{"id":1419,"verse_id":"DEU.14.1","translation_id":"net-engnet","book_id":"DEU","chapter":14,"verse":1,"note_index":1,"note_type":"study_note","label":"NET study note","caller":"2","reference":"14.1","text":"Do not cut yourselves or shave your forehead bald . These were pagan practices associated with mourning the dead; they were not be imitated by God’s people (though they frequently were; cf. 1 Kgs 18:28 ; Jer 16:6; 41:5; 47:5 ; Hos 7:14 [LXX]; Mic 5:1 ). For other warnings against such practices see Lev 21:5 ; Jer 16:5 .","source_note_position":2,"source_url":"https://netbible.org/resource/netNote/Deuteronomy%2014%3A1/2"} {"id":1420,"verse_id":"DEU.14.21","translation_id":"net-engnet","book_id":"DEU","chapter":14,"verse":21,"note_index":1,"note_type":"study_note","label":"NET study note","caller":"2","reference":"14.21","text":"Do not boil a young goat in its mother’s milk . This strange prohibition – one whose rationale is unclear but probably related to pagan ritual – may seem out of place here but actually is not for the following reasons: (1) the passage as a whole opens with a prohibition against heathen mourning rites (i.e., death, vv. 1-2 ) and closes with what appear to be birth and infancy rites. (2) In the other two places where the stipulation occurs ( Exod 23:19 and Exod 34:26 ) it similarly concludes major sections. (3) Whatever the practice signified it clearly was abhorrent to the Lord and fittingly concludes the topic of various breaches of purity and holiness as represented by the ingestion of unclean animals (vv. 3-21 ). See C. M. Carmichael, “On Separating Life and Death: An Explanation of Some Biblical Laws,” HTR 69 (1976): 1-7; J. Milgrom, “You Shall Not Boil a Kid In Its Mother’s Milk,” BRev 1 (1985): 48-55; R. J. Ratner and B. Zuckerman, “In Rereading the ‘Kid in Milk’ Inscriptions,” BRev 1 (1985): 56-58; and M. Haran, “Seething a Kid in its Mother’s Milk,” JJS 30 (1979): 23-35.","source_note_position":2,"source_url":"https://netbible.org/resource/netNote/Deuteronomy%2014%3A21/2"}