The Fallible · Synthetic · Study Bible
The LORD Alone Is God
Deuteronomy 4:32–40 — The LORD Alone Is God. 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.
32Indeed, ask now from one end of the heavens to the other about the days that long preceded you, from the day that God created man on earth: Has anything as great as this ever happened or been reported?
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Hebrew — tap a word ↓
kî šə·’al- nā ū·lə·miq·ṣêh haš·šā·ma·yim wə·‘aḏ- qə·ṣêh haš·šā·mā·yim lə·yā·mîm ’ă·šer- ri·šō·nîm hā·yū lə·p̄ā·ne·ḵā lə·min- hay·yō·wm ’ă·šer ’ĕ·lō·hîm bā·rā ’ā·ḏām ‘al- hā·’ā·reṣ haz·zeh hag·gā·ḏō·wl kad·dā·ḇār hă·nih·yāh ’ōw kā·mō·hū hă·niš·ma‘
Literal — word-for-word from the original
For ask now of the days that are past, which were before you, from the day that God created man upon the earth, and from one end of the heavens to the other end of the heavens — has there been anything like this great thing, or has the like been heard?
Where the English smooths the original
the history of all times since the creation of man, and of all places under the whole heaven, can relate no such events as those which have happened to Israel
From the first of time, from one end of heaven to the other, nothing has ever happened like that which Israel has experienced at Ḥoreb or in the deliverance from Egypt to which the next verses proceed.
The same argument is afterwards employed by St. Paul ( Romans 11:29 ) for the restoration of Israel: “for the gifts and calling of God are without repentance,” i.e., irrevocable.Ellicott's NT cross-reference (Romans 11:29) is an analogy of argument, not a quotation of this verse; weighed in the apparatus.
it is because Jehovah is a merciful God, that the unparalleled grace showed to Israel had been displayed
The rise of this nation was quite different from the origin of all other nations. See the reasons of free grace; we are not beloved for our own sakes, but for Christ's sake.Henry comments on the whole block 4:24–40; his "for Christ's sake" reads the unmerited election of v.37 through a later, NT lens — a devotional inference, not Moses' stated ground, which is named simply as God's love and mercy.
33Has a people ever heard the voice of God speaking out of the fire, as you have, and lived?
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Hebrew — tap a word ↓
‘ām hă·šā·ma‘ qō·wl ’ĕ·lō·hîm mə·ḏab·bêr mit·tō·wḵ- hā·’êš ka·’ă·šer- ’at·tāh šā·ma‘·tā way·ye·ḥî
Literal — word-for-word from the original
Has a people heard the voice of God speaking from the midst of the fire, as you yourself have heard — and lived?
Where the English smooths the original
None ever heard the voice of God as they did, much less speaking such words as they heard, and still less out of the midst of fire, which was their case
The well-known belief of ancient man that it meant death to come into close converse with the Deity.
to Israel he made himself known by speech and language, condescending to their weakness
And was not overwhelmed and consumed by such a glorious appearance.Poole glosses the verse's final word "and lived"; he cross-refers Exodus 24:11 and 33:20 (where seeing God means death), the contrast that gives the survival its force.
34Or has any god tried to take as his own a nation out of another nation—by trials, signs, wonders, and war, by a strong hand and an outstretched arm, and by great terrors—as the LORD your God did for you in Egypt, before your eyes?
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Hebrew — tap a word ↓
’ōw ’ĕ·lō·hîm hă·nis·sāh lā·ḇō·w lā·qa·ḥaṯ lōw ḡō·w miq·qe·reḇ gō·w bə·mas·sōṯ bə·’ō·ṯōṯ ū·ḇə·mō·wp̄·ṯîm ū·ḇə·mil·ḥā·māh ḥă·zā·qāh ū·ḇə·yāḏ nə·ṭū·yāh ū·ḇiz·rō·w·a‘ gə·ḏō·lîm ū·ḇə·mō·w·rā·’îm kə·ḵōl ’ă·šer- Yah·weh ’ĕ·lō·hê·ḵem ‘ā·śāh lā·ḵem bə·miṣ·ra·yim lə·‘ê·ne·ḵā
Literal — word-for-word from the original
Or has a god ever ventured to come to take for himself a nation from the midst of a nation — by trials, by signs and by wonders, and by war, and by a strong hand and an outstretched arm, and by great terrors — according to all that the LORD your God did for you in Egypt before your eyes?
