Moses presents the stark choice facing Israel: blessing or curse. This chapter forms the climactic conclusion to Moses' second discourse, laying out the comprehensive consequences of Israel's covenant relationship with God. Obedience will bring abundant blessing in every sphere of life, while disobedience will result in devastating curses that reverse every promised benefit. The dramatic contrast between the brief blessings and the extensive, detailed curses underscores the gravity of Israel's covenant commitment as they prepare to enter the Promised Land.
The structure of verses 15-19 forms a precise inversion of the blessing formula in verses 3-6, creating a literary diptych that presents Israel with stark binary alternatives. Verse 15 opens with the protasis wəhāyâ ʾim-lōʾ ("but it will be, if not"), a conditional construction that mirrors the positive wəhāyâ ʾim-šāmôaʿ of verse 2. The lengthy conditional clause in verse 15 establishes the single trigger for the entire curse sequence: failure to "listen to the voice of Yahweh your God, to keep carefully all His commandments and His statutes." The infinitival construction lišmōr laʿăśôt ("to keep carefully") uses two verbs to emphasize both preservation and performance of the covenant stipulations. The apodosis then announces that "all these curses will come upon you and overtake you," employing two verbs (bāʾû and hiśśîḡûkā) that depict the curses as active pursuers, hunting down the covenant-breaker with relentless determination.
Verses 16-19 deploy the passive participle ʾārûr ("cursed") twelve times in a hammering anaphora that creates an overwhelming sense of comprehensive judgment. The structure precisely mirrors verses 3-6, but where those verses used bārûk ("blessed"), these substitute its antonym. Verse 16 establishes the spatial totality: "in the city...in the field," covering all human habitation. Verse 17 moves to economic life: "your basket and your kneading bowl," from harvest to meal preparation. Verse 18 addresses biological fertility: "the fruit of your womb and the fruit of your ground, the increase of your herd and the young of your flock," encompassing human reproduction and all categories of livestock. Verse 19 returns to spatial language but now temporal: "when you come in...when you go out," a merism for all activity and movement. The effect is claustrophobic—there is no sphere of life, no moment of time, no location in space where the curse does not penetrate.
The rhetorical force of this passage lies in its systematic dismantling of every dimension of blessing promised to Abraham and reiterated throughout Deuteronomy. The curse on the "fruit of your womb" nullifies the promise of numerous descendants; the curse on "the fruit of your ground" revokes the land's fertility; the curse "in the city and in the field" means no refuge exists within the promised land itself. The repetition of the second-person singular pronouns (ʾattâ, "you"; the suffixes on biṭnəkā, "your womb"; ʾadmātekā, "your ground") personalizes the judgment, making each Israelite individually accountable. The passage functions not as vindictive threat but as covenant lawsuit, laying out with legal precision the consequences stipulated in the treaty document itself. Moses is not inventing penalties but rehearsing the terms to which Israel has already agreed at Sinai.
Covenant relationship is not a static status but a living bond sustained by continual obedience; to cease listening is to step from the sphere of blessing into the domain of curse, where every dimension of life—spatial, temporal, economic, biological—falls under judgment. The twelve-fold repetition of "cursed" is not rhetorical excess but covenant realism: disobedience is comprehensive in its consequences because it severs the relationship with the One who is the source of all life and flourishing.