Exodus 19:17
Context19:17 Moses brought the people out of the camp to meet God, and they took their place at the foot of the mountain.
Deuteronomy 31:12
Context31:12 Gather the people – men, women, and children, as well as the resident foreigners in your villages – so they may hear and thus learn about and fear the Lord your God and carefully obey all the words of this law.
Deuteronomy 31:1
Context31:1 Then Moses went 1 and spoke these words 2 to all Israel.
Deuteronomy 15:3
Context15:3 You may exact payment from a foreigner, but whatever your fellow Israelite 3 owes you, you must remit.
Deuteronomy 15:2
Context15:2 This is the nature of the cancellation: Every creditor must remit what he has loaned to another person; 4 he must not force payment from his fellow Israelite, 5 for it is to be recognized as “the Lord’s cancellation of debts.”
Deuteronomy 5:2-3
Context5:2 The Lord our God made a covenant with us at Horeb. 5:3 He 6 did not make this covenant with our ancestors 7 but with us, we who are here today, all of us living now.
Nehemiah 8:1
Context8:1 all the people gathered together 8 in the plaza which was in front of the Water Gate. They asked 9 Ezra the scribe to bring the book of the law of Moses which the LORD had commanded Israel.
[31:1] 1 tc For the MT reading וַיֵּלֶךְ (vayyelekh, “he went”), the LXX and Qumran have וַיְכַל (vaykhal, “he finished”): “So Moses finished speaking,” etc. The difficult reading of the MT favors its authenticity.
[31:1] 2 tn In the MT this refers to the words that follow (cf. NIV, NCV).
[15:3] 3 tn Heb “your brother.”
[15:2] 4 tn Heb “his neighbor,” used idiomatically to refer to another person.
[15:2] 5 tn Heb “his neighbor and his brother.” The words “his brother” may be a scribal gloss identifying “his neighbor” (on this idiom, see the preceding note) as a fellow Israelite (cf. v. 3). In this case the conjunction before “his brother” does not introduce a second category, but rather has the force of “that is.”
[5:3] 6 tn Heb “the