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Exodus 23

1

Thou shalt not raise a false report: put not thine hand with the wicked to be an unrighteous witness.

2

Thou shalt not follow a multitude to do evil; neither shalt thou speak in a cause to decline after many to wrest judgment:

3

Neither shalt thou countenance a poor man in his cause.

4

If thou meet thine enemy’s ox or his ass going astray, thou shalt surely bring it back to him again.

1
5

If thou see the ass of him that hateth thee lying under his burden, and wouldest forbear to help him, thou shalt surely help with him.

6

Thou shalt not wrest the judgment of thy poor in his cause.

7

Keep thee far from a false matter; and the innocent and righteous slay thou not: for I will not justify the wicked.

8

And thou shalt take no gift: for the gift blindeth the wise, and perverteth the words of the righteous.

9

Also thou shalt not oppress a stranger: for ye know the heart of a stranger, seeing ye were strangers in the land of Egypt.

10

And six years thou shalt sow thy land, and shalt gather in the fruits thereof:

11

But the seventh year thou shalt let it rest and lie still; that the poor of thy people may eat: and what they leave the beasts of the field shall eat. In like manner thou shalt deal with thy vineyard, and with thy oliveyard.

1
12

Six days thou shalt do thy work, and on the seventh day thou shalt rest: that thine ox and thine ass may rest, and the son of thy handmaid, and the stranger, may be refreshed.

13

And in all things that I have said unto you be circumspect: and make no mention of the name of other gods, neither let it be heard out of thy mouth.

14

Three times thou shalt keep a feast unto me in the year.

15

Thou shalt keep the feast of unleavened bread: (thou shalt eat unleavened bread seven days, as I commanded thee, in the time appointed of the month Abib; for in it thou camest out from Egypt: and none shall appear before me empty:)

16

And the feast of harvest, the firstfruits of thy labours, which thou hast sown in the field: and the feast of ingathering, which is in the end of the year, when thou hast gathered in thy labours out of the field.

17

Three times in the year all thy males shall appear before the Lord God.

18

Thou shalt not offer the blood of my sacrifice with leavened bread; neither shall the fat of my sacrifice remain until the morning.

19

The first of the firstfruits of thy land thou shalt bring into the house of the Lord thy God. Thou shalt not seethe a kid in his mother’s milk.

20

Behold, I send an Angel before thee, to keep thee in the way, and to bring thee into the place which I have prepared.

21

Beware of him, and obey his voice, provoke him not; for he will not pardon your transgressions: for my name is in him.

22

But if thou shalt indeed obey his voice, and do all that I speak; then I will be an enemy unto thine enemies, and an adversary unto thine adversaries.

23

For mine Angel shall go before thee, and bring thee in unto the Amorites, and the Hittites, and the Perizzites, and the Canaanites, the Hivites, and the Jebusites: and I will cut them off.

24

Thou shalt not bow down to their gods, nor serve them, nor do after their works: but thou shalt utterly overthrow them, and quite break down their images.

25

And ye shall serve the Lord your God, and he shall bless thy bread, and thy water; and I will take sickness away from the midst of thee.

26

There shall nothing cast their young, nor be barren, in thy land: the number of thy days I will fulfil.

27

I will send my fear before thee, and will destroy all the people to whom thou shalt come, and I will make all thine enemies turn their backs unto thee.

28

And I will send hornets before thee, which shall drive out the Hivite, the Canaanite, and the Hittite, from before thee.

29

I will not drive them out from before thee in one year; lest the land become desolate, and the beast of the field multiply against thee.

30

By little and little I will drive them out from before thee, until thou be increased, and inherit the land.

31

And I will set thy bounds from the Red sea even unto the sea of the Philistines, and from the desert unto the river: for I will deliver the inhabitants of the land into your hand; and thou shalt drive them out before thee.

32

Thou shalt make no covenant with them, nor with their gods.

33

They shall not dwell in thy land, lest they make thee sin against me: for if thou serve their gods, it will surely be a snare unto thee.

