There are no products in your shopping cart.
| 0 Items | Total: $0.00 |
|
The nation of Israel was poised on the brink of a totally new kind of life. They would be changing from nomadic herdsmen to a settled agrarian lifestyle, living in villages and on farms. At the same time their charismatic leader of forty years was soon to die; the responsibility of caring for these people was to be turned over to another. Before they could possess the land in which they were to settle, they would have to battle the current residents for the privilege. At such a critical time in their history, their shepherd, leader, guide, mediator with God, and spokesman, Moses, felt it was imperative that he spell out to them one more time in the strongest possible langauge what God was expecting of them. Deuteronomy has been a controversial book for at least the last 120 years. At that time what is known as the critical school developed which insisted that the book could neither have been written at the time of the exodus and wandering nor could it have been written by Moses. Hall has cogently and thoroughly defended the conservative position which holds to the traditional view which the book claims for itself. By carefully delineating the structure of the book both holistically and in many disputed passages, he demonstrates that Deuteronomy was originally a single piece of legal history, not a hodgepodge of writings from various times in Israel's history put together by a series of editors in the years after the exile. One of the common Near Eastern legal documents in the 2,000 years before Christ was the covenant treaty in which one party was the vassal of the other. The vassal promised to give their total loyalty, love, obedience, and trust into the hands of the overlord in exchange for his protection, care, and provision. This is the form the book of Deuteronomy takes. It spells out in the legal terms of the second millenium the benefits the Israelites can expect from Gd as their overlord and the complete loyalty and obedience he expects from them in return. Click here for the Table of Contents. About the Author... Gary H. Hall, Ph.D., attended Minnesota Bible College, Eastern Christian College, and graduated from Milligan College. He earned the M.Div. from Lincoln Christian Seminary with majors in Old Testament and Theology, a M.Th. from Gordon-Conwell Theological Seminary (summa cum laude) in New Testament, and a Ph.D. in Old Testament from Union Theological Seminary in Virginia. His dissertation was an exegetical study of the marriage imagery in Jeremiah 2 and 3. Dr. Hall has been professor of Old Testament at Lincoln Christian Seminary since 1986. Prior to 1986 he was professor of Old Testament at Kentucky Christian College for 14 years, serving the last five as academic dean. Dr. Hall has ministered in Lancaster, PA, Greencastle, IN, Huntington, WV (interim), and Ashland, KY (with students in a prison). He has taught in Sprindale College in England. He has written lessons for Standard Adult Lessons, articles for Christian Standard and the Stone-Campbell Journal, and contributed several articles to the New International Dictionary of Old Testament Theology and Exegesis. He is a member of the Biblical Archaeology Society and the Evangelical Theological Society. Dr. Hall serves the Lincoln Christian Church as Sunday school teacher and elder. About the Editors... Terry Briley, Ph.D., is a associate professor of Bible at Lipscomb University, Nashville, Tennessee, since 1986. Terry Briley received the B.A. from David Lipscomb College (now Lipscomb University), then a M. Phil. and Ph.D. from Hebrew Union College, Cincinnati, Ohio. In addition to teaching at Lipscomb University, he is the Senior Minister at Natchez Trace Church of Christ and leads an annual summer mission trip to Brazil.
Paul J. Kissling, Ph.D., is professor of Old Testament and Biblical Languages and Area Chair in Bible/Theology at Great Lakes Christian College, Lansing, Michigan. He is an elder at Meridian Christian Church in Okemos. Paul Kissling received the Bachelor's degree from Great Lakes Christian College, the M.Div. from Lincoln Christian Seminary, the Th.M. from Trinity Evangelical Divinity School, and the Ph.D. from the University of Sheffield (England). Paul has taught and preached in over 15 countries and serves as Old Testament specialist on the Board of the Stone-Campbell Journal.
|
List Price: $32.99