|   | Prayer Request (for site updates, see below) I  was laid off from my full-time job awhile ago. After a lot of prayer,  soul searching, and discussions with my wife, we have decided to operate  this ministry entirely by faith in God's provision through the love and  kindness of His people. I am not paid for doing this work, and  therefore I ask you to consider supporting us. If you can help, please offer a donation or purchase some of the Hebrew study materials offered here.  Encouraging other  web sites to link here also helps us become more visible on the web.   Above all, agree with us for the Lord's will to be done in our lives.  Todah, chaverim. 
 
              
  Note:  My wife and I have have two young children (Josiah and Judah). The LORD has graciously provided for us as Adonai Yireh (יְהוָה יִרְאֶה),  "the One who sees [our need]."  We are living one day at a time by the  grace and mercy of God, and I want to publicly praise Yeshua and  acknowledge His faithful love in caring for my family -- despite the  trials during this time.  The LORD God of Israel is faithful and true! And for those of you who have sent us a word of encouragement or donation during this difficult time, please accept our heartfelt appreciation! Your chesed and prayers truly help sustain us.
  יְהִי שֵׁם יְהוָה מְברָךְ - "Blessed be the Name of the Lord."  
 
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 May 2012 Site Updates 
  The Spirit of the Word...
 
  
 05.23.12 (Sivan 2, 5772)  Hebrew is written using only consonants; the vowel  sounds are supplied by the one speaking the words (i.e., by  inhaling/exhaling). "For the word is very near you" – כִּי־קָרוֹב אֵלֶיךָ הַדָּבָר מְאד - "it is in your mouth and in your heart" (Deut. 30:14).  Note that the word "breath" is ruach (רוּחַ) in Hebrew (i.e., wind, spirit). The letter kills, but the Spirit gives life (2 Cor. 3:6). It is the spirit that breathes life into what is written (John 6:63). "Behold, I will cause breath (רוּחַ) to enter you, and you shall live" (Ezek. 37:5).
  When the Apostle Paul quoted this verse regarding how someone personally receives salvation (Rom. 10:8), he deliberately omitted the phrase "so that you can do it" (לַעֲשׂתוֹ), because the message of the gospel is precisely that we cannot "do it," but praise be to God, Yeshua can and has indeed finished the work on our behalf (John 19:30).   Instead of attempting to merit our own righteousness, we now confess  our trust in Yeshua's righteousness offered for our justification (Rom. 10:8-10).  This is the miracle of the "exchanged life" based on the korban principle of the sacrifice of Messiah for our deliverance (2 Cor. 5:21).   We now live by the power of the Holy Spirit according to the law of  love. "For the law of the Spirit of life has set you free in Yeshua the  Messiah from the law of sin and death" (Rom. 8:2).  The Messiah alone is our Savior, the Substance of our hope. He "hears  the groaning of the prisoner and sets free those who are subject to  death" (Psalm 102:20).
  "The righteousness of God" is revealed to the heart of faith, since "the righteous shall live by his faith" - tzaddik be'emunato yicheh (צַדִּיק בֶּאֱמוּנָתוֹ יִחְיֶה) [Rom. 1:17; Hab. 2:4]. This is the righteousness of God manifested apart from the law (Rom. 3:21), or the "righteousness [of God] imputed apart from works" (Rom. 4:6).  Faith in God's righteousness is the essence of all true Torah from  heaven, since apart from faith we are spiritually dead and "powerless  (ἀδύνατος) to please God" (Heb. 11:6).
  The way of salvation (דֶּרֶךְ הַיְשׁוּעָה) is always a matter of the heart and will, and therefore the Holy Spirit always cries out: Choose Life! "For  this commandment (of teshuvah) is not too hard (lit. "too wonderful")  for you, neither is it far away. It is not in heaven...nor across the  sea.... Rather, the Word (הַדָּבָר) is very near you - in your mouth and your heart....  If you are willing to open you  heart and believe, you will discover that "the kingdom of God is inside  of you - ἐντὸς ὑμῶν ἐστιν (Luke 17:21), and that Yeshua is the breath of your life. 
 
  Personal Note: I humbly ask for your prayers, chaverim. Like many of you I have been  struggling lately... Please ask the LORD to help sustain this work and  to give me victory over the powers of hell arrayed against me. Thank  you.
 
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  The Seeking Savior...
 
  
 05.22.12 (Sivan 1, 5772)  "Those who are well have no need of a physician, but those who are sick" (Matt. 9:12).  Even though we are weak, sickly, broken, and sinful people, we must  never lose hope and begin to fear that we do not belong to the Kingdom  of the Messiah... Indeed, our infirmities are often a blessing in  disguise, a gift that reveals our need... He has torn us so that we may  be healed; He has struck us down so that He may bind us up: לְכוּ וְנָשׁוּבָה אֶל־יְהוָה  כִּי הוּא טָרָף וְיִרְפָּאֵנוּ  יַךְ וְיַחְבְּשֵׁנוּ le·khu · ve·na·shu·vah · el · Adonai  ki · hu · ta·raf · ve·yir·pa·ei·nu yakh · ve·yach·be·shei·nu    "Come, let us return to the LORD;  for he has torn us, that he may heal us;  he has struck us down, and he will bind us up."
  (Hosea 6:1)
 
   Our  infirmities draw us closer to God our Healer. If you are sinful and  sick, you are invited to come before the Master for life and rescue from  the power of sin... Take your place among the lepers, the tax  collectors, the outcasts... you will never hear Him criticize you or  shame you for coming to Him for healing of your sinful state... "For the  Son of Man came to seek and to save the lost" (Luke 19:10).  Yeshua is the Good Shepherd (הָרעֶה הַטּוֹב) who leaves his flock of 99 sheep in order to find the one sheep who is lost (Matt. 18:12-14). He is always like that – He is always seeking and saving the lost sinner; He is always offering life and  healing to those who have been made sick with the plague of sin. Thank  God we have a Savior who seeks us out in our desperate need!
  King David wrote, "You have given those who fear you a banner (נֵּס לְהִתְנוֹסֵס) for the sake of the truth" (Psalm 60:4),  which Rashi interprets, "You have given hardships and suffering to  those who fear you to elevate them in the way." Indeed the word nes (נֵּס)  can mean "banner" (as on the mast of a ship), a "sign" (or miracle), or  a "test" (nisayon). God tests those who fear Him in order to help them  become a miraculous sign to the world at large. Ultimately, the sign or  miracle is the gift of Messiah's suffering on our behalf and His  resurrection for our justification (Isa. 11:10). Even in the face of our enemies who have breached the land, we have the promise of victory in Adonai Nissi (יְהוָה נִסִּי), God my Miracle.
  May  you, broken and contrite one, hear the word of His hope calling out for  your soul... He is your Shepherd, your Healer, and your Miracle. May  you come beneath His banner of truth and love to find eternal refuge....     |  
 
 
  Parashat Bamidbar - במדבר
 
  
 [ The following is related to this week's Torah reading, parashat Bamidbar ("in the wilderness").  Please read the Torah portion to "find your place" here. ]
  05.21.12 (Iyyar 28, 5772)  It is customary to refer to "books" of the Hebrew  Bible according to their initial word(s).  For example, the first book  of the Torah is called Bereshit ("in the beginning"), from the first word in the scroll (בְּרֵאשִׁית).   When the Hebrew was later translated into Koine Greek (c. 3rd-2nd  century BC), individual books were assigned names based on the interpretations of the sages. Therefore the Septuagint (i.e., the ancient Greek  translation) named the first book of the Torah Γένεσις ("birth" or  "origin"), which later made its way into English (and other languages)  via Latin as the word "Genesis."  
  It's important to understand  that the names of the various books of the Bible were "coined" by the  Greek translators and are not part of the original texts of Scripture  themselves. Therefore the "Book of Leviticus" is a transliteration of  the Greek phrase βιβλίον το Λευιτικόν, ("book of the Levites"), though  in a Torah scroll it was simply identified according to its first  significant word: Vayikra (וַיִּקְרָא - "and he called"); likewise, the "Book of Numbers" comes from the  Greek word Ἀριθμοί ("numbers"), though in a Torah scroll it was  identified by the keyword Bamidbar (בְּמִדְבַּר - "in the wilderness"); and so on.  Of course, we refer to the names of the books in Hebrew (not Greek, etc.): Bereshit (for Genesis), Shemot (for Exodus), Vayikra (for Leviticus), and so on.
  Bamidbar means "in the wilderness" and is the name associated with the fourth  book of the Torah scroll.  Since several censuses are recorded in it,  the sages sometimes called the book sefer ha-pekudim (the book of counting), so named because of the phrase bemispar shemot (בְּמִסְפַּר שֵׁמוֹת) - "they were counted according to their names" (Num. 1:2). The sages stress that unlike earlier censuses (e.g., Exod. 30:12-14), this one was personal because it was based on individual names (shemot).   Accordingly, and because the idea of personal counting was considered  central, the book was translated in the Septuagint using the Greek word  Ἀριθμοί ("numbers") as its title.  As Yeshua said, even the very hairs  on our heads are all numbered (Matt. 10:30).
  The  Tribe of Levi was the smallest of the tribes of Israel (both before and  after the sin of the Golden Calf).  According to midrash, this was  because the Levites were faithful to God while in Egypt and therefore  did not come under the special blessing of God to supernaturally  multiply those who persecuted the tribes (Exod. 1:12). Even when going out of Egypt, the LORD preserved a remnant for the sake of His Name.
  The book recounts Israel's adventures in the wilderness (מִדְבָּר)  from their second year of the Exodus until the 40th year. In general,  it details how the tribes of Israel were counted and meticulously  arranged into military camp formation around the Mishkan (tabernacle).
 
