Deuteronomy 3:5

Berean Standard Bible · deep dive

All these cities were fortified with high walls and gates and bars, and there were many more unwalled villages.

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What it means

On the surface, this is a real estate report. Moses is recounting Israel's victory over Og, king of Bashan, and he pauses to describe what Israel just took: cities ringed with high stone walls, heavy gates, and crossbars to lock them down — plus a sprawling countryside of unwalled villages around them. Sixty fortified cities, the next verse will tell you, all in one campaign.

But notice where Moses chooses to put his emphasis. He doesn't say "we were strong." He says the cities were strong. High walls. Gates. Bars. He's piling up the defenses on purpose. Because Moses is preaching, not just reporting. This whole book is his farewell sermon to the next generation — the kids of the people who refused to go into the land forty years earlier. And why did their parents refuse? Look at Deuteronomy 1:28 and Numbers 13:28: the spies came back terrified because "the cities are large, with walls up to the heavens." That phrase — fortified cities — was the exact excuse for the unbelief that cost a whole generation their inheritance.

So when Moses says here, "All these cities were fortified with high walls and gates and bars," he's deliberately echoing the old fear — and then telling you they fell anyway. The very obstacle their parents said was impossible, God has just handed them. The walls that swallowed up a generation's faith are now rubble under Israel's feet.

The mention of "many unwalled villages" matters too. It's not just the fortresses that fell — the whole countryside opened up. Total victory, not partial.

There's no major denominational dispute on this verse; it's a piece of historical narrative. The question it presses on every Christian tradition is the same: do you actually believe God can take down what looks unbreakable?

Historical Context

You're standing on the plains of Moab — modern-day Jordan, just east of the Jordan River — somewhere around 1406 BC if you take the traditional dating, or a couple centuries later if you take the lower scholarly dating. Either way: Moses is old, about to die, and Israel is camped on the doorstep of the Promised Land. He's giving his last sermons. That's what Deuteronomy is — Moses preaching the whole story back to the people one more time before they cross over without him.

The territory Moses is describing here, Bashan, sat northeast of the Sea of Galilee — rolling, fertile highland country famous in the ancient world for its cattle and oak forests. (When later prophets want to picture fat, prosperous people, they say "bulls of Bashan.") Og's kingdom was rugged terrain, and the cities Moses is describing were the real deal — archaeologists have found basalt-stone fortifications in this region with walls thick enough to take serious punishment. These weren't mud-brick villages. They were strongholds.

Why fortified cities at all? Because the ancient Near East was a violent neighborhood. City-kings raided each other constantly for grain, women, and slaves. A walled city with locking gates was your life insurance policy. People in the surrounding villages would run inside the walls when raiders showed up. To a foot soldier in 1400 BC, a fortified city was the closest thing to "unconquerable" that existed.

And remember who Moses is talking to. The audience is the children of the wilderness generation — kids who grew up hearing their parents say, "We couldn't take those cities. The walls were too high." Now their parents are dead in the desert, and Moses is saying: look at the rubble of Bashan. The walls aren't the problem. Unbelief was.

Original Language

- בְּצֻרֹת (bətsurot) — "fortified." Comes from a root meaning "to cut off" or "make inaccessible." Picture a city deliberately sealed off from the world. This same word shows up in Numbers 13:28 when the spies came back trembling — "the cities are bətsurot." Moses uses the exact word that broke his parents' generation, and then tells you the walls came down anyway.

- חוֹמָה גְבֹהָה (chomah gəvohah) — "high wall." Chomah is the city wall specifically; gəvohah means tall, lofty, imposing. The kind of wall that throws a shadow over you when you stand at its base.

- דְּלָתַיִם וּבְרִיחַ (dəlatayim u'vriach) — "gates and a bar." Dəlatayim is the double-leaf gate; bri'ach is the heavy crossbar that drops into iron brackets and locks the gate from inside. This is the picture of a city saying no one is getting in here.

- פְּרָזִי (pərazi) — "unwalled village." A defenseless hamlet, an open settlement. Later in Ezekiel 38:11 it'll describe a people "living without walls" — vulnerable, exposed.

The vocabulary is deliberate. Moses is stacking up military jargon — fortified, high-walled, gated, barred — and then watching it all collapse.

How it points to Christ

Walls falling is one of the Bible's quiet, recurring pictures of what God does. He brings down what cannot be brought down. Jericho's walls in Joshua 6 — picked up again in Hebrews 11:30 as a monument to faith. The walls of Bashan here. Eventually, the walls of every human stronghold that sets itself against God.

Paul takes this picture and applies it to the inside of you. In 2 Corinthians 10:4–5 he writes, "the weapons of our warfare are not the weapons of the world. Instead, they have divine power to demolish strongholds." The "fortified cities" Christ came to take down aren't made of basalt — they're made of pride, fear, addiction, self-righteousness, the lies we've believed about God and ourselves. Every one of us has Bashan inside us. Walls that have stood since childhood. Gates locked from the inside.

And here's the thing: Jesus doesn't just demolish strongholds in us — he himself walked into the most fortified stronghold of all and broke it open. Death. The grave. The "gates of Hades" Jesus talks about in Matthew 16:18, when he tells Peter that the gates of hell will not prevail against his church. Notice the picture — gates are defensive. Jesus isn't picturing the church holding off hell. He's picturing the church kicking in hell's gates. He went first. He went down into death with locks and bars and walls all around it, and three days later he walked out the front gate carrying it on his shoulder.

So when you read about Og's iron-bound gates lying in pieces, you're seeing a small picture of the bigger thing Jesus came to do: break open every fortress that holds you captive, including the last one.

Application

Here's the uncomfortable question this verse wants to ask you: what's your fortified city?

Because everyone has one. There's something in your life right now that looks unbreakable. A pattern of sin you've fought for years and given up on. A relationship that feels permanently broken. A wound from your childhood that has stone walls around it three feet thick. A fear that runs the whole show — fear of failing, fear of being alone, fear of being found out. You've stared at the walls so long you've decided they don't come down. Maybe you've stopped praying about it. Maybe you've made peace with the prison.

Israel's parents did exactly that. They saw the walls and turned around. They spent the rest of their lives wandering in circles, dying in a desert, because they decided in advance that God couldn't take what looked impossible.

Don't do that.

The cost this verse asks of you is specific: stop calling permanent what God calls temporary. Name the wall. Speak it out loud to God today. "Lord, this is the city I think you can't take." And then ask him to take it — not in some vague, spiritual, someday way. Ask him this week. Ask him tomorrow morning.

You will not march around it seven times and have it collapse on Tuesday. But God's pattern with walls is unbroken. Jericho fell. Bashan fell. Sin and death fell at the cross. Whatever you're staring at right now, with its high walls and its locked gates and its iron bars — it is not stronger than the God who is calling you to walk forward.

The walls are not the problem. Unbelief is.

Prayer Points

Reflections

Sources

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