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<p>Here, 1. Moses summons the assembly. He <i>called all Israel</i>; not only the elders, but, it is likely, as many of the people as could come within hearing, <a class="bibleref" title="Deut.5.1" href="/passage/?search=Deut.5.1">Deut. 5:1</a>. The greatest of them were not above Gods command, nor the meanest of them below his cognizance; but they were all bound to do. 2. He demands attention: “<i>Hear, O Israel</i>; hear and heed, hear and remember, hear, that you may learn, and keep, and do; else your hearing is to no purpose.” When we hear the word of God we must set ourselves to learn it, that we may have it ready to us upon all occasions, and what we have learned we must put in practice, for that is the end of hearing and learning; not to fill our heads with notions, or our mouths with talk, but to rectify and direct our affections and conversations. 3. He refers them to the covenant made with them in Horeb, as that which they must govern themselves by. See the wonderful condescension of divine grace in turning the command into a covenant, that we might be the more strongly bound to obedience by our own consent and the more encouraged in it by the divine promise, both which are supposed in the covenant. The promises and threatenings annexed to some of the precepts, as to the second, third, and fifth, make them amount to a covenant. Observe, (1.) The parties to this covenant. God made it, <i>not with our fathers</i>, not with Abraham, Isaac, and Jacob; to them God gave the <i>covenant of circumcision</i> (<a class="bibleref" title="Acts.7.8" href="/passage/?search=Acts.7.8">Acts 7:8</a>), but not that of the ten commandments. The light of divine revelation shone gradually, and the children were made to know more of Gods mind than their fathers had done. “The covenant was made with us, or our immediate parents that represented us, before Mount Sinai, and transacted for us.” (2.) The publication of this covenant. God himself did, as it were, read the articles to them (<a class="bibleref" title="Deut.5.4" href="/passage/?search=Deut.5.4">Deut. 5:4</a>): He <i>talked with you face to face; word to word</i>, so the Chaldee. Not in dark visions, as of old he spoke to the fathers (<a class="bibleref" title="Job.4.12,Job.4.13" href="/passage/?search=Job.4.12,Job.4.13"><span class="bibleref" title="Job.4.12">Job 4:12</span>, <span class="bibleref" title="Job.4.13">13</span></a>), but openly and clearly, and so that all the thousands of Israel might hear and understand. He spoke to them, and then received the answer they returned to him: thus was it transacted <i>face to face</i>. (3.) The mediator of the covenant: <i>Moses stood between God and them</i>, at the foot of the mount (<a class="bibleref" title="Deut.5.5" href="/passage/?search=Deut.5.5">Deut. 5:5</a>), and carried messages between them both for the settling of the preliminaries (<a class="bibleref" title="Exod.19.1-Exod.19.25" href="/passage/?search=Exod.19.1-Exod.19.25">Exod. 19:1-25</a>) and for the changing of the ratifications, <a class="bibleref" title="Exod.24.1-Exod.24.8" href="/passage/?search=Exod.24.1-Exod.24.8">Exod. 24:1-8</a> Herein Moses was a type of Christ, who <i>stands between God and man, to show us the word of the Lord</i>, a blessed days-man, that has laid his hand upon us both, so that we may both hear from God and speak to him without trembling.</p>