The Fallible · Synthetic · Study Bible
The Promise of Restoration
Deuteronomy 30:1–10 — The Promise of Restoration. 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.
1“When all these things come upon you—the blessings and curses I have set before you—and you call them to mind in all the nations to which the LORD your God has banished you,
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Hebrew — tap a word ↓
wə·hā·yāh ḵî- kāl- hā·’êl·leh had·də·ḇā·rîm yā·ḇō·’ū ‘ā·le·ḵā hab·bə·rā·ḵāh wə·haq·qə·lā·lāh ’ă·šer nā·ṯat·tî lə·p̄ā·ne·ḵā wa·hă·šê·ḇō·ṯā ’el- lə·ḇā·ḇe·ḵā bə·ḵāl hag·gō·w·yim ’ă·šer Yah·weh ’ĕ·lō·he·ḵā šām·māh hid·dî·ḥă·ḵā
Literal — word-for-word from the original
“And-it-shall-come-to-pass, when all these the-words shall-come upon-you — the-blessing and-the-curse which I-have-set before-your-face — and-you-bring-[them]-back unto your-heart, in all the-nations where YHWH your-God has-driven-you, there —”
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The curse is still upon them, and therefore this chapter contemplates the possibility of a restoration still to come. Some would go much further than this. But thus much is undeniable. And thou shalt call them to mind. —An awakening among the people themselves must precede their restoration.
and thou shalt call to mind — The benefits of obedience, and miseries of disobedience; shalt reflect seriously upon thy ways, and the ends to which they will certainly lead: in which consideration true repentance begins.
Blessing as well as curse , because the memory that God, in His faithfulness, had blessed them, in such times as they were obedient, and therefore might be trusted to do so again, is as requisite for the repentance of the exiled people, as their bitter experience of His curses upon their disobedience.Cambridge also notes the verb for "driven" (hiddiah) is used eleven times in Jeremiah for the dispersion, but scarcely elsewhere in Deuteronomy.
2and when you and your children return to the LORD your God and obey His voice with all your heart and all your soul according to everything I am giving you today,
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Hebrew — tap a word ↓
’at·tāh ū·ḇā·ne·ḵā wə·šaḇ·tā ‘aḏ- Yah·weh ’ĕ·lō·he·ḵā wə·šā·ma‘·tā ḇə·qō·lōw kə·ḵōl ’ă·šer- lə·ḇā·ḇə·ḵā bə·ḵāl nap̄·še·ḵā ū·ḇə·ḵāl ’ā·nō·ḵî mə·ṣaw·wə·ḵā hay·yō·wm
Literal — word-for-word from the original
“and-you-return unto YHWH your-God, and-you-hearken to-His-voice, according-to-all that I am-commanding-you today — you and-your-children — with-all your-heart and-with-all your-soul;”
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And shalt return unto the Lord — Here is a further description of true repentance. It is a returning unto the Lord, in humiliation, shame, and sorrow, and yet with confidence in him, as our God, with a fixed purpose of obeying him universally and heartily in future.
In true repentance there is no hypocrisy.Geneva's marginal gloss (b) on "with all thine heart, and with all thy soul."
and returnest to the Lord thy God, and hearkenest to His voice with all the heart," etc. (cf. Deuteronomy 4:29 ); "the Lord will turn thy captivity, and have compassion upon thee, and gather thee again."
3then He will restore you from captivity and have compassion on you and gather you from all the nations to which the LORD your God has scattered you.
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Hebrew — tap a word ↓
Yah·weh ’ĕ·lō·he·ḵā ’eṯ- wə·šāḇ šə·ḇū·ṯə·ḵā wə·ri·ḥă·me·ḵā wə·šāḇ wə·qib·beṣ·ḵā mik·kāl hā·‘am·mîm ’ă·šer Yah·weh ’ĕ·lō·he·ḵā šām·māh hĕ·p̄î·ṣə·ḵā
Literal — word-for-word from the original
“then-YHWH your-God will-turn your-captivity and-will-have-compassion-on-you, and-will-turn-back and-gather-you from all the-peoples where YHWH your-God has-scattered-you, there.”
