The Fallible · Synthetic · Study Bible
The Command to Leave Horeb
Deuteronomy 1:1–8 — The Command to Leave Horeb. Each verse below carries the full apparatus: the Berean Standard Bible, the vocalized original (tap any word), and a parsed breakdown of every term transcribed from the interlinear. Synthesized commentary, canonical threads, and the reading of Christ gather at the end, over the whole unit.
1These are the words that Moses spoke to all Israel in the wilderness east of the Jordan—in the Arabah opposite Suph—between Paran and Tophel, Laban, Hazeroth, and Dizahab.
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Hebrew — tap a word ↓
’êl·leh had·də·ḇā·rîm ’ă·šer mō·šeh dib·ber ’el- kāl- yiś·rā·’êl bam·miḏ·bār bə·‘ê·ḇer hay·yar·dên bā·‘ă·rā·ḇāh mō·wl sūp̄ bên- pā·rān ū·ḇên- tō·p̄el wə·lā·ḇān wa·ḥă·ṣê·rōṯ wə·ḏî zā·hāḇ
Literal — word-for-word from the original
“These the-words that spoke Moses to all-Israel, on-the-other-side-of the-Jordan, in-the-wilderness, in-the-Arabah, opposite Suph, between Paran and-between Tophel, and-Laban, and-Hazeroth, and-Dizahab.”
Where the English smooths the original
The proper names which follow seem to belong to places where "words" of remarkable importance were spoken. They are by the Jewish commentators referred to the spots which witnessed the more special sins of the people, and the mention of them here is construed as a pregnant rebuke. The Book of Deuteronomy is known among the Jews as "the book of reproofs."
to furnish a recapitulation of the leading branches of their faith and duty was among the last public services which Moses rendered to Israel.JFB on why Moses gives this address: the aging mediator's last gift to a generation born in the desert.
The subscription to Numbers ( Numbers 36:13 ) indicates that what precedes is occupied chiefly with what God spake to Moses; the inscription here intimates that what follows is what Moses spake to the people. This is the characteristic of Deuteronomy.
between Paran … and Di-zahab ] All these places are uncertain.Cambridge's candid verdict on the place-list: the geography of the title simply cannot be fixed — the honest floor under all the harmonizing attempts.
2It is an eleven-day journey from Horeb to Kadesh-barnea by way of Mount Seir.
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Hebrew — tap a word ↓
’a·ḥaḏ ‘ā·śār yō·wm mê·ḥō·rêḇ ‘aḏ qā·ḏêš bar·nê·a‘ de·reḵ har- śê·‘îr
Literal — word-for-word from the original
“Eleven day [is] from-Horeb by-way-of mount-Seir unto Kadesh-barnea.”
Where the English smooths the original
This is added, to show that the reason why the Israelites in so many years were advanced no farther from Horeb than to these plains, was not the distance of the places, but because of their rebellions.
It is not easy to say for what reason these words are expressed, unless it be to show in how short a time the Israelites might have been in the land of Canaan, in a few days' journey from Horeb, had it not been for their murmurings and unbelief, for which they were turned into the wilderness again
This was to remind them that their own bad conduct had occasioned their tedious wanderings; that they might the more readily understand the advantages of obedience.Henry frames the eleven-day reckoning pastorally: the lost years are a teaching tool, not merely an indictment.
3In the fortieth year, on the first day of the eleventh month, Moses proclaimed to the Israelites all that the LORD had commanded him concerning them.
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Hebrew — tap a word ↓
way·hî bə·’ar·bā·‘îm šā·nāh bə·’e·ḥāḏ la·ḥō·ḏeš bə·‘aš·tê- ‘ā·śār ḥō·ḏeš mō·šeh dib·ber ’el- bə·nê yiś·rā·’êl kə·ḵōl ’ă·šer Yah·weh ṣiw·wāh ’ō·ṯōw ’ă·lê·hem
Literal — word-for-word from the original
“And-it-came-to-pass, in-the-fortieth year, in-the-eleventh month, on-the-first of-the-month, Moses spoke to the-sons-of Israel according-to-all that YHWH commanded him unto-them.”
