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Posts Tagged ‘Deuteronomy’

Much of the sinewy stuff of biblical faith is about showing up. We are given few levers over events, circumstances, and the outcomes that in retrospect we bundle together and label ‘history’. The core of our work is to present ourselves and to wait, not a passive, inactive waiting but a tour de force of preparedness for whatever happens. (more…)

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Moses’ narration of events occurring from the time Israel encountered YHWH at Zion through to the dramatic moment in which he delivers his sermons to a people about to wet their feet in the Jordan is a damning tale.

From this lawgiver’s perspective, YHWH has been attentive to the people’s needs during their generation of wandering. This same postponed generation has seen YHWH guide them through the politics of semi-nomadism, the necessary passages through claimed turf, and cultivated in them a desire for a place to call their own.

Moses ask rhetorically what other nation has known a god to walk in its midst as YHWH has walked in Israel’s. What other nation has been given statutes and ordinances that produce community and life, as Israel has received? His delineation of Israel’s life among the nations is a familiar one: They worship idols while Israel worships the living God who has set up camp in their midst. (more…)

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When Moses ‘undertook to expound’ the Law that the Pentateuchal narrative places into his hands by means of a private encounter with YHWH on Mount Horeb/Sinai, his first words provoke a movement towards risk-laden opportunity:

The LORD our God spoke to us at Horeb, saying, ‘You have stayed long enough at this mountain.’

The destination is clear, promising, and potentially lethal:

Resume your journey, and go into the hill country of the Amorites as well as into the neighboring regions—the Arabah, the hill country, the Shephelah, the Negeb, and the seacoast—the land of the Canaanites and the Lebanon, as far as the great river, the river Euphrates. See, I have set the land before you; go in and take possession of the land that I swore to your ancestors, to Abraham, to Isaac, and to Jacob, to give to them and to their descendants after them.

The context for this collective recalling of the people’s history is both important and dramatic. Israel stands on ‘the plains of Moab’, on the cusp of entering into the land that YHWH had promised to them. Moses, the Lawgiver, now takes leave of his people. His role in the Israelites’ cowardice forty years earlier is now given without explication as the reason that YHWH will not allow Moses’ footsteps to fall on the land of promise. His last act of leadership over the tribes of the sons of Israel is to deliver a series of valedictory speeches that come into our hands as the book of Deuteronomy. (more…)

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