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The word “turn” is not active as we should expect (in the Hebrew), but neuter, and upon this fact the Rabbis have grounded the following observation that “in some way the Shechinah is abiding upon Israel during the stress of their captivity, and whensoever they are redeemed, He has prescribed Redemption for Himself, that He will return with them.”
Will turn thy captivity - Will change or put an end to thy state of captivity or distress (compare Psalm 14:7 ; Psalm 85:2 ; Jeremiah 30:18 ). The rendering of the Greek version is significant; "the Lord will heal thy sins."Barnes notes the Septuagint reads "heal thy sins" — reading the restoration as remission of guilt.
The Lord thy God will turn thy captivity. This does not mean will cause thy captives to return, for (1) the verb in Kal (as it is here, שָׁב ) never has the force of the Hiph.; and (2) the returning of the dispersed is afterwards referred to as consequent on the turning of the captivity.
4Even if you have been banished to the farthest horizon, He will gather you and return you from there.
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Hebrew — tap a word ↓
’im- nid·da·ḥă·ḵā yih·yeh biq·ṣêh haš·šā·mā·yim Yah·weh ’ĕ·lō·he·ḵā ū·miš·šām yə·qab·beṣ·ḵā yiq·qā·ḥe·ḵā miš·šām
Literal — word-for-word from the original
“If your-being-driven-out be at the-end of the-heavens, from-there YHWH your-God will-gather-you, and-from-there he-will-take-you.”
Where the English smooths the original
Unto the outmost parts of heaven. —The LXX. version of these words is traceable in Matthew 24:31 , “From the one end of heaven to the other.”
Not the widest and most distant dispersion of any of thy tribes shall cause them to be finally lost. But God, upon the before-mentioned condition, will so order it that you shall in the most material instances recover your ancient state. Nehemiah pleads this promise in his prayer for the restoration of Jerusalem, Nehemiah 1:8-9 .
They do not consider the promise as fulfilled by their restoration from the captivity in Babylon, for Israel was not then scattered in the manner here described—"among all the nations," "unto the utmost parts of heaven" (De 30:4).
5And the LORD your God will bring you into the land your fathers possessed, and you will take possession of it. He will cause you to prosper and multiply more than your fathers.
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Hebrew — tap a word ↓
Yah·weh ’ĕ·lō·he·ḵā we·hĕ·ḇî·’ă·ḵā ’el- hā·’ā·reṣ ’ă·šer- ’ă·ḇō·ṯe·ḵā yā·rə·šū wî·riš·tāh wə·hê·ṭiḇ·ḵā wə·hir·bə·ḵā mê·’ă·ḇō·ṯe·ḵā
Literal — word-for-word from the original
“And-YHWH your-God will-bring-you into the-land which your-fathers possessed, and-you-shall-possess-it; and-he-will-do-you-good and-multiply-you more-than your-fathers.”
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Into the land which thy fathers possessed. —It is very difficult to interpret these words of any land except Palestine. Comp. Jeremiah 29:13-14 , for their fulfilment in the first restoration, from Babylon.
There are in this and several other prophecies concerning the restoration of the Jews, such magnificent descriptions of it as do by no means appear to have been sufficiently fulfilled in any restoration yet past; and therefore are to be accomplished in a more complete one yet to come, after their conversion, in principle and practice, to true Christianity.
The multiplication promised here, so far as it falls within the Messianic age, will consist in the realization of the promise given to Abraham, that his seed should grow into nations ( Genesis 17:6 and Genesis 17:16 ), i.e., in the innumerable multiplication, not of the "Israel according to the flesh," but of the "Israel according to the spirit,"
6The LORD your God will circumcise your hearts and the hearts of your descendants, and you will love Him with all your heart and with all your soul, so that you may live.
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Hebrew — tap a word ↓
Yah·weh ’ĕ·lō·he·ḵā ’eṯ- ū·māl lə·ḇā·ḇə·ḵā wə·’eṯ- lə·ḇaḇ zar·‘e·ḵā lə·’a·hă·ḇāh ’eṯ- Yah·weh ’ĕ·lō·he·ḵā bə·ḵāl lə·ḇā·ḇə·ḵā ū·ḇə·ḵāl nap̄·šə·ḵā lə·ma·‘an ḥay·ye·ḵā
Literal — word-for-word from the original
“And-YHWH your-God will-circumcise your-heart and the-heart of-your-seed, to-love YHWH your-God with-all your-heart and-with-all your-soul, so-that you-may-live.”
