Judaism · Source book
Torah Deuteronomy
Deuteronomy (Devarim) — N=1
Book-level distillation (Moses' covenant-renewal address; the heart of Jewish liturgy). Source: JPS 1917 via Sefaria API. Quotes pending Phase 7 audit. Per-verse depth = Stage-B. Tags & method:
../00-methodology.md.
Book role
Deuteronomy ("second law") re-presents the covenant as Israel prepares to enter the land. It contains the Shema — the load-bearing centre of Jewish liturgy and the nearest thing to a creed — and frames the whole covenant as a free choice between life and death, with Torah as a word "very nigh unto thee." Its ethical core is wholehearted love of God expressed in justice and hesed toward the vulnerable.
Atomic statements
Deut-C1: Hear, O Israel — the LORD our God, the LORD is one. (FOUNDATIONAL / GOD)
- Deut 6:4: "HEAR, O ISRAEL: THE LORD OUR GOD, THE LORD IS ONE."
- Stance: assert · Importance: core · The Shema — recited twice daily and at death; Judaism's central confession of oneness.
Deut-C2: Love the LORD with all your heart, soul, and might. (FOUNDATIONAL / GOD+HESED)
- Deut 6:5: "And thou shalt love the LORD thy God with all thy heart, and with all thy soul, and with all thy might."
- Stance: command · Importance: core
Deut-C3: Take these words to heart and teach them diligently to your children — at home, on the way, lying down, rising up. (FOUNDATIONAL / TORAH)
- Deut 6:6–9: "And these words… shall be upon thy heart; and thou shalt teach them diligently unto thy children… And thou shalt write them upon the door-posts of thy house, and upon thy gates."
- Stance: command · Importance: core · Source of the mezuzah (6:9) and tefillin (6:8) — lived daily practice.
Deut-C4: God requires you to fear Him, walk in His ways, love and serve Him, and keep the commandments for your own good. (FOUNDATIONAL / TORAH+GOD)
- Deut 10:12–13: "What doth the LORD thy God require of thee, but to fear the LORD thy God, to walk in all His ways, and to love Him, and to serve the LORD thy God with all thy heart and with all thy soul; to keep for thy good the commandments of the LORD, and His statutes, which I command thee this day?"
- Stance: command · Importance: core
Deut-C5: God is impartial, executes justice for the fatherless and widow, and loves the stranger; therefore love the stranger. (FOUNDATIONAL / JUSTICE+HESED)
- Deut 10:17–19: "…the great God, the mighty, and the awful, who regardeth not persons, nor taketh reward. He doth execute justice for the fatherless and widow, and loveth the stranger… Love ye therefore the stranger; for ye were strangers in the land of Egypt."
- Stance: assert/command · Importance: core
Deut-C6: Open your hand to the poor; release debts in the seventh year; never harden your heart. (OPERATIONAL / JUSTICE+HESED)
- Deut 15:7–8: "…thou shalt not harden thy heart, nor shut thy hand from thy needy brother; but thou shalt surely open thy hand unto him…"
- Deut 15:11: "For the poor shall never cease out of the land; therefore I command thee… Thou shalt surely open thy hand unto thy poor and needy brother…"
- Stance: command · Importance: core · Untranslatable: the seventh-year shemittah (release).
Deut-C7: The commandment is not too hard, nor far off; the word is very near, in your mouth and heart, to do it. (FOUNDATIONAL / TORAH)
- Deut 30:11–14: "For this commandment which I command thee this day, it is not too hard for thee, neither is it far off… But the word is very nigh unto thee, in thy mouth, and in thy heart, that thou mayest do it."
- Stance: assert · Importance: core
Deut-C8: Set before you life and death — therefore choose life. (FOUNDATIONAL / TESHUVAH+TORAH)
- Deut 30:15: "See, I have set before thee this day life and good, and death and evil…"
- Deut 30:19: "…I have set before thee life and death, the blessing and the curse; therefore choose life, that thou mayest live, thou and thy seed…"
- Stance: command · Importance: core
Deut-C9: Return to God and He will gather and restore you; He circumcises the heart to love Him. (SUPPORTING / TESHUVAH+HESED)
- Deut 30:2–3,6: "…and shalt return unto the LORD thy God… that then the LORD thy God will turn thy captivity, and have compassion upon thee… And the LORD thy God will circumcise thy heart… to love the LORD thy God with all thy heart."
