Deuteronomy 28 Quiz

25 Hard Deuteronomy 28 Quiz Questions and Answers

Deuteronomy 28 is the longest chapter in Deuteronomy and one of the most-cited covenant chapters in the entire Old Testament. The Deuteronomy 28 quiz below tests the brief opening section of blessings, the long catalogue of curses, and the closing reversal that ends the chapter.

Pair it with the Deuteronomy 27 quiz on the Mount Ebal ceremony that precedes it, the Deuteronomy 29 quiz on the Moab covenant renewal that follows, and the entire Bible quiz.

Deuteronomy 28 Quiz Questions and Answers

Question 1: What did this chapter say Israel would eat in the siege and the straitness of their enemies?
  • A. The bread of the bondman in the day of his hard servitude in Egypt
  • B. The flesh of thy cattle that fall sick in the wilderness in time of famine
  • C. The roots and bitter herbs of the field of the heathen in the day of trouble
  • D. The fruit of thine own body, the flesh of thy sons and of thy daughters
  • E. The carcases of birds slain in the siege of the city of thy fathers
View Answer

Answer 1: D. The siege-cannibalism curse is one of the most appalling in the chapter. The verse names the eating of one’s own children explicitly, and the curse is later recorded as fulfilled at the siege of Samaria (2 Kings 6:28-29) and again in Lamentations 4:10 during the fall of Jerusalem.
KJV Reference: Deuteronomy 28:53. “And thou shalt eat the fruit of thine own body, the flesh of thy sons and of thy daughters… in the siege, and in the straitness.”

Question 2: What did this chapter say the blessings would do unto Israel if they hearkened to the voice of the LORD?
  • A. They shall fall upon thee in righteousness
  • B. They shall come on thee and overtake thee
  • C. They shall be sealed upon thee for ever
  • D. They shall be poured out from heaven above
  • E. They shall accompany thee in thy harvest
View Answer

Answer 2: B. The verb “overtake” is striking — blessings here are personified as pursuers that catch up with the obedient. The same verb appears with reversed direction in verse 15, where the curses “overtake” the disobedient. The chapter uses identical language for both outcomes, signalling that obedience and disobedience trigger active pursuits.
KJV Reference: Deuteronomy 28:2. “And all these blessings shall come on thee, and overtake thee, if thou shalt hearken unto the voice of the LORD thy God.”

Question 3: What status did the LORD promise to make Israel under the blessing?
  • A. The head, and not the tail; above only, and not beneath
  • B. The chief among the nations, and the strong in the day
  • C. The vessel of his glory, and the temple of his holiness
  • D. The captain of the host, and the leader of the people
  • E. The watchmen of the wall, and the keepers of the gate
View Answer

Answer 3: A. Two parallel pairs: head/tail and above/beneath. The metaphors are spatial and political — top of the body and top of the structure. Verse 44 reverses both pairs explicitly when the stranger becomes head and Israel becomes tail in the curse section.
KJV Reference: Deuteronomy 28:13. “And the LORD shall make thee the head, and not the tail; and thou shalt be above only, and thou shalt not be beneath.”

Question 4: Among the nations of the scattering, what would Israel not find?
  • A. Bread for thy table in the day of thy weariness
  • B. Friend or kinsman to comfort thee in thy sorrow
  • C. Refuge from thine enemies in the day of trouble
  • D. Place to lay thine head in the night of thy fear
  • E. Rest for the sole of thy foot among these nations
View Answer

Answer 4: E. The phrase “rest for the sole of thy foot” recalls Genesis 8:9, where the dove finds no rest. The image is of a wandering people perpetually unable to settle. Hebrews 4:1-11 develops the theological inverse — the people of God seeking the rest the wilderness generation forfeited.
KJV Reference: Deuteronomy 28:65. “And among these nations shalt thou find no ease, neither shall the sole of thy foot have rest.”

Question 5: How did this chapter describe the action of the pestilence under the curse?
  • A. The pestilence shall sweep through the land like a storm
  • B. The pestilence shall fall upon thee in the day of thy pride
  • C. The pestilence shall cleave unto thee until he have consumed thee
  • D. The pestilence shall sit at thy door in the day of thy fear
  • E. The pestilence shall come upon the strangers in thy gates
View Answer

Answer 5: C. The verb “cleave” is the same Hebrew root used in Genesis 2:24 of marital union (“a man shall… cleave unto his wife”) — a covenantal bonding. Here the chapter uses the same verb to describe pestilence as inseparable from the disobedient, an attachment that lasts until consumption.
KJV Reference: Deuteronomy 28:21. “The LORD shall make the pestilence cleave unto thee, until he have consumed thee from off the land.”

