<span class="x" onmousemove="Show('perush','El Rambam explica todo este versículo en el <b>9º Capítulo</b> de Las Leyes de los Fundamentos de la Torá.',event);" onmouseout="Close();">Cuidaréis de hacer todo lo que yo os mando:</span> <span class="x" onmousemove="Show('perush','Estas palabras sirvieron al Rambam como referencia al <b>313er Precepto Negativo</b> y al <b>314to Precepto Negativo</b> enumerados en el Prefacio a Mishné Torá, su “Compendio de la Ley Hebrea” para todo el Pueblo de Israel, habiéndose también referido a este versículo al <b>finalizar el Prefacio</b> al mismo.',event);" onmouseout="Close();">no añadirás a ello, ni quitarás de ello</span>.
The Five Books of Moses, by Everett Fox
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The Five Books of Moses, by Everett Fox
The subject is various scenarios under which Israelites might be lured to worship other gods; it has first been broached in Ex. 22:19, and will return in Deut. 17:2–7. Vv.2–6 deal with a religious visionary, 7–12 with a relative (both of whom seek to turn the Israelites to idols), and 13–19 with a whole town that has abandoned the covenant in favor of other gods. In all three cases, the penalty is death, with the chapter building up the sentences into a crescendo of destruction in vv.16–19. The opening verse of the chapter forms a fitting superscript for the bulk of the laws, and hints that Deuteronomy is a kind of final, closed, “canonical” dispensation.