- Stance: promise · Importance: supporting · Untranslatable: teshuvah (return/repentance)
Step 4 — Clusters
| Cluster | Atomic statements | Intent |
|---|---|---|
| The Shema — one God, wholehearted love | C1, C2 | God's oneness; total love-response |
| Transmission & formation | C3 | Teach the children; bind it to daily life |
| What God requires | C4 | Fear, walk, love, serve, keep — for your good |
| Justice & love of the vulnerable | C5, C6 | Impartial justice; open hand; release of debts |
| The nearness of the word & the choice | C7, C8, C9 | The word is within reach; choose life; return |
Step 5 — Internal tensions
- Election (chosen people) vs impartiality (God "regardeth not persons"): held together — God's choosing of Israel does not make Him partial; He executes justice for all the vulnerable and loves the stranger.
- No genuine contradictions at book-level.
Step 6 — Synthesized book principles
Deut-P1: God is one, and is to be loved with the whole self (the Shema)
"Hear, O Israel: the LORD our God, the LORD is one" — and love Him "with all thy heart, and with all thy soul, and with all thy might." The oneness of God and the totality of the love-response are the centre of Jewish faith and liturgy.
- Tier:
FOUNDATIONAL· Domain: GOD · Covers: C1, C2 · Evidence: Deut 6:4–5
Deut-P2: Torah is transmitted by being lived and taught to the children
The words are to be taken to heart, taught diligently to children, spoken of throughout the day, and bound to hand, eyes, and doorpost. Faith is formed in the home and across generations, woven into daily life.
- Tier:
FOUNDATIONAL· Domain: TORAH · Covers: C3 · Evidence: Deut 6:6–9 · Untranslatable: torah
Deut-P3: What God requires is wholehearted walking, loving, serving, and keeping — for the people's own good
The whole law reduces to: fear God, walk in His ways, love and serve Him, keep the commandments — and this is "for thy good." Obedience is framed as flourishing, not arbitrary demand.
- Tier:
FOUNDATIONAL· Domain: TORAH+GOD · Covers: C4 · Evidence: Deut 10:12–13
Deut-P4: God is impartial and defends the vulnerable; therefore so must you
God "regardeth not persons," executes justice for the fatherless and widow, and loves the stranger — so Israel must open its hand to the poor, release debts in the seventh year, and love the stranger, "for ye were strangers in Egypt." Memory of one's own affliction grounds compassion.
- Tier:
FOUNDATIONAL· Domain: JUSTICE+HESED · Covers: C5, C6 · Evidence: Deut 10:17–19, 15:7–11 · Untranslatable: hesed, mishpat
Deut-P5: The word is near, not impossible — Torah is within human reach
The commandment is "not too hard… neither is it far off"; it is not in heaven or beyond the sea, but "very nigh unto thee, in thy mouth, and in thy heart, that thou mayest do it." The good life is attainable, not utopian.
- Tier:
FOUNDATIONAL· Domain: TORAH · Covers: C7 · Evidence: Deut 30:11–14
Deut-P6: Choose life — moral freedom, and the open door of return
God sets before each person life and death, blessing and curse, and commands "choose life." Even after failure, return (teshuvah) is possible, and God "will circumcise thy heart" to love Him. Human moral agency is real, and so is mercy.
- Tier:
FOUNDATIONAL· Domain: TESHUVAH+TORAH · Covers: C8, C9 · Evidence: Deut 30:2–6, 30:15–19 · Untranslatable: teshuvah
Step 7 — Traceability
| Principle | Atomic statements | Verses |
|---|---|---|
| Deut-P1 | C1, C2 | Deut 6:4–5 |
| Deut-P2 | C3 | Deut 6:6–9 |
| Deut-P3 | C4 | Deut 10:12–13 |
| Deut-P4 | C5, C6 | Deut 10:17–19, 15:7–11 |
| Deut-P5 | C7 | Deut 30:11–14 |
| Deut-P6 | C8, C9 | Deut 30:2–6, 15–19 |
Step 8 — Quality
- Coverage (book-level): Deuteronomy's load-bearing centre (Shema, the requirement, justice/hesed, the nearness of the word, choosing life) is captured. The legal code (Deut 12–26) and the blessings/curses (Deut 27–28) are Stage-B for per-law depth.
- Principles: 6 (within range).
- Traceability: 100%.
Step 9 — Validation
- Standalone comprehension: Deut-P1 (the Shema) is the tradition's highest-lived-centrality text and a WEAK-distinctive anchor — claim: ultimate reality is one and worthy of total love; warrant: that One is the personal covenant God of Israel. Deut-P2 (formation in the home), Deut-P4 (defend the vulnerable; compassion grounded in memory of suffering), and Deut-P5 (the good is within reach) are strong cross-tradition convergence candidates at the claim level. Deut-P6 (real moral choice + the door of return) converges broadly; the warrant (a personal God who circumcises the heart) is theistic.