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DEUTERONOMY 5-11. MOSES'SECOND ADDRESS. This contains laws
(Deuteronomy 5:6) and (mainly) exhortation based on the fundamental
conception of Yahweh's uniqueness. This discourse had probably an
indepen...
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B. Chs. 5 11. The Second Discourse Introductory to the Laws
This discourse is characterised throughout by emphasising, as the
foundation of everything, Israel's relation and duty to Jehovah their
God...
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_MOSES CONTINUES TO RELATE HOW GOD GAVE THEM THE LAW OF THE TEN
COMMANDMENTS FROM MOUNT SINAI, AND HOW THE PEOPLE ENTREATED THAT THEY
MIGHT NO MORE HEAR THE LORD SPEAKING OUT OF THE MIDST OF THE FIRE....
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SUMMARY OF CHAPTER FIVE
God's covenant with the people in Horeb, 1-4. Moses the mediator of
it, 5. A repetition of the ten commandments, 6-21; which God wrote on
two tables of stone, 22. The people ar...
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V.
This chapter contains a recapitulation of the Decalogue itself and of
the circumstances of its delivery. The repetition of the Ten
Commandments is the true beginning of the Deuteronomy, as their f...
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INTRODUCTION TO DEUTERONOMY 5
In this chapter Moses, after a short preface, Deuteronomy 5:1, repeats
the law of the decalogue, or ten commands, with some little variation,
Deuteronomy 5:6, and then r...
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_A.M. 2553. B.C. 1451._
The general intent of the ten commandments as a covenant between God
and Israel, Deuteronomy 5:1. The commandments, Deuteronomy 5:6. God
writes them, and grants the people's r...
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1 The Couenant in Horeb.
6 The ten Commandements.
22 At the peoples request Moses receiueth the Law from God.
1 AND Moses called all Israel, and sayd vnto them, Heare, O Israel,
the Statutes and Iu...
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* The covenant in Horeb. (1-5) The ten commandments repeated. (6-22)
The request of the people that the law might be delivered through
Moses. (23-33)...
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INTRODUCTORY.
Part 1 of the commentary contained the first speech of Moses which
proclaimed the recent history of Israel under the hand of Yahweh,
demonstrating why they had reason to be grateful to H...