Deuteronomy describes the love relationship between God and His people. It reminds a covenant people of what God has done and what they must do. Moses' three sermons gives Deuteronomy three parts: they call of the past, the expectations of the present, and the commitments to the future. Deuteronomy describes God's covenant faithfulness and the choice Israel has to be a people of curse or of blessing.
deutoronomy
Genesis , Exodus , Leviticus , Deutoronomy & Numbers
Leviticus (or however you spell that) comes before Numbers! :-) Why do you ask?
Deutoronomy 6:5:
Genesis Exodus Leviticus Numbers Deutoronomy God's Everlasting Love Never Dies
The Red Sea is mentioned 28 times in the King James. Exodus, Numbers, Deutoronomy, Joshua, Judges, I Kings, Nehemiah, Psalms, Jeremiah, Acts, and Hebrews.
The five books of Moses are called the Torah. The five books are: Genesis- Bereshit, Exodus-Shemot, Leviticus-Vayikra, Numbers-Bamidbar, Deutoronomy-D'varim. The entire Hebrew Bible is called the Tanakh.
Jewish religious writings, are named by using the first significant words of the writing. The first significant word of the Book of Deutoronomy is "words" (also translated as "matters"), so the Book is called dvarim (דברים), the Hebrew word for "words or "matters".
Explain RAM? Explain RAM?
explain
"Explain this" is actually "You explain this" or some form of that phrase. As such, "You" is the [understood] subject and "explain" is action requested, i.e. the verb. Or another way of saying it is "explain" IS the verb, "explanation" is the noun, as in "You please explain the written explanation to me.' or simply "Explain it to me Lucy".
i think it depends on WHERE you explain it and WHO you explain it to.