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Exodus 23

Exodus 23 completes the Book of the Covenant with laws about justice, the land, and three annual feasts, before closing with God's promise of conquest and guidance. Justice must not be perverted by following the crowd, accepting bribes, or showing partiality to the poor in their suit — fairness is not the same as favoritism. Even an enemy's wandering ox must be returned. Every seventh year the land rests and the poor may eat what grows on its own. The Sabbath is observed weekly, and the reason given here is not theological but humanitarian: your servant and the foreigner may be refreshed. Three pilgrimage feasts — Unleavened Bread, Harvest, and Ingathering — structure the agricultural year as liturgical time. Then God promises His angel to go ahead of Israel into the land, and warns against worshipping the gods of the nations they displace or making covenants with them. Obedience will bring blessing; compromise will bring a snare. The chapter ends with a vision of territorial expansion stretching from the Red Sea to the Euphrates — a promise whose full dimensions Israel will only partially inhabit. Galatians 3:19 and Hebrews 2:2 both reflect on the role of angels in covenant mediation.

Exodus 23:1

Do not spread false reports. Do not help a guilty person by being a malicious witness. The Book of the Covenant continues with laws governing speech and witness. False reports and malicious testimony corrupt justice at its source — the testimony on which decisions rest. Proverbs 6:16–19 lists a false witness who pours out lies among the seven things God detests. The prohibition is specific to the legal context — a witness who lies destroys the innocent — but its principle extends to every form of false speech about another person. Ephesians 4:25 says put away falsehood and speak truthfully to your neighbor, for we are all members of one body. The social fabric of the covenant community depends on truthfulness in every form of public speech.

Exodus 23:2

Do not follow the crowd in doing wrong. When you give testimony in a lawsuit, do not pervert justice by siding with the crowd. The prohibition on crowd-following in matters of justice is one of the most countercultural provisions in the Torah. Public opinion, social pressure, and the desire for approval are named as threats to the integrity of justice. Romans 12:2 says do not conform to the pattern of this world, but be transformed by the renewing of your mind. The renewed mind that can resist the crowd's pressure in Romans 12 is the same mind that can give honest testimony against the crowd's verdict in Exodus 23. The pressure to conform to collective wrongdoing is recognized as a specific moral hazard — and resisting it is a specific covenant obligation.

Exodus 23:3

And do not show favoritism to a poor person in a lawsuit. The prohibition against showing favoritism to the poor in a legal case is the counterweight to the protections given to the poor throughout the legal code. Justice requires equal treatment: not prejudice against the poor and not prejudice in favor of them. Leviticus 19:15 makes this explicit: do not pervert justice; do not show partiality to the poor or favoritism to the great, but judge your neighbor fairly. The tendency to romanticize poverty as moral virtue is as much a distortion of justice as despising the poor. The covenant community's commitment to justice requires that every person — poor or rich, foreigner or native — is judged by the same standard.

Exodus 23:4

If you come across your enemy's ox or donkey wandering off, be sure to return it. The obligation to return a wandering animal even to an enemy is one of the most striking provisions in the covenant law. The enemy is not someone the law has defined but someone who has wronged you personally. The return is not optional — be sure to return it. Matthew 5:43–44 records Jesus commanding love for enemies; the covenant law's requirement of active service to enemies' property interests is the Old Testament legal form of the same principle. Proverbs 25:21–22 says if your enemy is hungry, give him food to eat — the principle of active good toward enemies runs through both testaments in different registers.

Exodus 23:5

If you see the donkey of someone who hates you fallen down under its load, do not leave it there; be sure you help them with it. The help given to the enemy extends to the animal itself: a donkey collapsed under its load is to be helped, not ignored. The someone who hates you — a personal enemy — has no claim on your assistance under the social logic of reciprocity. But the covenant logic overrides that: the animal is suffering, and the covenant community does not walk past suffering because of social complications. Luke 10:33 records the Samaritan who stopped to help the wounded man — the categories of enemy-help in Exodus 23:5 anticipate the parable's reversal of who counts as a neighbor.

Exodus 23:6

Do not deny justice to your poor people in their lawsuits. Having prohibited favoritism to the poor in verse 3, the law now prohibits the opposite: denying justice to the poor because they are poor. Both distortions are prohibited. The poor person who comes to court with a legitimate grievance must receive the same hearing and the same standard of justice as anyone else. Isaiah 10:1–2 pronounces woe on those who make unjust laws and issue oppressive decrees that deprive the poor of their rights. Amos 5:12 says he knows that you oppress the innocent and take bribes and deprive the poor of justice in the courts. The prophets assume the covenant law of Exodus 23:6 as the standard against which Israel's judicial failures are measured.