Where the English smooths the original
The “and” is the real beginning of Deuteronomy, and connects it with the previous books.
Which shows not only that what he now delivered was in substance the same with what had formerly been commanded, but that God now commanded him to repeat it. He gave this rehearsal and exhortation by divine direction: God appointed him to leave this legacy to the church.
towards the end of his life, after the conclusion of the divine lawgiving; so that he was able to speak "according to all that Jehovah had given him in commandment unto them"
4This was after he had defeated Sihon king of the Amorites, who lived in Heshbon, and then at Edrei had defeated Og king of Bashan, who lived in Ashtaroth.
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Hebrew — tap a word ↓
’a·ḥă·rê hak·kō·ṯōw ’êṯ sî·ḥōn me·leḵ hā·’ĕ·mō·rî ’ă·šer yō·wō·šêḇ bə·ḥeš·bō·wn wə·’êṯ bə·’eḏ·re·‘î ‘ō·wḡ me·leḵ hab·bā·šān ’ă·šer- yō·wō·šêḇ bə·‘aš·tā·rōṯ
Literal — word-for-word from the original
“After his-smiting Sihon king-of the-Amorites, who dwelt in-Heshbon, and Og king-of Bashan, who dwelt in-Ashtaroth, in-Edrei.”
Where the English smooths the original
By these examples of God's favour, their minds are prepared to receive the law.Geneva's marginal gloss (d) on why the victories over Sihon and Og are rehearsed before the law.
In Edrei - These words should, to render the sense clear, come next after "slain." The battle in which Sihon and Og were defeated took place at Edrei.
Ashtaroth—the royal residence of Og, so called from Astarte ("the moon"), the tutelary goddess of the Syrians. Og was slain at Edrei
5On the east side of the Jordan in the land of Moab, Moses began to explain this law, saying:
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Hebrew — tap a word ↓
bə·‘ê·ḇer hay·yar·dên bə·’e·reṣ mō·w·’āḇ mō·šeh hō·w·’îl bê·’êr ’eṯ- haz·zōṯ hat·tō·w·rāh lê·mōr
Literal — word-for-word from the original
“On-the-other-side-of the-Jordan, in-the-land-of Moab, Moses undertook to-make-plain this law, saying:”
Where the English smooths the original
never to engrave, or stamp, not even here nor in Deuteronomy 27:8 and Habakkuk 2:2 . Here it signifies "to expound this law clearly," although the exposition was connected with an earnest admonition to preserve and obey it.K&D on bâʼar — the rare verb (3 OT occurrences) the Verifier flags as the unit's strongest verbal thread.
It would seem, then, that at this period Moses began to throw the discourses and laws that he had delivered into a permanent form, arranging and writing them
The Heb. bç’çr , properly to dig or hew , is used of writing on stone ( Deuteronomy 27:8 ), or tablets ( Habakkuk 2:2 ). Only here metaphorically, to explain or expound , as in post-Bibl. Heb., or to engrave in the mind of the people.Cambridge on the rare verb the Verifier flags as the unit's strongest link: its three occurrences move from cutting stone (Deut 27:8; Hab 2:2) to cutting truth into the mind.
6The LORD our God said to us at Horeb: “You have stayed at this mountain long enough.
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Hebrew — tap a word ↓
Yah·weh ’ĕ·lō·hê·nū dib·ber ’ê·lê·nū bə·ḥō·rêḇ lê·mōr še·ḇeṯ haz·zeh bā·hār raḇ- lā·ḵem
Literal — word-for-word from the original
“YHWH our-God spoke to-us at-Horeb, saying: enough for-you the-dwelling at this mountain.”
