Deuteronomy 22:1 Thou shalt not see thy brother's ox or his sheep go astray, and hide thyself from them: thou shalt in any case bring them again unto thy brother. Laws about stray cattle,
Deu 22:1-3. About thy neighbor’s ox fallen in the way,
Deu 22:4. Woman’s wearing of apparel distinct from man’s,
Deu 22:5. Of birds caught,
Deu 22:6 ,7. Of battlements for houses,
Deu 22:8. Of divers seeds sown,
Deu 22:9. Of ploughing with an ox and ass,
Deu 22:10. Of garments of divers colours,
Deu 22:11. Of fringes upon the four quarters of a garment,
Deu 22:12. The punishment of him that slandereth his wife.
Deu 22:13-19. Her punishment if the scandal be true,
Deu 22:20 ,21. The punishment of adultery,
Deu 22:22-24; of rape,
Deu 22:25-27; of fornication,
Deu 22:28 ,29. Against incest,
Deu 22:30.
Thy brother;
so called by communion not of religion, but of nature, as having one Father, even God,
Malachi 2:10; as appears,
1. Because the same law is given about their enemy’s ox, &c.,
Exodus 23:4.
2. Because else the obligation of this law had been uncertain, seeing men could not ordinarily tell whether the straying ox or sheep belonged to a Jew or to a stranger.
3. Because this was a duty of common justice and charity, which the law of nature taught even heathens, and it is absurd to think that the law of God delivered to the Jews should have less charity in it than the law of nature given to the Gentiles.
Hide thyself from them,
i.e. dissemble or pretend that thou dost not seen them; or neglect or pass them by as if thou hadst not seen them.