Let us note the mournful reasons for all this.
1. The reasons for their incapacity to see and perceive lay, first, in the tact that these people never believed in their own blindness. They had no heart to perceive, and they did not perceive their absence of perception; they had no eyes wherewith to detect their own dimness of vision. They were such fools as to dote on their own wisdom, so poor as to think themselves rich, so hypocritical as to profess to be sincere. Pride is the great creator of darkness; like Nahash, the Ammonite, it puts out the right eye. Men seek not the light, because they boast that they are the children of the day and need no light from above.
2. More than this, these men never asked for a heart to perceive, and eyes to see, and ears to hear. No man hath ever asked for these things and been refused; no soul has cried in its blindness and darkness, Open Thou mine eyes, but what a gracious answer has always come. It is the prerogative of the Lord Jesus to open the blind eyes; but this He is ever ready to do whenever men call upon His name. Then, moreover, what little light they did have they resisted. When they were forced to see, it was only for a moment that they would be instructed, and then they shut their eyes again.
III. What was the mournful result of these people being so highly favoured, and yet not seeing their God?
1. The result was, first, that they missed a happy portion, I can hardly imagine how happy the children of Israel might have been. They left Egypt with a high hand and an outstretched arm, their ears were hung with jewels, and their purses were filled with riches, while around them manna dropped from heaven, and cool streams flowed at their side. They might have made a quick march to the promised land, and at once entered their rest, for their God who had sent the hornet before them would soon have driven out their adversaries. They would have known no invading enemy, and felt neither blast, nor blight, nor mildew; in fact, they would have been the happiest nation under heaven: He should have fed them also with the finest of the wheat: and with honey out of the rock should I have satisfied thee. They flung all this on one side: they would not have God, and so they could not have prosperity. They walked contrary to Him, and He walked contrary to them; they would not obey Him, and therefore His anger smoked against them.
2. Think, moreover, what a glorious destiny they threw aside. Had they been equal to the occasion, by Gods grace they might have been a nation of kings and priests, they might have been the Lords missionaries to all lands, the light-bearers to all peoples.
3. Another result was that while they missed so high a position, they went on sinning. As they did not learn the lesson God was teaching them, namely, that He was God, and that to serve Him was their joy and their prosperity, they went from one evil to another, provoking the Lord to jealousy.
4. Hence they frequently suffered. A plague broke out at one time, and a burning at another; at one time they were visited with fever, and anon the earth opened beneath them; one day the Amalekites smote them, another day fiery serpents leaped up from the sand, and they died by thousands, being poisoned by their bites. They suffered much and often, and in all their trials they did but reap what they had sown.
5. At last this evil ended terribly. The Lord lifted His hand to heaven, and swore that the rebellious generation should not enter into His rest, and they began to die by wholesale till Moses cried, We are consumed by Thine anger, and by Thy wrath are we troubled. Not one of the men that came out of Egypt, save only Joshua and Caleb, reached the promised land. (C. H. Spurgeon.)
A perceiving heart the gift of God
To complete the sense of the words, we must have recourse to the two precedent verses; which, being compared to the text, present us with a description of such a brutish temper as is not to be found in any people mentioned throughout the whole Book of God, or any history whatsoever.
I. What is meant by Gods giving to the soul a perceiving heart? We have grace here set out by such acts as are properly acts of knowledge; as understanding, seeing, hearing; not because, as some imagine, grace is placed only in the understanding, which, being informed with such a principle, is able to govern, and practically to determine the will, without the help of any new principle infused into that. For grace is a habit equally placed in both these faculties, but it is expressed by the acts of the understanding:–
1. Because the understanding has the precedency and first stroke in holy actions, as well as in others; it is the head and fountain from whence they derive their goodness, the leading faculty: and therefore the works of all the rest may, by way of eminence, be ascribed to this, as the conquest of an army is ascribed to the leader only, or general.