Question 6: What did this chapter say the stranger within Israel would do under the curse?
  • A. He shall get up above thee very high, and thou shalt come down very low
  • B. He shall lend silver unto thee in the day of thy hunger and need
  • C. He shall make thy people a byword among all nations of the earth
  • D. He shall be removed from thy gates in the day of thy victory in war
  • E. He shall serve thee in the day of thy prosperity in the land of inheritance
View Answer

Answer 6: A. The verse is the reverse of the head/tail blessing in verse 13. The “very high” and “very low” intensifiers are deliberate rhetorical doublings that mark a complete inversion of social standing. Verse 44 extends the same reversal: the stranger lends, Israel borrows; the stranger is the head, Israel is the tail.
KJV Reference: Deuteronomy 28:43. “The stranger that is within thee shall get up above thee very high; and thou shalt come down very low.”

Question 7: How did this chapter describe the heaven and the earth under the climate curse?
  • A. The rain of thy land shall be turned into ashes upon thy fields by night
  • B. The sun shall be darkened in the day of thy harvest before thy face
  • C. The clouds shall withhold their rain from the face of the earth in the day
  • D. The springs shall fail and the rivers run dry in the season of need
  • E. The heaven shall be brass and the earth that is under thee shall be iron
View Answer

Answer 7: E. Brass refuses to release rain; iron refuses to yield crop. The metaphor is one of total agricultural collapse from above and below simultaneously. Leviticus 26:19 uses the inverse pairing (“heaven as iron, earth as brass”) — both metals figure in covenant curse language across the Pentateuch.
KJV Reference: Deuteronomy 28:23. “And thy heaven that is over thy head shall be brass, and the earth that is under thee shall be iron.”

Question 8: Verse 65 names three things the LORD would give Israel among the nations of the scattering. Which set names them?
  • A. Pain in thy bones, weariness of soul, and silence of tongue
  • B. Famine in thy bowels, anguish of heart, and confusion of mind
  • C. A trembling heart, and failing of eyes, and sorrow of mind
  • D. Hunger of body, thirst of throat, and faintness of feet
  • E. Wandering of foot, restlessness of soul, and sleeplessness of eye
View Answer

Answer 8: C. Three internal afflictions: heart, eyes, mind. The curse is psychological as much as physical. The “trembling heart” recurs in verse 67 as the source of the morning-and-evening cry. The chapter consistently treats internal terror as a more lasting punishment than external loss.
KJV Reference: Deuteronomy 28:65. “the LORD shall give thee there a trembling heart, and failing of eyes, and sorrow of mind.”

Question 9: What words would Israel speak in the morning under the curse, and what in the evening?
  • A. In the morning thou shalt cry, Where is the LORD God of Israel that hath delivered us?
  • B. In the morning, Would God it were even! and at even, Would God it were morning!
  • C. In the morning thou shalt weep, Mine enemies have prevailed against me in the day
  • D. In the morning thou shalt mourn, The day of evil hath come upon me at last
  • E. In the morning thou shalt groan, The hand of the LORD is heavy upon me always
View Answer

Answer 9: B. The cry is identical in structure morning and evening but with the times reversed — a perfect verbal symmetry that captures the impossibility of escape from terror. Each end of the day longs for the other end. The verse names “the fear of thine heart” and “the sight of thine eyes” as the reasons.
KJV Reference: Deuteronomy 28:67. “In the morning thou shalt say, Would God it were even! and at even thou shalt say, Would God it were morning!”

Question 10: How did this chapter describe the invading nation that the LORD would bring against Israel from far?
  • A. A nation of giants, sons of Anak, dwelling in the high places of stone
  • B. A nation of merchants, princes of the trade, ruling over the seas
  • C. A nation of priests of strange gods, serving idols of wood and stone
  • D. A nation from far, from the end of the earth, as swift as the eagle
  • E. A nation of horsemen, riders of fast horses, scattering the dust before them
View Answer

Answer 10: D. The eagle simile signals speed of arrival; the language barrier signals the depth of foreignness. Habakkuk 1:8 uses the same eagle image of the Chaldean invasion. Both passages draw on the imagery of an inescapable, alien predator descending from the heights.
KJV Reference: Deuteronomy 28:49. “The LORD shall bring a nation against thee from far, from the end of the earth, as swift as the eagle flieth.”

