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| theme of the book of Joshua |
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| God gives the land to Israel |
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| does not provide detailed account of all the battles fought by the Israelites when taking control of Canaan |
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| end of the book of Joshua |
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| , the land has been allotted |
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| the crossing of the Jordan |
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| the story of Joshua, is remisicient of Moses |
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| as Moses's successor at the beginning of Book of Joshua |
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| end of the book of Joshua |
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| Joseph bones get buried in the Promised Land |
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| book of Joshua is part of the section |
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| did not receive an allottment of land |
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| Shechem is the land that the Israelites renew their covenant with God |
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| end of the book of Joshua |
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| the association of twenty-three members centered around a central religious shrine in Delphi, Greece |
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| that Deborah's military assistant |
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| Barak and that Deborah solved legal cases |
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| the judge who fleeced God |
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| the judge who sacrificed his daughter to God |
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| the "Former Prophets" in the Hebrew Bible |
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| major difficulty in the book of Judges |
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Definition
| that there no clear leader |
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| Ark of Covenant and the laws |
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Definition
| does not play a major role in the book of Judges |
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| the reason implied at the end of the book of Judges for Israel to have a king |
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| ideally, a King will bring greater order to Israelite society |
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| expression of Israel's need for a King |
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| with a jawbone of a donkey |
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| David is the most prominent figure |
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| in I Samuel and in I Chronicles |
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| that David was the second king of Israel |
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| David existed for some time as an outlaw |
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| even joining the Philistines army for a while |
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| relationship between David and Saul |
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| His Successor, His Son-in-Law, Court Musician, An Officer in his Army |
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| both Saul and David as King |
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| Prophet, Priest, Judge, and Anointer of Kings |
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| that Samuel was not a supporter |
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| the idea of Israel having a King |
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| reason implied at the beginning of I Samuel for Israel to have a King |
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| , ideally, a King will produce a stronger army |
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| Saul troubled by David's popularity as a military hero |
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| resulted in Saul trying to kill David |
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| that Saul consulted a witch in order to talk |
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| to Samuel after Samuel had died |
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Term
| that David's failure to respond to the rape of Abalom's sister |
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Definition
| resulted in Absalom's rebellion |
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| David helped established Jerusalem as a worship site by bringing |
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Definition
| the Ark of the Covenant to Jerusalem |
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Term
| during David's reign a plague struck Israel |
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Definition
| killing 70,000 people because David conducted a census |
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| David responded to Saul's and Jonathan's death by |
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| that Hebron was David's capital |
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| the beginning of his reign |
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| the the book of II Samuel does not end |
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| that Adonijah, David's elder son |
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| Solomon's primary competitor and rightful heir to the throne |
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| Solomon was the first king of Israel to achieve |
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| throne by dynastic succession |
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| the book of Kings report many of the acts of |
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| acts of prophets like Elijah and Elisha |
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| are part of the Deuteronomistic History |
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| that a major focus of the books of Chronicles is |
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Definition
| the development of important Israelite institutions, such as monarchy and temple |
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| the first nine chapters of I Chronicles |
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Definition
| primarily composed of genealogical material |
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