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For the Lord himself here engages to circumcise their hearts; and when regenerating grace has removed corrupt nature, and Divine love has supplanted the love of sin, they certainly will reflect, repent, return to God, and obey him; and he will rejoice in doing them good.
God will purge all your wicked affections, a thing that is not in your own power to do.Geneva's gloss (e) on "circumcise thine heart."
The Lord will then circumcise their heart, and the heart of their children (see Deuteronomy 10:16 ), so that they will love Him with all their heart. When Israel should turn with true humility to the Lord, He would be found of them, - would lead them to true repentance, and sanctify them through the power of His grace, - would take away the stony heart out of their flesh, and give them a heart of flesh, a new heart and a new spirit,K&D gather the new-covenant parallels: Ezekiel 11:19; 36:26; Jeremiah 31:33.
7Then the LORD your God will put all these curses upon your enemies who hate you and persecute you.
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Hebrew — tap a word ↓
Yah·weh ’ĕ·lō·he·ḵā ’êṯ wə·nā·ṯan kāl- hā·’êl·leh hā·’ā·lō·wṯ ‘al- ’ō·yə·ḇe·ḵā wə·‘al- ’ă·šer śō·nə·’e·ḵā rə·ḏā·p̄ū·ḵā
Literal — word-for-word from the original
“And-YHWH your-God will-put all these the-curses upon your-enemies and-upon those-who-hate-you, who persecuted-you.”
Where the English smooths the original
But after its conversion, the curses, which had hitherto rested upon it, would fall upon its enemies and haters, according to the promise in Genesis 12:3 .
curses] Heb. ‘alôth , Deuteronomy 29:20 f. (19 f.), q.v. ; and not ḳelalôth as in Deuteronomy 30:1 and ch. 28. Because of this and the fact that the v . breaks the connection between Deuteronomy 30:6 ; Deuteronomy 30:8 it is probably an intrusion (Dillm.).Cambridge's text-critical doubt: a different word for "curses" and a break in the flow lead Dillmann to judge the verse an insertion. Recorded as a scholarly opinion, not a textual verdict.
for he being now sought unto, and embraced, will be their King and their Saviour, and revenge their enemies
8And you will again obey the voice of the LORD and follow all His commandments I am giving you today.
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Hebrew — tap a word ↓
wə·’at·tāh ṯā·šūḇ wə·šā·ma‘·tā bə·qō·wl Yah·weh wə·‘ā·śî·ṯā ’eṯ- kāl- miṣ·wō·ṯāw ’ă·šer ’ā·nō·ḵî mə·ṣaw·wə·ḵā hay·yō·wm
Literal — word-for-word from the original
“And-you, you-shall-again hearken to-the-voice of-YHWH, and-you-shall-do all His-commandments which I am-commanding-you today.”
Where the English smooths the original
It is as certain as anything can be in this world that the laws of Deuteronomy have never been kept perfectly. The minute observances of the Talmudical system took the heart and spirit out of the law of Moses. Christians do not profess to obey any commandments but those which are called moral. If the Law itself is to be fulfilled, a restoration of Israel would seem to be necessary.
Israel would then hearken again to the voice of the Lord and keep His commandments, and would rejoice in consequence in the richest blessing of its God.
These two verses are closely connected, the former expressing the condition on which the aspect expressed in the latter depends. They should be rendered accordingly, If thou shalt return... then the Lord thy God , etc.