2. Because the means of grace are chiefly and most frequently expressed by the word truth; 1Ti 1:15, This is a faithful (or a true) saying, that Christ came into the world to save sinners. And in Joh 3:33, He that believeth hath set to his seal that God is true. And in Joh 17:17, Thy Word is truth. From hence, therefore, I collect–
(1) That to understand and receive the Word, according to the letter and notion, by a bare assent to the truth of it, is not to have a heart to perceive nor an ear to hear: because it is evident, both from Scripture and ordinary observation, that such a reception of the means of grace is not always attended with these spiritual effects: as, for instance, the Jews heard Christ and admired Him, but afterwards they rejected His doctrine and crucified His person. To hear the Word of God, and to hear God speaking in His Word, are things vastly different.
(2) Therefore, in the second place, to have a perceiving heart and a hearing ear is to have a spiritual light begot in the mind by an immediate overpowering work of the Spirit, whereby alone the soul is enabled to apprehend the things of God spiritually, and to practise them effectually: and without this we may see and see, and never perceive, and hear again and again and never understand.
II. Whence it is that, without this gift of a perceiving heart, the soul cannot make any improvement of the means of grace. It arises from these two reasons–
1. From its exceeding impotence and inability to apprehend these things.
2. From its contrariety to them. And there are two things in the soul in which this contrariety chiefly consists.
(1) Carnal corruptions.
(2) Carnal wisdom.
III. Although upon Gods denial of a perceiving heart the soul does inevitably remain unprofitable under the means of grace, so as not to hear nor perceive; yet this hardness, or unprofitableness, cannot at all be ascribed to God as the author of it. In order to the clearing of this we know that Gods not giving a heart to perceive may admit of a double acceptation.
1. As it implies only a bare denial of grace.
2. As it does also include a positive act of induration.
IV. How God can justly reprehend men for not hearing nor perceiving, when, upon His denial of a heart, there is a necessity lying upon them to do neither. Now, there can be no just reprehension but for sin, and nothing can be sin but that which is voluntary and free, and how can that be flee for a man to do or not to do which from necessity he cannot do? Application–
1. This doctrine speaks refutation to that opinion that states a sufficiency of grace in the bare proposal of things to be believed and practised, without a new powerful work of the Spirit upon the heart, that may determine and enable it to believe and accept of these things.
2. Is of exhortation; that in the enjoyment of the means of grace we should not terminate in the means, but look up to God, who alone is able to give a heart to improve them. (R. South, D. D.)
Mens blindness in spiritual things
Consider this complaint–
I. As uttered by Moses against the people of his charge. They had seen with their bodily eyes all the wonders that had been wrought for them. They understood not.
1. The true character of that dispensation.
2. The obligations which it entailed upon them.
II. As applicable to ourselves at this day.
1. By the great mass of nominal Christians the nature of the Gospel is very indistinctly seen.
2. The effects of it are very partially experienced. Address–
(1) Those who are altogether blind.
(2) Those who think they see.
(3) Those whose eyes God has opened. (C. Simeon, M. A.)
Fuente: Biblical Illustrator Edited by Joseph S. Exell
Verse 4. The Lord hath not given you a heart, c.] Some critics read this verse interrogatively: And hath not God given you a heart, c.? because they suppose that God could not reprehend them for the non-performance of a duty, when he had neither given them a mind to perceive the obligation of it, nor strength to perform it, had that obligation been known. Though this is strictly just, yet there is no need for the interrogation, as the words only imply that they had not such a heart, &c., not because God had not given them all the means of knowledge, and helps of his grace and Spirit, which were necessary but they had not made a faithful use of their advantages, and therefore they had not that wise, loving, and obedient heart which they otherwise might have had. If they had had such a heart, it would have been God’s gift, for he is the author of all good and that they had not such a heart was a proof that they had grieved his Spirit, and abused the grace which he had afforded them to produce that gracious change, the want of which is here deplored. Hence God himself is represented as grieved because they were unchanged and disobedient: “O that there were such a heart in them, that they would fear me, and keep all my commandments always, that it might be well with them and with their children for ever!” See De 5:29, and the note there.
