Comparison of the Two Deuteronomistic History Sources of King David The two sources that are credited with telling the story of King David are known as the Deuteronomistic History source and another source that is thought to be priestly in origin. The Deuteronomistic History source begins the story of King David in 1 Samuel 16:12 and continues through 2 Samuel until it concludes at 1 Kings 2:11. The other(priestly) source begins King David’s
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Running Head: God’s Promise Essay Jesus through the Eyes of the Prophets Eddie Lewis Grand Canyon University: Bib 351 Moses and the Prophets July 10‚ 2012 Jesus through the Eyes of the Prophets God’s promise to King David that he would establish his house and throne forever was the basis of the hope that the Old Testament Prophets look to for the restoration of Israel. The Messianic prophesies that flowed from the mouths of the prophets aligned themselves perfectly with these original
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agreement. That pact is known as a covenant‚ and it is based on conditions or rules that individuals must live by to have stability‚ growth and success. In times past‚ the covenants made by God had to be revamped due to the failures of those who were not able to live it out. In the Old Testament‚ there are five covenants: The Nohaic‚ Abrahamic‚ Mosaic‚ Davidic‚ and the last covenant‚ which is the promise of Jesus Christ. Theme: Renewing an Everlasting Covenant Background: Jeremiah was called
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The lord your God and Remember Israel Hear o Israel and Today Keep the commandments laws and customs Key ideas Jhwh is sole God of Israel Has chosen Israel Israel responds to election Isreal must love jhwh Jhwh given Israel land faithful to covenant Liturgy assembly called by jhwh hear and understand word of god a. Saul: first king of Israel Tragic hero 1 Samuel 13-31 Transitional leader collapse of confederacy and birth of new order Alienated two people Samuel and David (Saul’s downfall)
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Time Line Hebrews Israelites Nation of Israel with a King – 1020 B.C. Destruction of Judah by the Babylonians – 587 Time Line – Foreign Domination Exile Persian Period - 539 Greek Period Roman Period Judaism Monotheism Sacred Text; makes them unique Christianity Destruction of Jerusalem – 70 A.D. Arrangement Hebrew Bible – TANAK Law/ Torah Prophets / Nevi ‘im Writings / Ketuvim Old Testament Law / Pentateuch (five scrolls) History Wisdom Literature & Psalms Prophets
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The Prophet Ezekiel : 2009 Past Paper In the following essay i am going to provide a detailed discussion on how the prophet Ezekiel’s message changed after the fall of Jerusalem in 586B.C.E. In Ezekiel’s opening vision‚ he see’s the majesty of God on His chariot throne on the the plains of Babylon and recieves his call to be a prophet of the house of Israel. "Son of man‚ i send you to the people of Israel‚ to a nation of rebels."(Ezek.1:3) Here Judah is being regarded as a "rebellious house"
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UFDN midterm study notes 1.Old testament is Scripture. OT consists 39 books and is the Hebrew Bible. NT is 27 books = 66 TANAK (Law‚ Prophets‚ Writings) IS the Hebrew Bible. TANAK contains law which is the Torah. 2. Septuagint (LXX) – Ancient Greek Translation of the Hebrew Bible 2. At the moment of canonization (synagogue; church)- Thinks the final draft is better than first. The Dead Sea Scrolls were discovered. – 100 B.C.E-100 C.E Masoretic Text (about the time of Jesus)- All modern
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DISPENSATIONALISM - COVENANTS - LAW and GRACE Larry R. Oats Maranatha Baptist Seminary Summer 2013 INTRODUCTION In the broad evangelical‚ there are three basic approaches to systematic Bible study‚ theology‚ and hermeneutics; each of these has multiple variations. They are the covenant‚ promise‚ and dispensational schools of thought. A controversy between their proponents exists because the approaches begin with different sets of presuppositions. The covenant theologian sees God’s
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Prophetic Book Discovery and Reflection: Amos INTRODUCTION TO AMOS The author reveals himself from the beginning to be Amos. Not a lot is known of Amos‚ we do know that he was a farmer from Tekoa which was a town about 6 miles southeast of Bethlehem and about ten miles south of Jerusalem in Judah or the southern kingdom. Located on a hill in the desert (2 Chron 11:6; 20:20)‚ the town served as a lookout against invaders approaching Jerusalem (Jer 6:1). In 7:14–15 Amos states he was not a prophet
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LIBERTY UNIVERSITY A CRITIQUE OF CHRISTOPHER WRIGHT’S “KNOWING JESUS THROUGH THE OLD TESTAMENT” AN ESSAY SUBMITTED TO DR. CURTIS FITZGERALD IN PARTIAL FULFILMENT OF THE REQUIREMENTS FOR THE COURSE OBST 591 LIBERTY BAPTIST THEOLOGICAL SEMINARY BY MARTA N. LUNA LYNCHBURG‚ VIRGINIA MONDAY‚ FEBRUARY 18‚ 2013 TABLE OF CONTENTS INTRODUCTION 3 BRIEF SUMMARY OF THE BOOK 3 CRITICAL INTERACTION 5 CONCLUSION 9 BIBLIOGRAPHY 10
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