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   Note: Each tribe had its own prince (nassi) and its own unique flag (degel), and each tribe's flag color corresponded with the color of its respective stone in Aaron's breastplate (Exod. 28:15-21).  For example, Judah's stone was a sky-blue carbuncle and therefore the  color of his flag was like the color of the sky with a "fiery lion"  embroidered upon it (Gen. 49:9).
  Led by the Shekhinah (שְׁכִינָה) cloud by day and the pillar of fire by night, at first the Jews were en route to the Promised Land - the land of Canaan - which the LORD swore to  give to Abraham and his descendants forever.  However, the people  rebelled (i.e., their complicity in the "Sin of the Spies") and were  therefore condemned to wander for 40 years in the desert.  This 40 year  period is often thought of as a time of punishment, though it was also a  time of refinement for the nation, and it was during this time that God  demonstrated great love for Israel by feeding the people with manna,  giving them water from rock (i.e., the so-called Well of Miriam),  protecting them with the Clouds of Glory, instructing them through the  teaching of Moses, and so on. God loves his people -- even when they are  faithless -- and his punishments are ultimately healing and redemptive.  
  The Great Assembly (כְּנֶסֶת הַגְּדוֹלָה) decreed that parashat Bamidbar would be read on the Sabbath before the festival of Shavuot "so that the year and its curses will be terminated."  This phrase refers to the "Great Rebuke" - called the Tochachah (תּוֹכָחָה) - that was delivered in the  previous Torah reading (i.e., Bechukotai,  the last portion of Vayikra).  Recall that this portion used 11 verses  to describe the blessings for obedience (i.e., "if you follow my  laws...") but used three times as many (33 verses) to describe the  curses for disobedience to the Sinai covenant ("but this is what will  happen if you do not listen to me"). Since the curses (קְלַלוֹת) included the destruction of the Temple and the great exile (galut) from the land, and since Shavuot commemorates the giving of the Torah  at Sinai, it was thought that recommitting to the Sinai covenant during  Shavuot would "reverse the curse" and cause blessing to come upon  Israel.  This explains why Shavuot was regarded as time for Israel to  recommit themselves to talmud Torah (the study of Torah) and to renew the decision to live as a Jew.  And this also explains why the Ruach HaKodesh (Holy Spirit) was given to Yeshua's disciples precisely during this  time after His resurrection.  Instead of recommiting to Sinai we were  given evidence that the New Covenant was beginning to be established at  Zion....
  The Hebrew word midbar ("wilderness") shares the same root as davar (דּבר) which means "word." Sometimes we need to be alone to hear God speaking kol demamah dakkah (קוֹל דְּמָמָה דַקָּה)  - "the sound of a low whisper" (1 Kings. 19:12), and indeed some of the  sages regard the journey into the wilderness (as opposed to the direct  route to the Promised Land) as God's way of separating His people away  in order to speak to them "privately." The desert (i.e., "word") of  Sinai is the word of humility (עֲנָוָה).  When God spoke Torah to Moses (mattan Torah), it was from a nondescript  mountain - a place of emptiness, brokenness and need. Indeed, another  word for Sinai is Chorev (חרֵב), a word that refers to the dryness and desolation. That is the starting point -- not the lush places of future promise. We receive Torah "bamidbar" because we can only hear God's davar in a place of humility and inner quiet. God brings us to an arid place  -- inhospitable, and dangerous -- to reveal our need for Him. This is a  necessary excursion to prepare us to look for the greater hope of Zion. 
  The giving of the law was meant to offer gracious discipline until the Messiah would come to fulfill the law's true intent (Gal. 3:19, 24-25). Yeshua is the Greater Hope, the One who delivers us from the curse of Sinai to bring us to Zion (Gal. 3:10).  We enter into the realm of promise when we personally put our trust in God's love for us -- not by  redoubling our efforts to obtain favor through adherence the terms given  at Sinai (Heb. 8:13).   "For the Torah made nothing perfect; but on the other hand, a better  hope is introduced, and that is how we draw near to God" (Heb. 7:19).     |  
 
 
  Ascension and Mem B'Omer...
 
  
  05.18.12 (Iyyar 25, 5772)  Today marks the 40th day of the Omer Count (i.e., Mem B'Omer), the time associated with the ascension of Yeshua. Recall that Yeshua told His followers that it was good that he would leave them, so that the Holy Spirit (רוּחַ הַקּדֶשׁ),  the "Comforter" or "Advocate" (παράκλητος), would be given to them.  "But I tell you the truth, it is for your advantage that I am going  away. For if I do not go away, the Advocate (ὁ παράκλητος) will not come  to you, but if I go, I will send him to you" (John 16:7).  Notice that the word translated as "advantage" here is the Greek word  συμφέρω (from σύν, "with" and φέρω, "to carry"), which suggests that we  would be given power that "carries us" with the Lord during the trials  of this life... Bo, Ruach Elohim: "Come, Holy Spirit..."
   
 
  "Table Talk" for Behar-Bechukotai
 
  
 [ This Shabbat we read the final two portions of the Book of Leviticus (i.e., Vayikra), namely, parashat Behar and Bechukotai. Please read the portions to find your place here... ]
  05.18.12 (Iyyar 24, 5772)   It is encouraging and edifying to discuss the  weekly Torah portion with your family and friends during the Friday  night Sabbath meal. To make it a little easier to discuss some topics, I  created a new Shabbat "Table Talk" guide for both parashat Behar and  parashat Bechukotai. The guides include a brief summary of the Torah  portion, a few questions (with answers), and some additional topics for  discussion. Hopefully this material will prompt some interesting (and  enjoyable) discussion around your Sabbath table, chaverim. You can  download the discussion guides here:  Parashat  Bechukotai begins, "If you walk in my statutes ... you shall eat your  bread ... and I will give peace ... and none shall make you afraid."   The midrash notes that the blessings listed in this section (Lev.  26:3-13) begin with the letter Aleph (in the word אִם) and end with the letter Tav (in the word קוֹמְמִיּוּת),  which suggests that they encompass all other possible blessings (from  Aleph to Tav). This reminds me of a Psalm that lists "from A to Z" the  blessings that are bestowed upon the righteous: 
 אַשְׁרֵי־אִישׁ יָרֵא אֶת־יְהוָה בְּמִצְוֹתָיו חָפֵץ מְאד Ash·rei · ish · ya·rei · et · Adonai, Be·mitz·vo·tav · cha·fetz · me·od    "How blessed is the one who fears the LORD, who takes great delight in keeping his commands" (Psalm 112:1)
 
    Notice  that Psalm 112 is an "acrostic" (alphabetical) song. After the call to  praise the LORD (Hallelujah), every stanza (twenty-two in all) begins  with a successive letter of the Hebrew alphabet (i.e., Aleph, Bet, Gimmel, and so on).  The first verse includes both Aleph and Bet, the second verse includes Gimmel and Dalet, and so on, with each stanza separated by an atnach accent mark. Note further that the word translated "happy" (i.e., ashrei: אַשְׁרֵי) comes from a verb (אָשַׁר) that means to go straight (yashar), or to advance in your walk with the LORD (the word yesharim [יְשָׁרִים] means "the upright ones").  Ashrei can also mean "enriched." As Psalm 1 teaches us, "Enriched is the  person who has not walked after the advice of the wicked, nor stood on  the path of sinners, nor sat among the scorners, but finds delight (חָפֵץ) in the law (תּוֹרָה) of the LORD, and in His law he meditates day and night... (Psalm 1:1-2).  The one who reveres the LORD and honors His truth will be like a tree  transplanted beside flowing streams, yielding fruit at the proper time,  with leaves that never fall off" (Psalm 1:3, cp. Jer. 17:7-8). "If you know that he is righteous, you may be sure that everyone who practices righteousness (צֶדֶק) has been born of him" (1 John 2:29).
  Personal Update: Please keep this ministry in your prayers. There are times when the  spiritual oppression seems so severe all I can do is plead, plead, and  plead before God for His deliverance and healing. "Heal me, O LORD, and I  shall be healed; save me, and I shall be saved,  for you are my praise"  (Jer. 17:14).  Shabbat Shalom, chaverim...
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  Carelessness and Exile...
 