Question 11: What did this chapter say concerning the seed Israel would carry into the field?
  • A. Thy field shall yield only stubble in the day of thy harvest before thee
  • B. Thy bread shall fail thee in the heat of the summer harvest of thy land
  • C. Thy threshing floor shall be empty in the day of the gathering of corn
  • D. Thy crop shall wither in the morning sun before the dew is dried up
  • E. Thou shalt carry much seed into the field, and gather but little in
View Answer

Answer 11: E. The reason is named in the second half of the verse: “for the locust shall consume it.” The same pattern recurs in verses 39-42 with vineyard, olive, and tree — labour without yield as a defining curse. Joel 1-2 develops the locust-as-judgment theme at length.
KJV Reference: Deuteronomy 28:38. “Thou shalt carry much seed out into the field, and shalt gather but little in; for the locust shall consume it.”

Question 12: With which Egyptian disease did the LORD threaten to smite Israel?
  • A. The leprosy of Naaman, the boils of Job, and the wasting of Hezekiah
  • B. The plague of Korah, the murrain of Egypt, and the fever of Babylon
  • C. The botch of Egypt, and the emerods, and the scab, and the itch
  • D. The boil of Hezekiah, the issue of David, and the leprosy of Miriam
  • E. The murrain of cattle, the blains of beasts, and the lice of Pharaoh
View Answer

Answer 12: C. Four diseases named in sequence, all skin afflictions. The “botch of Egypt” links to the sixth plague of Exodus 9:9-11 (boils with blains). The verse closes with “whereof thou canst not be healed” — the curse removes not only health but the possibility of recovery.
KJV Reference: Deuteronomy 28:27. “The LORD will smite thee with the botch of Egypt, and with the emerods, and with the scab, and with the itch.”

Question 13: With which three specific afflictions did the LORD threaten to smite Israel in verse 28?
  • A. Trembling, weakness, and confusion of mind
  • B. Sickness, fainting, and stumbling at midnight
  • C. Forgetfulness, dullness, and grief of heart
  • D. Madness, blindness, and astonishment of heart
  • E. Hardness, stiffness, and bitterness of soul
View Answer

Answer 13: D. Three internal afflictions affecting mind, sight, and heart. The next verse develops the blindness specifically: “thou shalt grope at noonday, as the blind gropeth in darkness.” The chapter treats mental and perceptual collapse as covenantal punishments equal in severity to physical disease.
KJV Reference: Deuteronomy 28:28. “The LORD shall smite thee with madness, and blindness, and astonishment of heart.”

Question 14: What did this chapter say Israel would become among all nations whither the LORD would lead them?
  • A. An astonishment, a proverb, and a byword among all the nations of the earth
  • B. A reproach, a derision, and a hissing in the day of trouble
  • C. A scattering, a wandering, and a perishing among the heathen
  • D. A spectacle, a wonder, and a marvel before the eyes of the people
  • E. A sign, a token, and a memorial unto the generations to come
View Answer

Answer 14: A. Three nouns of public shame in sequence: astonishment (involuntary reaction), proverb (recurring saying), byword (mocking nickname). The verse signals not just defeat but lasting cultural memory of the defeat — Israel’s name itself becomes a warning used by other peoples.
KJV Reference: Deuteronomy 28:37. “And thou shalt become an astonishment, a proverb, and a byword, among all nations whither the LORD shall lead thee.”

Question 15: What did this chapter say Israel would do concerning lending and borrowing under the blessing?
  • A. Thou shalt buy bread of all nations and lack nothing
  • B. Thou shalt lend unto many nations, and thou shalt not borrow
  • C. Thou shalt receive tribute from all nations of the heathen
  • D. Thou shalt gather gold from all the lands round about
  • E. Thou shalt take captive the men of all the nations
View Answer

Answer 15: B. Lending without borrowing signifies economic independence and surplus. Verse 44 reverses this exactly: under the curse the stranger lends, and Israel cannot lend back. The chapter uses the lending direction as a precise barometer of covenantal standing.
KJV Reference: Deuteronomy 28:12. “and thou shalt lend unto many nations, and thou shalt not borrow.”