9So the LORD your God will make you abound in all the work of your hands and in the fruit of your womb, the offspring of your livestock, and the produce of your land. Indeed, the LORD will again delight in your prosperity, as He delighted in that of your fathers,
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Hebrew — tap a word ↓
Yah·weh ’ĕ·lō·he·ḵā wə·hō·w·ṯî·rə·ḵā bə·ḵōl ma·‘ă·śêh yā·ḏe·ḵā bip̄·rî ḇiṭ·nə·ḵā ū·ḇip̄·rî ḇə·hem·tə·ḵā ū·ḇip̄·rî ’aḏ·mā·ṯə·ḵā lə·ṭō·w·ḇāh kî Yah·weh yā·šūḇ lā·śūś ‘ā·le·ḵā lə·ṭō·wḇ ka·’ă·šer- śāś ‘al- ’ă·ḇō·ṯe·ḵā
Literal — word-for-word from the original
“And-YHWH your-God will-make-you-abound in all the-work of-your-hand, in-the-fruit of-your-womb and-in-the-fruit of-your-beast and-in-the-fruit of-your-ground, for-good; for YHWH will-again rejoice over-you for-good, as he rejoiced over your-fathers,”
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Whereas thou didst formerly receive these mercies for thy hurt, now thou shalt have them for thy good; thy heart shall be so changed that thou shalt not now abuse them, but employ them to the glory of God the giver.
Rejoice over thee for good, i.e. to do thee good; as he did rejoice to destroy thee, Deu 28:63 .Poole names the exact reversal the Hebrew encodes: the rare verb śûś ("rejoice") of 28:63, where God rejoiced to destroy, here turned to doing good.
the meaning is, that the Lord will greatly bless them in all that they shall set their hands to in a lawful way; so that they shall abound in good things, and have enough and to spare, a redundancy of the good things of life, great plenty of them
10if you obey the LORD your God by keeping His commandments and statutes that are written in this Book of the Law, and if you turn to Him with all your heart and with all your soul.
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Hebrew — tap a word ↓
kî ṯiš·ma‘ bə·qō·wl Yah·weh ’ĕ·lō·he·ḵā liš·mōr miṣ·wō·ṯāw wə·ḥuq·qō·ṯāw hak·kə·ṯū·ḇāh haz·zeh bə·sê·p̄er hat·tō·w·rāh kî ṯā·šūḇ ’el- Yah·weh ’ĕ·lō·he·ḵā bə·ḵāl lə·ḇā·ḇə·ḵā ū·ḇə·ḵāl nap̄·še·ḵā
Literal — word-for-word from the original
“when you-hearken to-the-voice of-YHWH your-God, to-keep His-commandments and-His-statutes that-are-written in this the-book of-the-Law; when you-turn unto YHWH your-God with-all your-heart and-with-all your-soul.”
Where the English smooths the original
If thou shalt hearken. —“If” is the LXX. translation. The Hebrew word signifies “for,” or “when.”
It is observable, that Moses calls God, the Lord thy God, twelve times in these ten verses. In the threatenings of the former chapter, he is all along called the Lord, a God of power, and the Judge of all. But in the promises of this chapter, the Lord thy God, a God of grace, and in covenant with thee.
This caution and condition is added to warn them that they should not receive the grace of God in vain, and to teach them that the grace of God doth not discharge man’s obligation to his duty, nor excuse him for the neglect of it, and that conversion and sanctification, though it be God’s work, yet it is man’s duty.
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 chapter is built on a single Hebrew verb, šûḇ — “turn / return” — and it sounds first not from God but from the exile’s own remembering. “When all these things come upon you… and you bring [them] back upon your heart” (wahăšēḇōṯā ’el-ləḇāḇeḵā, v. 1): the very root of returning appears in an act of memory. Benson names the moment exactly — to “call to mind… the benefits of obedience, and miseries of disobedience,” for “in which consideration true repentance begins.” Cambridge adds the surprise that the blessing is recalled along with the curse: “the memory that God, in His faithfulness, had blessed them… is as requisite for the repentance of the exiled people, as their bitter experience of His curses.” Only then comes the outward turn (v. 2): “you return (wəšaḇtā) to the LORD… and hear his voice with all your heart and all your soul.” The Shema’s love-command (Deut 6:5) has become the shape of repentance. Geneva’s gloss guards it: “In true repentance there is no hypocrisy.” The provenance of each line is named; the weave is this tool’s.
