· Translation: KJV

Deuteronomy 14:11Of all clean birds you may eat.

The setting

Plains of Moab, east of Jordan River, ~1406 BC. Moses addresses the new generation before entering Canaan, modern-day Jordan/Israel border.

The emotion here: paternal concern for a people about to face new temptations

The original word

tahor (טָהוֹר) — ritually clean, set apart, fitting for God's people

Why it matters

These laws distinguished Israel from Canaanite cultures that ate anything, including animals used in pagan rituals

Read with care

What most readers miss in Deuteronomy 14:11

This isn't about health—it's about being visibly different from surrounding nations

Common misconceptionPeople think these are health laws, but they're about covenant identity. Many 'unclean' birds are actually nutritious—this was about staying separate from pagan practices.

Bible Genome reading

Deuteronomy 14:11 — Bible Genome reading

SpeakerMoses
Eraexodus
Primary emotionresting
Literary typelaw
MarkCommand

Emotional genome

Comfort power40%
Quotability30%
Memorability40%
Crisis relevance20%
Standalone40%
Themes:holinessobedience

In context

No verse stands alone.

Read the conversation around it.

Open Deuteronomy 14

Deuteronomy 14:11 comes from the book of Deuteronomy, written during the exodus period. These words are attributed to Moses. The dominant emotion in this verse is resting, with a comfort power of 40% and a tone that is commanding. It belongs to the law genre of biblical literature. Key themes include holiness, obedience. Notable phrases: clean birds you may eat. This verse contains a command.

Your reflection

What does Deuteronomy 14:11 mean to you, today?

A short note. A question. A prayer. Saved privately to your Soul Garden, dated, and tied to this verse forever.

Speak your heart →

Get 3 verses for "resting"

Delivered to your inbox right now. Free.