Exodus 23:7

Have nothing to do with a false charge and do not put an innocent or honest person to death, for I will not acquit the guilty. The double command — reject false charges, do not kill the innocent — protects the integrity of the judicial process from both directions. The divine sanction — I will not acquit the guilty — grounds the human obligation in the divine character: the God who is just will not overlook what human courts attempt to do unjustly. Proverbs 17:15 says acquitting the guilty and condemning the innocent — the Lord detests them both. The miscarriage of justice that the law prohibits is precisely what the passion narrative records: false charges, innocent condemned, guilty released. The law of Exodus 23:7 is violated in the trial of Jesus.

Exodus 23:8

Do not accept a bribe, for a bribe blinds those who see and twists the words of the innocent. The prohibition on bribery is grounded in its observable effect: it blinds and distorts. The judge who accepts a bribe is not merely corrupt but impaired — their capacity to see clearly has been compromised by the payment. Deuteronomy 16:19 repeats this with the same language: do not accept a bribe, for a bribe blinds the eyes of the wise and twists the words of the innocent. 1 Samuel 8:3 records Samuel's sons accepting bribes and perverting justice — the warning of Exodus 23:8 is fulfilled in the corruption of Israel's judges. The bribe is not only a legal problem but a perceptual one: it distorts the sight of those who receive it.

Exodus 23:9

Do not oppress a foreigner; you yourselves know how it feels to be foreigners, because you were foreigners in Egypt. The protection of the foreigner returns — the third time this covenant section has addressed it. The grounding this time is experiential and empathetic: you know how it feels. The memory of Egyptian oppression is not merely historical information but the moral foundation of Israel's treatment of outsiders. Leviticus 19:34 and Deuteronomy 10:19 both cite the same experiential grounding. Matthew 25:43 records the judgment against those who did not welcome the stranger — the experiential knowledge of exclusion that Israel carries from Egypt is the very knowledge that should make them unable to exclude others.

Exodus 23:10

For six years you are to sow your fields and harvest the crops, but during the seventh year let the land lie unplowed and unused. Then the poor among your people may get food from it, and the wild animals may eat what is left over. Do the same with your vineyard and your olive grove. The sabbatical year for the land extends the six-and-one pattern of the Sabbath and the manna week to the agricultural calendar. The seventh year's fallow is simultaneously an act of land stewardship, a provision for the poor who can glean from the unharvested growth, and a statement of trust: the land belongs to God, and its productivity is His gift. Leviticus 25 develops the sabbatical year into the jubilee system. Mark 2:27 says the Sabbath was made for humanity — the sabbatical year extends that gift of structured rest to the earth itself.

Exodus 23:11

Do the same with your vineyard and your olive grove. The sabbatical year applies to every form of agriculture: fields, vineyards, olive groves. No agricultural holding is exempt from the seventh-year rest. The comprehensive coverage ensures that the covenant rhythm is not observed selectively by those whose crops can survive a fallow year and ignored by those whose crops cannot. Deuteronomy 15:1–11 connects the sabbatical year for the land with the sabbatical year for debt: every seventh year debts are cancelled, just as the land rests. The integrated sabbatical economy addresses both the land and the poor simultaneously. Isaiah 61:1–2 announces the year of the Lord's favor — the sabbatical and jubilee patterns reach their eschatological expression in Jesus' inaugural sermon in Luke 4:18–19.

Exodus 23:12

Six days do your work, but on the seventh day do not work, so that your ox and your donkey may rest, and so that the slave born in your household and the foreigner living among you may be refreshed. The Sabbath command is restated with a new emphasis: the rest is for the ox, the donkey, the slave, and the foreigner. The humanitarian rationale — that the animals and the most vulnerable people need rest — is the stated purpose of the weekly Sabbath in this verse. Deuteronomy 5:14–15 grounds the Sabbath in the memory of Egypt: you were slaves in Egypt; therefore the Lord commands you to observe the Sabbath. The slave who was not given rest in Egypt must be given rest in Israel. The Sabbath is the covenant community's ongoing repudiation of the labor extraction model of Egypt.

Exodus 23:13

Be careful to do everything I have said to you. Do not invoke the names of other gods; do not let them be heard on your lips. The transitional verse before the feast calendar closes the legal section with a call to comprehensive obedience and covenant exclusivity. The prohibition on invoking other gods' names extends even to casual speech: do not let them be heard on your lips. The concern is not only formal worship but the everyday use of language that embeds other deities in normal conversation. Hosea 2:17 promises a day when the names of the Baals will no longer be invoked. Philippians 4:8 says whatever is true, whatever is noble, whatever is right — think about such things. The formation of speech is the formation of the heart, and the covenant law addresses both.

