Verses 1–6
DEUTERONOMY - CHAPTER NINE
Verses 1-6:
"This day," not that same calendar day, but "at this time," or "very soon."
Anakim, descendants of Arba, one of the sons of Heth, Genesis 23:3, who built Hebron seven years before the building of Zoan in Egypt, Genesis 23:2; Numbers 13:22; Joshua 15:13; Joshua 15:54. Anak was his son. In Moses’ time. there were three prominent sons of Anak, Ahiman, Sheshai, and Talmai, Numbers 13:22-33. Like the Emim (Deuteronomy 2:10-11), they were huge and warlike and numerous, and lived in well-fortified cities.
God promised to precede Israel in their conquest of the Land, and destroy the Anakim and the other inhabitants. This does not mean that God would do all the work Himself, and Israel would have nothing at all to do. It means that He would work in and through Israel, to accomplish what He had promised to Abraham, Isaac, and Jacob regarding the Land.
The text is a warning to Israel, that they must not think God had given them this Land because of their own goodness. Moses describes them as "stiff necked," gesheh oraph, "hard of neck," obstinant, refusing to bow their necks to submit to Jehovah’s yoke, see Exodus 32:9; Exodus 33:3-5; Exodus 34:9.
God’s reason for bringing Israel into the Land was two-fold: (1) The wickedness of the inhabitants. The moral corruption of the Canaanites was legendary in the ancient world. They were grossly immoral, and practiced the shedding of innocent blood in their human sacrifices. God could not ignore this depravity. (2) His covenant with Abraham, Isaac, and Jacob.