INTRODUCTION TO DEUTERONOMY
I. SIGNIFICANCE
A.
It is one of the four OT books quoted most often in the NT (i.e., Genesis,
Deuteronomy, Psalms, and Isaiah). Deuteronomy is quoted 83 times.
B.
A quote from the Tyndale OT Commentary Series, "Deuteronomy," by J.
A. Thompson:
"Deuteronomy is one of the greatest books of the Old
Testament. Its influence on the domestic and personal religion of all ages has
not been surpassed by any other book in the Bible" (p. 11).
C.
This must have been one of Jesus' favorite books of the OT:
1.
He quoted repeatedly from it during His temptation by Satan in the wilderness
a.
Matt. 4:4; Luke 4:4 - Deut. 8:3
b.
Matt. 4:7; Luke 4:12 - Deut. 6:26
c.
Matt. 4:10; Luke 4:8 - Deut. 6:13
2.
It is possibly the outline behind the Sermon on the Mount (cf. Matthew 5-7).
3.
Jesus quoted Deut. 6:5 as the greatest commandment (cf. Matt. 22:34-40; Mark
12:28-34; Luke 10:25-28).
4.
Jesus quoted this section of the OT (Genesis-Deuteronomy) most often because
the Jews of His day considered it the most authoritative section of the canon.
E.
Deuteronomy is a series of messages given by Moses on the Plains of Moab
(eastern Jordan). The three sermons all begin with the designation of the
physical place of the sermon. All may refer to the same place.
1.
"across the Jordan in the wilderness, in the Arabah opposite Suph, between
Paran and Tophel and Laban and Hazeroth and Dizahab," Deut. 1:1
2.
"across the Jordan in the land of Moab," Deut. 1:5
3.
"across the Jordan, in the valley opposite Beth-peor, in the land of Sihon
the king," Deut. 4:46
4.
"in the land of Moab," Deut. 29:1
F.
Deuteronomy is also the center of dialogue today among OT scholars concerning
its literary formation. Modern scholarship is divided on its theories regarding
the compositions of both Deuteronomy and rest of the Pentateuch.
II.
THE NAME OF THE BOOK
A.
In Hebrew the titles of the books of the Tanakh (Pentateuch) are one of their
first ten words, usually their first word:
1.
Genesis, "In the beginning"
2.
Exodus, "And these are the names"
3.
Leviticus, "And He called"
4.
Numbers, "In the desert"
5.
Deuteronomy, "And these are the words"
B.
In the Talmud Deuteronomy is called "repetition of the law" (Mishnah
Hattorah from Deut.17:18).
C.
In the Greek translation of the OT, called the Septuagint (LXX), written around
250 b.c., Deuteronomy is called
"the second law" because of a mistranslation of Deut. 17:18 (i.e.,
"make a copy of this law").
D.
We get our English title from Jerome's Latin Vulgate which calls it "the
second law" (Deuteronomium).
1.
"this book of the law," Deut. 28:61
2.
"this law," Deut. 1:5; 4:8; 17:18,19; 27:3,8,26
3.
other descriptive phrases, Deut. 4:1,45; 6:17, 20; 12:1
III.
CANONIZATION – This is the concluding book of The Torah which forms the first
of the three divisions of the Hebrew canon
A.
The Torah or Law — Genesis-Deuteronomy
B.
The Prophets:
1.
Former Prophets — Joshua-Kings (except Ruth)
2.
Latter Prophets — Isaiah-Malachi (except Daniel and Lamentations)
C.
The Writings:
1.
The Megilloth (5 scrolls):
a.
Song of Songs
b.
Ecclesiastes
c.
Ruth
d.
Lamentations
e.
Esther
3.
Wisdom Literature:
a.
Job
b.
Psalms
c.
Proverbs
4.
I & 2 Chr.
IV.
GENRE
A.
Deuteronomy is a mixture of several genres.
1.
historical narrative
a.
Deut. 1-4
b.
Deut. 34
2.
exhortations - Deut. 6-11
3.
guidelines, Deut. 12-28
4.
psalms/hymns/songs -- Deut. 32
5.
blessings -- Deut. 33
C.
God's special leader is replaced by God's written revelation. Human leaders
will remain, but the written revelation is emphasized as authoritative.
V.
AUTHORSHIP
A.
Jewish Tradition:
1.
Ancient tradition is unanimous that the author was Moses.
2.
This is stated in:
a.
Talmud - Baba Bathra 14b
b.
Mishnah
c.
Ben Sirach's Ecclesiasticus 24:23 (written about 185 B.C.)
d.
Philo of Alexandria
e.
Flavius Josephus
3.
The Scripture itself:
a.
Judges 3:4 and Joshua 8:31
b.
