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1992-09-08
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SCOFIELD REFERENCE NOTES (Scofield BIBLE [1917]) Book Introductory Notes:
The Fifth Book of Moses called DEUTERONOMY
DEUTERONOMY consists of the parting counsels of Moses delivered to
Israel in view of the impending entrance upon their covenanted
possession. It contains a summary of the wilderness wanderings of
Israel, which is important as unfolding the moral judgement of God upon
those events; repeats the Decalogue to a generation which had grown up
in the wilderness; gives needed instruction as the conduct of Israel
in the land, and contains the Palestinian Covenant (30. 1-9). The book
breathes the sternness of the Law. Key-words, "Thou shalt"; key-verses,
11. 26-28.
It is important to note that, while the land of promise was
unconditionally given Abraham and to his seed in the Abrahamic Covenant
(Gen. 13. 15; 15. 7), it was under the conditional Palestinian Covenant
(Deut. 28.-30 .9) that Israel entered the land under Joshua. Utterly
violating the conditions of that covenant, the nation was first
disrupted (I Ki. 12.) and then cast out of the land (2 Ki. 17. 1-18.;
24. 1-25.11). But the same covenant unconditionally promises a national
restoration of Israel which is yet to be fulfilled (Gen. 15. 18, note).
DEUTERONOMY is in seven divisions:
I. Summary of the history of Israel in the wilderness, 1. 1-3.29
II. A restatement of the Law, with warnings and exhortations,
4.1 -11. 32,
III. Instructions, Warnings, and Predictions, 12. 1-27. 26,
IV. The great closing prophecies summarizing the history of Israel
to the second coming of Christ, and containing the Palestinian
Covenant, 28. 1-30. 20,
V. Last counsels to Priests, Levites, and to Joshua, 31.,
VI. The Song of Moses and his parting blessings, 32., 33.,
VII. The Death of Moses, 34.
The time covered by this retrospect is approximately forty years.