Ramban on Deuteronomy, Introduction 2ืจืื"ื ืขื ืืืจืื, ืืงืืื ืืณ
Before Moses commenced the explanation of the Torah he began to reprove them, reminding them of their sins, How oft did they rebel against Him in the wilderness, and how the Holy One, blessed be He, conducted Himself towards them with the attribute of mercy. This was to inform them of His mercies towards them; also, that they be chastised by his words so that they would not revert to their degradation lest they be swept away in all their sins, and [finally] to strengthen their hearts by informing them that He will always conduct Himself towards them with the attribute of mercy, and hence a person should not feel that he will not be able to inherit the Land because โ since there is no person that does not sin โ the attribute of judgment would at once be aimed against him and he would be destroyed. Therefore Moses our teacher informed them that the Holy One, blessed be He, is the Merciful One, full of mercy, since the forgiveness and pardon which come from Him, blessed be He, are an assistance and help to people in serving Him, similar to what Scripture says, For with Thee is forgiveness, that Thou mayest be feared.
Or HaChaim on Deuteronomy 1:1:4ืืืจ ืืืืื ืขื ืืืจืื ืืณ:ืืณ:ืืณ
The word ืืื is also an allusion to a statement by Rava in Yuma 19 that the words ืืืืจืช ืื "and you shall speak about them" in Deut 6,7 mean that the only legitimate subjects of conversation are Torah learning and the instilling of fear of G'd in the minds of people, i.e. words of admonition. The Torah wishes to testify that throughout his life the only words which Moses permitted himself to speak unbidden were of a compelling nature; other than that he only spoke words which G'd had bidden him to speak. Anyone who peruses the words in this Book can see at once that they are either instructions in Torah or words designed to strengthen the people's faith in G'd.
Kli Yakar on Deuteronomy 1:1:1ืืื ืืงืจ ืขื ืืืจืื ืืณ:ืืณ:ืืณ
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Kli Yakar on Deuteronomy 1:1:2ืืื ืืงืจ ืขื ืืืจืื ืืณ:ืืณ:ืืณ
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Kli Yakar on Deuteronomy 1:1:3ืืื ืืงืจ ืขื ืืืจืื ืืณ:ืืณ:ืืณ
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Kli Yakar on Deuteronomy 1:6:1ืืื ืืงืจ ืขื ืืืจืื ืืณ:ืืณ:ืืณ
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Kitzur Ba'al HaTurim on Deuteronomy 1:39:1ืงืืฆืืจ ืืขื ืืืืจืื ืขื ืืืจืื ืืณ:ืืดื:ืืณ
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Sforno on Deuteronomy 1:37:1ืกืคืืจื ื ืขื ืืืจืื ืืณ:ืืดื:ืืณ
ืื ืื ืืชืื ืฃ ื' ืืืืืื, this was in order that you would have reason to cry throughout the ages, as Gโd had decreed in Numbers 14,28. When that verse referred to ืืืจืืื, โyour words,โ the objectionable words Gโd had referred to were: โour children and wives will become loot,โ (Numbers 14,5). Moses told the people at this stage the real reason for his impending death, even though the cause occurred already 38 years earlier. At that time Gโd had announced His decree ืื ืืจืื ืืืฉ ืืื ืฉืื ืืืื, adding that by contrastืืืคืื ืืฉืจ ืืืจืชื ืืื ืืื, โyour children concerning whom you had predicted that they would wind up as loot, as prisoners of war, would conquer the land.โ The major point Moses is making, [and I am paraphrasing the author who quotes Psalms 106,26-27, Ezekiel 20,23, as well as Psalms 106,32-40, Ed] is that were it not for the fact that he also had not been allowed to enter the Holy Land, they would have been condemned to extinction. The fact that he, the innocent leader, had been included in their punishment was for the sake of the nationโs survival as such, even if traumatic exile experiences lay ahead of them. (compare our author on Deut. 4,1)
Kli Yakar on Deuteronomy 1:37:1ืืื ืืงืจ ืขื ืืืจืื ืืณ:ืืดื:ืืณ
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