The human šûḇ is answered by a divine one: “then YHWH your God will turn (wəšāḇ) your captivity” (v. 3). The grammarians press the point that this is not God bringing captives back but God turning the calamity itself — the Pulpit Commentary: the Qal verb “never has the force of the Hiph.,” so it means to reverse the whole distress. Ellicott preserves the rabbinic reading that the intransitive form implies the Shechinah “will return with them” — God sharing the homecoming. The gathering then reaches “the end of the heavens” (v. 4), language Ellicott traces into the Greek of Matthew 24:31, the in-gathering of the elect. Yet the same voices refuse to over-read it: Keil insists the promised multiplication “above the fathers” (v. 5) could never fit in Palestine and so points past “the Israel according to the flesh” to “the Israel according to the spirit,” while Ellicott holds it is “very difficult to interpret these words of any land except Palestine.” The tension is real and is left standing — the witnesses are named on both sides.
Here the chapter turns its deepest corner. In Deuteronomy 10:16 Israel was commanded, “circumcise the foreskin of your heart”; here the very same rare verb, mûl, has a new subject: “YHWH your God will circumcise your heart” (v. 6). What the law required and could not produce, grace now performs — Geneva: God “will purge all your wicked affections, a thing that is not in your own power to do.” Matthew Henry: “the Lord himself here engages to circumcise their hearts; and when regenerating grace has removed corrupt nature… they certainly will reflect, repent, return.” The purpose-clause is love (lə’ahăḇāh) — the cut heart’s first fruit is not duty but affection — “so that you may live.” And only after the surgery does obedience return (v. 8): “you shall again hear the voice of the LORD… and do all his commandments.” The order is the gospel’s order. Keil gathers the new-covenant kin — Ezekiel 11:19; 36:26; Jeremiah 31:33 — the heart of stone exchanged for a heart of flesh. (Verse 7, the curse redirected onto Israel’s enemies, K&D reads under Genesis 12:3; Cambridge candidly judges it a possible later insertion, on the grounds of its different word for “curses” and its break in the flow — a text-critical doubt recorded, not adjudicated.)
The climax is a reversed echo. “YHWH will again rejoice over you for good” (v. 9) — the rare verb śûś, “to exult,” the same verb Deuteronomy 28:63 had used of God rejoicing to destroy. Poole hears the turn and names it: God will “rejoice over thee for good… as he did rejoice to destroy thee.” The identical word, bent from ruin to blessing, is the whole drama in one syllable; and it is carried, once more, on the keyword yāšûḇ — God “turns” to rejoice (K&D notes this proves the “again” of v. 8). The unit closes (v. 10) on the human šûḇ a final time — “when you turn to the LORD with all your heart” — and on the written word: obedience measured by “the commandments and statutes that are written in this book of the Law.” Benson’s count seals the tone: Moses names God “the LORD thy God” twelve times in these ten verses — in the curses of chapter 29 “the LORD, a God of power… the Judge of all,” but here “a God of grace, and in covenant with thee.” Each citation is attributed; the synthesis is the tool’s and fallible.
Tested against the rule that Scripture alone is the final authority, four things stand out in this unit — offered as a reading to be weighed, not a verdict to be trusted. First, the decisive move is God’s, not man’s. The pivot of the chapter is v. 6: the same heart-circumcision that 10:16 commanded of Israel, God here promises to perform. The law that could not produce the love it required is answered by grace that does — and the obedience of v. 8 follows the surgery of v. 6, never the reverse. This is the gospel’s own order, written into the Torah. Second, repentance and the new heart are one work seen from two sides. Israel “returns” (šûḇ, vv. 2, 8, 10) and God “turns” their captivity and “turns again” to rejoice (šûḇ, vv. 3, 9) — a single verb braided through both the human and the divine act, so that the turning we are commanded is the turning God Himself works. Third, the authority is a written, fixed text. The unit ends (v. 10) tying restoration to “the commandments and statutes that are written (hakkəṯûḇāh) in this book of the Law” — the Berean pattern in seed, life measured against what stands written. Fourth, the honest open question. The voices divide over whether the regathering is literal-national or spiritual-Messianic (Ellicott and Keil pull opposite ways), and even over whether v. 7 belongs (Cambridge). Under Sola Scriptura that division is not hidden but held: the promise of a circumcised heart producing whole-souled love is plain; the geography of its fulfilment is left, with the witnesses, in tension.
The turning we are commanded is the turning God Himself performs — He circumcises the heart so that the heart can love Him back.
