Deuteronomy 4:28
Context4:28 There you will worship gods made by human hands – wood and stone that can neither see, hear, eat, nor smell.
Deuteronomy 4:38
Context4:38 to dispossess nations greater and stronger than you and brought you here this day to give you their land as your property. 1
Deuteronomy 18:10
Context18:10 There must never be found among you anyone who sacrifices his son or daughter in the fire, 2 anyone who practices divination, 3 an omen reader, 4 a soothsayer, 5 a sorcerer, 6
Deuteronomy 19:13
Context19:13 You must not pity him, but purge out the blood of the innocent 7 from Israel, so that it may go well with you.
Deuteronomy 19:19
Context19:19 you must do to him what he had intended to do to the accused. In this way you will purge 8 evil from among you.
1 tn Heb “(as) an inheritance,” that is, landed property that one can pass on to one’s descendants.
2 tn Heb “who passes his son or his daughter through the fire.” The expression “pass…through the fire” is probably a euphemism for human sacrifice (cf. NAB, NIV, TEV, NLT). See also Deut 12:31.
3 tn Heb “a diviner of divination” (קֹסֵם קְסָמִים, qosem qÿsamim). This was a means employed to determine the future or the outcome of events by observation of various omens and signs (cf. Num 22:7; 23:23; Josh 13:22; 1 Sam 6:2; 15:23; 28:8; etc.). See M. Horsnell, NIDOTTE 3:945-51.
4 tn Heb “one who causes to appear” (מְעוֹנֵן, mÿ’onen). Such a practitioner was thought to be able to conjure up spirits or apparitions (cf. Lev 19:26; Judg 9:37; 2 Kgs 21:6; Isa 2:6; 57:3; Jer 27:9; Mic 5:11).
5 tn Heb “a seeker of omens” (מְנַחֵשׁ, mÿnakhesh). This is a subset of divination, one illustrated by the use of a “divining cup” in the story of Joseph (Gen 44:5).
6 tn Heb “a doer of sorcery” (מְכַשֵּׁף, mikhashef). This has to do with magic or the casting of spells in order to manipulate the gods or the powers of nature (cf. Lev 19:26-31; 2 Kgs 17:15b-17; 21:1-7; Isa 57:3, 5; etc.). See M. Horsnell, NIDOTTE 2:735-38.
7 sn Purge out the blood of the innocent. Because of the corporate nature of Israel’s community life, the whole community shared in the guilt of unavenged murder unless and until vengeance occurred. Only this would restore spiritual and moral equilibrium (Num 35:33).
8 tn Heb “you will burn out” (בִּעַרְתָּ, bi’arta). Like a cancer, unavenged sin would infect the whole community. It must, therefore, be excised by the purging out of its perpetrators who, presumably, remained unrepentant (cf. Deut 13:6; 17:7, 12; 21:21; 22:21-22, 24; 24:7).