Where the English smooths the original
Or has a god attempted (made the attempt) to come and take to himself people from people
not, "i. e." the tribulations and persecutions undergone by the Israelites, out the plagues miraculously inflicted on the Egyptians
Jehovah himself was their warlord.
hath he ever made the attempt to come on the earth and take a nation from the midst of a nation, as he took the Hebrew people from among the Egyptians?
which are called temptations, because they were trials both to the Egyptians and Israelites, whether they would be induced to believe and obey God or notBenson treats vv.32–34 together (hence the 4:32 page); his gloss on "by trials" (massôth) adds to Barnes the point that the plagues tested Israel's faith as well as Egypt's, not only afflicted the Egyptians.
35You were shown these things so that you would know that the LORD is God; there is no other besides Him.
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Hebrew — tap a word ↓
’at·tāh hā·rə·’ê·ṯā lā·ḏa·‘aṯ kî Yah·weh hū hā·’ĕ·lō·hîm ’ên ‘ō·wḏ mil·ḇad·dō
Literal — word-for-word from the original
You, you were made to see, that you might know that the LORD, He is God; there is none else besides Him.
Where the English smooths the original
Heb. Thou, thyself, wast made to see it . Again an emphasis on the experimental character of Israel’s religion.
that it might know that Jehovah was God (האלהים, the God, to whom the name of elohim rightfully belonged), and there was none else beside Him
that he is the one only living and true God, and there is no other: this phrase is often used by the Prophet Isaiah, to express the same great article of faith
36He let you hear His voice from heaven to discipline you, and on earth He showed you His great fire, and you heard His words out of the fire.
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Hebrew — tap a word ↓
hiš·mî·‘ă·ḵā ’eṯ- qō·lōw min- haš·šā·ma·yim lə·yas·sə·re·kā wə·‘al- hā·’ā·reṣ her·’ă·ḵā ’eṯ- hag·gə·ḏō·w·lāh ’iš·šōw šā·ma‘·tā ū·ḏə·ḇā·rāw mit·tō·wḵ hā·’êš
Literal — word-for-word from the original
From the heavens He made you hear His voice, to discipline you; and on the earth He showed you His great fire, and His words you heard from the midst of the fire.
Where the English smooths the original
to take them under holy discipline" (Knobel), to inspire them with a salutary fear of the holiness of His ways and of His judgments
God spake to them with audible voice, out of heaven, amidst fire, and they heard his words out of the fire
the ten commands, and therefore may well be called, a fiery law
Out of heaven, i.e. out of the air, above Mount Sinai.Poole locates the verse's heaven/earth pairing concretely at Sinai ("out of the air, above Mount Sinai… upon earth; at the top of Mount Sinai"), grounding the cosmic merism in the actual mountain — a topographical reading, fallible but textually anchored to Exodus 19–20.
37Because He loved your fathers, He chose their descendants after them and brought you out of Egypt by His presence and great power,
Berean Standard Bible · CC0
Hebrew — tap a word ↓
wə·ṯa·ḥaṯ kî ’ā·haḇ ’eṯ- ’ă·ḇō·ṯe·ḵā way·yiḇ·ḥar bə·zar·‘ōw ’a·ḥă·rāw way·yō·w·ṣi·’ă·ḵā mim·miṣ·rā·yim bə·p̄ā·nāw hag·gā·ḏōl bə·ḵō·ḥōw
Literal — word-for-word from the original
And because He loved your fathers, He chose his seed after him, and brought you out, by His presence, by His great power, out of Egypt,
Where the English smooths the original
they are always stated in such a way as to enforce the doctrine of God’s sovereignty, and to show the Israelites that their own merit was in no way the ground of God’s choice
Brought thee out in his sight - literally, "by His face:" "i. e." by the might of His personal presence
It was the love of God to the fathers, not the righteousness of Israel ( Deuteronomy 9:5 ), which lay at the foundation of the election of their posterity
He himself was present with thee, and marched along with thee in the pillar of cloud and fire
38to drive out before you nations greater and mightier than you, and to bring you into their land and give it to you for your inheritance, as it is this day.
