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Tabor College Victoria 222 Oban Road, Ringwood North, Vic. 3134 Australia
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Deuteronomy
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Deuteronomy
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DEVARIM (Book of Deuteronomy) Massoretic, Hebrew, Aramaic, JPS, Kaplan texts of Deuteronomy from the Jewish Publication Society Bible
- Old Testament Bible Study for a New Testament Understanding Torah is the Hebrew word for the first 5 books of the Bible and it is the foundation of the Old Testament just as the Old Testament is the foundation of the New. The Old Testament (Tanach) is the Holy Scripture that Jesus (Yeshua, in Hebrew) taught from, and His Disciples referred to, since there was no New Testament until well after the time of the Apostles that succeeded Him. The Old and New Testaments are inseparable and only when used together do we have a complete, unified, divinely-inspired Bible. Torah Class cross-references the Torah and Old Testament passages with New Testament passages to reveal their seamless continuity.
New International Version (Book of Deuteronomy) On-Line
The Net Bible (Book of Deuteronomy) On-Line
The Authorship of Deuteronomy John William McGarvey An examination of the authorship of the book.
Introduction to Deuteronomy David Malick
Outline of Deuteronomy David Malick
Deuteronomy Bob Dunston
Outline of Deuteronomy Bob Dunston
Notes on Deuteronomy Thomas L. Constable Deuteronomy reveals how God loves people and how we should in turn love God.
Introduction to the Book of Deuteronomy and Overview Dennis Bratcher
If you re concerned for your loved ones that you feel are lost please visit
prayingtheprodigalshome.com
Deuteronomy
an Overview Division of Student Ministry
Baptist
General Convention of Texas
Dating the Pentateuch: the Book of Deuteronomy, Archaeological Anomalies
and Anachronisms
Walter Mattfeld looks at the archaeological findings and compares them with the Biblical
accounts. The Secret Things and the Things Revealed: Reactions to the Exile in the Deuteronomistic History Ralph W. Klein
The Themes of Deuteronomistic History M Weinfield
The Ten Commandments Bob Dunston with Chart or short chart
Israel's "Aramaean" Origins Walter Mattfeld looks at Deuteronomy 26:5 and explores the archaeological evidence supporting this concept.
The Primary History (Genesis - 2 Kings), an Exilic Composition of 562 - 561 BCE Walter Mattfeld focuses on Deuteronomy 30:1-10 and explores the theory the idea that the Primary History was written by one author in the exile and notes that some sites appearing in Joshua did not come into existence until late in the 7th century BCE.
Regal Messianic Hope in Deuteronomy, 1,2 Samuel and 1,2 Kings Greg Herrick continues his study of kingly/messianic hope in the Old Testament.
Responsibilities of Fatherhood Deuteronomy 6:1-19 J. Hampton Keathly III explains that although often used to extol happiness and well-being in the family it is also a call to ministry and testimony as the people of God through their obedience to God.
The Shema: Carl Schulz. A covenant challenge.
Underdogs and Earthen Vessels Dennis Bratcher An article on the theology of the warning to Israel in Deuteronomy 8, and how it might apply to us today.
Outline of the Deuteronomic Statutes and Ordnances Stephen Wiggins
Deuteronomy as De-Centering Center: Reflections on Post-Modernism and the Quest for a Theological Center of the Hebrew Scriptures Dennis T. Olson. A Semeia Journal article
From Manasseh to the Deuteronomic Reform Gerald A Larue examines the impact of Deuteronomy on the Kings of Israel.
Deuteronomy 20:10-14 The Role of the Beautiful Captive Woman Pearl Elman gives an overview on the Biblical views of women and warfare recent events in Bosnia, it must be appreciated how ethically and morally forward this thinking was.
Ethics as Deconstruction, and, The Ethics of Deconstruction David JA Clines writes this paper in two parts, exegetical, Ethics as Deconstruction, and theoretical, The Ethics of Deconstruction and attempts to show that literary and philosophical deconstruction has more ethical effect than is commonly supposed.
Bakhtin Revisits Deuteronomy: Narrative Theory and the Dialogical Event of Deut. 31:2 and 34:7 - by David A. Bergen demonstrates the unrealized potential inherent in Bakhtin's dialogic theory for the interpretation of biblical narrative. Reading with sensitivity the voice structure of Deuteronomy, it is possible to discern not only a dialogic angle between Moses and the narrator, but also a subtle polemical nuance in the narrator's superlative evaluation of Israel's first prophet
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