Where the English smooths the original
It is well for persons that they are not to stay long under the law, and the terrors of it, but are directed to Mount Zion; Hebrews 12:18 .Gill reads the departure from Horeb typologically: law and terror give way to grace (the Zion of Heb 12).
this divine name is placed emphatically at the beginning of the sentence, as the proper start and motive of the whole discourseCambridge on the syntax: against the usual order, "Jehovah our God" stands first — the covenant Name is the motive the whole book flows from.
the words, "ye have dwelt long enough at this mountain," imply that the purpose for which Israel was taken to Horeb had been answered, i.e., that they had been furnished with the laws and ordinances requisite for the fulfilment of the covenant, and could now remove to Canaan
7Resume your journey and go to the hill country of the Amorites; go to all the neighboring peoples in the Arabah, in the hill country, in the foothills, in the Negev, and along the seacoast to the land of the Canaanites and to Lebanon, as far as the great River Euphrates.
Berean Standard Bible · CC0
Hebrew — tap a word ↓
pə·nū ū·sə·‘ū lā·ḵem ū·ḇō·’ū har hā·’ĕ·mō·rî wə·’el- kāl- šə·ḵê·nāw bā·‘ă·rā·ḇāh ḇā·hār ū·ḇaš·šə·p̄ê·lāh ū·ḇan·ne·ḡeḇ hay·yām ū·ḇə·ḥō·wp̄ ’e·reṣ hak·kə·na·‘ă·nî wə·hal·lə·ḇā·nō·wn ‘aḏ- hag·gā·ḏōl han·nā·hār nə·har- pə·rāṯ
Literal — word-for-word from the original
“Turn and-set-out for-yourselves, and-come to-the-hill-country-of the-Amorite and-to all its-neighbors, in-the-Arabah, in-the-hill-country, and-in-the-lowland, and-in-the-Negev, and-by-the-seacoast, [to] the-land-of the-Canaanite, and-the-Lebanon, as-far-as the-great river, the-river Euphrates.”
Where the English smooths the original
Behold, I have set the land before you — Hebrew, before your faces; it is open to your view, and to your possession; there is no impediment in your way. And thus is the heavenly Canaan, and the kingdom of grace which leads to it, laid open to the view and enjoyment of all believers.Benson's note straddles vv. 7–8, reading the open land as a figure of the gospel inheritance.
as far as the great river, the river Euphrates , the ideal but never the actual limit of Israel’s territoryCambridge marks the Euphrates as the promise's ideal bound, not its realized one — the land is described at its sworn span, never its held one.
The mount of the Amorites is the mountainous country inhabited by this tribe, the leading feature in the land of Canaan, and is synonymous with the "land of the Canaanites" which follows; the Amorites being mentioned instar omnium as being the most powerful of all the tribes in Canaan
8See, I have placed the land before you. Enter and possess the land that the LORD swore He would give to your fathers Abraham, Isaac, and Jacob, and to their descendants after them.”
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Hebrew — tap a word ↓
rə·’êh nā·ṯat·tî hā·’ā·reṣ lip̄·nê·ḵem ’eṯ- bō·’ū ū·rə·šū ’eṯ- hā·’ā·reṣ ’ă·šer Yah·weh niš·ba‘ lā·ṯêṯ lā·hem la·’ă·ḇō·ṯê·ḵem lə·’aḇ·rā·hām lə·yiṣ·ḥāq ū·lə·ya·‘ă·qōḇ ū·lə·zar·‘ām ’a·ḥă·rê·hem
Literal — word-for-word from the original
“See, I-have-given the-land before-you; enter and-possess the-land that YHWH swore to-your-fathers, to-Abraham, to-Isaac, and-to-Jacob, to-give to-them and-to-their-seed after-them.”
Where the English smooths the original
Note that the land is promised to Abraham, and to Isaac, and to Jacob, not only to their seed. The promise is not forgotten, though the three patriarchs are in another world. (Comp. Acts 7:5 , and Hebrews 11:16Ellicott draws the line the NT draws: a promise outliving the patriarchs' deaths points beyond earthly Canaan.
Before you, Heb. before your faces ; it is open to your view, and to your possession; there is no impediment in the way.
At Horeb, therefore, they received the charter of their inheritance, and might have gone on at once to take possession of the land. The delay that had occurred had arisen solely from their own waywardness and perversity, not from anything on the part of God.
The verse-by-verse work is done. What follows gathers the whole unit. All three layers below are machine-generated (⚙). Weigh them; they have no authority.