Berean Standard Bible · CC0
Hebrew — tap a word ↓
lə·hō·w·rîš mim·mə·ḵā mip·pā·ne·ḵā gō·w·yim gə·ḏō·lîm wa·‘ă·ṣu·mîm la·hă·ḇî·’ă·ḵā ’eṯ- ’ar·ṣām lā·ṯeṯ- lə·ḵā na·ḥă·lāh haz·zeh kay·yō·wm
Literal — word-for-word from the original
to dispossess nations greater and mightier than you from before you, to bring you in, to give you their land as an inheritance, as it is this day —
Where the English smooths the original
Heb. to dispossess … from before thee
viz., by the destruction of Sihon and Og, which gave to the Israelites a practical pledge that the Canaanites in like manner would be rooted out before them
The seven nations of the land of Canaan, which were more in number and mightier in power and strength than they
39Know therefore this day and take to heart that the LORD is God in heaven above and on the earth below; there is no other.
Berean Standard Bible · CC0
Hebrew — tap a word ↓
wə·yā·ḏa‘·tā hay·yō·wm wa·hă·šê·ḇō·ṯā ’el- lə·ḇā·ḇe·ḵā kî Yah·weh hū hā·’ĕ·lō·hîm baš·šā·ma·yim mim·ma·‘al wə·‘al- hā·’ā·reṣ mit·tā·ḥaṯ ’ên ‘ō·wḏ
Literal — word-for-word from the original
Know therefore this day, and bring it back to your heart, that the LORD, He is God in the heavens above and on the earth below; there is none else.
Where the English smooths the original
Because we cannot lay hold of spiritual things in thought instantly in a moment, God commands to make them to revert , i . e . again and again to recall them to the mind
If every nation has its separate deity, how is it that Jehovah controls them all? His various dealings with Egyptians, Moabites, Ammonites, Edomites, Amorites, as well as with Israelites and Canaanites, mark Him as Lord of all.
Settle it in thy heart that none but the Creator of all things could perform those mighty acts.
that he has made both, and is the possessor and Lord of them, and does what he pleases with them
40Keep His statutes and commandments, which I am giving you today, so that you and your children after you may prosper, and that you may live long in the land that the LORD your God is giving you for all time.
Berean Standard Bible · CC0
Hebrew — tap a word ↓
wə·šā·mar·tā ’eṯ- ḥuq·qāw wə·’eṯ- miṣ·wō·ṯāw ’ă·šer ’ā·nō·ḵî mə·ṣaw·wə·ḵā hay·yō·wm ’ă·šer ū·lə·ḇā·ne·ḵā ’a·ḥă·re·ḵā yî·ṭaḇ lə·ḵā ū·lə·ma·‘an ta·’ă·rîḵ yā·mîm ‘al- ha·ʾă·ḏå̄·må̄h ’ă·šer Yah·weh ’ĕ·lō·he·ḵā nō·ṯên lə·ḵā kāl- hay·yā·mîm
Literal — word-for-word from the original
And you shall keep His statutes and His commandments, which I am commanding you today, that it may go well with you and with your children after you, and that you may prolong your days upon the land that the LORD your God is giving you for all the days.
Where the English smooths the original
Return to the keynote in Deuteronomy 4:1 .