AI-generated connections. Each carries a verification badge with a recorded basis; contested links are flagged.
The hinge of the unit is that the heart-circumcision commanded of Israel in Deuteronomy 10:16 — “circumcise therefore the foreskin of your heart” — is here promised of God: “the LORD your God will circumcise your heart” (30:6). The Verifier records the link on the verb itself, mûl (H4135), found in only about 33 verses across the canon, plus the shared lēḇāḇ (“heart”). The same scarce word, with the subject changed from the people to God, marks the move from law’s demand to grace’s gift. Honestly weighed, this is not one verse quoting another but the same book reusing its own rare vocabulary with the subject inverted — a command turned into a promise — so it is tiered structural rather than as a quotation, even though the supporting lexeme is genuinely uncommon.
Deuteronomy 30:6 · Deuteronomy 10:16
basis: Verifier-computed shared lexemes H4135 mûwl (“to circumcise,” in only ~33 verses) and H3824 lêbâb (“heart”); the distinctive collocation "circumcise the heart" stands at both, and the lexeme is uncommon — but neither verse cites the other, so this is the same author reusing his own rare word with the subject flipped (people→God), a structural command→promise inversion rather than a quotation. Tiered down from verbal accordingly.
The promise that God will gather his outcasts “from the end of the heavens” (vv. 1, 4) is the very text Nehemiah pleads back to God in exile: “if you are unfaithful, I will scatter you… but if you return to me… though your outcasts were in the uttermost part of heaven, I will gather them” (Neh 1:8–9). Benson and the Pulpit note the citation directly. The Verifier ties them on the cluster of shared lexemes that carry the whole motif — nādach (“drive out,” H5080, ~53 verses), qāṣeh (“end / extremity,” H7097), and qāḇats (“gather,” H6908).
Deuteronomy 30:1 · Deuteronomy 30:4 · Nehemiah 1:9
basis: Verifier-computed shared lexemes H5080 nâdach (in 53 vv), H7097 qâtseh (in 87 vv), H6908 qâbats (in 121 vv); Nehemiah 1:9 paraphrases this promise back in prayer — a structural reuse of the scatter/gather pattern, not a single rare quotation
Jeremiah’s letter to the exiles takes up this chapter’s exact promise: “I will gather you from all the nations… and I will bring you back (turn your captivity) to the place from which I sent you into exile” (Jer 29:14). The shared vocabulary is the unit’s own restoration cluster — the relatively rare šəḇûṯ (“captivity,” H7622, in only ~27 verses), with qāḇats (“gather”) and šûḇ (“turn / return”). Keil cites Jeremiah 29:14 as the decisive parallel that “turning the captivity” is distinct from merely bringing prisoners back.
Deuteronomy 30:3 · Jeremiah 29:14
basis: Verifier-computed shared lexemes H7622 shᵉbûwth (in 27 vv), H6908 qâbats (in 121 vv), H7725 shûwb (in 950 vv); the scarce H7622 anchors a real restoration-formula link, but it is a shared formula across the prophets, not an exclusive quotation — tiered structural
The unit’s climax (30:9) deliberately reverses 28:63. There God warned, “as the LORD rejoiced over you to do you good… so the LORD will rejoice over you to destroy you” — the rare verb śûś. Here the very same verb is turned back to blessing: “the LORD will again rejoice over you for good.” Poole catches it precisely: God will “rejoice over thee for good… as he did rejoice to destroy thee, Deu 28:63.” The Verifier confirms the link on śûś (H7797), a strikingly rare lexeme found in only ~24 verses, shared with the same chapter’s curse and with Jeremiah 32:41, where God again promises to “rejoice over them to do them good.”
Deuteronomy 30:9 · Deuteronomy 28:63 · Jeremiah 32:41
basis: Verifier-computed shared lexeme H7797 sûws (“to rejoice / exult”), found in only ~24 verses, at Deut 30:9, Deut 28:63, and Jer 32:41. This rests on rarity, not on a citation: it is the same book deliberately re-sounding a scarce, vivid verb with the object reversed — joy that destroys (28:63) bent to joy that blesses (30:9) — which is the strongest verbal link in the unit. (The Verifier's own conservative label is structural; the verbal tier is claimed here only because the lexeme is genuinely rare and the reuse is unmistakable.)