"Moses spoke":
(1)
Deut. 1:1, 3
(2)
Deut. 5:1
(3)
Deut. 27:1
(4)
Deut. 29:2
(5)
Deut. 31:1, 30
(6)
Deut. 32:44
(7)
Deut. 33:1
c.
"YHWH spoke to Moses":
(1)
Deut. 5:4-5, 22
(2)
Deut. 6:1
(3)
Deut. 10:1
d.
"Moses wrote":
(2)
Exodus 17:14
(3)
Exodus 24:4, 12
(4)
Exodus 34:27-28
(5)
Numbers 33:2
e.
Jesus quotes from or alludes to Deuteronomy and states "Moses
said"/"Moses wrote":
(1)
Matt. 19:7-9; Mark 10:4-5 - Deut. 24:1-4
(2)
Mark 7:10 - Deut. 5:16
(3)
Luke 16:31; 24:27, 44; John 5:46-47; 7:19, 23
f.
Paul asserts Moses as author:
(1)
Rom. 10:19 - Deut. 32:21
(2)
1 Cor. 9:9 - Deut. 25:4
(3)
Gal. 3:10 - Deut. 27:26
(4)
Acts 26:22; 28:23
g.
Peter asserts Moses as author in his Pentecostal sermon - Acts 3:22
h.
The author of Hebrews asserts Moses as author - Heb. 10:28; Deut. 17:2-6
B.
Modern Scholarship
1.
Many of the 18th and 19th century theologians, following the Graf-Wellhausen
theory of multiple authorship (JEDP), assert that Deuteronomy was written by a
priest/prophet during Josiah's reign in Judah to support his spiritual reform.
This would mean that the book was written in Moses' name about 621 B.C.
2.
They base this on:
a.
2 Kgs. 22:8; II Chron. 34:14-15, "I have found the book of the law in the
house of the Lord"
b.
Deut. 2 discussed a single site for the Tabernacle and later Temple
c.
Deut. 17 discussed a later king
e.
similarities of style, vocabulary and grammar between Deuteronomy and Joshua,
Kings and Jeremiah
f.
Deuteronomy records the death of Moses (Deut. 34)
g.
obvious later editorial additions in the Pentateuch:
(1)
Deut. 3:14
(2)
Deut. 34:6
h.
the sometimes unexplainable variety in the use of the names of Deity: El, El
Shaddai, Elohim, YHWH, in seemingly unified contexts and historical periods.
C.
There are obviously some editorial additions. Jewish scribes were trained in
Egypt where they regularly updated ancient texts. Mesopotamian scribes were
reluctant to add material.
Some
examples in Deuteronomy are:
1.
Deut. 27:3,8
2.
Deut. 28:58
3.
Deut. 29:21,29
5.
Deut. 31:24
VI.
DATE
A.
If written by Moses there are still two possibilities related to the time and
duration of the Exodus from Egypt:
1.
If 1 Kgs. 6:1 is meant to be taken literally then about 1445 b.c. (18th dynasty of Thutmose III and
Amenhotep II):
a.
LXX has 440 years instead of 480 years
b.
This number may reflect generations not years (symbolic)
2.
Archaeological evidences for 1290 B.C.
for the Exodus (19th Egyptian dynasty):
a.
Seti I (1390-1290) moved Egyptian capital from Thebes to delta region -
Zoan/Tanis.
b.
Rameses II (1290-1224):
(1)
His name occurs in a city built by Hebrew slaves (cf. Gen. 47:11; Exod.1:11)
(2)
He had 47 daughters
(3)
He was not succeeded by his oldest son
c.
All major walled cities of Palestine destroyed and rapidly rebuilt about 1250 B.C.
B.
Modern Scholarship theory of multiple authorship:
1.
J (YHWH) 950 B.C.
2.
E (Elohim) 850 B.C.
3.
JE (combination) 750 B.C.
4.
D (Deuteronomy) 621 b.c.
5.
P (Priests) 400 B.C.
VII.
SOURCES FOR CORROBORATING THE HISTORICAL SETTING
B.
The Hittite pattern and its Deuteronomy parallels:
1.
Preamble (Deut. 1:1-5, introduction of speaker, YHWH)
2.
Review of the past acts of the King (Deut. 1:6-4:49, God's past acts for
Israel)
3.
Treaty terms (Deut. 5-26):
a.
General (Deut. 5-11)
b.
Specific (Deut. 12-26)
a.
Benefits (Deut. 28)
b.
Consequences (Deut. 27)
5.
Witness of deity (Deut. 30:19; 31:19, also 32, Moses' song functions as a
witness):
a.
a copy of the Treaty placed in temple of the deity
b.
a copy of the Treaty kept in the temple of the vassal to be read annually
c.
the uniqueness of the Hittite treaties from the later Assyrian and Syrian treaties
were:
(1)
the historical review of the past acts of the king
(2)
the cursing section was less pronounced
C.