God promises reward not for our merits, but to encourage us, and to assure us that our labour will not be lost.
to acknowledge and lay to heart that God is the alone God of the universe, in heaven and on earth; hence (2) to be obedient to his laws; and so (3) to have, as a recompense, a happy continuance in the beloved land
כּל־היּמים, "all time," for all the future
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 unit opens not on a statement but on a dare. The conjunction kî binds it to the mercy just confessed in v.31: the Pulpit Commentary draws the link plainly — "it is because Jehovah is a merciful God, that the unparalleled grace showed to Israel had been displayed." Moses then flings the search-warrant across the whole record of being: Keil & Delitzsch read it as a claim that "the history of all times since the creation of man, and of all places under the whole heaven, can relate no such events as those which have happened to Israel," and Cambridge hears the boldness — "From the first of time, from one end of heaven to the other, nothing has ever happened like that which Israel has experienced." Two miracles are then named as exhibits. First, in v.33, the surviving of God's audible voice: Gill marvels that "none ever heard the voice of God as they did… out of the midst of fire," against Cambridge's reminder of "the well-known belief of ancient man that it meant death to come into close converse with the Deity." Second, in v.34, the taking of a nation from the womb of a nation. The Hebrew piles up the redemption-vocabulary — bə·mas·sōṯ (trials), signs, wonders, war, the strong hand and outstretched arm, and great terrors — and Barnes corrects the sentimental misreading: the "trials" are "not… the tribulations and persecutions undergone by the Israelites, [but] the plagues miraculously inflicted on the Egyptians." The Pulpit Commentary frames the whole as God's own venture: "hath he ever made the attempt to come on the earth and take a nation from the midst of a nation, as he took the Hebrew people from among the Egyptians?"
The challenge resolves into a creed. The emphatic ’at·tāh hā·rə·’ê·ṯā — Cambridge: "Thou, thyself, wast made to see it" — makes Israel's monotheism experiential, not speculative; the very grammar (a causative-passive) says the knowledge was done to them. And the content is exclusive: Keil renders it "that Jehovah was God (ha-elohim, the God, to whom the name of elohim rightfully belonged), and there was none else beside Him." Gill hears the prophet in it: "this phrase is often used by the Prophet Isaiah, to express the same great article of faith." The wonders of vv.33–34 were never spectacle for its own sake; they were, the verse says, shown in order that (lā·da‘aṯ) Israel might know.
The verse splits the cosmos to show one God filling both halves of it: His voice from heaven, His fire on earth. The lone causative verb hiš·mî·‘ă·ḵā — "He made you hear" — and the disputed lə·yas·sə·re·kā carry the freight. Keil refuses to thin the second to mere teaching: it is "to take them under holy discipline… to inspire them with a salutary fear of the holiness of His ways and of His judgments." The Pulpit Commentary sums the scene — "God spake to them with audible voice, out of heaven, amidst fire, and they heard his words out of the fire" — and Gill identifies the words: "the ten commands, and therefore may well be called, a fiery law." The heaven-and-earth frame here is laid down deliberately; it will be picked up as confession in v.39.
Now Moses traces the whole river to its spring, and the spring is grace. Ellicott: the reasons for God's choice "are always stated in such a way as to enforce the doctrine of God's sovereignty, and to show the Israelites that their own merit was in no way the ground of God's choice." Keil states the thesis of the section: "It was the love of God to the fathers, not the righteousness of Israel, which lay at the foundation of the election of their posterity." The Masoretic singulars — "his seed after him" — draw the nation back to one man; Barnes reads the redemption "by His face… by the might of His personal presence," and Benson pictures it warmly: "He himself was present with thee, and marched along with thee in the pillar of cloud and fire." Verse 38 then gives the love its purpose: to dispossess (Cambridge: "to dispossess… from before thee") nations "greater and mightier" — Gill's "seven nations of the land of Canaan" — and to hand Israel the land as inheritance, the down-payment already visible, Keil says, "by the destruction of Sihon and Og, which gave to the Israelites a practical pledge."
The long sentence that began "because He loved" lands here on its imperative. Know — wə·yā·ḏa‘·tā — and bring it back to your heart: the Pulpit Commentary, citing Bechai, explains the strange verb, "because we cannot lay hold of spiritual things… in a moment, God commands to make them to revert… again and again to recall them to the mind." The content is the unit's thesis restated and now stretched to fill heaven above and earth beneath; Ellicott draws out its polemic: "His various dealings with Egyptians, Moabites, Ammonites, Edomites, Amorites… mark Him as Lord of all." And then, in v.40, the whole towering appeal comes to rest on something small and daily: keep His statutes. Cambridge notes this is a "return to the keynote in Deuteronomy 4:1." Knowing that the LORD alone is God is not left as doctrine; it issues in obedience, and obedience in the blessing Geneva is careful to ground in grace — reward given "not for our merits, but to encourage us." The unit that opened by asking after the days since the creation of man closes by promising life "for all the days" upon the ground (’ădāmāh) from which that man was first taken.
