Deuteronomy 25 Commentary
Please choose a passage
Moses instructs the Israelites on how to administer legal justice in the land. This law limits the number of lashes to be given to a criminal to forty.
Moses’s concern for compassion moves to the treatment of domestic animals. He now commands Israel not to muzzle the ox while he is threshing.
Beginning a section that focuses on the principle of the tenth commandment which restricts envy, Moses described the principles relating to levirate marriage. They involve a situation where one of two brothers dwelling together dies without having a son. Though the surviving brother was required to marry his brother’s wife so his family line could continue, this law dictated what to do if the surviving brother refuses to do what was required of him.
This law prescribed to cut off the hand of a wife who sought to deliver her husband in a fight by seizing the genitals of his opponent.
Moses commands the Israelites to use accurate weights and measures when they engage in commerce with other people.
Moses urged the Israelites to remember to wipe out the Amalekites when they are settled in the Promised Land. This was in response to the brutality the Amalekites showed when they attacked the Israelites during the exodus from Egypt.
Deuteronomy 25 continues Moses' exposition of the Ten Commandments. It concludes the discussion generally flavored by the ninth commandment ("Don't bear false witness") and then moves to examples of how to obey the principle behind the tenth commandment ("Do not envy"). Moses wants to make sure the Israelites behave in a way that pleases the Suzerain God who has rescued them from Egypt and plans to continue His ongoing care and protection for them in the future.
To obey God's ways is to gain blessing, as God knows what is for our best. God set up Israel as a self-governing society based on the principles of rule of law (the first five commandments) and loving one's neighbor (the last five commandments). But God left it up to Israel to choose who to follow, whether to follow the idolatrous pagan ways of the strong exploiting the weak, or His ways of loving and serving one another.
Deuteronomy 25 can be outlined as follows:
- Ninth Commandment Laws (Deuteronomy 25:1 – 4)
- Regarding the Treatment of the Guilty (Deuteronomy 25:1 – 3)
- Regarding the Treatment of Animals (Deuteronomy 25:4)
- Tenth Commandment Laws (Deuteronomy 25:5 – 19)
- Regarding Levirate Marriage (Deuteronomy 25:5 – 10)
- Regarding a Wife's Rescue Attempt (Deuteronomy 25:11 – 12)
- Regarding Unjust Weights and Measures (Deuteronomy 25:13 – 16)
- Regarding the Amalekites (Deuteronomy 25:17 – 19)
© 2025 The Bible Says, All Rights Reserved.
Ask The Bible Says