Deuteronomy 28:18
Cursed shall be the fruit of thy body, and the fruit of thy land, the increase of thy kine, and the flocks of thy sheep.
Original Language Analysis
Cross References
Historical Context
Ancient Near Eastern peoples measured prosperity primarily through children, crops, and livestock—exactly what verse 18 curses. Childlessness was considered divine judgment (1 Samuel 1:5-6; Luke 1:25); crop failure meant famine; livestock disease meant economic ruin. Israel's history repeatedly validated this curse: the exile decimated population and disrupted family lines; agricultural failures plagued disobedient periods (Haggai 1:6, 9-11); and livestock diseases appear in prophetic judgments (Exodus 9:3-6; Zechariah 14:15). The connection between human and agricultural fertility reflects ancient covenant theology where land and people exist in symbiotic relationship under God's sovereign blessing or curse.
Questions for Reflection
- How does the parallel between human fertility and land productivity reveal the interconnection between covenant obedience and creation's flourishing?
- What does the ironic use of 'ashtarot' (related to fertility goddess worship) teach about the futility of false gods?
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Analysis & Commentary
Cursed shall be the fruit of thy body, and the fruit of thy land, the increase of thy kine, and the flocks of thy sheep—This verse reverses the Abrahamic covenant's core promises: offspring and land (Genesis 12:2, 7; 17:2-8). The Hebrew peri-vitnekha (פְּרִי־בִטְנְךָ, fruit of your womb) parallels peri-admatekha (פְּרִי־אַדְמָתֶךָ, fruit of your ground), linking human fertility to agricultural productivity—both proceed from God's blessing and both fail under curse. The mention of shegar-alaphekha (שְׁגַר־אֲלָפֶיךָ, increase of your cattle) and ashtarot tsonekha (עַשְׁתְּרוֹת צֹאנֶךָ, flocks of your sheep) covers livestock reproduction, completing the picture of comprehensive barrenness.
The term ashtarot for sheep flocks is particularly striking—it uses the plural form of Ashtoreth, the Canaanite fertility goddess. This may be deliberate irony: Israelites who worship fertility deities will experience infertility as judgment. Only Yahweh controls reproduction and productivity; false gods are impotent. The curse attacks the three foundations of ancient agrarian wealth: children (labor, inheritance, legacy), crops (sustenance), and livestock (wealth, trade, sacrifice). Without these, covenant community cannot sustain itself generationally.