In Deuteronomy: Covenant Memory and Moral Imagination, Robert Church traces Moses' final sermons as a sustained call to remember rightly, love fully, and obey faithfully when redemption becomes memory and obedience becomes ordinary. Standing on the plains of Moab, a new generation prepares to enter promises they did not personally suffer to receive. Moses' burden is not only to restate commands, but to interpret Israel's story so that freedom does not collapse into entitlement and blessing does not become spiritual danger. This book follows Deuteronomy's movement from memory to worship, from worship to justice, and from justice to daily life-showing how the covenant is meant to shape households, leadership, economics, compassion, and community holiness. Along the way, it highlights Deuteronomy's realism about human failure and its astonishing hope: a covenant that warns with moral seriousness, yet anticipates repentance, restoration, and renewed love for the LORD. Written for readers who want clarity without jargon, this volume offers a chapter-by-chapter theological guide that helps you see what Deuteronomy says, why it says it, and how its themes hold together within the larger biblical storyline. Deuteronomy: Covenant Memory and Moral Imagination is part of Robert Church's Bible in Context series, following earlier volumes on Genesis and Exodus.
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