About: Book of Deuteronomy   Sponge Permalink

An Entity of Type : dbkwik:resource/jqiagBYt7gleQRig0FoSXQ==, within Data Space : 134.155.108.49:8890 associated with source dataset(s)

Deuteronomy (Greek: Deuteronomion, "second law") or Devarim (Hebrew: דְּבָרִים‎, literally "things" or "words") is the fifth book of the Hebrew Bible, and the fifth of five books of the Jewish Torah/Pentateuch. A large part of the book consists of three sermons delivered by Moses reviewing the previous forty years of wandering in the wilderness, and the future entering into the Promised Land. Its central element is a detailed law-code by which the Israelites are to live within the Promised Land.

AttributesValues
rdf:type
rdfs:label
  • Book of Deuteronomy
rdfs:comment
  • Deuteronomy (Greek: Deuteronomion, "second law") or Devarim (Hebrew: דְּבָרִים‎, literally "things" or "words") is the fifth book of the Hebrew Bible, and the fifth of five books of the Jewish Torah/Pentateuch. A large part of the book consists of three sermons delivered by Moses reviewing the previous forty years of wandering in the wilderness, and the future entering into the Promised Land. Its central element is a detailed law-code by which the Israelites are to live within the Promised Land.
sameAs
dcterms:subject
Next book
  • Book of Joshua
Previous book
  • Book of Numbers
dbkwik:bible/prope...iPageUsesTemplate
dbkwik:religion/pr...iPageUsesTemplate
rows
  • 2(xsd:integer)
Name
  • Deuteronomy
  • Book of Deuteronomy
Book number
  • 5(xsd:integer)
Major people
  • *God *Moses *Aaron *Joshua
Language
  • Hebrew
Author
  • *God *Moses
section
Before
After
Alt Name Previous
  • Numbers
Alt Name Next
  • Joshua
Testament
abstract
  • Deuteronomy (Greek: Deuteronomion, "second law") or Devarim (Hebrew: דְּבָרִים‎, literally "things" or "words") is the fifth book of the Hebrew Bible, and the fifth of five books of the Jewish Torah/Pentateuch. A large part of the book consists of three sermons delivered by Moses reviewing the previous forty years of wandering in the wilderness, and the future entering into the Promised Land. Its central element is a detailed law-code by which the Israelites are to live within the Promised Land. Theologically the book constitutes the renewing of the covenant between Yahweh the jewish God and the "Children of Israel." One of its most significant verses is considered to be Deuteronomy 6:4, which constitutes the Shema, a definitive statement of Jewish identity: "Hear, O Israel: the LORD (YHWH) (is) our God, the LORD is one." Conservative Bible scholars are united in their conviction that Moses wrote this book. Much of modern critical scholarship, while agreeing that Deuteronomy contains a core of material from ancient Mosaic traditions or writing, dates the book several centuries after Moses time, to the late 7th century BC. This latter view sees Deuteronomy as a product of the religious reforms carried out under king Josiah, with later additions from the period after the fall of Judah to the Babylonian empire in 586 BC.
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