Fuente: Adam Clarke’s Commentary and Critical Notes on the Bible
This verse comes in by way of correction or exception to the foregoing clause in this manner, I said indeed, Ye have seen, &c., Deu 29:2, and thine eyes have seen, &c., but I must recall my words, for in truth you have not seen them; in seeing you have not seen, and perceiving you have not perceived them: you have perceived and seen them with the eyes of your body, but not with your minds and hearts; you have not seen them to any purpose; you have not yet learned rightly to understand the word and works of God, so as to know them for your good, and to make a right use of them, and to comply with them; which he expresseth thus,
the Lord hath not given you, & c., not to excuse their wickedness, but partly to direct them what course to take, and to whom they must have recourse for the amending of their former errors, and for a good understanding and improvement of Gods works; and partly to aggravate their sin, and to intimate that although the hearing ear, and the seeing eye, and the understanding heart, be the workmanship of God, Pro 20:12, and the effects of his special grace, Deu 30:6; Jer 31:33; 32:39, &c., yet their want of this grace was their own fault, and the just punishment of their former sins; their present case being like theirs in Isaiahs time, who first shut their eyes and ears that they might not see and hear, and would not understand, and then by the tremendous, but righteous judgment of God, had their hearts made fat, and their eyes and ears closed, that they should not be able to see, and hear, and understand, as is manifest from the history of their carriage in the wilderness.
Fuente: English Annotations on the Holy Bible by Matthew Poole
Yet the Lord hath not given you an heart to perceive,…. They had some of them seen the above miracles with their bodily eyes, but had not discerned with the eyes of their understanding the power of God displayed in them, the goodness of God to them on whose behalf they were wrought, in order to obtain their deliverance, and the vengeance of God on the Egyptians for detaining them; so Jarchi interprets it of an heart to know the mercies of the Lord, and to cleave unto him:
and eyes to see, and ears to hear, unto this day; to see and observe the gracious dealings of God with them, and to hearken to his voice and obey it: so the understanding heart, the seeing eye, and hearing ear, in things spiritual, are from the Lord, are special gifts of his grace, which he bestows on some, and not on others; see Pr 20:12. The Targum of Jonathan is,
“the Word of the Lord did not give you an heart, &c.”
Fuente: John Gill’s Exposition of the Entire Bible
4. Yet the Lord hath not given. By reproaching them with their past stupidity, he stirs up their desire for a better understanding, as if he had said, that they had been too long indifferent to so many miracles, and therefore they should no longer delay to rouse themselves, etc., to give greater heed to God; not because they had been so senseless that His acts had altogether escaped their notice, but because all acknowledgment of them had immediately come to an end. For, just as the drunken man, or one suffering from lethargy, when he hears a cry, raises his head for a moment, and opens his eyes, and then relapses into a state of torpor, so the people had never seriously applied their minds to consider God’s works; and when they had been aroused by some miracle, had immediately sunk back into forgetfulness, wherefore there is good cause why Moses should seek to awaken them from their dulness and stupidity by various methods. But he does not merely condemn their senselessness, and blindness, and deafness, but declares that they were thus senseless, and blind, and deaf, because they were not inspired with grace from above to profit duly by so many lessons. Thence we learn that a clear and powerful understanding is a special gift of the Spirit, since men are ever blind even in the brightest light, until they have been enlightened by God. What Moses relates of the Israelites, is unquestionably common to us all. He declares, then, that they were not induced by the conspicuous glory of God to fear and worship Him, because He had not given them either mind, or eyes, or ears. It is true that at man’s creation He had naturally bestowed upon him a mind, and ears, and eyes; but Moses means, that whatever innate light we have, is either hidden or lost, so that, as far as regards the highest point of wisdom, all our senses lie useless. True that in nature’s corruption, the light still shineth in darkness, but it is light which is soon obscured; therefore, the entire understanding and faculty of reason, in which men glory and pique themselves, is nought but smoke and darkness. Well then may David ask that his eyes may be opened to behold the secrets of the Law. (259) (Psa 119:18.) Still this defect by no means frees us from blame; because (as we are told) none have wisdom, but those to whom it is given by the Father of lights; for we are ignorant (260) through our own fault. Besides, every one is sufficiently, and more than sufficiently convicted by his own conscience, that his ignorance is closely connected with pride and indolence, and is therefore voluntary. The word heart is not here used for the seat of the affections, but for the mind itself, which is the intellectual faculty of the soul.
