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Chief city of Moab — Israel was forbidden to attack it because God gave it to Lot's descendants
MoabHistorically Verified
The exact site is debated but most candidates lie in central Moab between the Arnon and Mujib rivers. Iron Age Moabite settlements throughout the area have been documented.
The chief city of Moab, situated along the Arnon River that formed Moab's northern border. God explicitly forbade Israel from attacking Ar because He had given it "to the descendants of Lot" — the Moabites (Deuteronomy 2:9, 18). When Israel passed near it on the way north, the Moabites of Ar sold them food and water (Deuteronomy 2:29). The fragment of the ancient war song quoted in Numbers 21 celebrates Ar's destruction by Sihon the Amorite king before Israel's arrival — fire from Heshbon "devoured Ar of Moab."
Numbers
Snakes, Songs, and Conquered Kings
Israel's wilderness wandering takes a dramatic turn — from deadly snakes and a strange bronze cure that Jesus himself would later point back to, to spontaneous singing at a desert well, to two decisive military victories that change the trajectory of everything.
Deuteronomy
Forty Years of Walking Past What Isn't Yours
Moses walks the new generation through the quietest and heaviest years of Israel's history — decades of passing through nations they couldn't touch, a generation dying off in a single sentence, and the electric moment God finally said 'now fight.' It's a chapter about what obedience looks like when the answer is 'not yet' and what changes when the answer finally becomes 'now.'
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