Deuteronomy Explained: Loving God and Choosing Life
Deuteronomy is Moses' farewell sermon — a passionate, urgent call to love God with everything you have, choose life over death, and walk faithfully in His ways. Here's what this often-overlooked book is really about and why it matters deeply for your faith today. Picture this: forty years of wandering are finally over. The generation that trembled at the base of Sinai has died in the wilderness. A new generation stands at the edge of the Jordan River, looking across at the land God promised their ancestors. They are about to cross over. They are about to inherit everything. And Moses — 120 years old, still sharp-eyed, still on fire — has one last thing to say. What follows is the book of Deuteronomy: three sermons delivered in the plains of Moab, in the final weeks before Moses dies and Israel crosses into Canaan. It is one of the most important books in the entire Bible, quoted more than almost any other in the New Testament, cherished by Jesus himself, and yet often ski...