- 1. Start with the topic or framing question.
- 2. Review the passages most commonly cited.
- 3. Open representative clips from real debates.
- 4. Continue into verse pages and argument maps.
Quoted to argue that the same divine statutes applied to surrounding nations as well as Israelites, supporting the claim that biblical servitude was governed by universal moral ...
Referenced to argue that different communities were given their own laws, so Torah and Gospel remain legally binding for Jews and Christians.
Referenced as a cluster of verses central to the dispute over whether the Bible remains an authority for Jews and Christians.
Quoted to argue that Jews and Christians are subject to Islamic law through the jizya, undermining the claim that their own scriptures remain their sole legal authorities.
Quoted as an example of Quranic dietary restrictions given specifically to Jews, supporting an abrogation argument about changing legal obligations.
Used to argue that Sabbath laws applied only to a particular people and were not permanently binding.
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1 mentions • 1 debates
1 mentions • 1 debates
1 mentions • 1 debates
1 mentions • 1 debates