Introduction
Historical Background
The Aim and Method of the Present Work
Ideology and Structure in Deuteronomy
1. Centralization, Secularization, and Demythologization in Deuteronomy
Centralization in Deuteronomy
Secularization and Demythologization in Deuteronomy
The Ideology (ies) of Centralization, Secularization, and Demythologization
2. The Appointment of Judges and Torah: Deuteronomy 1:9-18
Prevailing View: Secularization of Judicial Procedure Evaluation
Alternative View: Yahweh and Torah for All Times
Conclusions regarding Deuteronomy 1:9-18
3. The Presence of Yahweh and Torah: Deuteronomy 4:1-6:9
Deuteronomy 4
Deuteronomy 5:1-6:9
4. The Supremacy of the Giver of Torah: Deuteronomy 12
Prevailing View: Radical Reform
Evaluation
Alternative View: The Supremacy of Yahweh
Conclusions regarding Deuteronomy 12
5. Political Administration and Torah: Deuteronomy 16:18-18:22
Prevailing View: Centralization and Secularization
Alternative View: Supremacy of Yahweh and Torah
Conclusions regarding Deuteronomy 16:18-18:22
Implications and Conclusions
Indexes
Index of Authors
Index of Scripture
Engaging the best scholarship on Deuteronomy, Vogt presents a fresh view of the countercultural character of the book and rightly sees at its heart a claim for the sovereignty of the Lord of Israel as manifest through covenant and Torah. His analysis of key dimensions of Deuteronomy, especially such major components as centralization, kingship, and the presence of God, will require interpreters to reassess how such matters are to be regarded. Certainly, widespread assumptions about how the book reflects a secularization and demythologization of earlier modes of thinking, acting, and seeing will require reevaluation in the light of Vogt's careful reading of the text of Deuteronomy. -- Patrick D. Miller, Princeton Theological Seminary
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