  
 [ The following is related to this week's Torah reading (Bechukotai). Please read the Torah portion to "find your place" here. ]
  05.18.12 (Iyyar 24, 5772)   Our Torah portion this week (Bechukotai)  includes the first great "rebuke" (i.e., tochachah: תּוֹכָחָה) of Israel given in the Scriptures (the second is found in Ki Tavo, i.e., Deut. 28:15-68). In this ominous section, God promises the people great blessing if they would obey Him (Lev. 26:3-13),  but He forewarns that exile, persecution and other progressively worse  punishments would befall them if they would break faith with Him (Lev. 26:14-46). The sages note that divine censure would come if the people "forgot" about God or otherwise became careless in their observance of  His laws. They point out that the refrain "if you walk contrary to me" (וַהֲלַכְתֶּם עִמִּי בְּקֶרִי) - which occurs several times during the rebuke - really means "if you walk carelessly (i.e., keri: קְרִי) with me." Rashi notes that the verb קָרָה means "to befall" or "to happen" and therefore suggests a sense of randomness (the related word mikreh [מִקְרֶה]  means "coincidence"). If the people regarded the events of life as  "random," then God would reciprocate by bringing senseless trouble into  their lives...  For this reason the sages regard a careless attitude  about God's will as the very first step to inevitable apostasy. In  other words, regarding whatever happens in life as mere "coincidence"  essentially denies God's Presence, and this attitude will eventually  call for God's corrective intervention. People can be "hot or cold"  regarding their relationship with Him, but God will never give the  option of affecting indifference toward Him...
  Note: For more on this subject, see the article "Thoughts on the Tochachah."     |  
 
 
  Troubles of Love - יִסּוּרִים שֶׁל אַהֲבָה
 
  
 [ The following is related to this week's Torah reading (Bechukotai). Please read the Torah portion to "find your place" here. ]
  05.18.12 (Iyyar 24, 5772)   Parashat Bechukotai is the final portion of the Book of Leviticus, which is the central book of the Torah. In light of all that God had done for the Jewish  people - from their great deliverance in Egypt to the ordination of the  priesthood in the Mishkan (Tabernacle) - God expected them to live up to  their high calling as His chosen people: "You shall be holy, for I the  LORD your God am holy" (Lev. 19:2).  
  It has been said that the opposite of love is not hate, but rather indifference, and that explains why the punishments would come if the people "left their first love." Indeed, the "rebuke" portion of the tochachah begins with v'im lo tishme'u li (וְאִם־לא תִשְׁמְעוּ לִי), "if you do not listen to me" (Lev. 26:14), which recalls the Shema and the duty to love the Lord bekhol levavkha, "with all your heart." If the people walk carelessly (i.e., keri: קְרִי) with God, then God will afflict them with "the troubles of love" (i.e., yissurei ahavah: יִסּוּרֵי אַהֲבָה),  afflictions that would haunt them because of God's jealousy. A student  once asked his rebbe: "Do we get punished for our sins in this world?"  His succinct response was, "Only if we are made fortunate..." It is the  worst possible fate for God to be indifferent to you! Can anything be more tragic than to be forgotten or to go unnoticed by God?  It is far better that He afflict and harass you with the "troubles of love!" 
  Jewish tradition generally regards the entire chapter of Leviticus 26 as a great rebuke (i.e., "the" tochachah: הַתּוֹכָחָה), even though the chapter itself begins with promises of blessing for obedience to God's law (Lev. 26:3-13). The sages of the Talmud regard the "rebuke section" of this chapter (Lev. 26:14-46) as even more severe than the rebuke found in the Book of Deuteronomy (Deut. 28:15-68),  because it was spoken directly by the LORD to the Jewish nation as a  whole, whereas the latter warning was spoken by Moses himself and  addressed in singular form (Megillah 31b). It is often difficult to find  volunteers to publicly read this Torah portion during synagogue  services, and the custom arose to have just one person read the entire  rebuke section as one long aliyah (reading), as opposed to  breaking it up for several people to read in smaller parts. It is also  customary for the one making this aliyah to recite the passage in a  lowered tone of voice...
  The tochachah of Bechukotai begins with 11 verses that promise blessings for obedience to God's laws, but three times as many (i.e., 33 verses) that promise punishment for disobedience. To  help "offset" this discrepancy, the midrash notes that blessing section  begins with the letter Aleph (in the word אִם) and ends with the letter Tav (in the word קוֹמְמִיּוּת),  which suggests that the blessings encompass all other possible  blessings (from Aleph to Tav). On the other hand, the punishment section  begins with the letter the Vav (in the word וְאִם) and ends with the letter Hey (in the word משֶׁה), the last two letters found in the Sacred Name (יהוה),  which suggests that God's compassion would be present even in the  suffering to come in the latter days. Another way to look at this is to  regard the letter Vav as the symbol of man, and the letter Hey as the  symbol of the Spirit: in the end - after the punishments were complete -  God's compassion would prevail over His judgment for sin, and the  Spirit of God would rest upon Israel. The midrash further states during  the days of the Messiah, Israel will keep the Torah, "from Aleph to Tav"  (i.e., from beginning to end), and at that time all the blessings God  promised to them would finally be fulfilled.
  The idea of tochachah is not simply something for ethnic Israel, of course, since the New  Testament likewise warns us that God will punish those who likewise walk  carelessly (i.e., keri: קְרִי)  with Him. Have you forgotten the exhortation that addresses you as  God's children? "My son, do not regard lightly (ὀλιγώρει) the discipline  of the Lord, nor be weary by his reproof (תּוֹכֵחָה). For the Lord disciplines the one he loves, and reproves (יוֹכִיחַ) every child whom he receives" (Heb. 12:5-6; Prov. 3:11-12).  The Lord charged the assembly at Ephesus that they had let go of their  first love. Yeshua therefore urged them: "Remember from what high state  you have fallen and repent! Do the deeds (ἔργα) you did at the first; if  not, I will come to you and remove your menorah from its place – unless  you repent" (Rev. 2:4-5). Because God is never indifferent toward those who are trusting in His salvation, he will discipline and  correct us to keep close to Him. He will afflict us with the "troubles  of love." As it is written, "It is a fearful thing to fall into the  hands of the Living God" (Heb. 10:30).
  Regarding  the curses of this section, I'd like to relate a beautiful story I once  read. The child of a famous Torah sage was used to hearing his father  read the weekly Torah portion at synagogue, but on the Shabbat of  Bechukotai his father happened to be out of town, and the boy listened  intently as a substitute Torah reader recited the various punishments  listed in the parashah.  Afterwards, the boy was so emotionally  distraught that he fell into a deep depression that lasted for over a  month. The child was later asked, "Why were you not disturbed this way  when the admonition was read in past years?" The boy replied, "When  father reads it, no curses are heard." Yes, when "father reads," namely,  the Father that sees our hearts in the darkest of places, we will hear  His voice of blessing....
  At the end of this parashah, as with every other parashah that concludes a book of the Torah, we say, Chazak, chazak, v'nitchazek - "Be strong, be strong, and may we be strengthened!" Despite the  "heaviness" associated with the idea of God's judgment and punishment,  we must press on in faith.... The great commandment is always "Choose  Life!" (Deut. 30:19),  and that life comes from being in a loving relationship with our  Heavenly Father through our Yeshua our Savior, blessed be He (1 John 5:12). May God help us return to our first love for Him b'khol levavkha - with all our hearts. "I love those who love me; and those who seek me will find me" (Prov. 8:17). "The LORD is good to those who hope (קוה) for him, to the soul who seeks him" (Lam. 3:25).     |  
 
 
  New Hebrew Meditation: The Cry of the Heart...
 
    
 05.17.12 (Iyyar 23, 5772)   Today I wrote a brief Hebrew meditation ("Cry of the Heart") based on the verse: "He fulfills the desire of those who fear him; he also hears their cry and saves them" (Psalm 145:19).  God allows troubles into our lives so that we will "keep asking, keep  seeking, keep knocking..." The door of blessing will be opened to us  through perseverance of heart... "For everyone who asks receives, and the one who seeks finds, and to the one who knocks it will be opened" (Matt. 7:8). 
  Personal Update: Recently I twisted my ankle on a hike and have had trouble sleeping  because of the pain. Your prayers for my healing are appreciated,  friends... Thank you.   
 
  Jerusalem Day - Solar Eclipse
 
  
 [ Jerusalem Day is observed Saturday, May 19th through Sunday, May 20th this year... ]
  05.16.12 (Iyyar 22, 5772)   In Israel, "Jerusalem Day" (Yom Yerushalayim)  commemorates the re-unification of old city of Jerusalem on June 7th,  1967 during the Six Day War. In 1968 the Chief Rabbinate of Israel  declared Iyyar 28 to be a minor holiday to thank God for answering the  2,000-year-old prayer of "Next Year in Jerusalem." On March 23, 1998,  the Knesset passed the Jerusalem Day Law, making it a national holiday.  This year, Iyyar 28 runs from Saturday, May 19th (after sundown)  through Sunday, May 20th (until sundown). Note that this year the moon  will eclipse nearly 95% of the sun on Sunday (in the United States, the  solar eclipse will begins around 7:30 pm (CDT) and will last for two  hours).  
  Note further that the very next day, Monday, May 21st,  marks Rosh Chodesh Sivan, the new moon of Sivan, which means that within  two consecutive days we will have the sun eclipsed by the moon,  followed by the disappearance of the moon! "Then the moon will be  confounded and the sun ashamed, for the LORD of hosts reigns on Mount  Zion and in Jerusalem, and his glory will be before his elders" (Isa  24:23)." Out of Zion, the perfection of beauty, God shines forth" (Psalm  50:2).
  Note: Click here to learn 25 reasons why Jerusalem matters...     |  
 
 
  Be not Afraid...
 