Question 16: What implement did this chapter say the LORD would put upon Israel’s neck under the curse?
  • A. A burden of brass upon thy shoulders in the day of thy bondage
  • B. A heavy chain about thy hands in the day of thy captivity
  • C. A yoke of iron upon thy neck until he have destroyed thee
  • D. A snare of brass at thy feet in the day of thy weariness
  • E. A weight of stone upon thy back in the day of thy weakness
View Answer

Answer 16: C. Iron is the heaviest and least removable of the metals. The “until he have destroyed thee” closing clause makes the yoke not merely a hardship but a process of consumption. Jeremiah 28 develops the iron yoke as a symbol of Babylonian captivity, drawing on this exact image.
KJV Reference: Deuteronomy 28:48. “and he shall put a yoke of iron upon thy neck, until he have destroyed thee.”

Question 17: What did this chapter say the LORD would establish Israel as, if they kept his commandments?
  • A. An holy people unto himself, as he hath sworn unto thee
  • B. A great nation among all the peoples of the earth
  • C. A kingdom of priests and a peculiar treasure of his choosing
  • D. A mighty army feared by all the nations round about thy borders
  • E. A peaceful kingdom in the land of thine inheritance for ever
View Answer

Answer 17: A. The verse reaches back to Exodus 19:6 (“a kingdom of priests, and an holy nation”) and forward to 1 Peter 2:9. The “as he hath sworn” clause grounds the establishment in patriarchal oath, not present worthiness.
KJV Reference: Deuteronomy 28:9. “The LORD shall establish thee an holy people unto himself, as he hath sworn unto thee.”

Question 18: What did this chapter say would happen to the vineyards Israel planted under the curse?
  • A. Thou shalt plant the vine, but the heathen shall pluck the fruit thereof
  • B. Thou shalt plant vineyards, and dress them, but shalt neither drink the wine, nor gather the grapes
  • C. Thou shalt plant vineyards in the day of thy strength and find them dry in the day of thy weakness
  • D. Thou shalt plant the vine and the fig in the day, and the wind shall destroy them by night
  • E. Thou shalt plant of every tree, but the rain shall not fall upon them in the season
View Answer

Answer 18: B. Three labours fail in succession: planting, dressing, and harvest. The verse names the worm as the destroyer of the vineyard. The same labour-without-reward pattern repeats with the olive (v.40) and the field (v.38). The chapter treats agricultural futility as a defining mark of the curse.
KJV Reference: Deuteronomy 28:39. “Thou shalt plant vineyards, and dress them, but shalt neither drink of the wine, nor gather the grapes; for the worms shall eat them.”

Question 19: How would Israel return to Egypt under the closing curse of the chapter?
  • A. They shall return on foot through the wilderness, and there be scattered, and no man shall gather them
  • B. They shall return as captives bound in chains, and there be tried, and no man shall plead for them
  • C. They shall return upon the backs of their own horses, and there be slain, and no man shall bury them
  • D. They shall return into Egypt with ships, and there be sold, and no man shall buy
  • E. They shall return on the camels of the merchants, and there be exchanged, and no man shall keep them
View Answer

Answer 19: D. The closing verse of the chapter reverses the entire Exodus story. Egypt was the land they were brought out of “with an high hand”; they now return as goods on ships, and the market does not even want them. The image is of total covenantal collapse — slavery beyond the reach of buyer or seller.
KJV Reference: Deuteronomy 28:68. “And the LORD shall bring thee into Egypt again with ships… and ye shall be sold unto your enemies for bondmen and bondwomen, and no man shall buy you.”

Question 20: After Israel had been as the stars of heaven for multitude, what would they become under the curse?
  • A. As the dust of the field which the wind driveth away in the day of harvest
  • B. As the wandering bird cast out of the nest in the day of trouble
  • C. As a vessel forgotten in the corner of the house of strangers
  • D. As the broken reed of Egypt that pierceth the hand of him that leans
  • E. Left few in number, after they were as the stars of heaven for multitude
View Answer

Answer 20: E. The reduction reverses the patriarchal promise of Genesis 22:17 and 26:4. The chapter’s logic is precise: the very promise that defined Israel’s blessing becomes the scale against which their loss is measured. Population collapse becomes a verdict on covenantal failure.
KJV Reference: Deuteronomy 28:62. “And ye shall be left few in number, whereas ye were as the stars of heaven for multitude.”