(259) The references here are to Psa 19:13, and 18:24, (in the Fr. 14.) There may be allusion to 19:12, and 18:28. See Calvin’s comments on these passages.
(260) “Desipimus.” — Lat. “Ainsi hebetez, et desprouvez de sens.” — Fr.
Fuente: Calvin’s Complete Commentary
(4) Yet the Lord hath not given you an heart to perceive.To mark the mercies of the Holy One, blessed be He! and to cleave unto Him (Rashi). And so in Psa. 106:7, Our fathers understood not Thy wonders in Egypt; they remembered not the multitude of Thy mercies. (See also on Deu. 31:16, &c.)
Fuente: Ellicott’s Commentary for English Readers (Old and New Testaments)
4. A heart to perceive Their disobedience had rendered them incapable of perceiving their true relations to Jehovah their God. Comp. Isa 6:9; Mat 13:15, and Joh 12:37-40.
Fuente: Whedon’s Commentary on the Old and New Testaments
Ver. 4. Yet the Lord hath not given you an heart to perceive The meaning of this complaint is, not that God was wanting in his assistance, much less that he actually operated upon them to make them stupid and ungrateful; but that, through their own obstinacy and perverseness, the means which God had been pleased to make use of to reclaim them had always proved ineffectual; and all the great and marvellous things that he had done for them in Egypt and in the wilderness had not prevailed with them to repent. See parallel expressions, Mat 13:11; Mat 13:58. Maimonides therefore understands these words to import, that they had not disposed themselves to receive grace from God. God had done great things for them; but they rebelled and vexed his Holy Spirit, Isa 63:9-10. Le Clerc reads the words interrogatively: Hath not God given you an heart to perceive? As much as to say, that God had given them understanding, but they had not made a right use of it: or, as Jeremiah expresses it, ch. Deu 5:21 they have eyes, but see not; and ears, but hear not.
Fuente: Commentary on the Holy Bible by Thomas Coke
DISCOURSE: 221
MENS BLINDNESS IN SPIRITUAL THINGS
Deu 29:4. The Lord hath not given you an heart to perceive, and eyes to see, and ears to hear, unto this day.
THERE is nothing more comforting to a minister, than to see the word of the Lord running and glorified amongst the people of his charge. On the other hand, it is extremely painful to him to find that his labours have been in a great measure in vain. Yet such are the reflections which many a faithful minister is led to make, after an attentive survey of his ministrations. The Prophet Isaiah felt occasion to lament this, in his day; saying, Who hath believed our report? and to whom hath the arm of the Lord been revealed [Note: Isa 53:1.]? Our blessed Lord had but too much reason to make a similar complaint respecting the issue of his labours also [Note: Joh 12:37-38.]. Thus we find Moses, after the most indefatigable exertions for the space of forty years, constrained to adopt towards the Jewish people the language of my text; The Lord hath not given you an heart to perceive, and eyes to see, and ears to hear, unto this day. Would to God that there were not grounds, also, for similar complaint amongst you, my Brethren! But Christian fidelity compels me to declare, that to a most lamentable extent these words are verified in this place: and, of course, I must open to you the complaint,
I.
As uttered by Moses against the people of his charge
They had seen with their bodily eyes all the wonders that had been wrought for them in Egypt and the wilderness But they had no spiritual perception of them. They understood not,
1.
The true character of that dispensation
[They viewed the various occurrences as so many separate and detached events; and had no idea of their figurative import, no conception of them as shadows of good things to come. They saw not that more wonderful redemption which was typically exhibited to their view. The paschal lamb led them not to the contemplation of their Messiah, and of the deliverance which he should effect through the shedding, and the sprinkling, of his most precious blood. Their subsistence by manna, and by water from the rock, served not to shew them what it was to live by faith on the Son of God, or to experience in their souls the refreshing communications of the Spirit of God. And though they had already seen a portion given to three of their tribes, yet did they not contemplate the issue of a believers warfare in the possession of the heavenly Canaan. As for the Law that had been given them, whether the moral or ceremonial law, they knew not the true intent of either: they had no idea of the one as shutting them up to the only possible way of salvation through faith in their Messiah, or of the other as shadowing forth that Messiah in all his offices. In fact, they had no spiritual discernment of any of these things, but were uninstructed and unedified by all that they had seen and heard [Note: All these hints admit of profitable enlargement.].]