  
 05.16.12 (Iyyar 22, 5772)  Most of us understand that loving God is our  essential obligation, the end or "goal" of all the other commandments,  the very reason why God has spoken and why we exist.  Yeshua plainly  taught that this was the point of "the law and the prophets," the rest  being commentary (Matt. 7:12, Matt. 22:36-40).  However, while love is our greatest duty - the yoke of heaven -  you  might be surprised to learn that the most frequent commandment is simply  al-tirah, "Be not afraid." Over and over again in the Scriptures  we hear the LORD saying to those who trust in Him, al tira, "be not  afraid." אַל־תִּירָא כִּי עִמְּךָ־אָנִי  אַל־תִּשְׁתָּע כִּי־אֲנִי אֱלהֶיךָ  אִמַּצְתִּיךָ אַף־עֲזַרְתִּיךָ  אַף־תְּמַכְתִּיךָ בִּימִין צִדְקִי al · ti·ra · ki · im·me·kha · a·ni;   al · tish·ta · ki · a·ni · E·lo·he·kha im·matz·ti·kha · af · a·zar·ti·kha;  af · te·makh·ti·kha · bi·min · tzid·ki    "Fear not, for I am with you; be not dismayed, for I am your God;  I will strengthen you, I will help you, I will uphold you with my righteous right hand" (Isa. 41:10)
 
     Hebrew Study Card This is a word for the exiles of every age: Be not afraid - al-tirah – not of man, nor of war, nor of tribulation, nor even of death itself (Rom. 8:35-39).  If God be for us, who can be against us? Indeed, Yeshua came to die to  destroy the power of death "and to release all those who through fear of  death were subject to lifelong slavery" (Heb. 2:14-15). The resurrection of the Messiah is the focal point of history - not the "dust of death." Death does not  have the final word. Indeed, because Yeshua is alive, we also shall  live (John 14:19). Because of Yeshua's victory, we can now live without fear: al-tirah, "Be not afraid, it is I."  "There is no fear in God's perfect love," as the Apostle John wrote (1 John 4:18). If we love God because He first loved us (1 John 4:19), then we find courage because of the heart He imparts to us... God will uphold you – even in the trials of your faith.
  Of  course this doesn't mean that we should pretend that evil doesn't exist  or that there's no real danger in this world. No, the Scriptures are  clear that there are spiritual enemies in the world and we are engaged  in a genuine spiritual war (1 Pet. 5:8-9; Eph. 6:10-18).  Indeed every day the media attempts to frighten us by broadcasting lies  and fearmongering propaganda. We must fight these messages of fear by  remembering the truth and promises of God; we must never fear mere men  but rather the LORD our God, who is our Maker, our King, and our  Redeemer. We must train our minds to see beyond mere appearances, to  ignore the messages of this dark world, and to look for God's Presence  in everything.  יְהִי־חַסְדְּךָ יהוה עָלֵינוּ כַּאֲשֶׁר יִחַלְנוּ לָךְ ye·hi · chas·de·kha · Adonai · a·lei·nu, · ka·a·sher · yi·chal·nu · lakh     May your chesed, O LORD, be upon us, as we wait for You (Psalm 33:22) 
 
   Download Study Card We  must trust in the LORD and His care for our lives, which always comes  "as we hope" in Him... May it please God to impart to each us the  courage that comes from Heaven itself. May He help us not to live in  fear, but rather to walk in faith, full of confidence. So remember: al-tirah, "be not afraid!" Let us be strong and be strengthened in Yeshua our King.   
 
  Shavuot and Firstfruits...
 
  
 [ The following is related to the holiday of Shavuot (i.e., "Weeks" or "Pentecost"), which occurs Saturday, May 26th at sundown this year. ]
  05.16.12 (Iyyar 22, 5772)  We are nearing the end of the 49 day "countdown"  that runs from the second day of Passover until the holiday of Shavuot  ("Weeks" or "Pentecost"). This seven week period is called "Counting the  Omer" (סְפִירַת הָעוֹמֶר) in Jewish tradition (Lev. 23:15-16).  During the Temple period, on each of these days a priest would wave a  sheaf (omer) of barley before the LORD as a symbolic gesture of  dedicating the coming harvest to Him. This ceremony was called tenufat ha-omer ("waving of the sheaf"). On the 50th day, however, a sample of the first fruits of the wheat harvest was baked into two loaves of leavened bread (called "Shtei Ha-Lechem," שְׁתֵּי הַלֶּחֶם) and waved before the altar as the climactic rite of the season (Lev. 23:15-20). Notice that this was the only time that otherwise forbidden chametz (leaven) was used by the priests for worship (see Lev. 2:11).
 
   The holiday of Shavuot (שָׁבֻעוֹת),  "weeks," is regarded as the culmination of the experience of redemption  since it is directly linked with Passover and ends with the ripened  first fruits (בִּכּוּרִים) of the wheat harvest. The word "first fruits" includes the idea of being first born (בְּכוֹר) or "chosen" (בָּחַר), that is, the first fruit of the human family (James 1:18). Adam was a pattern (i.e., τύπος, "type" or imprint) of the One to come (Rom. 5:14); but the "first of the first fruits" is Yeshua, who was resurrected as the first "new Man" on the holiday of first fruits (1 Cor. 15:22; 45-47; Rom. 5:12-19).  Shavuot, then, is central among the holidays, since without the giving of the Holy Spirit at Zion (Acts 2:1-4)  we would not be able to partake of the other festivals of the year...  In other words, the goal (τέλος) of our redemption was to set us free to  become God's own chosen and treasured people (i.e., am segulah: עַם סְגֻלָּה), a light to the nations: ambassadors for Heaven's voice. The outpouring of the Holy Spirit (רוּחַ הַקּדֶשׁ) is therefore the climax of redemption, imparting the presence of the Comforter (παράκλητος) to help us live sanctified lives (Acts 1:8).
  The  number seven is said to represent wholeness and completion, just as God  created the heavens and the earth in six days but rested (finished) on  the seventh (and indeed, the first complete verse of the Torah contains  exactly seven words). The concept of the "week" (שָׁבוּעַ) therefore is an ongoing reminder that God is our King, the Creator of the world.  The word Shavuot (שָׁבֻעוֹת) includes (and perfects) the idea of sheva (שֶׁבַע),  or "seven."  We are to count seven groups of seven, or exactly 49 days,  from the second day of Passover until we reach the climactic day of  Shavuot when revelation was given. We see the same cycle of sevens with  regard to the laws of Shemittah (Lev. 25:4) and the Year of Jubilee (Lev. 25:8).  The "seventy weeks of years" (i.e., 490 years) in Daniel's vision also  reveals the complete prophetic vista of human history - from the time of  the crucifixion of the Messiah through the period of the Great  Tribulation at the End of the Age (Dan. 9:24-27).     |  
 
 
  Captives of Hope...
 
  
 05.15.12 (Iyyar 21, 5772)  An old Jewish prayer, uttered somewhat wistfully,  begins, "O Lord, I know that Thou wilt help us; but wilt Thou help us before Thou wilt help us?" It's not always easy to wait for God: "Hope deferred makes the heart sick" (Prov. 13:12). Where it is written, "hope to the LORD (קַוֵּה אֶל־יְהוָה); be strong and strengthen your heart; and (again) hope to the LORD" (Psalm 27:14), we see that hope gives us inward strength: קַוֵּה אֶל־יְהוָה חֲזַק וְיַאֲמֵץ לִבֶּךָ וְקַוֵּה אֶל־יְהוָה ka·veh  el  Adonai  cha·zak  ve'ya·metz  lib·be·kha, ve-ka·veh  el  Adonai    "Hope to the LORD; be strong and let your heart be strengthened; and (again) hope to the LORD" (Psalm 27:14)
 
   In this famous verse, the imperative verb kaveh (often translated as "wait") might better be rendered as "look for with  anticipation!" or "hope!" (the root of this verb actually appears in  the Hebrew word for hope: "tikvah"). Hope in the Lord and chazak! - "be strong" (the Septuagint translates chazak as andridzou - "act like a man"). That is, hope in the Lord, be stouthearted and  decisive in your conviction, and then the LORD will instill courage  within your heart (the verb ametz is hiphil, meaning that it is God who produces the courage within you). But note the order here: You must first step out in faith, obeying the commandment to hope in the LORD, and then God will fill your heart with courage. בָּרוּךְ אַתָּה יהוה אֱלהֵנוּ מֶלֶךְ הָעוֹלָם אֲשֶׁר עָשָׂנוּ אֲסִירֵי תִּקְוָה ba·rukh  at·tah  Adonai  E·lo·hei·nu  me·lekh  ha·o·lam, a·sher  a·sa·nu  a·si·rei  tik·vah    "Blessed art You, LORD our God, King of the universe, who has made us captives of hope."
 
  
    When  we put our hope in the LORD, strong in our conviction, we will be given  courage to bear whatever may befall us - and this is help indeed during  these perilous days! "Hope to the LORD (קַוֵּה אֶל־יְהוָה); be strong and strengthen your heart; and (again) hope to the LORD." There can be no turning to God without genuine hope (תִּקְוָה). Indeed, as the Apostle Paul wrote: "We are saved by hope" (Romans 8:24).   
 
  Damnable Nonsense... 
 