AI synthesis — woven from the public-domain voices above and the original text; generated and fallible.
The book is headed not “the laws” but the words (הַדְּבָרִים, haddᵉḇārîm) — its Hebrew name. The Pulpit Commentary draws the contrast precisely: the subscription to Numbers shows that book “occupied chiefly with what God spake to Moses; the inscription here intimates that what follows is what Moses spake to the people.” The geography is told from Canaan looking back — בְּעֵבֶר הַיַּרְדֵּן is “beyond Jordan,” the standing name (so Barnes, Cambridge, K&D) for the eastern side, which only a writer in the land would use. And the place-list is hard: bare Suph, not yam-sûp̄ — Benson, JFB and Barnes all insist there is no word “sea” in the text and Moses was now far from the Red Sea. The Jewish tradition Barnes records turns the whole roll into rebuke: these are “the spots which witnessed the more special sins of the people… the Book of Deuteronomy is known among the Jews as ‘the book of reproofs.’” The bare arithmetic of v. 2 seals it — eleven days from Horeb to the border. Poole and Benson agree the verse exists only “to show… that the reason why the Israelites in so many years were advanced no farther… was not the great distance of the places… but because of their rebellions.”
Verse 3 opens with וַיְהִי — Ellicott's “real beginning of Deuteronomy,” the narrative and that ties the book to the four before it. The date is the last possible one: the fortieth year, eleventh month, first day — the whole exodus generation now dead, Moses weeks from his own death. He speaks כְּכֹל אֲשֶׁר צִוָּה יְהוָה, “according to all the LORD commanded”; Benson reads this as proof “not only that what he now delivered was in substance the same with what had formerly been commanded, but that God now commanded him to repeat it.” Verse 4 anchors the moment in fresh victory: הַכֹּתוֹ, “his smiting” of Sihon and Og. K&D see the theology — “by giving a victory over these mighty kings, the Lord had begun to fulfil His promises… and had thereby laid Israel under the obligation to love, gratitude, and obedience.” The Geneva margin says it plainest: “By these examples of God's favour, their minds are prepared to receive the law.”
Here the unit turns on a single rare verb. Moses הוֹאִיל — not merely “began” but, per K&D and Cambridge, “undertook, set himself, resolved” — to בֵּאֵר this law. bāʼēr occurs only three times in the whole Old Testament (here, Deut 27:8, Hab 2:2), each time touching the plain, deep-cut setting-forth of God's word; its root is “to dig.” K&D fix the sense: “to expound this law clearly,” the exposition bound to “an earnest admonition to preserve and obey it.” Crucially this is exposition, not addition — “Substantially there is throughout but one law” (Schultz, in K&D). Deuteronomy is the Sinai tôrāh made unmistakable to a generation that had not stood at the mountain. ⚙ The reading that follows is the tool's own, offered to be tested.
The LORD's own word frames the charge, and it opens with the covenant Name set first: יְהוָה אֱלֹהֵינוּ, “Jehovah, our God” — what Cambridge calls the watchword of the book, in whose repetition “we seem to touch the heart of the writers.” The command is blunt: רַב־לָכֶם, “enough for you” of dwelling (yāšaḇ, settled rest) at this mountain. Gill hears grace in the move: God's people “are not to stay long under the law, and the terrors of it, but are directed to Mount Zion (Heb 12:18).” Then two clipped imperatives — פְּנוּ וּסְעוּ, “turn! pull up stakes!” — and the land unrolled to its sworn extent, the great river, the Euphrates, the ideal Abrahamic bound (Gen 15:18; so Cambridge, against K&D's “rhetorical fullness”). Verse 8 lands the whole unit on grace: רְאֵה נָתַתִּי — “See, I have given the land” — a perfect, the gift complete in God's purpose before a foot enters; nātan lipnê, handed over to their free disposal (K&D, Poole). And it rests on oath: God “sevened Himself” to Abraham, Isaac, and Jacob. Ellicott notes the patriarchs themselves are named, “though the three… are in another world” — a promise outliving their graves (Acts 7:5; Heb 11:16).
