The Curse and the Return

Before Israel set foot in the land, Mosheh placed two roads before them: obey and be blessed above all nations, or forsake the covenant and inherit a curse spelled out in terrible detail. The curses of Deuteronomy 28 are not vague. They name yokes of iron, scattering to the ends of the earth, and ships carrying the people back into bondage. This study reads those words plainly, because they explain the long night of the scattered. But it does not stop at the curse. The same Mosheh who wrote the curse wrote the way home. The Most High is just in the judgment and faithful in the mercy. Read...

Before Israel set foot in the land, Mosheh placed two roads before them: obey and be blessed above all nations, or forsake the covenant and inherit a curse spelled out in terrible detail. The curses of Deuteronomy 28 are not vague. They name yokes of iron, scattering to the ends of the earth, and ships carrying the people back into bondage. This study reads those words plainly, because they explain the long night of the scattered. But it does not stop at the curse. The same Mosheh who wrote the curse wrote the way home. The Most High is just in the judgment and faithful in the mercy. Read both, and do not stop at the sorrow.

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