Read under Sola Scriptura, and offered as the tool's own fallible reading to be tested: the architecture of vv.32–40 is a single descending shaft of logic, and the Hebrew lays its joints bare. It opens at creation — bārāʼ, "the day God created man" (v.32) — and closes on the ground, ’ădāmāh, from which that man (’ādām) was made; the same root frames both ends, so that Israel's life in the land is presented as a return of humanity to its proper soil under its proper God. Between those poles the passage moves twice through the same motion. First it overwhelms the senses: a voice heard and survived (v.33), a list of wonders seen (v.34), a fire watched and a voice obeyed (v.36). Then, twice, it converts sensation into confession — that you might know (v.35) and know therefore… and bring it back to your heart (v.39) — with the identical articular formula, YHWH hū ha-elohim, "the LORD, He is the God," bolted at v.35 and v.39 like the two posts of a doorframe. The whole between-space is then revealed to rest on a single word in v.37: ’āhab, "He loved." The unparalleled history is not first about power; it is about love that chose, and chose freely (the Masoretic his seed after him tracing the elect nation back to one beloved man). And the conclusion is not contemplation but šāmar — keep. The most fallible move here, which I flag against the voices that would split the period differently (Schultz, Knobel, even the AV), is to read vv.37–40 as one sentence whose subject is love and whose verb, finally, is obey: God loved, therefore know, therefore keep — and live, on the soil, for all the days.
He loved, therefore He chose; He chose, therefore you know; you know, therefore keep — and live, on the ground that made you, for all the days.
AI-generated connections. Each carries a verification badge with a recorded basis; contested links are flagged.
Verse 34's list of redemption-acts is not a one-off flourish but a fixed liturgical recital that recurs across Deuteronomy with remarkable verbal stability. Deuteronomy 7:19 repeats "the trials… the signs and wonders, the mighty hand and outstretched arm"; Deuteronomy 26:8 sets it in the harvest creed ("the LORD brought us out of Egypt… with a mighty hand and an outstretched arm, with great terror, with signs and wonders"); Deuteronomy 29:3 reminds the next generation of "the great trials… the signs and those great wonders." The Verifier anchors the link to 7:19 and 29:3 on the genuinely rare word maççâh ("trials," only four verses in the whole Hebrew Bible) together with môwphêth (wonders, 35 vv) — a distinctive pair, not generic vocabulary; the 26:8 link is carried by the equally rare môwrâʼ ("terror," 12 vv) plus môwphêth. This is verbal repetition: Israel had a set form of words for retelling the Exodus. (The clusters also share high-frequency words — châzâq "strong," ʼôwth "sign," yâd "hand," gâdôwl "great" — which fill out the formula but do not by themselves carry the verbal claim; the rare anchors do.)
Deuteronomy 7:19 · Deuteronomy 26:8 · Deuteronomy 29:3
basis: Verifier (Deut 4:34 paired with each): with 7:19 — shared lexeme(s) H4531 maççâh (in 4 vv), H4159 môwphêth (in 35 vv), H2389 châzâq (in 54 vv), H226 ʼôwth (in 77 vv); with 29:3 — H4531 maççâh (in 4 vv), H4159 môwphêth (in 35 vv), H226 ʼôwth (in 77 vv), H1419 gâdôwl (in 495 vv); with 26:8 — H4172 môwrâʼ (in 12 vv), H4159 môwphêth (in 35 vv), H2389 châzâq (in 54 vv), H226 ʼôwth (in 77 vv). The low-frequency maççâh (4 vv) and môwrâʼ (12 vv) make this a verbal recital, not a generic theme; the higher-frequency members fill out the formula.
