Deuteronomy: The Second Giving Of The Law (III)

On Possessing And Dispossessing (2:1-34)

Neal Pollard

After detailing the rebellion and unbelief of the nation in chapter one, Moses highlights aspects of the latter portion of their wandering in this chapter. He breezes through the first 38 years of their wandering (14), explaining that these 40 years were to purge Israel of the generation of the men of war who refused to obey God’s command under Moses to enter Canaan (16). Moses highlights how God completely took care of their needs throughout the wandering (7). But, the emphasis of this chapter seems to be multiple object lessons concerning the nations they encounter near the end of their journey, nations they have some relationship to and observations concerning God’s care for them and the opponents these nations overcame. 

First, there are the Edomites (4-8a, 12). These descendants of Esau (Israel’s brother) have a healthy fear of Israel (4), so God tells them not to provoke them, attack them, or try to take their land (5). This was Esau’s promised land (5). Instead, they were to buy food and water from Edom, trusting God to help meet their needs (6-7). Heathen inhabitants possessed the territory before Esau’s descendants drove them out (12). Moses writes, “dispossessed them and destroyed them from before them and settled in their place.” The Edomites served as a pattern and example to Israel (12).

Second, there are the Moabites (8b-11).  These are the descendants of Lot, Abraham’s nephew. The same instructions are given concerning the territory of these people. Israel is to refrain from harassing them or provoking them to war (9). This was territory promised to Moab (9). However, like the giants Israel saw in spying out their promised land, the Moabites had a people as great, numerous, and tall as the Anakim (11). The Moabites called them Emim, and they apparently displaced these fearful folks. 

Third, there are the Ammonites (19-23,37). Between his mention of Moab and Ammon, Moses reminds the people that their faithless counterparts, these people’s parents, had God against them to destroy them. He doesn’t explicitly mention why here, but we know from numerous accounts that it was their lack of faith. As the new generation heads toward Canaan, they encounter Ammon. They hear the same instructions as concerning Edom and Moab (19). Again, the Ammonites faced giants like the Anakim (Num. 13:33) who the Israelites were too fearful of.  Moses emphasizes the Ammonites courage, even doubling back to Edom to make the point with Israel that Ammon displaced the Rephaim, “A people as great, numerous, and tall as the Anakim, but the Lord destroyed them before them. And they dispossessed them and settled in their place, just as He did for the sons of Esau, who live in Seir, when He destroyed the Horites from before them; they dispossessed them and settled in their place even to this day” (21-22).  In verse 23, he seems to give another example of a people, the ancestors of the Cretans (Caphtorim), who came to the land of a people, the Avvim, and destroyed them and lived in their place. That would be Israel’s task regarding Canaan.

Fourth, there are the Amorites (24-36). This enemy forms a sort of military exercise and preparation for the conquest. First, God tells them that they would defeat and displace them (24). Israel has grown into a massive, young, and vibrant nation, and people everywhere feared them to the point of dread, trembling, and anguish (25). The king of the Amorites, Sihon, king of Heshbon, is asked to sell food and water to Israel and allow safe passage through their land as the Edomites, Moabites, and Ammonites had done (26-29). But God used this to harden his heart, that Israel might see God’s deliverance as they obeyed His command (30). In fact, God said, “See, I have begun to deliver Sihon and his land over to you…” (31). Israel fights and God delivers (32-33). Israel “utterly destroyed the men, women and children of every city. We left no survivor. We took only the animals as our booty and the spoil of the cities which we had captured” (34-35). What a transformation of attitude! They could report, “there was no city that was too high for us; the Lord our God delivered all over to us” (36)!  This land would eventually become part of the territory of Reuben and Gad (Josh. 13:15-27). 

Moses is still reviewing the events of the wandering, settling now on the more recent past. But, notice that God is using these inferior, unchosen nations–their ethnic cousins–to show them what courageous action coupled with divine favor could produce. He also clarifies that these territories were not their land of promise, but areas to pass through on the way. He gives them a taste of what the conquest would be like, enabling their victory over the Amorites.

Sometimes, we can learn from the people around us to possess the courage, conviction, and tenacity we need to have in pursuing our God-given tasks (Luke 16:8)! They should never outdo us in their pursuit of their goals and purposes. We also need to be reminded that this world is not our home; we’re just passing through (Mat. 6:19-21; 1 Jn. 2:15-17)! May we never mistake this world for the world to come. Finally, our small victories here are all part of our endeavor to gain the greatest victory there is (1 Jn. 5:4)! 

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Author: preacherpollard

preacher,Cumberland Trace church of Christ, Bowling Green, Kentucky

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