Deut in A Sentence

    1

    According to this ' According to Deut.

    2

    Allusions in the chapter itself point unmistakably to a time just before the departure from Sinai-Horeb, and this date is confirmed both by Deut.

    3

    At the same time, these additions must for the most part be prior to D, since many of them are included in Deut.

    4

    But between the priesthood of Eli at Shiloh or of Jonathan at Dan and the priesthood of the Levites as described in Deut.

    5

    But the express words "and he added no more," in Deut.

    6

    Carlstadt again definitely denied the Mosaic authorship of the Pentateuch on the ground that Moses could not have written the account of his own death and yet that Deut.

    7

    Chapter xx., belonging to the Predaction, has certain points of contact with Deut.

    8

    Further the exchange of garments was not meaningless, and the prohibition in Deut.

    9

    Graf also wrote, Der Segen Moses Deut.

    10

    I ff.), and little detail beyond the horrors usual in long sieges (see Deut.

    11

    Ib-7 (Ia belongs to P), though Deut.

    12

    In Germany it was even customary for men to dress up as women, and women as men, against the command of Deut.

    13

    In Jewish apocalypses especially, the imagination ran riot on the rank, classes and names of angels; and such works as the various books of Enoch and Deut.

    14

    It is in Deut.

    15

    Love to God is emphasized in Deut.

    16

    Originally Caleb alone was exempt and for his faith received a blessing; later tradition adds Joshua and in Deut.

    17

    Private sacrifices, too, could hardly be offered without some priestly aid now that ritual was more complex; the provision of Deut.

    18

    Sabellius himself appears to have made use of Stoical formulas (irXaruveQ6ac,avvriXXeo-Oai), but he chiefly relied upon Scripture, especially such passages as Deut.

    19

    The book read to Josiah must therefore have comprised most of what is found in Deut.

    20

    The conceptions of Jesus of Nazareth, however, were not the Messianic conceptions of his fellow-countrymen, but 1 Deut.

    21

    The practice is prohibited in Deut.

    22

    The ritual functions of the priesthood still appear in Deut.

    23

    The solidarity of race or family was expressed in the old tradition reflected in Deut.

    24

    The two passages are to a large extent verbally identical, but while Deut.

    25

    The word translated "firstfruits" in Deut.

    26

    There are other details in Deut.

    27

    There is, however, no reason to doubt that a large portion of the laws is genuinely old since the subject is one that would naturally call for early legislation; moreover, Deut.

    28

    This was justified by Deut.

    29

    Thus, since the Hebrew eth, which marks the accusative, is also the preposition " with," Deut.