John Calvin Commentary


John Calvin Commentary
"How should one chase a thousand, And two put ten thousand to flight, Except their Rock had sold them, And Jehovah had delivered them up?" — Deuteronomy 32:30 (ASV)
How should one chase a thousand. Of all the many tokens of God’s wrath, He selects one which was particularly striking; for as long as God was on their side, they had put to flight mighty armies, nor had they been supported by any multitude of forces. Now, when, though in great numbers, they are conquered by a few, this change plainly shows that they are deprived of God’s aid, especially when a thousand, who previously were accustomed to rout the greatest armies with a small group, gave way before ten men. Moses, therefore, condemns the stupidity of the people, because it does not occur to them that they are rejected by God, when they are so easily overcome by a few enemies, whom they greatly outnumber.
Moses, however, goes still further, and says that they were sold and betrayed;279 since God, having so often found them to be unworthy of His aid, not only deserted them, but made them subject to heathen nations, and, as it were, sold them to be their slaves. This threat is often repeated by the prophets, and Isaiah, desiring to awaken in them a hope of deliverance, tells them that God would redeem the people whom He had sold.280 But, in case anyone should object that it was not surprising if the uncertain chance of war should confer on others the victory which often, as a profane poet says,
“Hovers between the two on doubtful wings,”281
Moses anticipates the objection by declaring that, unless the people should be deprived of God’s aid, they could not be anything but successful. A comparison is therefore made between the true God and false gods, as if Moses had said that, where the God of hosts presides, the outcome of war can never be doubtful. Hence it follows, that God’s elect and peculiar people are exempted from the ordinary condition of nations, except insofar as they deserve to be rejected on account of their ingratitude.
He calls the unbelievers themselves to be the arbiters and witnesses of this, since they had often experienced the formidable power of God, and knew for certain that the God of Israel was unlike their idols. It is, then, just as if he had said that this was conspicuous even to the blind, or were to cite as witnesses those who have no light from above. In thus inviting unbelievers to be judges, it is not as if he supposed that they would pronounce what was true, and thoroughly understood by them, but because they must inevitably be convinced by experience: for, if anyone had asked the heathen whether the supreme government and power of heaven and earth were in the hands of the One God of Israel, they never would have confessed that their idols were mere vanity.
Still, however malignantly they might detract from God’s glory, Moses does not hesitate to boast, even with them as judges, that God had magnificently exerted His unconquered might; although he refers rather to the experience of facts themselves, than to their feelings. Other commentators extract a different meaning, namely, that although unbelievers might be victorious, still God remained unaffected by it, neither was His arm broken because He permitted them to afflict the apostate Israelites:282 the former explanation, however, is the more appropriate one.
279 “Shut them up.” — A. V.
280 The reference is here generally to Isaiah 52:3, however, to which , however, to which C. probably alludes, hardly bears out the statement in the text: “Ye have . probably alludes, hardly bears out the statement in the text: “Ye have sold yourselves for nought, etc. The for nought, etc. The Fr. stands thus, ”Isaie, en parlant du retour de la captivite de Babylone, dit que Dieu rachetera le peuple qu’il a vendu.”. stands thus, ”Isaie, en parlant du retour de la captivite de Babylone, dit que Dieu rachetera le peuple qu’il a vendu.”
281
diuque
Inter utrumque volat dubiis Victoria pennis.
Ovid, Metam. viii. 11, 12.
282 This is the view of S.M. “Although our enemies now be our judges, this they have not from their own gods, but from our God, who has delivered us into their hands.”. “Although our enemies now be our judges, this they have not from their own gods, but from our God, who has delivered us into their hands.”