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Deuteronomy, God’s Sovereign Election and Man’s Responsibility
My recent reading has included study on sections of Deuteronomy, as for instance this recent post, David Baron’s exposition of Deuteronomy 32, The Song of Moses. The overall book of Deuteronomy also comes up in James Hamilton’s God’s Glory in Salvation through Judgment, with a good overview study of the book and its major themes including the great truths of God’s sovereign election and man’s responsibility. A great summary of this point:
Israel is urged to choose life, to love Yahweh, to cleave fast to Him (30:19–20). They have a real choice, but their ‘chooser’ will always select sin because Yahweh has not given them the heart they need. But they will make their choice, and they will be judged for the rightness or wrongness of the choice they make. The fact that Yahweh promises to change their ‘chooser’ by circumcising their hearts does not remove their responsibility for the choice they will make. Nor does it make Yahweh unjust if He chooses not to change their ‘chooser’, or if He chooses only to change the ‘choosers’ of those He chooses. People are responsible. And Yahweh is sovereign.
Through the Torah (the Mosaic law) the people of Israel are to know and love their God, and to understand how to live in a way pleasing to God. A large portion of Deuteronomy can be seen as an expansion of and commentary upon the Ten Commandments. Deuteronomy 5 recites the Ten Commandments, and chapters 6 through 25 explain:
Commandment | Chapters in Deuteronomy | Exposition |
1. No other gods | 6-11 | Love and worship Yahweh |
2. No idols | 12-13 | Central sanctuary and false gods |
3. Name | 13–14 | Holiness to Yahweh |
4. Sabbath | 14-16 | periodic duties |
5. Parents | 16–18 | Authority: judge, king, priest, and prophet |
6. Murder | 19–22 | Life and Law |
7. Adultery | 22-23 | Regulations on sexuality |
8. Theft | 23-25 | Property |
9. False testimony | 24-25 | Truthfulness |
10. Coveting | 25 | Unselfish levirate marriage |
The last chapters of Deuteronomy, after this exposition of the ten commandments, address the root issue of human nature as in the specific case of the people of Israel. Having been given every positive inducement to obey, and the warnings about not obeying, as Hamilton observes: obedience would seem to be a reasonable consequence. Reason alone, however, does not govern the human heart. Sin never makes sense. In order to obey, one must have a circumcised heart. Circumcision of the heart, however, is not something one does to oneself. One must be given what one needs by Yahweh himself, and Moses declares to Israel that Yahweh has not given them the kind of heart they need (Deut. 29:3).