  
 05.15.12 (Iyyar 21, 5772)  In general it may be said that "pantheism" is a  metaphysical doctrine that identifies God with the universe, or that  regards the universe as a manifestation of God. A variant of this  doctrine is that everything is "in" God, or that the physical universe  is likened to a divine "body" whereas God represents its "soul..."  C.S.  Lewis once called such doctrine "damned nonsense," meaning it was  literally nonsense that led to damnation. Contrary to such universalism  that reduces all things to an undifferentiated unity (i.e., "the One"),  the Scriptures clearly teach that God is holy, and moral goodness and  evil are eternally separated by means of a "Great Divorce." The LORD is  not both the cancer and the cure, the sickness and the disease... Among  other things, this means that we live in a "high-stakes" universe where truth is of eternal significance. If  you do not take the distinction between good and bad very seriously,  then it is easy to say anything you find in this world is a part of God.  But, of course, if you think some things really bad, and God really  good, then you cannot talk like that. You must believe that God is  separate from the world and that some of the things we see in it are  contrary to His will. Confronted with a cancer or a slum the Pantheist  can say, 'If you could only see it from the divine point of view, you  would realise that this also is God.' The Christian replies, 'Don't talk  damned nonsense.' For Christianity is a fighting religion. It thinks  God made the world, that space and time, heat and cold, and all the  colours and tastes, and all the animals and vegetables, are things that  God 'made up out of His head' as a man makes up a story. But it also  thinks that a great many things have gone wrong with the world that God  made and that God insists, and insists very loudly, on our putting them  right again." (Lewis: Mere Christianity) 
 In this connection, beware of Kabbalistic theology that claims that "everything is God," or that claims that the Shema (i.e., Deut. 6:4) implies either that God creates evil or that evil is somehow not real.  When a Kabbalist says, "HaShem is One," ask him to clarify his terms. For instance, some interpret this to mean that since God is  the source for everything, what we call "good" or "evil" is relative to God's ultimate unity: "Even that which appears as evil is really  goodness and kindness, because from the One who is good it is impossible  that evil can emanate" (Malbim). In other words, moral evil in the  universe is really an "aspect" of the greater divine "unity," since  categorically everything flows from God... According to Kabbalah,  whether you know it or not, this is the "best of all possible worlds,"  despite the existence and prevalence of moral evil. Indeed what we call  "evil" is really just an illusion or a statement of our ignorance  about what is ultimate. It should be clear that the theological denial  of evil based on cosmic "oneness" is contrary to the plain teaching of  Scripture: הוֹי הָאמְרִים לָרַע טוֹב וְלַטּוֹב רָע  שָׂמִים חשֶׁךְ לְאוֹר וְאוֹר לְחשֶׁךְ  שָׂמִים מַר לְמָתוֹק וּמָתוֹק לְמָר hoy · ha·om·rim · la·ra · tov · ve·la·tov · ra, sa·mim · cho·shekh · le·or · ve·or · le·cho·shekh, sa·mim · mar · le·ma·tok · u·ma·tok · le·mar     "Woe to those who call evil good and good evil,  who put darkness for light and light for darkness,  who put bitter for sweet and sweet for bitter" (Isa. 5:20)
 
  
 
  It is not an exaggeration to say that the spirit of the age" is invariably based on the "devil's logic"  of pantheism, and much of modern politics is based the metaphysical  philosophy of G.W. Hegel (1770-1831), an idealist and pantheistic  thinker who "triangulated" truth to mean its assimilation into a higher  unity (i.e., the dialectic). Among others, Karl Marx was Hegel's  disciple. Indeed, all the deception of the devil begins with the denial  of God's rightful rule and authority as the King of the Universe, that  is, from a rejection of God's revelation and truth given in the  Scriptures. Contrary to the "politically correct" spirit of this world,  however, God's truth is inviolable and one day every soul will be judged  in in its light: יִרְאַת יְהוָה שְׂנאת רָע  גֵּאָה וְגָאוֹן וְדֶרֶךְ רָע   וּפִי תַהְפֻּכוֹת שָׂנֵאתִי yir·at · Adonai · se·not · ra ge·ah · ve·ga·on · ve·de·rekh · ra u·fi · tah·pu·khot · sa·nei·ti     "The fear of the LORD is the hatred of evil. Pride and arrogance and the way of evil and perverted speech I hate. (Prov. 8:13)
 
  
 
  The fear of the Lord (יִרְאַת יְהוָה) shows itself in hatred of evil, since evil represents what is contrary to God's love, life,  healing, truth, mercy, salvation, and so on. In a sense, the fear is  born by the hatred of evil and all that evil means. You cannot serve two  masters. "The fear of the LORD is the beginning of knowledge," which  means primarily the fear of God's retributive justice and punishment of  the sinner. Fearing God's wrath for evil is the foundation of all the  commandments (see Rambam on Deut. 10:12). It is a fearful thing to fall into the hands of the Living God. The minimum fear of heaven, yirat hashamayim, is to fear God's power to punish transgressors and those who love and  practice sin: as Yeshua said: "fear Him who can destroy both soul and  body in hell (Matt. 10:28).  "The living are destined to be judged. Do not let your evil inclination  convince you that the grave is a place of refuge for you... Against  your will you will have to give account and reckoning before the Supreme  King of kings, the Holy One, blessed be He. As it is written, 'Guard  your steps when you go to the house of God. To draw near to listen is  better than to offer the sacrifice of fools, for they do not know that  they are doing evil'" (Avot 4:22).
  For those who are saved, the  fear of the LORD does not mean distrusting His love and grace, of  course, but implies reverential affection for Him, godly awe over all He  has done to pardon your sin through the awful cost of the cross... It  is the "fear and trembling" that comes from appreciating all God has  done for you so that you can live as His child.
  Sometimes we need  to correct other people's doctrine, and a good shepherd will throw  stones at wolves that threaten the sheep. It is written: "Take no part  in the unfruitful works of darkness, but instead refute (ἐλέγχω) them" (Eph. 5:11).  Yeshua clearly condemned the practices and dogma of many religious  teachers of his day, calling them whitewashed tombs, a brood of vipers,  hypocrites, etc. (Matt. 23:22, 27). Those who teach false doctrine, such as kabbalists, are enemies of the gospel and therefore deceivers... The apostle John would not so  much as greet those who deviated from the message of the gospel, and  instructed followers of Messiah to do likewise (2 John 1:10-11).  Paul minced no words when he wished that the "legalists" who advocated  circumcision would "go all the way and emasculate themselves" (Gal. 5:12). Paul literally cursed those who perverted the teaching of the gospel of grace (Gal. 1:8-9) and said in another place: "If anyone does not love the Lord Yeshua -- a curse be on him" (1 Cor. 16:22).  It is not unloving to rebuke your neighbor, if it is done in a spirit  of humility: "You shall not hate your brother in your heart, but you  shall reprove your neighbor, lest you incur sin because of him" (Lev. 19:17).
  Surely  our great need today is to have heart, strength, resolution, and  earnest conviction in order to walk boldly through these darkened days (2 Tim. 3:1-5). As Lewis further said, "Courage is not simply one of the virtues, but the form of every virtue at the testing point." Without courage, people become "men  without chests," heartless clones of real men who are essentially  cowards because they have no passion to live for the truth...
  The  mantra of today's politically correct world is, "Everyone is special  and has a unique vision," thereby relegating all truth claims into the  same homogenous class. But if categorically everyone has "the  truth," then no one really does, because "truth" has been qualified to  death and redefined into oblivion...  In light of today's insipid political correctness, the confession of Yeshua results in a collision with the world. 
  Does this make Christianity intolerant then? Not unless you are a hypocrite.  All faith expressions - including skepticism, universalism, or "politically correct" humanism - are exclusivistic commitments to whatever the believer embraces as his or her "ground of ultimate  concern." Every person has their own "narrow gate," though this does not  necessarily lead to life in God. No, the "narrow gateway of life" (שַּׁעַר אֶל־הַחַיִּים) is found only by the few (Matt. 7:13-14).  There is safety in numbers, the mob reasons, and the cost of genuine  conviction may be ostracism from the group, but then you are in good  company, since the true prophets were persecuted as outcasts as well (Matt. 5:11-12). 
  We live in a "high-stakes" universe where truth is of eternal significance. Christian (and Jewish) theology insists that truth matters, and knowing the truth about God is absolutely essential for life itself. Nothing is  more important. Nothing is more vital. "This is eternal life (חַיֵּי עוֹלָם), that they may know you, the only true God (אֶל־אֱמֶת), and Yeshua the Messiah whom you have sent (John 17:3). The Hebrew word for knowledge is da'at (דַּעַת),  a word that implies intimate knowledge (the opposite of da'at is  folly). Euphemistically, it implies romantic love. Knowing the "only  true God" implies being passionately committed to the truth and  abandoning other promiscuous possibilities...     |  
 
 
  Feeding on Faithfulness...
 