2.
The obligations which it entailed upon them
[The very first and most obvious effect of all these wonders should have been, to bring them to the knowledge of Jehovah as the only true God, and to make them his faithful worshippers and adherents to the latest hour of their lives. Yet, behold! they had not been delivered from Egypt three months, before they made and worshipped the golden calf: yea, and all the way through the wilderness they took up the tabernacle of Moloch, and the star of their god Remphan, figures which they made as objects of their worship [Note: Act 7:41-43.], in preference to Jehovah, whom thus they provoked to jealousy, till he was constrained to pour forth his wrath upon them to their destruction. It might well be expected, too, that they would yield up themselves to God in a willing obedience to his Law, and live altogether devoted to his service. But they were a rebellious and stiff-necked people, from first to last. The mercies of God could not win them to obedience, nor his judgments deter them from disobedience. The present and future gratification of their senses was all that they desired: and, if only they had their enjoyments, they cared not whether God were glorified or not.
We say not that this was the character of all that people: but when we recollect, that of that whole nation two only, of all the men that came out of Egypt, were suffered to enter into Canaan, we cannot but fear that the exceptions were very few, and the great mass of the people were of the very description represented in our text.]
Humiliating as this complaint is, we must also consider it,
II.
As applicable to ourselves at this day
Infinitely greater have our advantages been than those enjoyed by the Jewish people. They had the shadow only, but we the substance. The whole of redemption has been set before us: yet we, for the most part, have but a very faint and inadequate conception of it. By the great mass of nominal Christians,
1.
The nature of the Gospel is very indistinctly seen
[A mere general notion of salvation by Christ may be entertained: but of the grace of the Gospel, its freeness, its fulness, its suitableness, how little is seen! and how far are we from comprehending the length and breadth, and depth and height of the love of Christ contained in it! How few amongst us have any just views of the glory of God in the face of Jesus Christ, and of all the divine perfections, as united, and harmonizing, and glorified, in this stupendous mystery! The various offices of the sacred Three, all sustained and executed for us, how little of them is known! Indeed, indeed, the generality of those who call themselves Christians are as dark with respect to the excellency and glory of the Gospel, as the Jews themselves were of the scope and character of their Law.]
2.
The effects of it are very partially experienced
[What might we expect from those who have been redeemed by the blood of Gods only dear Son, and renewed in their souls by the operation of his blessed Spirit? Should we not be full of admiring and adoring thoughts of God? Should we not be wrapt, even to the third heaven, in love to Christ? Should we not be yielding up both our bodies and our souls to God, as living sacrifices, holy and acceptable to him as our reasonable service? And to what an extent should we not be sanctified, in all our tempers, dispositions, and actions, if we were duly influenced by the principles of the Gospel! In a word, if we felt as we ought, methinks our every feeling would be love, and our every word be praise.
But look at the great majority of those to whom the Gospel has been ministered, and say whether any measure of these effects be visible upon them? Alas! it is as true of us as of the Jews, that God has not given us an heart to perceive, or eyes to see, or ears to hear, unto this day.]
Let me then address myself,
1.
To those who are altogether blind
[Perhaps you will be disposed to say, If God has not given me this discernment, the fault is not mine. But this is a fetal error: for the fault is altogether yours. Had you sought of God the illuminating influences of his Spirit, he would have opened your blind eyes, and unstopped your deaf ears, and renewed you in the spirit of your mind: no earthly parent would so readily bestow bread on his famished child, as God would have given to you his Holy Spirit in answer to your prayers. If, then, you perish for lack of knowledge, it must be ascribed to your own obstinate neglect of those means which God has appointed for the attainment of spiritual instruction.]
2.
To those who think they see
[Multitudes, like the Pharisees of old, are ready to ask with confidence, Are we blind also? To these we reply, Let your lives declare: let the fruit determine the quality of the tree. Yes, brethren, if you were indeed blind, you would comparatively have no sin: but now ye say, We see; therefore your sin remaineth [Note: Joh 9:40-41.]. Your conceit and self-sufficiency render your blindness tenfold more odious, more incurable, and more fetal ]
3.