Exodus 23:14

Three times a year you are to celebrate a festival to me. The feast calendar is introduced as a comprehensive requirement: three annual festivals for every Israelite. The three times a year structure the agricultural year around three moments of covenant worship. Leviticus 23 and Deuteronomy 16 develop the feast calendar in detail. The triple rhythm — spring, summer, fall — means no season of the year passes without a covenant gathering. The feast calendar is the liturgical architecture that prevents the covenant community from reducing religion to private observance. Acts 2:1 records the Spirit falling at Pentecost — one of the three pilgrimage feasts. The early church's founding moments consistently occur within the liturgical calendar of the covenant.

Exodus 23:15

Celebrate the Festival of Unleavened Bread; for seven days eat bread made without yeast, as I commanded you. Do this at the appointed time in the month of Aviv, for in that month you came out of Egypt. No one is to appear before me empty-handed. The Feast of Unleavened Bread returns to its institution in Exodus 12–13. The month of Aviv grounds the feast in the historical fact of the Exodus. The command no one is to appear before me empty-handed establishes the principle of bringing something to the covenant gathering — an offering that acknowledges God as the source of all provision. Deuteronomy 16:16–17 repeats this: each one should bring a gift in proportion to the way the Lord your God has blessed you. The feast is not merely commemorative but participatory: what God has given is returned to Him in worship.

Exodus 23:16

Celebrate the Festival of Harvest with the firstfruits of the crops you sow in your field. Celebrate the Festival of Ingathering at the end of the year, when you gather in your crops from the field. The two remaining festivals mark the agricultural year's key transitions: the summer grain harvest (Pentecost, Feast of Weeks) and the autumn ingathering (Tabernacles, Feast of Booths). Both are named by their agricultural content — firstfruits of sown crops and the final ingathering. Acts 2:1 connects the Pentecost event to the Feast of Harvest — the firstfruits of the new covenant community are given on the feast of firstfruits. James 1:18 says God chose to give us birth through the word of truth, that we might be a kind of firstfruits of all he created. The agricultural feast is the type of the spiritual harvest.

Exodus 23:17

Three times a year all the men are to appear before the Sovereign Lord. The three-pilgrimage-feast requirement is restated with emphasis: all the men are to appear before the Sovereign Lord. The Hebrew Adonai YHWH — Sovereign Lord — is a title that emphasizes absolute lordship. Appearing before the Sovereign Lord is not optional religious attendance but covenant obligation. Psalm 84:7 says they go from strength to strength, till each appears before God in Zion. The pilgrimage feast as a spiritual journey from strength to strength — the movement toward the presence of the Sovereign Lord is itself formative. The annual pilgrimage to the sanctuary is the Old Testament practice that corresponds to the New Testament's gathering of the whole people of God in Hebrews 10:25.

Exodus 23:18

Do not offer the blood of a sacrifice to me along with anything containing yeast, and do not let the fat of my festival offering remain until morning. The ritual prohibitions about sacrifice — no yeast with blood offerings, no fat left until morning — maintain the integrity of the sacrificial act. Leaven, associated with corruption and incompleteness in the Passover narrative, cannot contaminate the blood offering. The fat that must be consumed by morning mirrors the manna that could not be kept overnight — both require complete offering in their appointed time. Leviticus 7:15–17 specifies that the thanksgiving offering must be eaten the same day. The ritual urgency of the same-day consumption reflects the theological urgency of the offering: what is given to God is given completely and without reservation.

Exodus 23:19

Bring the best of the firstfruits of your soil to the house of the Lord your God. Do not cook a young goat in its mother's milk. The firstfruits command concentrates the provision of verse 15: bring the best. Not what remains after the household's needs are met, but the first and best. Deuteronomy 26:2–10 describes the firstfruits offering as a liturgical act of testimony — the first of the harvest is brought with a recitation of the Exodus story. The prohibition on cooking a kid in its mother's milk has generated extensive interpretation in Jewish tradition, becoming the basis for the separation of meat and dairy in kosher law. Its most direct meaning is that the boundary between life-giving and death — the milk that nourished the kid used to destroy it — should not be transgressed.