Verse 1 looks back to the covenant’s two definite outcomes — “the blessing and the curse” (habbərāḵāh wəhaqqəlālāh) — and the same paired terms reappear at the chapter’s close in the choice of life and death (30:19), and at the Shechem ceremony of Joshua 8:34. The Verifier records the shared pair qəlālāh (“curse,” H7045, ~33 verses) and bərāḵāh (“blessing,” H1293). The motif is the Deuteronomic structure itself — the two ways laid before the hearer — not a single quotation, so it is tiered structural.
Deuteronomy 30:1 · Deuteronomy 30:19 · Joshua 8:34
basis: Verifier-computed shared lexemes H7045 qᵉlâlâh (in 33 vv) and H1293 Bᵉrâkâh (in 64 vv); the blessing/curse pair is a recurring Deuteronomic frame (also at the Ebal/Gerizim ceremony, Josh 8:34), a structural motif rather than a verbal citation
Paul’s claim that “real circumcision is a matter of the heart, by the Spirit, not by the letter” (Rom 2:29) reaches back to this very promise — the inward mûl of Deut 30:6 — and the new-covenant oracles (Jer 31:33; Ezek 36:26) that K&D gathers expressly in the voice on this verse (“the heart of stone exchanged for a heart of flesh… a new heart and a new spirit”). Held honestly on two counts: first, the Romans tie is cross-Testament (Greek↔Hebrew), so no shared Strong’s number is even possible — the link cannot be “verbal.” Second, even the Hebrew↔Hebrew reach to Jer 31:33 and Ezek 36:26 returns no computed lexical overlap from the Verifier; the connection there is a shared new-covenant theme (a heart God Himself renews), attested by the commentator, not a word-link. So the whole cluster is offered as a figural / typological reading — ancient and widely held for Rom 2:29, and resting on attested theme rather than lexicon for the prophets — with the cautions stated openly.
Deuteronomy 30:6 · Jeremiah 31:33 · Ezekiel 36:26 · Romans 2:29
basis: NOT a verbal link on any leg. The Rom 2:29 tie is cross-Testament (Hebrew↔Greek), where a shared Strong's number is impossible; and the Verifier returns NO shared original-language lexeme even for the Hebrew↔Hebrew pairs Deut 30:6 → Jer 31:33 and Deut 30:6 → Ezek 36:26 (both compute to "flagged — verify source"). The cluster rests on a commentator-attested new-covenant theme (heart-renewal by God; K&D names these parallels in the v.6 voice) read figurally toward the Spirit's inward circumcision — ancient and widely-held, marked typological.
AI-generated reading; weigh it against the text.
The center of this unit — God Himself circumcising the heart “to love the LORD… so that you may live” (30:6) — is read by the whole stream of the voices as the gospel under the law. Gill calls it plainly “the circumcision made without hands, which is not of men, but of God,” the thing Paul names in Colossians 2:11 as “the circumcision of Christ.” JFB, Henry, and the Pulpit all carry the promise forward to “the age of Messiah,” when God “will circumcise their hearts… to love the Lord.” What Moses could only command (10:16), and what no law could perform, is accomplished in Christ by the Spirit — the heart of stone exchanged for a heart of flesh (Ezek 36:26), so that obedience (v. 8) flows from love rather than fear. The reading is ancient and widely held; weigh it still against the text.
Deuteronomy 30:6 · Colossians 2:11 · Romans 2:28-29 · Ezekiel 36:26
The promise to gather Israel’s outcasts “from the end of the heavens” (vv. 3–4) is taken up by the voices and lifted to its New-Covenant breadth. Barnes reads the “turning of the captivity” as fulfilled “when Israel is converted to Him in whom the Law was fulfilled, and who died ‘not for that nation only,’ but also that he might ‘gather together in one the children of God that were scattered abroad’ (John 11:51–52),” so that “there shall be ‘one fold and one shepherd.’” The Pulpit Commentary presses the same: Jew and Gentile brought “into the one fold under the one Shepherd, the Shepherd of Israel.” The literal regathering becomes the figure of Christ’s gathering of all His own — and Ellicott’s note that the LXX of v. 4 surfaces in Matthew 24:31, “from one end of heaven to the other,” the angels gathering the elect, lets the typology run to the last day.
