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Written by Moses (traditional)
34 chapters · 253 min read
1400s–600s BC (traditional vs. critical dating)
The second generation of — the children of those who left
To renew God's with the next generation and prepare them to enter the
Deuteronomy is farewell address — part sermon, part history lesson, part love letter. He retells the story, restates , and pleads with Israel to choose life by obeying God. It's emotional, urgent, and deeply personal. Moses knows he's about to die, and he's pouring everything into making sure this generation doesn't repeat their parents' mistakes.
God told Israel the Promised Land was an eleven-day trip and they turned it into a forty-year L because they couldn't trust the process — the ultimate fumble.
Deuteronomy 1 — Moses' Recap Episode
God said victory would come little by little ON PURPOSE — rushing it would've caused bigger problems than the enemies themselves, because sometimes the process IS the protection.
Deuteronomy 7 — God Said Y'all Are His and It's Not Up for Debate
Miracles don't automatically make someone legit — if the message doesn't match God's word, that prophet is a fraud no matter how impressive the signs are.
Deuteronomy 13 — Don't Fall for the Fake Prophets
If you lied under oath to get someone punished, YOU get that exact punishment instead — God's anti-fraud policy goes crazy.
Deuteronomy 19 — Safe Cities and Fair Courts
If your brain is just chemistry, you're not really choosing anything. So why does it feel like you are?
Discovered in a Jerusalem burial cave in 1979, they predate the Dead Sea Scrolls by 400 years — and quote Numbers 6 word for word.
Every 50 years, Israel was supposed to cancel all debts and return all land. They called it Jubilee. Leviticus 25.
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"Don't muzzle the ox while it's working" is lowkey one of the most based labor rights takes in the entire Bible — Paul even quotes it later to argue workers deserve fair pay.
Deuteronomy 25 — Keep It Fair or Get Called Out