⚙ Read as one movement, Deuteronomy 1:1–8 is the architecture of every renewed start God's people make. It begins on the wrong bank, with a roll of place-names the rabbis heard as a list of failures, and a flat eleven-day reckoning that measures not distance but unbelief — the gap between how short the road was and how long the wandering took. Yet the indictment is not the last word. Before the law is expounded, two giants lie dead (v. 4) and the covenant Name is spoken first (v. 6): the ground of the charge is what God has already done. The hinge is the rare verb bāʼēr (v. 5) — to dig the law deep, to make it so plain it cannot be misread by the children who never stood at Horeb. And the goal is not a task but a gift: “I have given the land” (v. 8, a perfect tense), sealed by an oath God swore on Himself. The pattern is law expounded resting on grace already given, and grace given resting on an oath already sworn. Israel has only to stop sitting still — raḇ-lāḵem, “enough of this mountain” — and walk into what is theirs. The deepest fallibility this unit warns against is not getting the geography wrong (the commentators cheerfully admit they cannot locate Suph or Dizahab); it is standing in plain sight of a sworn promise and refusing, as the fathers did, to cross.
The land was a gift before it was a battle, and an oath before it was a gift; unbelief alone makes eleven days into forty years. (⚙ a fallible reading, not Scripture)
AI-generated connections. Each carries a verification badge with a recorded basis; contested links are flagged.
The word for what Moses does to the law in v. 5 — בֵּאֵר (bāʼēr, H874, “make plain / engrave deep”) — appears in only three verses of the entire Hebrew Bible. The other two are the command to write the law “very plainly” on plastered stones at Ebal (Deut 27:8) and the LORD's charge to Habakkuk to “write the vision… make it plain on tablets” (Hab 2:2). All three concern God's word set down so clearly it cannot be mistaken. The rarity of the shared lexeme is what raises this from theme to verbal link.
Deuteronomy 27:8 · Habakkuk 2:2
basis: Verifier: rare shared lexeme H874 bâʼar (occurs in only 3 verses in the whole OT); Deut 1:5↔27:8 also share H8451 tôwrâh and H2063 zôʼth
Verse 4's defeat of Og king of Bashan, who dwelt at Ashtaroth, slain at Edrei, is recorded with the same cluster of names in the conquest accounts of Joshua and in Numbers 21:33. The shared proper nouns — אֶדְרֶעִי (Edrei, H154), עַשְׁתָּרֹת (Ashtaroth, H6252), בָּשָׁן (Bashan, H1316), עוֹג (Og, H5747) — are rare enough (Edrei in 8 verses, Ashtaroth in 12, Og in 22) that the verbal link is firm: these texts narrate the very same victory the unit recites as the down-payment on the promise.
Numbers 21:33 · Joshua 12:4 · Joshua 13:12 · Joshua 13:31 · Deuteronomy 3:1
basis: Verifier: shared rare lexemes H154 ʼedreʻîy (8 vv), H6252 ʻAshtârôwth (12 vv), H5747 ʻÔwg (22 vv), H1316 Bâshân (53 vv)
The place-names of v. 1, far from a neutral itinerary, gather the memory of Israel's failures. חֲצֵרֹת (Hazeroth, H2698) appears in only five verses — among them Numbers 11:35 and 12:16, the camp where Miriam and Aaron rebelled and from which Israel entered the wilderness of פָּארָן (Paran, H6290, in 10 verses), where the older generation was condemned (Num 13–14). The shared rare lexemes make the verbal connection certain; the unit's geography is, as Barnes' Jewish sources held, “a pregnant rebuke.”
Numbers 11:35 · Numbers 12:16 · Numbers 33:17
basis: Verifier: shared rare lexemes H2698 Chătsêrôwth (5 vv), H6290 Pâʼrân (10 vv); H4057 midbâr and H5265 nâçaʻ recur with the station names
The sweep of v. 7 to נְהַר־פְּרָת (the river Euphrates, H6578) with Lebanon (H3844) traces the same ideal frontier described in Joshua 1:4, where the LORD commissions Joshua to the land “to the great river, the river Euphrates… as far as the great sea.” Cambridge calls the Euphrates here “the ideal but never the actual limit of Israel’s territory,” and lists Joshua 1:4 with this verse among the parallel surveys of the land. The link is a shared boundary-formula (Perath, Lebanon, nāhār, the great sea, “as far as”), not a quotation — so it is tiered structural, not verbal; all of it recalls the grant first sworn to Abraham in Genesis 15:18.