Deuteronomy 30:3-4 · John 11:51-52 · John 10:16 · Matthew 24:31
The unit’s climactic reversal — the very verb śûś (“rejoice”) of judgment (28:63) turned to blessing (30:9) — is, read toward Christ, the picture of the Father who “rejoices over you with gladness” (Zeph 3:17) and the Son who tells of the joy in heaven over one sinner who repents, the shepherd who carries the found sheep home “rejoicing” (Luke 15:5–7). The circumcised, returning heart is met not by grudging acceptance but by divine exultation — the same joy with which the father runs to the prodigal. This is the tool’s own typological reading, drawn from the rare-verb reversal the Hebrew encodes; it is more synthetic than the ancient consensus on v. 6, so it is offered as the more tentative of the two — to be tested, not assumed.
Deuteronomy 30:9 · Luke 15:5-7 · Zephaniah 3:17
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:
The biblical text is the Berean Standard Bible (BSB), public domain (CC0) — free to copy, quote, and build upon. The Hebrew is the Masoretic tradition; the per-word transliterations, parses, Strong’s numbers, and roots are taken as sourced from the Berean/Strong’s apparatus, and the literal renderings, the “where the English smooths the Hebrew” divergences, and the word-notes are this tool’s own work (⚙) — careful but fallible; check them against a lexicon (BDB, HALOT) and a standard grammar.
The named voices (✦) are quoted verbatim from public-domain works via Biblehub’s commentary pages: Charles Ellicott, Commentary for English Readers (1878); Joseph Benson, Commentary on the Old and New Testaments (1810s); Matthew Henry, Concise Commentary (1706); Albert Barnes, Notes on the Bible (1834); Jamieson, Fausset & Brown (1871); Matthew Poole, Annotations (1685); John Gill, Exposition (1746–63); the Geneva Study Bible (1599); the Cambridge Bible for Schools and Colleges (1880s); the Pulpit Commentary (1880s); and Keil & Delitzsch (1860s, ET). Where a voice was attached to a verse but had no comment on it (Poole on vv. 2–5, 7), it was simply omitted.
Two honest cautions specific to this unit. (1) The interpretive fork is left open. The voices genuinely divide over whether the regathering and multiplication (vv. 4–5) are literal-national or spiritual-Messianic — Ellicott holds the land “very difficult to interpret… of any land except Palestine,” while Keil argues the promised increase “above the fathers” must point to “the Israel according to the spirit.” The synthesis records both rather than choosing. (2) Verse 7 carries a text-critical doubt. Cambridge (after Dillmann) judges v. 7 “probably an intrusion,” on the grounds that it uses a different word for “curses” (’ālōṯ, not qəlālāh) and breaks the flow between vv. 6 and 8. This is reported as a scholarly opinion, not adopted as a verdict. On the threads: every Hebrew↔Hebrew badge cites the Verifier’s computed shared lexemes. Only the rare verb śûś (~24 vv, the joy-to-destroy of 28:63 bent to joy-to-bless in 30:9) is tiered verbal, and even there the Verifier’s own conservative label is structural — the verbal claim rests on the rarity and the unmistakable same-book reversal, not on a citation. The mûl (“circumcise the heart”) link to 10:16, though carried on an uncommon verb (~33 vv), has been tiered down to structural in this pass: neither verse quotes the other; it is the same book reusing its own word with the subject flipped from the people to God. All broader restoration vocabulary is structural. The typological cluster to Romans 2:29 / Jeremiah 31:33 / Ezekiel 36:26 is explicitly not verbal: the Romans tie is cross-Testament (no shared Strong’s number is possible between Hebrew and Greek), and the Verifier returns no shared lexeme even for the Hebrew↔Hebrew reach to Jeremiah and Ezekiel — that cluster rests on a commentator-attested new-covenant theme, read figurally. The Joshua 1:5 → Hebrews 13:5 flag does not apply to this unit (it is not in Joshua and does not contain that verse). “Search the Scriptures daily, whether those things were so.” (Acts 17:11)
✦ = 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)