Exodus 23:20

See, I am sending an angel ahead of you to guard you along the way and to bring you to the place I have prepared. The transition from law to promise is marked by a personal divine announcement: I am sending an angel. The angel who will go ahead of Israel is the same presence that guided them from Egypt — the pillar of cloud and fire — now named as an angel. Exodus 33:2 and Numbers 20:16 both refer to the angel who went before Israel. Acts 7:38 says Moses was in the assembly in the wilderness, with the angel who spoke to him on Mount Sinai. The sending of the angel is the personal divine guarantee that the command-keeping required in the law is enabled by divine guidance. God does not give commands without also giving the guidance to follow them.

Exodus 23:21

Pay attention to him and listen to what he says. Do not rebel against him; he will not forgive your rebellion, since my name is in him. The angel's authority is absolute because my name is in him — the divine name dwells in this angelic presence, making obedience to the angel obedience to God. The warning do not rebel against him is the warning against apostasy from the covenant relationship. Numbers 14:9 records Joshua and Caleb saying do not rebel against the Lord — the same vocabulary. The New Testament reads the angel of the Lord as a pre-incarnate appearance of the Son — the name that dwells in the angel is the name above all names. Colossians 2:9 says in Christ all the fullness of the Deity lives in bodily form — the fullness of the divine name that dwelt in the angel dwells fully in Christ.

Exodus 23:22

If you listen carefully to what he says and do all that I say, I will be an enemy to your enemies and will oppose those who oppose you. The conditional promise — if you listen — introduces the consequences of covenant faithfulness. The divine commitment to Israel's protection is covenantal: God will oppose Israel's opponents. The language of enmity and opposition mirrors the divine enmity toward those who oppressed God's treasured possession. Romans 8:31 says if God is for us, who can be against us? The question is the New Covenant expression of the promise in Exodus 23:22: the God who is for His covenant people is against those who are against them. The protection is not unconditional — it is tied to listening and obeying — but it is total when the condition is met.

Exodus 23:23

My angel will go ahead of you and bring you into the land of the Amorites, Hittites, Perizzites, Canaanites, Hivites and Jebusites, and I will wipe them out. The list of nations in the promised land is the same list that appeared in Exodus 3:8 when God first announced the destination. The specificity of the nations is the specificity of the promise: not vaguely the land but this land, currently occupied by these peoples. The divine commitment to clear the land is stated in the strongest possible terms: I will wipe them out. Joshua 3:10 cites God's power over these exact nations as the sign of the living God among Israel. The conquest that follows the Exodus is not Israel's achievement but the fulfillment of the divine commitment made here.

Exodus 23:24

Do not bow down before their gods or worship them or follow their practices. You must demolish them and break their sacred stones to pieces. The requirement to destroy the religious infrastructure of the conquered nations is the covenant's most confrontational provision. The alternative — tolerance of other worship systems within the land — would undermine the exclusive devotion the covenant requires. Deuteronomy 7:5 repeats this command with the same comprehensiveness: break down their altars, smash their sacred stones, cut down their Asherah poles and burn their idols in fire. The failure to carry out this command becomes the source of Israel's greatest recurring sin — the worship of the very gods they failed to destroy. Judges 2:1–3 records God's warning when Israel made covenants with the nations instead of demolishing their altars.

Exodus 23:25

Worship the Lord your God, and his blessing will be on your food and water. I will take away sickness from among you. The positive covenant promise following the prohibition of other worship: worship the Lord and His blessing falls on every basic provision — food, water, health. The connection between covenant loyalty and physical wellbeing is not mechanistic prosperity theology but the covenant structure of Deuteronomy 28: blessing flows from covenant faithfulness, curse from covenant unfaithfulness. John 7:38 says whoever believes in me, as Scripture has said, rivers of living water will flow from within them — the blessing on food and water in Exodus 23:25 is the type of the living water that Christ promises to those who come to Him.

Exodus 23:26

And none will miscarry or be barren in your land. I will give you a full life span. The covenant blessing extends to reproduction and longevity: no miscarriage, no barrenness, full life. In the ancient world, these were the most fundamental measures of divine favor — the land that produces and the family that grows. Deuteronomy 7:14 repeats the promise: none of your men or women will be childless; your livestock will not lack young. Psalm 127:3 says children are a heritage from the Lord, offspring a reward from him. The covenant God who created human beings to be fruitful and multiply (Genesis 1:28) is the God who promises to sustain that fruitfulness within the covenant relationship.