  
 05.14.12 (Iyyar 20, 5772)  Our Lord Yeshua taught us: "Do not lay up for  yourselves treasures on earth ... but lay up for yourselves treasures in  heaven, where neither moth nor rust destroys and where thieves do not  break in and steal. For where your treasure is, there your heart will be  also" (Matt. 6:19-21).   In this connection, Soren Kierkegaard tells the story of a poor old  couple that possessed nothing but poverty. As they grew older, their  anxiety about the future increased: They  did not assail heaven with their prayers, for they were too pious for  that; but nevertheless they continually cried to heaven for help. Then  it happened one morning that the wife, going out to the oven, found a  precious stone of great size upon the hearth. She immediately showed the  stone to her husband, who saw at once that they were well supplied for  the rest of their life. A bright future for this old couple – what joy!  Yet, God-fearing as they were, and content with little, they resolved  that since they had enough to live upon for another day, they would sell  the jewel not that day, but the following. And then a new life would  begin.
  That night the woman dreamed that she was transported to  paradise. An angel took her around and showed her all the glories an  oriental imagination could invent. Then the angel led her into a hall  where there were long rows of armchairs adorned with pearls and precious  stones, which, the angel explained, were for the devout. Finally the  angel showed her the chair that was intended for her. Looking more  closely, the woman saw a large jewel was missing from the back of the  seat. She asked the angel how that had come about.
  Now be alert,  here comes the story! The angel answered, "That was the precious stone  you found on the hearth. You received it in advance, and so it cannot be  inserted again." In the morning the woman related the dream to her  husband. She felt they should hold on to the stone for a few years  longer rather than let the precious stone be absent throughout eternity.  And her devout husband agreed. So, that evening they laid the stone  back on the hearth and prayed to God that he would take it back. In the  morning, sure enough, it was gone. Where it had gone the old couple  knew: it was now in its right place. (Attack upon Christendom, 246) 
  In the end, you can only "keep" what you give away (John 12:25).   This old couple's treasure was stored in the "right place," free from  the vanity and illusions of this world and its comforts, and free from  the concessions made to human frailty that would result in an eternal  loss... So where is your treasure being stored, chaverim?  
  The  trials and testings of this life are meant to prepare us for eternity.  They are God-given opportunities to exercise faith! We have one chance to walk this life and then we face judgment. "Let us not be weary in  well doing: for in due season we shall reap, if we faint not" (Gal. 6:9).  I sincerely pray that we will not miss the reward that comes from living in genuine faith in God's Presence and provision!
 לא אַרְפְּךָ וְלא אֶעֶזְבֶךָ lo · ar·pe·kha · ve·lo · e·ez·ve·kha     "I will not fail you nor abandon you" (Josh. 1:5)
 
  
 
  Note: For more on this, see the article "Feeding on Faithfulness."   
 
  Strange Settlers...
 
  
 [ This week we read the final two portions of the Book of Leviticus (i.e., Vayikra), namely, parashat Behar and Bechukotai. Please read the portions to find your place here... ]
  05.14.12 (Iyyar 20, 5772)   In this week's Torah portion (Behar) the LORD states: "...you are strangers (גֵּרִים) and settlers (תּוֹשָׁבִים) with Me" (Lev. 25:23). This is a paradoxical phrase, since a ger (גֵּר) is one who is just passing through, like a visitor or tourist, whereas a toshav (תּוֹשָׁב) is one who is a resident or a citizen. How can someone be both a visitor and a resident of a place, or a stranger and a citizen at the  same time? How can one "pass through" a place he is said to dwell? 
  Concerning  this paradox the Maggid of Dubna comments: "If you see yourselves in  this world as strangers and remember that you are here only for a short  visit, passing through the hallway of this world, then I will settle  among you. However, should you see yourselves as settlers on this world,  "owners" who are here to stay, then I am but a stranger among you.  Either you are the settlers and I the stranger, or you the stranger and I  the settler." In other words, God "settles" among the exiles in this  world, and those who "settle" here, who lay claim to this world,  therefore make God their stranger (James 4:4).
  Note: God's people are "strangers" in this world; they are literally estranged and live as "resident aliens" -- here, yet not here.  For more on this, see the article "Strange Settlers."     |  
 
 
  Our Daily Bread...
 
  
 05.14.12 (Iyyar 20, 5772)   God humbles us and tests us to show us how much we need His daily care (Deut. 8:3). Recall that the curse put upon the nachash (serpent) was that it would go about on its belly, eating the dust of the earth (Gen. 3:14)...  But what kind of a curse was this - to put food before its face at all  times? The sages say the worst curse of all is to never feel the need  for the Creator. As David said, "Let their table become a snare and a  trap, a stumbling block and a retribution for them" (Psalm 69:22).  The fact that we have needs, deficiencies - especially regarding our  daily sustenance - is a "blessed fault," since it makes us look to the  LORD, who is our only real provider.   
 
  God's Thoughts and Ways...
 
  
 05.13.12 (Iyyar 19, 5772)   It would be simple if God always and automatically rewarded a good deed and immediately punished a bad one, but since human beings were created b'tzelem Elohim (in the likeness of God), they are not trained like dogs...  Consequently, it is often difficult to discern God's ways in this world,  first because we "see through a glass darkly," and secondly, because  God deliberately obscures His Presence so that people might seek His face (Psalm 27:8-9).  The Book of Job, the Book of Ecclesiates, and the lives of the prophets  all testify that we must be careful to distinguish between appearance  and reality, and not to assume that obedience to the moral law  invariably yields blessing and prosperity.  After all, riches can be a  deadly snare and affliction can be a blessing; and it is common to see  the wicked prosper while the righteous suffer. Indeed, beholding the  Divine Presence requires faith to enlighten the perception of the heart (Heb. 11:6), and God's love and grace remain undetected in a heart hardened by cynicism and despair. Yet it is written, "For my  thoughts are not your thoughts, neither are your ways my ways, declares  the LORD." כִּי לא מַחְשְׁבוֹתַי מַחְשְׁבוֹתֵיכֶם וְלא דַרְכֵיכֶם דְּרָכָי נְאֻם יְהוָה ki · lo · mach·she·vo·tai · mach·she·vo·te·khem ve·lo · dar·khei·khem · de·ra·khai · ne·um · Adonai     "For my thoughts are not your thoughts,  neither are your ways my ways, declares the LORD" (Isa. 55:8)
 
  
    This verse contrasts God's thoughts and ways with those of sinful and hardhearted men, as mentioned in the  immediately preceding verses: "Seek the LORD while he may be found; call  upon him while he is near; let the wicked forsake his way, and the  perverse man his thoughts; and let him return to the LORD, that he may  have compassion on him, and to our God, for he will abundantly pardon" (Isa. 55:6-7).   In other words, unlike men, God's thoughts and ways are forgiving,  gracious, and there is a heaven-wide difference between the divine and  human ways of thinking. "For as the heavens are higher than the earth,  so are My ways higher than your ways and My thoughts than your thoughts"  (Isa. 55:9). God's amazing love is revealed in His Word, which descends from heaven like rain or snow to water the earth and give life (Isa. 55:10-11).
  There  is a classic Jewish folktale that is sometimes told to illustrate that  we cannot easily understand God's ways in this world: One day, the Torah sage Joshua ben  Levi watched as a mysterious stranger did a secret act of kindness for  someone in the marketplace. Joshua wondered if this stranger might be  none other than the prophet Elijah, who never died and whom God  commissioned to go about as a hidden tzaddik doing acts of mercy  in this world. Joshua approached the man and asked to take him along on  his journey. The prophet agreed, but only on the condition that no  matter how strange he might think his actions were, Joshua was to ask  for no explanation. If he asked, Elijah said, then they would part  company. 
  The first night they visited the house of a poor couple  whose only possession was a cow. The man and wife welcomed the two  weary wanderers, fed them, and insisted they sleep in the cottage's only  bed, while they themselves slept on the floor. The next morning, Elijah  prayed that the couple's cow might die, and before they left the house,  the cow was dead.... Joshua wondered, "Is this the way God repays acts  of kindness to us?" but he remained silent. 
  The second night  they came to the house of a wealthy man. After much begging, the man  agreed to let the two strangers sleep in his barn, though he offered  them no food or blankets. The next morning the rich man ordered his  servants to repair a breach in the wall around his property, but before  they could begin, Elijah prayed and the wall was miraculously rebuilt...  Joshua wondered, "Is this the way God rewards those who refuse  hospitality?" but remembering his promise, he said nothing. 
  The  following day they reached a beautiful synagogue, with seats of silver  and gold, but the people there seemed to have hearts of stone. No one  offered to feed them, and it was only with diligent begging that they  were allowed to remain in the synagogue overnight, sleeping on the hard  benches. The next morning Elijah blessing the congregation, praying they  would all become leaders. Joshua was bewildered and disturbed, but he  held his peace and did not question Elijah.
  In the next town, the  synagogue was a simple, wooden one, but the congregation warmly  welcomed the wayfarers and invited them to dine with them. Several  members of the synagogue offered them their homes to spend the night.  The next morning, Elijah prayed that God would choose any one of the  congregation to be its leader...
  This was too much for Joshua,  who was exasperated at what he had seen and finally demanded an  explanation for Elijah's prayers. "Great prophet - far be it from me to  tell you what to do. Yet it seems to me that you add insult to injury;  that you reward good with evil, and evil with good. Please explain to me  your strange ways." Elijah then turned to him and said, "Now we must go  our separate ways, for you have broken your word to me. But before we  part, I will explain what you have seen, and how little you have  understood." 
  "Regarding the couple who showed us great  hospitality and gave us their last crumbs of bread, I prayed their cow  might die, for I knew that one that very day the wife was to be stricken  deathly ill by a decree from heaven, and because of my prayers, the cow  was taken instead of her. And as for the rich man. I rebuilt his wall  for him since beneath the broken section was hidden a vast treasure  which his servants would have discovered while making the repairs. As  for the congregation of the rich, I prayed they might all become  leaders, for a multiplicity of leaders brings a multiplicity of  disputes. For the congregation of the poor, I prayed they might have  only one leader, for with just one to guide them, success will overtake  all they do." 
  "Learn from this," Elijah concluded, "if you see  an evil person prosper, it is not always to his advantage; and if you  see a righteous person suffer yissurim (troubles), do not imagine  God is unjust. For while man judges by the sight of his eyes, God looks  into the heart, and He always rules the world with justice and mercy."  (Adapted from Sanhedrin 98a and Sefer Ha-Ma'asiyot)  
 Jewish  tradition tends to be indomitably optimistic in its outlook. Here is  another classic story intended to teach that God always works "behind  the scenes" for our good:  There was a certain man called  Nachum Gam Zu, so called because he had the supposed ability to see that  whatever happens to an individual is tied to a cosmic calculation for  good that only God comprehends. Whenever something went wrong for him,  he would always say, "Gam zu le'tovah," meaning, "this too is for good."  
  One day, Rabbi Akiva traveled and sought to find a place to  spend the night at a certain town, but no one would let him in. Akiva  remembered the words of Nachum Gam Zu and said, gam zu le'tovah, "this too is for good," and went to sleep in a field. He had with him a  donkey, a rooster, and a lamp. That evening his lamp was blown out by a  strong wind, his rooster was eaten by a cat, and a lion killed and  devoured his donkey - but despite all this, he still, gam zu le'tovah. Later that night plunderers attacked the town, capturing the  inhabitants. Akiva realized that had he not been turned away from the  town, he would have shared the town's fate, and moreover, had the lamp  not gone out or the animals been killed, he would have been detected by  the marauders and surely killed. Therefore Akiva regarded these  misfortunes as a blessing in disguise, and he gratefully testified that  everything God does is indeed for the best. (Talmud: Chagiga 12a; Sefer  HaAggadah)
    