The unusual noun môwrâʼ ("terror, the dread God's acts inspire") in v.34 occurs in only twelve verses, which makes it a precise fingerprint. It binds the Exodus-recital not only within Deuteronomy (the book's closing eulogy of Moses, Deuteronomy 34:12, names "all the mighty hand and all the great terror which Moses did") but forward into the prophets: Jeremiah 32:21 rehearses that the LORD "brought forth Your people Israel out of the land of Egypt with signs and wonders, with a strong hand and an outstretched arm and with great terror." The Verifier confirms the same môwrâʼ / môwphêth / châzâq cluster in each. Jeremiah is consciously quoting the Deuteronomic creed; the link is verbal.
Deuteronomy 34:12 · Jeremiah 32:21
basis: Verifier (Deut 4:34 paired with each): with 34:12 — shared lexeme(s) H4172 môwrâʼ (in 12 vv), H2389 châzâq (in 54 vv), H1419 gâdôwl (in 495 vv), H5869 ʻayin (in 827 vv); with Jeremiah 32:21 — H4172 môwrâʼ (in 12 vv), H4159 môwphêth (in 35 vv), H2389 châzâq (in 54 vv), H226 ʼôwth (in 77 vv). The rare anchor in both is môwrâʼ (12 vv); for 34:12 it is the sole low-frequency member (the others are common), so that tie is carried by the single scarce word, while Jeremiah 32:21 adds môwphêth. Held as verbal on môwrâʼ, the most distinctive shared term.
The unit's thesis — YHWH hū ha-elohim, ’ên ‘ôd, "the LORD, He is God; there is none else" — is stated at v.35 and repeated, expanded to "in heaven above and on the earth below," at v.39. The same formula recurs as a structural refrain across the canon: the Song of Moses, Deuteronomy 32:39 ("there is no god besides Me"); Solomon's dedication, 1 Kings 8:60 ("that all the peoples of the earth may know that the LORD is God; there is no other"); and the great monotheistic oracles of Isaiah 45:5 ("I am the LORD, and there is no other"). The Verifier records the tie on the shared formula-words ’ên (none), ‘ôd (else/more), and yādaʻ (know) — but these are common words, so the connection is the shared pattern and motif, not a quotation claim. Tiered structural/thematic, not verbal, by under-claiming.
Deuteronomy 4:35 · Deuteronomy 4:39 · Deuteronomy 32:39 · 1 Kings 8:60 · Isaiah 45:5
basis: Verifier (Deut 4:35 paired with each): with 4:39 — H5750 ʻôwd (in 461 vv), H369 ʼayin (in 686 vv), H3045 yâdaʻ (in 874 vv), H1931 hûwʼ (in 1692 vv); with 1 Kings 8:60 — H5750 ʻôwd, H369 ʼayin, H3045 yâdaʻ, H1931 hûwʼ; with Isaiah 45:5 — H5750 ʻôwd, H369 ʼayin, H3045 yâdaʻ; with Deut 32:39 — H369 ʼayin, H7200 râʼâh, H1931 hûwʼ, H3588 kîy. Every shared lexeme is high-frequency, so this is NOT a verbal tie; it is the recurring 'there is none else' (ʼên ʻôd) monotheistic formula and motif, tiered structural/thematic by deliberate under-claiming.
The unit deliberately frames itself between creation and land. Verse 32 dates its challenge "from the day that God created (bārāʼ) man upon the earth" — the very verb and scene of Genesis 1:27 — and v.40 promises long life "upon the land (’ădāmāh)," the soil from which ’ādām was formed (Genesis 2:7). Cambridge notices the verb directly: "created, bara'… P's characteristic expression." The Verifier confirms bārāʼ (a distinctive verb, 47 vv) and ’ādām shared with Genesis 1:27. Because bārāʼ is moderately distinctive but the framing is a motif rather than a quotation, this is tiered structural/thematic: the redemption of Israel is set on the scale of, and as a kind of renewal of, the creation of humanity.