Exodus 23:27

I will send my terror ahead of you and throw into confusion every nation you encounter. I will make all your enemies turn their backs and run. The divine terror that precedes Israel's entrance into the land is the same terror that the Song of the Sea announced in Exodus 15:14–16: the nations will hear and tremble. The confusion God promises is the same word used for the confusion He brought on the Egyptian army at the sea (Exodus 14:24). God fights Israel's battles by going ahead of them — the military promise is the extension of the Passover's protection into the conquest. Joshua 2:9–11 records Rahab confirming that this terror has already arrived: all who live in this country are melting in fear because of you.

Exodus 23:28

I will send the hornet ahead of you to drive out the Hivites, Canaanites and Hittites out of your way. The hornet is a figure for the divine advance force — whether literal or metaphorical is debated, but the theological point is clear: God precedes Israel into the land with instruments that prepare the way. Joshua 24:12 confirms this: I sent the hornet ahead of you, which drove them out before you — also the two Amorite kings. The conquest is not Israel's military achievement but the visible result of God's invisible advance work. Deuteronomy 7:20 repeats the hornet promise with the same application. The God who fought for Israel at the sea fights for Israel in the land — the same divine warrior of Exodus 15:3.

Exodus 23:29

But I will not drive them out in a single year, because the land would become desolate and the wild animals too numerous for you. The graduated nature of the conquest is God's mercy — not only for Israel but for the land itself. Total immediate displacement would produce ecological collapse: uncultivated fields overrun with wild animals. The gradual displacement gives Israel time to occupy, cultivate, and steward what they receive. Deuteronomy 7:22 confirms: the Lord your God will drive out those nations before you, little by little. The patience of the process is itself providential. God's timetable for the conquest is calibrated to the capacity of the people to receive and manage what He gives. His gifts are sized to what their recipients can bear.

Exodus 23:30

Little by little I will drive them out before you, until you have increased enough to take possession of the land. The little by little provision of the conquest mirrors the daily-gathering economy of the manna. Just as the manna was given daily rather than all at once, the land is given gradually rather than immediately. Both provisions match the gift to the recipient's current capacity for receiving it. Isaiah 28:10 says line upon line, precept upon precept, here a little, there a little — the pedagogical structure of divine teaching follows the same graduated pattern as the promised land's delivery. The God who does not overwhelm His people with more provision than they can handle is the God of Exodus 23:30.

Exodus 23:31

I will establish your borders from the Red Sea to the Mediterranean Sea, and from the desert to the Euphrates River. I will give into your hands the people who live in the land, and you will drive them out before you. The borders of the promised land are stated at their maximum extent: Red Sea to Mediterranean, desert to Euphrates. This is the full scope of the Abrahamic land promise from Genesis 15:18. Solomon's kingdom came closest to these borders (1 Kings 4:21, 24) but never fully achieved them. Revelation 21:1 describes a new earth — the ultimate fulfillment of the land promise at eschatological scale. The borders God declares in Exodus 23:31 are the outer limit of a promise that points beyond any specific geography to the renewed creation where God's people will fully inhabit what He gives.

Exodus 23:32

Do not make a covenant with them or with their gods. The prohibition on covenant with the nations and their gods is the negative form of the covenant exclusivity the law has required throughout. A covenant with the nations would create a legal obligation to their gods — the religious and the political cannot be separated in the ancient world. Judges 2:2 records God's rebuke when Israel made covenants instead of demolishing altars. The failure of covenant exclusivity begins with the formal alliances the law prohibits. 2 Corinthians 6:14–16 applies the same principle to the church: do not be yoked together with unbelievers — the covenant incompatibility of light and darkness, Christ and Belial, is the New Covenant form of the Old Covenant's prohibition on alliances with foreign nations and their gods.

Exodus 23:33

Do not let them live in your land or they will cause you to sin against me, because the worship of their gods will certainly be a snare to you. The final verse of the Book of the Covenant closes with the reason for all the preceding prohibitions on covenant with the nations: the worship of their gods will be a snare. The word snare — moqesh — is the trap that catches the unwary. Psalm 106:36 records Israel falling into exactly this trap: they worshipped their idols, which became a snare to them. Judges 2:3 and 1 Kings 11:4 (Solomon's foreign wives) are the narrative fulfillments of this warning. The snare of foreign worship is not hypothetical — every subsequent generation of Israel proves the prediction. The law's prohibition is simultaneously the description of what Israel will repeatedly fail to do.