     |  
 
 
  Parashat Behar-Bechukotai
 
  
 [ This week we read the final two portions of the Book of Leviticus (i.e., Vayikra), namely, parashat Behar and Bechukotai. Please read the portions to find your place here... ]
  05.13.12 (Iyyar 19, 5772)   Why is it, the sages asked, that God bypassed all  of the world's great and lofty mountains and chose to give His Torah on  the obscure mountain of Sinai? Because God's Spirit (רוח) rests with the lowly, the humble of heart. Therefore humility (ענוה) is considered one of the greatest of middot ha-lev (heart qualities).
  It  is perhaps in this connection that we should understand the  commandments given in this parashah to refrain from harvesting the land  every seventh year (the shemittah - שׁמטּה) and to cancel all outstanding debts every 50 years (during the Yovel - יובל).  Each of us must live in conscious dependence on God's provision and  care for our lives... The earth is the LORD's and the fulness thereof,  and in the end everything reverts back to God, since He alone owns all  things. "From Him, and through Him, and to Him are all things" (Rom.  11:36).
  God reveals Himself to the contrite (i.e., dakka: דַּכָּא) and the lowly of spirit (רוּחַ שְׁפָלִים), that is, to those who understand their own nothingness and live in utter dependence on Him.... Notice that the word dakka refers to being crushed to the very dust, as Yeshua was verily crushed  for our iniquities (Isa. 53:10). From the point of view of our  dependence on God for salvation, dakka refers to our contrition as we turn to God in genuine teshuvah... Pride, arrogance, and self-righteousness are antithetical to the awareness of God in the truth.     |  
 
 
  Divine Transposition...
 
  
 05.11.12 (Iyyar 19, 5772)   A central and recurring theme in the Torah of  Messiah is that "the last shall be first and the first shall be last" (Matt. 20:16). This is the principle of divine "transposition" or holy irony. What God esteems as great, man regards as vain, and therefore heaven  delivers the judgment: "To be great in the kingdom of heaven you must  become the servant of all, and whoever would be first among you must be  your slave (Matt. 20:26-27). God opposes the proud, but gives grace to the humble (1 Pet. 5:5; James 4:6).  The principle of spiritual greatness is always this: "Whoever exalts  himself shall be humbled, but he who humbles himself shall be exalted" (Matt 23:12). Indeed, the ego and its agenda is called to die: "Truly, truly, I say to you, unless a grain of wheat falls into the earth and dies, it remains alone; but if it dies, it bears much fruit. Whoever loves his life loses it, and whoever hates his life in this world will keep it for eternal life" (John 12:24-25).
  We  must be careful here, however, since the "first" and the "last" might  not be the ones you think they are... For example, it can happen that a  poverty-stricken person, weak and despised, who has even suffered  persecution for Messiah may come to regard himself as "first" because of  his self-satisfaction, whereas a rich man who is honored and enjoys the  world's good things may come to regard himself as contemptible and last  before heaven. In these circumstances, the one who regards himself as  "first" may indeed be last, while the one who regards himself as "last"  may indeed be first.
  Of course, the heart is deceitful above all things, and incurably sick - mi yadeinu? - who can know it? But how is the heart sick? By seeking excuses to  evade the truth of its great need. "No person is saved except by grace;  the apostle, too, was accepted only by grace. But there is one sin that  makes grace impossible, that is dishonesty; and there is one thing God  must unconditionally require, and that is honesty. עָקב הַלֵּב מִכּל וְאָנֻשׁ הוּא מִי יֵדָעֶנּוּ אֲנִי יְהוָה חקֵר לֵב בּחֵן כְּלָיוֹת וְלָתֵת לְאִישׁ כִּדְרָכָיו כִּפְרִי מַעֲלָלָיו a·kov · ha·lev · mi·kol · ve·a·nush · hu - mi · ye·dei·nu? a·ni · Adonai · cho·ker · lev · bo·chen · ke·la·yot ve·la·tet · le·ish · ki·dra·khav · kif·ri · ma·a·la·lav     "The heart is deceitful above all things and incurably sick - who can understand it? I the LORD search the heart and test the mind, to give every man  according to his ways, according to the fruit of his deeds." (Jer. 17:9-10)
 
  
    The heart truly needs a miracle to be healed of self-deception and inner dishonesty, and praise God  that He is indeed our great miracle-making Savior!  May it please the  LORD to empty us of pride and self-righteousness, trusting only in  Yeshua's grace and mercy that makes us truly "first" in His eyes...   Shabbat Shalom, chaverim!   
 
  Living in the Present...
 
  
 05.11.12 (Iyyar 19, 5772)   "Today if you hear His voice..."  I have a friend  who is literally obsessed with the end times, regularly sending me  emails predicting dates, times, etc., and urging me to get ready. I like  to remind him that for many people, the "end of the world" is actually today. How so? Because today some people will literally die and face their own  personal Rosh Hashanah, whereas other people will genuinely take up the  cross and die to their own agenda, fully trusting in God's plan and  purposes for the world at large. A  life of a human being begins with the illusion that a long, long time  and a whole world lie before him in the distance, begins with the  foolhardy decision that he has ample time for his many claims... But  when a person in the infinite transformation discovers the eternal  itself so close to life that there is not the distance of one single  claim, of one single evasion, of one single excuse, of one single moment  of time from what he -- in this instant, in this second, in this holy  moment -- shall do, then he is on the way to becoming a Christian... 
  How  rare is the person who actually is contemporary with himself;  ordinarily most people are apocalyptically, in theatrical illusions,  hundreds of thousands of miles ahead of themselves, or several  generations ahead of themselves in feelings, in delusions, in  intentions, in resolutions, in wishes, in longings. But the believer  (the one present) is in the highest sense contemporary with himself. To  be totally contemporary with oneself today with the help of the eternal  is also the most formative and generative: it is the gaining of  eternity. (Kierkegaard: Discourses). 
 When Yeshua said, "concerning that day and hour no one knows ... but the Father only" (Matt. 24:26), he meant to put to rest various end-times speculations so that His followers would be enabled to live today before the Divine Presence... "It is not for you to know times or seasons that the Father has fixed by his own authority" (Acts 1:7). We are called to follow Yeshua today... Today if you hear His voice, harden not your hearts... Sufficient for the day is its own trouble (Matt. 6:34).  We must learn to live one day at a time because yesterday is gone, the  future is uncertain, but the present is a gift from heaven. Repentance  is a daily turning to God, and we must trust that whatever plans  God has in store for the world will be disclosed to the one looking to  Him at just the right time. Therefore we can take comfort in David's  words: שִׁוִּיתִי יְהוָה לְנֶגְדִּי תָמִיד כִּי מִימִינִי בַּל־אֶמּוֹט shi·vi·ti  Adonai  le·neg·di  ta·mid ki mi·mi·ni  bal  e·mot     "I have set the LORD always before me;  because he is at my right hand, I shall not be shaken." (Psalm 16:8)
 
  
  Hebrew Study Card King David envisioned the Divine Presence standing before him, as close as his right hand. He "set the Lord  always before him," which means that he consciously chose to regard all  he did in relationship with the Master of the Universe. David's focus  made his heart steadfast and unshaken during the great trials of his  life. The LORD was his Rock and his Salvation.   
 
