X.I.3. View of revelation in Jeremiah, Zechariah, and the writer of Isa. xl.-lxvi.
X.II.1. Deuteronomy was the first law in our sense of the word.
It obtains authority during the exile. End of prophecy
X.II.2. The reforming legislation supplemented by that of the restoration. The usages of worship codified and systematised by Ezekiel and his successors. The Priestly Code—its introduction by Ezra
X.II.3. The Torah the basis of the Canon. Extension of the notion originally attached to the Torah to the other books
CHAPTER XI. THE THEOCRACY AS IDEA AND AS INSTITUTION—
XI.I.1. Freshness and naturalness of early Israelite history
XI.I.2. Rise of the state. Relation of Religion and of the Deity to the life of state and nation.
XI.I.3. The Messianic theocracy of the older prophets is built up on the foundations afforded by the actual community of their time
XI.I.4. The idea of the covenant
XI.II.1. Foundation of the theocratic constitution under the foreign domination