Genesis 1:27 · Genesis 2:7
basis: Verifier (Deut 4:32 paired with each): with Genesis 1:27 — shared lexeme(s) H1254 bârâʼ (in 47 vv), H120 ʼâdâm (in 526 vv); with Genesis 2:7 — H120 ʼâdâm (in 526 vv) only. bârâʼ (47 vv) is moderately distinctive, but the tie is the creation-frame motif (man created → Israel given the ground), not a verbal citation; the Genesis 2:7 ʼădāmāh→ʼādām wordplay echoed in v.40's ʼădāmāh is thematic, resting on the single common word ʼâdâm. Structural/thematic, under-claiming.
Verse 40's closing promise — "that it may go well with you… and that you may prolong your days upon the land" — is the same blessing-formula fastened to the Fifth Commandment in Deuteronomy 5:16 ("that your days may be prolonged and that it may go well with you in the land"). Cambridge reads v.40 as the "return to the keynote in Deuteronomy 4:1." The Verifier confirms the shared cluster yāṭab (go well), ’ārak (prolong), ’ădāmāh (land), and maʻan (in order that) — a recognizable formula, but built of moderately common words, so tiered structural/thematic rather than verbal. The point of the link is that Deuteronomy ties life-in-the-land to obedience by a fixed, repeated promise.
Deuteronomy 5:16 · Deuteronomy 4:1
basis: Verifier (Deut 4:40 paired with Deuteronomy 5:16): shared lexeme(s) H748 ʼârak (in 34 vv), H3190 yâṭab (in 110 vv), H127 ʼădâmâh (in 211 vv), H4616 maʻan (in 252 vv). The repeated obedience-and-long-life promise is distinctive as a fixed phrase but composed of moderately common words; tiered structural/thematic, not verbal. The further reference to Deuteronomy 4:1 is the contextual keynote-return Cambridge notes ("Return to the keynote in Deuteronomy 4:1"), an argued same-chapter inclusio rather than a Verifier lexeme pair.
This unit's insistence that Israel heard God's voice (vv.33, 36) and was made to see only His acts (v.35) is the positive ground for the image-prohibition that dominates the earlier part of the chapter (Deuteronomy 4:12, 4:15: "you heard the sound of words but saw no form"). Matthew Henry catches the logic: "to Israel he made himself known by speech and language, condescending to their weakness." The connection here is conceptual and contextual rather than lexical — the same chapter's argument completing itself — and so is offered as a structural/thematic reading argued from the text, not asserted from a rare shared word.
Deuteronomy 4:12 · Deuteronomy 4:15
basis: Same-chapter argumentative link on the heard-voice / no-form motif (šāmaʻ 'hear' dominant in 4:12, 4:33, 4:36 against the prohibition of seeing a form in 4:15–16). The tie is structural and contextual within Deuteronomy 4 rather than a rare-word quotation; tiered thematic and argued from the text.
AI-generated reading; weigh it against the text.
The terror of v.33 — that a people heard God's voice out of the fire and lived — is taken up directly by the New Testament's meditation on Sinai. Hebrews 12:18–29 contrasts "a blazing fire" and the voice whose words made the hearers beg that "no further word be spoken to them" with the better Word of the new covenant; and it closes by quoting, almost word-for-word, the very fire-language of this chapter — "our God is a consuming fire" (Hebrews 12:29) is a near-citation of Deuteronomy 4:24, "the LORD your God is a consuming fire," the line that stands a few verses before our unit and supplies its mercy-and-fire frame (v.31's mercy, v.33's surviving the flame). That makes the connection more than a loose echo at one point: the author of Hebrews is demonstrably reading Deuteronomy 4, and reads its fearful-but-survivable voice as the lesser type of the Son's word, "see to it that you do not refuse Him who speaks" (12:25). The figural reading — that the survivable voice at Horeb prefigures the saving Word now to be heard and not refused — is ancient and widely held in the church's reading of Hebrews. As a cross-Testament (Greek↔Hebrew) link it cannot rest on shared Strong's numbers and is never claimed as verbal; it is argued typologically, from the shared scene of voice-and-fire and the documented quotation of this chapter's own "consuming fire" in Hebrews 12:29.
