OLD TESTAMENT LESSON #3 Flashcards
1
Q
- The books of ______ History tell Israel’s story from the conquest of ______ through the ______ and finally through the fall of the Israelite kingdoms.
A
Deuteronomistic
Canaan
monarchies
2
Q
- These books try to explain the great _______ that has befallen God’s people in the sixth century B.C.; the overwhelming disaster is that there is no Israelite nation and that they are in exile.
A
national disaster
3
Q
- The book of Joshua tells of the Israelites conquest of the land of _______.
A
Canaan
4
Q
- The Israelite’s possession of the land fulfills promises made to ______.
A
Abraham
5
Q
- Joshua 5 tells the Israelites that the men are to be _______ and all are to celebrate the _______ which are two signal elements of keeping the covenant.
A
circumcised
Passover
6
Q
- In the story of the conquest of the city of ______, the Israelite spies ask a prostitute named _____ to hide them. She agrees but makes them promise to spare her and her family when they take the city.
A
Jericho
Rahab
7
Q
- Since the first battle to conquer Canaan was won by God, all of the _____ of the first victory were to be given to ______ alone. ______could not resist taking a few things for himself. As a result, the next battle at Ai leads to defeat. This episode demonstrates at least two very important truths:
- First, it shows that these texts work with ideas of corporate guilt.
- Second, it clearly establishes the link between the necessity of obedience to God and national success. If Israel hopes to survive as a nation, it must obey God’s statutes.
A
spoils
God
Achan
8
Q
- The book of Joshua devotes considerable attention to ______ the land among the twelve tribes (Joshua 15 – 22). _____ of the tribes settled on the west side of the Jordan and _____ on the east.
A
distributing
Ten
two
9
Q
- As they distribute the land, they reserve some areas as “______.” They were places where people could go when they have killed someone _____ (Joshua 20). Since there was no strong national government, families or clans sought their own justice by killing the person who caused the death of their kin.
A
“cities of refuge”
accidentally
10
Q
- The book of Judges tells Israel’s story from the death of _____ to within a few decades of the establishment of a ______. The Israelites had no national government in this period, but in times of crisis, leaders emerged who brought the tribes together to fight off common enemies. These leaders were called ______.
A
Joshua
monarchy
“judges”
11
Q
- The book of Judges contains ______ stories of judges which tell of the problems Israel had with their neighbors because of failure to exterminate them during the conquest. This caused them not to keep the ________ by worshiping the _____ of those neighboring peoples.
A
Israel’s
covenant with God
gods
12
Q
- The writer of Judges uses a pattern for the whole book in chapters 2:11-19. The pattern is as follows:
- The Israelites “what is evil in the sight of the Lord” by worshiping other gods
- God allows their neighbors to _______ them
- The people ________ to God
- God sends a leader to _______ them from oppression
This cycle is repeated once they are delivered.
A
defeat
cry out
rescue
13
Q
- The only woman among these judges is _____ which demonstrates that some women held important positions in Israelite culture.
A
Deborah
14
Q
- The book of Judges by saying: “In those days there was no ______ in Israel; all the people did what was right in their ______ eyes” (21:25). This theme not only runs throughout the book but prepares us for the ______ of the story.
A
king
own
next stage
15
Q
- The story of Ruth happened during the period of the _______ and was placed in the Bible directly after that book and established the lineage of ________, Israel’s idolized king.
A
judges
David