Joshua 1:4 · Genesis 15:18 · Deuteronomy 11:24
basis: Verifier (Deut 1:7↔Joshua 1:4): shared H6578 Pᵉrâth (18 vv), H3844 Lᵉbânôwn (64 vv), H5104 nâhâr (108 vv), H3220 yâm (339 vv) + H1419 gâdôwl, H5704 ʻad — a recurring boundary-formula, no quotation claimed, hence structural not verbal
Verse 1's setting beyond the Jordan, opposite the wilderness reappears in the land-survey of Joshua 9:1, which describes the kings “beyond the Jordan” who heard of Israel's advance. The Verifier records the shared terms מוֹל (mûl, H4136, “opposite,” in 34 vv), עֵבֶר (‘êber, H5676), and יַרְדֵּן (Yardên, H3383). These are common geographic words rather than a rare quotation, so the link is structural: the same theatre of the conquest, seen from Moses' speech and from the conquest narrative that fulfils it.
Joshua 9:1 · Joshua 9:10
basis: Verifier: shared H4136 mûwl (34 vv), H5676 ʻêber (83 vv), H3383 Yardên (164 vv) — frequent geographic terms, shared setting not quotation, hence structural
The LORD's word in v. 6, רַב־לָכֶם (raḇ-lāḵem, “enough for you”) at this mountain, is a fixed Deuteronomic idiom that recurs at two later turns of the same speech: רַב־לָכֶם again in Deut 2:3 (“you have circled this mountain long enough; turn northward”) and רַב־לָךְ in Deut 3:26 (the LORD's “enough! speak to Me no more of this matter” when Moses begs to cross). Cambridge marks it: “the same idiom in Deuteronomy 2:3, Deuteronomy 3:26.” The shared words (rab, “much/enough,” and the demonstrative zeh, “this”) are common, so the connection is one of repeated formula, not rare quotation — tiered structural. The pattern is striking: the same word that breaks camp from Horeb (1:6) and from Seir (2:3) finally falls on Moses himself (3:26), the leader the formula will not carry over.
Deuteronomy 2:3 · Deuteronomy 3:26
basis: Verifier (Deut 1:6↔2:3): shared H7227 rab (437 vv) + H2022 har, H2088 zeh; (Deut 1:6↔3:26): shared H7227 rab + H2088 zeh. Common lexemes, a recurring rebuke-formula not a quotation — hence structural, and the idiom is attested as deuteronomic by Cambridge.
Verse 8 grounds the gift in the LORD's oath to Abraham, Isaac, and Jacob “to give to them and to their seed.” Ellicott (on this verse) and the unit's own ⚙ reading follow the line the New Testament draws: Stephen testifies that God “gave him no inheritance in it” (Acts 7:5), and Hebrews says the patriarchs died “not having received the promises… they desired a better country, that is, a heavenly one” (Heb 11:13–16). Because this is a Greek-New-Testament reading of a Hebrew text, no shared Strong's lexeme exists; the link is typological — the earthly land sworn to the fathers prefigures the heavenly inheritance secured in Christ. Flagged where the connection rests on figural reading rather than citation.
Acts 7:5 · Hebrews 11:13-16 · Genesis 22:16
basis: Cross-Testament (Greek↔Hebrew): no shared Strong's possible; figural reading drawn by Ellicott and the NT itself (Acts 7:5; Heb 11:16). Ancient/widely-held in the church, but marked typological, not verbal.
AI-generated reading; weigh it against the text.
