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| | Some Thoughts on the Irrevocable Inevitability of Judgment for Israel (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-08) |
 | | Nevertheless, Delitzsch, himself a Jewish believer, does credit to himself as a scholar and servant of the Church and of Christ, by not withholding any implication of his painstaking exegesis of the Word of God however painful and fearful its implications. |
 | | He affirms that it is all over with the nation; and this is the ground and object of his reproachful lamentations." Delitzsch notes that Caspari, another brilliant Hebrew-Christian exegete, "has pointed out how nearly every word corresponds to the curses threatened in Lev. |
 | | Delitzsch comments that, "the hardening judgment would only come to an end when the condition had been fulfilled, that towns, houses, and the soil of the land of Israel and its environs had been made desolate, in fact utterly and universally desolate, as the three definitions (without inhabitant, without man, wilderness) affirm. |
| www.benisrael.org /articles/israel2.htm (2233 words) |
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