Page:Keil and Delitzsch,Biblical commentary the old testament the pentateuch, trad James Martin, volume 1, 1885.djvu/1324

 of human freedom and guilt, as the consequence of the divine decree; just as in the case of Pharaoh. On Kedemoth, see Num 21:13. בּדּרך בּדּרך, equivalent to “upon the way, and always upon the way,” i.e., upon the high road alone, as in Num 20:19. On the behaviour of the Edomites towards Israel, mentioned in Deu 2:29, see Num 21:10. In the same way the Moabites also supplied Israel with provisions for money. This statement is not at variance with the unbrotherly conduct for which the Moabites are blamed in Deu 23:4, viz., that they did not meet the Israelites with bread and water. For קדּם, to meet and anticipate, signifies a hospitable reception, and the offering of food and drink without reward, which is essentially different from selling for money. “In Ar” (Deu 2:29), as in Deu 2:18. The suffix in בּו (Deu 2:30) refers to the king, who is mentioned as the lord of the land, in the place of the land itself, just as in Num 20:18.

Verse 31
The refusal of Sihon was suspended over him by God as a judgment of hardening, which led to his destruction. “As this day,” an abbreviation of “as it has happened this day,” i.e., as experience has now shown (cf. Deu 4:20, etc.).

verses 32-33
Defeat of Sihon, as already described in the main in Num 21:23-26. The war was a war of extermination, in which all the towns were laid under the ban (see Lev 27:29), i.e., the whole of the population of men, women, and children were put to death, and only the flocks and herds and material possessions were taken by the conquerors as prey.

verses 34-35
Deu 2:34-35 מתם עיר (city of men) is the town population of men.

Verse 36
They proceeded this way with the whole of the kingdom of Sihon. “From Aroër on the edge of the Arnon valley (see at Num 32:34), and, in fact, from the city which is in the valley,” i.e., Ar, or Areopolis (see at Num 21:15), - Aroër being mentioned as the inclusive terminus a quo of the land that was taken, and the Moabitish capital Ar as the exclusive terminus, as in Jos 13:9 and Jos 13:16; “and as far as Gilead,” which rises on the north, near the Jabbok (or Zerka, see at Deu 3:4), “there was no town too high for us,” i.e., so strong that we could not take it.

Verse 37
Only along the land of the Ammonites the Israelites did not come, namely, along the whole of the side of the brook Jabbok, or the country of the Ammonites, which was situated upon the eastern side of the upper Jabbok, and the towns of the mountain, i.e., of the Ammonitish highlands, and “to all that the Lord had commanded,” sc., commanded them not to remove. The statement, in Jos 13:25, that the half of the country of the Ammonites was given to the