The Hittite treaty pattern was slightly changed (one item dropped) in the first
millennium B.C. The form of
Deuteronomy fits the time of Moses and Joshua best!
D.
For a good discussion of these Hittite treaties see K. A. Kitchen, Ancient
Orient and Old Testament, pp. 99-102.
VIII.
LITERARY UNITS (context)
A.
Introduction to the book, Deut. 1:1-5
C.
Second Sermon, Deut. 4:44-26:19 (The law of YHWH for today and for all days)
1.
General - the Ten Commandments (Deut. 5-11)
2.
Specific examples and applications (Deut. 12-26)
D.
Third Sermon, Deut. 27-30 (YHWH's Law for the future Deut. 27-29)
1.
Cursings (Deut. 27)
2.
Blessings (Deut. 28)
3.
Covenant renewal (Deut. 29-30)
E.
Last Words of Moses, Deut. 31-33
1.
"Good bye" sermon, Deut. 31:1-29
2.
The song of Moses, Deut. 31:30-32:52
3.
The blessings of Moses Deut. 33:1-29
F.
Moses' death, Deut. 34
IX.
MAIN TRUTHS
A.
Final preparations before entering the Promised Land. God's Covenant with
Abraham (Genesis 15) has been fulfilled!
B.
Genesis 12:1-3 promised a land and a seed. The OT focuses on the land; the NT
will focus on "the seed" (cf. Galatians 3).
C.
Moses prepares the people for a settled agricultural life versus a nomadic
life. He adapts the Sinai Covenant for the Promised Land. In a sense Deuteronomy is Israel's constitution.
X.
PERSONS, TERMS AND/OR PHRASES TO BRIEFLY DEFINE
A.
Terms and Phrases:
1.
“I call heaven and earth to witness,” 4:26 (NASB & NIV)
2.
“visiting the iniquity of the fathers on the children. . .,” 5:9 (NIV,
“punishing the children for the sins of the fathers to the third and fourth
generations”)
3.
“. . .but lovingkindness to thousands. . ,” 5:10 (NIV, “but showing love to a
thousand generations”)
4.
“hear,” (Shema) 6:4 (NASB & NIV)
5.
“frontals on your forehead,” (phylacteries) 6:8 (NIV, “as symbols on. . .”)
6.
“write them on your doorpost,” (mezuza) 6:9 (NIV, “doorframes”)
7.
“under the ban,” herem, 13:17 (NIV, “those condemned things”)
8.
“the heavenly host,” 17:3 (NIV, “stars of the sky”)
10.
medium, 18:11 (NASB & NIV)
11.
redeemed, 21:8 (NASB & NIV)
12.
“unloved,” 21:15 (NIV, “not for others”)
13.
“hang on a tree,” 21:23 (NASB & NIV)
14.
“wages of a dog,” 23:18 (NIV, “earnings of a. . .male prostitute”)
15.
“certificate of divorce,” 24:1 (NASB & NIV)
16.
“anoint yourselves with oil,” 28:40 (NIV, “use the oil”)
B.
Persons to Briefly Identify:
1.
Anakim, 1:28 (NIV, “Anakites”) 4. Asherim, 7:5 (NIV, “asherah poles”)
2.
Rephaim, 3:11 (NIV, “Rephaites”) 5. the Prophet, 18:15-22
3.
Hittites, 7:1 6. Jeshurun, 32:15; 33:5, 26
XI.
MAP LOCATIONS (by number)
1.
Mt. Horeb, 1:2,6,19; 4:10,15 6. Mt. Hermon, 3:8,9; 4:48
2.
Mt. Seir, 1:2,44; 2:1,4,5,8,12,22 ( a mountain range) 7. Mt. Ebal, 11:29;
27:4,13
3.
Kadesh Barnea, 1:46; 32:51 (NIV, “Kadesh”) 8. Mt. Gerizim, 11:29; 27:12
4.
Bashan, 1:4; 3:1,3,4,10,11,13; 4:43,47 9. Mt. Hor, 32:50 (Jebel
5.
Elath, 2:8 (Ezion-Geber) Harun)
XII.
STUDENT CONTENT QUESTIONS
1.
How is Deuteronomy different from Exodus and Numbers (Genre)?
2.
Why does Moses repeat the history of the Exodus?
3.
Why are there so many references to teaching your children, (4:9; 6:7, 20-25;
11:19; 32:46)?
4.
How is the Deuteronomy 5 version of the Decalog different from Exodus 20?
5.
Why were they told to smash the sacred pillars and tear down their Asherim
(7:5)?
6.
How does 10:12-21 characterize Deuteronomy?
7.
Why are chapters 27-29 so important in interpreting the entire Old Testament?
8.
Who recorded Moses’ death (34)?
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