8 “You are not to do as we are doing here today; everyone is doing whatever seems right in his own sight. 9 Indeed, you have not yet come into the resting place and the inheritance the Lord your God is giving you. 10 When you cross the Jordan and live in the land the Lord your God is giving you to inherit, and he gives you rest from all the enemies around you and you live in security, 11 then the Lord your God will choose the place to have his name dwell. Bring there everything I command you: your burnt offerings, sacrifices, offerings of the tenth, personal contributions, and all your choice offerings you vow to the Lord. (Deuteronomy 12: 8-11)
The call for a change in worship (8): The statement in v8 that “you are not to do as we are doing here today” an indication that they could not worship as prescribed by the book of Leviticus while they enroute to the promised land. Once they were in the promised land, worship would be different.
Moses then warned the people that they are doing what was right in their own eyes. While the same thought occurs in Judges 21:25 concerning sinful living, what Moses was referring to the fact that they had no set pattern for worship. Moses was not condemning the people. He was redirecting them.
Rest (9-10): Moses promised the people they would receive rest from wandering once they occupied the promised land. We know from the book of Joshua that it took five years to conquer the land. They could not rest until the land had been conquered. Moses linked rest and security to the elimination of the Canaanites.
The author of the book of Hebrews warned his audience that they would not receive rest if they failed to keep the faith. He reminded them that the rebellious generation failed to keep the faith at Kadesh Barnea and never received rest. Believers receive rest by accepting the Lord’s offer of salvation and making him Lord.
The Chosen Place (11): In verses 5-6 the Lord directed them to worship at one place. Here Moses states that the Lord would choose that place after the enemies have been removed. He also directed them to bring their first fruits, tithes, offerings, and sacrifices to the place of worship.
Commentator Eugene Merrill points out that the Israelites had local altars. For example: Joshua built an altar to celebrate the entrance into the promised land, Gideon built one to acknowledge his encounter with the angel. Elijah built one to demonstrate God’s power over Baal.
Challenge: Are you enjoying God’s rest? Is your personal worship away from distractions?
"As worship begins in holy expectancy, it ends in holy obedience. Holy obedience
saves worship from becoming an opiate, an escape from the pressing needs of modern life." Richard Foster