Question 21: What did this chapter say the LORD would open unto Israel under the blessing?
  • A. The mouth of the prophets, the elders, to speak the word in the season
  • B. The doors of the Gentiles, the kings, to bring tribute unto thy gates
  • C. His good treasure, the heaven, to give the rain unto thy land in his season
  • D. The gates of the cities of strangers, the heathen, to bring peace in thy day
  • E. The treasures hidden in the deep, the sea, to give riches to thy ships
View Answer

Answer 21: C. “His good treasure” is named explicitly as the heaven that holds the rain. This is the inverse of the brass-heaven curse of verse 23. The chapter consistently treats rainfall as the primary gift — the difference between blessing and curse is whether the heavens open or shut.
KJV Reference: Deuteronomy 28:12. “The LORD shall open unto thee his good treasure, the heaven to give the rain unto thy land in his season.”

Question 22: Under the curse, in how many ways would Israel flee before their enemies?
  • A. They shall flee seven ways before them and become a removal to all the kingdoms
  • B. They shall flee in three directions before the swords of their enemies
  • C. They shall flee unto the high places and find no refuge in the day of trouble
  • D. They shall flee unto the strongholds and the gates shall not be opened
  • E. They shall flee unto the wilderness and perish for hunger in the desert
View Answer

Answer 22: A. Out one way, flee seven — the numerical reversal is exact and ironic. Verse 7 promised the same numerical pattern in reverse for the obedient enemy. The chapter uses the same numbers in opposite directions to mark obedience and disobedience as mirror outcomes.
KJV Reference: Deuteronomy 28:25. “thou shalt go out one way against them, and flee seven ways before them: and shalt be removed into all the kingdoms of the earth.”

Question 23: What would the LORD bring upon Israel concerning the diseases of Egypt?
  • A. He would call them upon the rivers as in the days of the plagues of old
  • B. He would bring upon thee all the diseases of Egypt, which thou wast afraid of
  • C. He would visit the houses of Israel as he visited the houses of Pharaoh
  • D. He would make thee remember the days of the bondage and the hard labour
  • E. He would lay upon thy land the murrain of the cattle of the field of Egypt
View Answer

Answer 23: B. The verse names the irony directly: the diseases Israel feared in Egypt would now be brought upon them. The plagues that fell on the oppressor become the inheritance of the disobedient covenant nation. The chapter inverts the Exodus by making Israel the new target of plagues that once delivered them.
KJV Reference: Deuteronomy 28:60. “Moreover he will bring upon thee all the diseases of Egypt, which thou wast afraid of; and they shall cleave unto thee.”

Question 24: What did this chapter say the carcase of Israel would become under the curse?
  • A. As the dust of the streets in the day of the trampling of the heathen
  • B. As the corn that is left in the field after the gleaning of the harvest
  • C. As the broken vessel cast out at the gates of the city of strangers
  • D. As Meat unto all fowls of the air, and unto the beasts of the earth
  • E. As the chaff that is driven by the wind from the threshing floor
View Answer

Answer 24: D. The verse closes by naming what is missing: “and no man shall fray them away.” Burial denied is the deepest dishonour in the chapter’s economy. Jeremiah 7:33 and 16:4 reuse this exact image of carcasses left for fowls and beasts as a sign of judgment.
KJV Reference: Deuteronomy 28:26. “And thy carcase shall be meat unto all fowls of the air, and unto the beasts of the earth, and no man shall fray them away.”

Question 25: What three blessings did this chapter pronounce upon the fruits of Israel under the obedience clause?
  • A. Blessed shall be the work of thy hand, of thy lip, and of thy heart
  • B. Blessed shall be the fruit of thy field, of thy basket, and of thy store
  • C. Blessed shall be the fruit of thy labour, of thy days, and of thy years
  • D. Blessed shall be the fruit of thy tree, of thy vine, and of thy field
  • E. Blessed shall be the fruit of thy body, of thy ground, and of thy cattle
View Answer

Answer 25: E. The verse names three categories of fruit: body (children), ground (crops), and cattle (livestock — specified as “the increase of thy kine, and the flocks of thy sheep”). The triad covers human, agricultural, and pastoral fertility. Verse 18 reverses the same triad exactly under the curse.
KJV Reference: Deuteronomy 28:4. “Blessed shall be the fruit of thy body, and the fruit of thy ground, and the fruit of thy cattle, the increase of thy kine, and the flocks of thy sheep.”

The chapter that opens by promising Israel shall be the head and not the tail closes by selling them back to Egypt by ships, and even there finding no man willing to buy.

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