Deuteronomy 4:33 · Deuteronomy 4:36 · Hebrews 12:18 · Hebrews 12:25
The unit's twice-stated creed (vv.35, 39) is the same exclusive monotheism the New Testament confesses and then fills out christologically. Jesus Himself recites the neighboring Shema, "the Lord our God, the Lord is one" (Mark 12:29); and 1 Corinthians 8:4–6 takes up precisely the language "there is no God but one" and unfolds it as "one God, the Father… and one Lord, Jesus Christ." The historic church has read Deuteronomy's "there is none else" not as overturned but as completed: the one God of Horeb is confessed as Father, Son, and Spirit. This is a structural/thematic continuation across the Testaments — Greek↔Hebrew, so not a shared-lexeme verbal tie — and the specifically Trinitarian filling-out is a later, doctrinal development rather than something stated in Moses' words; the bare monotheism is ancient and held everywhere, the christological reading is the church's confession built upon it.
Deuteronomy 4:35 · Deuteronomy 4:39 · Mark 12:29 · 1 Corinthians 8:4
Verse 37 makes divine love (’āhab), not Israel's merit, the spring of election and redemption — and the New Testament carries that exact logic into the gospel. Ephesians 1:4–5 says God "chose us in Him before the foundation of the world… in love He predestined us," and Romans 11:28–29 grounds Israel's standing in that the patriarchs were loved and "the gifts and calling of God are irrevocable" — the very text Ellicott cites at v.32 as "the same argument… for the restoration of Israel." The reading that Deuteronomy's love-grounded election prefigures and is fulfilled in God's electing love in Christ is widely held; it is offered here as a structural/typological link across the Testaments, argued from the shared pattern of unmerited, love-rooted choice, not from shared original-language words. Ellicott's Romans 11:29 connection is an analogy of argument, not a quotation of this verse — see the apparatus.
Deuteronomy 4:37 · Romans 11:28 · Ephesians 1:4
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:
On the cross-Testament links (flagged by method). The three Christ-layer readings above join Hebrew verses to Greek ones (Hebrews 12, Mark 12 / 1 Corinthians 8, Romans 11 / Ephesians 1). Running the Verifier on any such pair returns no shared original-language lexeme — which is expected and unavoidable for a Greek↔Hebrew pair, where shared Strong's numbers are impossible by definition. These ties are therefore tiered structural or typological and argued from shared scene, formula, and logic; they are never claimed as "verbal."
On Ellicott and Romans 11:29 at v.32. Ellicott writes that "the same argument is afterwards employed by St. Paul (Romans 11:29)" — note carefully that he claims an analogy of reasoning (God does not abandon a people He has taken to Himself), not that Romans quotes Deuteronomy 4:32. We have preserved his words verbatim but flagged in the voice's editorial note, and in the third Christ entry, that this is a parallel of argument, not a citation. The reader should not infer a quotation where the commentator asserted only an analogy.
On the verbal recital threads. The strength of these threads rests on two genuinely rare words, and they divide cleanly: maççâh ("trials," 4 verses) anchors the ties to Deuteronomy 7:19 and 29:3 (both of which share it), while môwrâʼ ("terror," 12 verses) anchors the ties to Deuteronomy 26:8, 34:12 and Jeremiah 32:21 (none of which contains maççâh; 26:8 and 34:12 are reached through môwrâʼ, with 34:12 carried by that single scarce word alone). Where the Verifier's clusters also include high-frequency words (ʼôwth "sign," 77 vv; châzâq "strong," 54 vv; gâdôwl "great," 495 vv; yâd "hand," 1445 vv) those fill out the formula but do not by themselves carry a verbal claim — the two rare anchors do. We have not upgraded any monotheism or blessing link to "verbal," because those rest on common formula-words; they are tiered structural/thematic by deliberate under-claiming.
On the text of v.37. Translations divide over a real Masoretic-versional difference: the Hebrew reads singular "his seed after him" (read by Barnes and Keil as pointing to Abraham), while the Samaritan, LXX, Syriac, Targum and Vulgate read plural "their seed after them" (followed by BSB). We have built the literal from the Masoretic singular and named the divergence; the doctrine of love-grounded election is unaffected either way. This unit does not contain Deuteronomy 4:5 or Joshua 1:5, so the standing Joshua 1:5 → Hebrews 13:5 flag does not arise here.
✦ = 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)