To those whose eyes God has opened
[Verily, the mercy vouchsafed to you is beyond measure or conception great. You doubtless feel what a blessing the gift of reason is, which so elevates you above the beasts: but fax richer is the gift of spiritual discernment, which enables you to see the things of the Spirit, and elevates you above your fellow-men, even above the wisest and greatest of the human race. Compare the Apostles with the philosophers of Greece and Rome; mark, not merely their intellectual powers, but their moral habits and their spiritual attainments ; then will you have some conception of the mercies vouchsafed to you, and will appreciate, in some poor measure, the obligations conferred upon you.]
Fuente: Charles Simeon’s Horae Homileticae (Old and New Testaments)
We shall do well, Reader, to ask our hearts whether this be our case. Oh! gracious GOD, above all blessings give me JESUS and his HOLY SPIRIT, that I may perceive what my mercies are, and enjoy hits, and all things in him. “From all blindness, hardness of heart, and ignorance of thy word and commandment, good LORD deliver me!”
Fuente: Hawker’s Poor Man’s Commentary (Old and New Testaments)
Deu 29:4 Yet the LORD hath not given you an heart to perceive, and eyes to see, and ears to hear, unto this day.
Ver. 4. Yet the Lord hath not given you. ] Nor is he bound to do, “but on whom he will he showeth mercy, and whom he will he hardeneth,” i.e., he softeneth not. Till when, a man stands in the midst of means, as a stake in the midst of streams, unmoveable: yea, the more God forbids a sin, the more he bids for it. Rom 7:8 See Trapp on “ Mat 13:11 “ See Trapp on “ Mat 13:13 “ See Trapp on “ Mat 13:14 “
Fuente: John Trapp’s Complete Commentary (Old and New Testaments)
Deu 2:30, Pro 20:12, Isa 6:9, Isa 6:10, Isa 63:17, Eze 36:26, Mat 13:11-15, Joh 8:43, Joh 12:38-40, Act 28:26, Act 28:27, Rom 11:7-10, 2Co 3:15, Eph 4:18, 2Th 2:10-12, 2Ti 2:25, Jam 1:13-17
Reciprocal: 2Ch 20:33 – had not Psa 106:7 – Our Psa 141:4 – Incline not Isa 29:18 – the deaf Jer 5:21 – O foolish Jer 6:10 – their ear Eze 12:2 – which Dan 9:13 – that we Mat 13:13 – General Mar 4:12 – That seeing Mar 8:18 – see Luk 8:10 – that seeing Joh 3:3 – he cannot Joh 12:40 – that they Rom 11:8 – eyes 2Ti 3:7 – learning
Fuente: The Treasury of Scripture Knowledge
Deu 29:4. The Lord hath not given you a heart to perceive Which he would have done had you sincerely and earnestly desired and asked it of him; and you are inexcusable that you have not, considering his signal mercies on the one hand, and awful judgments on the other, of which you have had such great experience, and which called loudly upon you to humble yourselves before him in true repentance, and seek his grace to enable you to understand and improve by such extraordinary dispensations and wonderful works. For he does not speak thus to excuse their wickedness, but to direct them to whom they must have recourse for a good understanding of Gods works; and to intimate that although the hearing ear, and the seeing eye, be the workmanship of God, yet their want of these was their own fault, and the just punishment of their former sins; their present case being like theirs in Isaiahs time, who first shut their own eyes and ears that they might not see and hear, and would not understand, and then, by the righteous judgment of God, had their eyes and ears closed that they should not see, and hear, and understand. Gods readiness to do us good in other things, is a plain evidence, that if we have not grace, that best of gifts, it is our own fault and not his: he would have gathered us, and we would not.
Fuente: Joseph Bensons Commentary on the Old and New Testaments
29:4 Yet the LORD hath not {d} given you an heart to perceive, and eyes to see, and ears to hear, unto this day.
(d) He shows that it is not in man’s power to understand the mysteries of God if it is not given to him from above.