⚙ The unit's hinge is that Moses does not give a new law but expounds (bāʼēr) the one already given — “substantially there is throughout but one law” (Schultz). The Gospels press this further: the same Lord who gave the law at Horeb “makes it plain” on another mountain — “You have heard that it was said… but I say to you” (Matt 5) — and declares He came “not to abolish the Law… but to fulfil” it (Matt 5:17). Where Moses dug the law deep into stone and memory, Christ writes it on the heart (Jer 31:33; Heb 8:10). The trajectory from bāʼēr to the Sermon on the Mount is the canon's own.
Matthew 5:17 · Hebrews 8:10 · Jeremiah 31:33
⚙ Moses, “the servant of the LORD,” expounds the law in the plains of Moab but may not cross the Jordan (Deut 34); the task of leading Israel into the inheritance falls to Joshua — יְהוֹשֻׁעַ, “the LORD saves,” written in Greek as Ἰησοῦς, Jesus (Acts 7:45; Heb 4:8). The early church read this seam — law brought to the brink, salvation-named leader carrying the people over — as a figure of the gospel: the law could bring Israel to the land's edge but not in; only “Jesus” leads into the true rest (Heb 4:8–9). This unit stands precisely at that brink, weeks before Moses' death.
Hebrews 4:8-9 · Acts 7:45 · Deuteronomy 34:4-5
⚙ Gill, on v. 6, hears in the command to leave Horeb a figure that runs to the heart of the gospel: God's people “are not to stay long under the law, and the terrors of it, but are directed to Mount Zion (Heb 12:18).” Hebrews makes the same two mountains the very shape of redemption — “you have not come to a mountain that may be touched and that burned with fire… but you have come to Mount Zion… and to Jesus the mediator of a new covenant” (Heb 12:18–24). The order “enough of this mountain; arise, go” traces the believer's path from the law that condemns to the grace that receives.
Hebrews 12:18-24
The biblical text is the Berean Standard Bible (BSB), public domain (CC0). Hebrew/Greek text, transliteration, morphology and Strong’s are transcribed from the Berean interlinear (CC0) + Strong’s lexicons (PD); the literal renderings, divergence notes, word notes and all synthesis are this tool’s own work (⚙) — fallible; verify them.
Named voices, quoted verbatim from public-domain works:
⚙ Honesty notes for this unit. (1) The commentators uniformly confess that the geography of v. 1 cannot be pinned down: Suph, Tophel, Laban, and Dizahab are unidentified or disputed (Cambridge: “all these places are uncertain”), and even Paran and Hazeroth are debated. Our notes follow the majority that bare סוּף is not “Red Sea” — there is no word “sea” in the Hebrew — while recording that the LXX, Onkelos, and K&D nonetheless read it as a contraction of yam-sûp̄. (2) The Jewish-rebuke reading of the place-names (the “book of reproofs”) is reported by Barnes and Ellicott as tradition, attractive and ancient but not provable from the text; we mark it as such. (3) The rare-verb thread on bāʼēr (v. 5) is the unit's strongest verbal link and was confirmed by re-running the Verifier on Deut 1:5↔27:8 and 1:5↔Hab 2:2; K&D's gloss (“to expound clearly,” never “engrave”) is followed, though the root's digging/cutting sense is noted. (4) The Euphrates, Joshua-survey, and raḇ-lāḵem links are tiered structural, not verbal: their shared words (river, Lebanon, Jordan, “opposite”; rab, zeh) are common, and the connection is one of shared boundary-pattern or recurring deuteronomic formula, not a quotation — even though the Verifier confirms the shared lexemes. (5) The Christ readings are explicitly ⚙ synthesis: the Joshua/Jesus and Sinai/Zion typologies are ancient and widely held (Hebrews itself draws them), but they are figural readings, offered to be weighed against Scripture, never as the plain sense of Deuteronomy 1. (6) Cross-Testament links (e.g. the oath-to-the-fathers thread) carry no shared Strong's number, since Greek and Hebrew lexemes cannot match; those are tiered typological by rule, not verbal.
✦ = human, public-domain source, quoted and named. ⚙ = machine synthesis, to be verified. Flagged cross-references are left visible on purpose — the verifier working in the open. “Search the Scriptures daily, whether those things were so.” (Acts 17:11)