Deuteronomy 9:17
Context9:17 I grabbed the two tablets, threw them down, 1 and shattered them before your very eyes.
Deuteronomy 11:26
Context11:26 Take note – I am setting before you today a blessing and a curse: 2
Deuteronomy 27:7
Context27:7 Also you must offer fellowship offerings and eat them there, rejoicing before the Lord your God.
Deuteronomy 33:1
Context33:1 This is the blessing Moses the man of God pronounced upon the Israelites before his death.
1 tn The Hebrew text includes “from upon my two hands,” but as this seems somewhat obvious and redundant, it has been left untranslated for stylistic reasons.
2 sn A blessing and a curse. Every extant treaty text of the late Bronze Age attests to a section known as the “blessings and curses,” the former for covenant loyalty and the latter for covenant breach. Blessings were promised rewards for obedience; curses were threatened judgments for disobedience. In the Book of Deuteronomy these are fully developed in 27:1–28:68. Here Moses adumbrates the whole by way of anticipation.