  Love the Stranger as Yourself
 
  
 [ The following is related to this week's Torah reading (Emor). Please read the Torah portion to "find your place" here. ]
  05.11.12 (Iyyar 19, 5772)   Our Torah portion this week tells the disturbing story of a man who was executed for blasphemy (see Lev. 24:10-16).  We are told that two people, one of whom was described simply as "an  Israelite man," and the other the "son of an Israelite woman" named  Shelomit (שְׁלמִית), got  into a fight in the middle of the camp. During the fight, the son of the  Israelite woman "blasphemed" God's Name and cursed.  As a result, the  man was brought to Moses who then asked God what was to be done. The  LORD answered by commanding that those who heard the man blaspheme  should personally lay their hands on his head and then the entire  community was to stone the man to death...
  The sages wonder what  might have drove this man to revile God's Name, and they first note that  since he was a son of an Egyptian man and an Israelite woman, he was  essentially a Jew without a tribe. Moreover, since the right to  inherit derived from the father, this man would have had no hope of  inheritance in the promised land, no "place" among the people of God...   Shelomit was from the tribe of Dan, and the midrash says that her son  had appealed to the tribal leaders to provide him with a sense of  identity and belonging.  Sadly, he was refused, and his hurt and anger  at being treated as an outsider eventually led to the fight "in the  middle of the camp." Some of the sages place the blame for this man's  death on those who refused to help him, since they refused to make him  feel like a "member of the tribe." These people should have welcomed him  as a brother and remembered their hardship as slaves and strangers in  Egypt. Because of their hardness of heart, however, the man was  abandoned, and this eventually led to his self-destructive actions. The  sages note that the LORD required that the accusers were to first lay  hands on this "unnamed man" to make them confront the fact that they  were also responsible for his death. 
  Did you know that one of  the most frequently occurring commandments is for the Jew to love the  stranger?  The commandment is repeated in various forms over 30 times in the Jewish Scriptures, for instance "You shall love your neighbor as yourself: I am the LORD" (Lev. 19:18);  "You  shall treat the stranger who sojourns with you as the native among you,  and you shall love him as yourself, for you were strangers in the land  of Egypt: I am the LORD your God" (Lev. 19:34); "Love the stranger, therefore, for you were sojourners in the land of Egypt" (Deut. 10:19); "You shall not wrong a sojourner or oppress him, for you were sojourners in the land of Egypt" (Exod. 22:21); "When a stranger sojourns with you in your land, you shall not do him wrong" (Lev. 19:33); "Do not oppress the stranger" (Zech. 7:10); "Cursed be anyone who perverts the justice due the stranger" (Deut. 24:19); "The stranger shall be as the native born children of Israel among you" (Ezek. 47:22),  and so on.  Clearly the LORD does not want people to feel ostracized,  excluded, out of place, or otherwise left out of His providential and  loving plans... Indeed, the message of the universal love of God is at  the heart of the gospel itself, harkening back to God's earliest  promises to redeem humanity and restore paradise lost.  "Religion,"  tribalism, prejudice, ethnic pride, and so on, are anathema to the  Kingdom of God.
  Jewish tradition says that King David was born on Shavuot, the holiday of shtei ha-lechem, the "two loaves" that prophetically foretold of the advent of the "one new man" (Eph. 2:14-22) and of the mysterious inclusion of the Gentiles into the covenant promises of God (Eph. 3:6).  God has a great compassion for the outsider, for the lost, and for  those who are without inheritance in this world. During Shavuot it is  customary to read the Book of Ruth which tells the story about redeeming  love and the advent of King David.  Recall that King David was a direct  descendant of Ruth, who as a Moabitess was an outsider and "stranger"  to the promises of God (Ruth 4:17). Despite being part of an despised and rejected group of people (see Deut. 23:3), Ruth overcame the law's demand by believing in the love and acceptance of a redeemer of Israel (Ruth 3:9). Ruth's great grandson was named David (דָוִד), meaning "beloved," which has the same numerical value as the word "hand" (יָד).  It is no wonder that the LORD chose David to represent God's extended hand of love for the stranger, for the convert, for the outsider, the leper, and the  lost, since his descendant Yeshua the Messiah came to love and redeem  the entire world by means of His outstretched hand. "Blessed be the Name  of the LORD."
  It's been said that a "stranger" is a friend whose name you don't yet know. Just as we are commanded va'ahavta le'reakha kamokha (וְאָהַבְתָּ לְרֵעֲךָ כָּמוֹךָ), to love our neighbor as ourselves (Lev. 19:18), so we are commanded ve'ahavta lo kamokha (וְאָהַבְתָּ לוֹ כָּמוֹךָ), to love the stranger as ourselves (Lev. 19:34),  and that means opening our hearts toward others to make them feel  welcome in our presence. May the LORD our God help each of us to extend  love, compassion, and acceptance to everyone we encounter today. Amen.     |  
 
 
  The Ladder of Sinai...
 
  
 [ The following is related to the holiday of Shavuot (i.e., "Weeks" or "Pentecost"), which occurs Saturday, May 26th at sundown this year. ]
  05.11.12 (Iyyar 19, 5772)   The revelation at Sinai and Jacob's vision of the  ladder share something in common. Just as Yeshua was the "Voice of the  Living God (קוֹל אֱלהִים חַיִּים) speaking (davar) from the midst of the fire" at Sinai (Deut. 5:26), so He was the ascended LORD standing above the ladder speaking the word of promise given earlier to Israel (Gen. 28:12-15). The sages note that the Hebrew word for "ladder," i.e., sullam (סֻלָּם), has the same numerical value as the word Sinai (סִינָי), which suggests that there is a connection between the two great visions.  And indeed, Yeshua is sha'ar ha-shamayim - "the Gateway to Heaven," the Bridge or Ladder to God, the very means  by which the Living Torah both descends and ascends for the sake of our  deliverance (see John 1:51).  In other words, the "ladder of Sinai" is not meant for us to ascend to  heaven by means of our own effort to attain deliverance, but rather is  meant for the LORD our Savior to descend and ascend on our behalf.  Yeshua is the way, the truth, and the life (הדֶּרֶךְ וְהָאֱמֶת וְהַחַיִּים): no one can draw near to the Heavenly Father apart from Him (John 14:6).     |  
 
 
  Keeping your Balance...
 
  
 05.10.12 (Iyyar 18, 5772)   An old chassidic tale says that every person should  walk through life with two notes, one in each pocket. On one note  should be the words bish'vili niv'ra ha'olam (בִּשְׁבִילִי נִבְרָא הָעוֹלָם) -- "For my sake was this world created," and on the other note the words, anokhi afar ve'efer (אָנכִי עָפָר וָאֵפֶר)  -- "I am but dust and ashes." Regarding the former statement, never  say, "What does all this have to do with me?" Instead, do your share to  supply something missing - be salt and light - and leave the world a  little better for your sojourn within it. With regard to the latter  statement, always understand that it is only on account of God's love  that you exist during this time at all...   
 
  Walking by Faith...
 
  
 05.10.12 (Iyyar 18, 5772)   The Hebrew word for "faith" is emunah (אֱמוּנָה), which comes from the verb aman (אָמַן), meaning to uphold, support, to make steady and sure. The Hebrew word for "truth" (אֱמֶת) comes from the same root, as does the word "amen" (אָמֵן), implying that reality is upheld and subsists by the Word of God's power (Heb. 1:3; Col. 1:17).   Faith enables the soul to perceive the eternal within the transitory,  the invisible within the visible, and the Divine Presence in the midst  of the whirlwind. When applied to the heart, "faith" is better  understood as "faithfulness," since it implies integrity and  trustworthiness, and so on. God's faithfulness is connected with His  love (חֶסֶד), which means that He can be relied upon to uphold you as you sojourn through this world.
  Exercising faith means actively listening to  the Eternal Voice, the Word of the LORD that calls out in love in  search of your heart's trust... To have faith means justifying God's  faith in you, that is, understanding that you are worthy of salvation,  that you truly matter to God, and that the Voice calls out your name,  too.... Living in faith means consciously accepting that you are  accepted by God's love and grace. Trusting God means that you bear  ambiguity, heartache, and darkness, yet you still allow hope to  enlighten your way. כִּי־אַתָּה תָּאִיר נֵרִי  יְהוָה אֱלהַי יַגִּיהַּ חָשְׁכִּי ki · at·tah · ta·ir · ne·ri Adonai · E·lo·hai · ya·gi·ah · chosh·ki    "For it is you who light my lamp;   the LORD my God enlightens my darkness." (Psalm 18:28)  
  
  Hebrew Study Card   The  Rizhiner Rebbe once said, "Let your light penetrate the darkness until  the darkness itself becomes the light and there is no longer a division  between the two. As it is written, "And there was evening and there was  morning, one day." Yea, the darkness and the light are both alike unto  Thee, O LORD, as it is written: "If I say, "Surely the darkness shall  cover me, and the light about me be night, even the darkness is not dark  to you; the night is bright as the day, for darkness is as light with  you" (Psalm 139:11-12). "To  have faith is to perceive the wonder that is here, and to be stirred by  the desire to integrate the self into the holy order of being. Faith  does not spring out of nothing. It comes with the discovery of the holy  dimension of our existence. Faith means to hold small things great, to  take light matters seriously, to distinguish between the common and the  passing from the aspect of the lasting. It is from faith from which we  draw the sweetness of life, the taste of the sacred, the joy of the  imperishably dear. It is faith that offers us a share in eternity."  -  Abraham Heschel 
 We walk by faith, not by sight -  by hearing the Word of God, heeding what the Spirit of God is saying to the heart... For now we "see  through a glass darkly," which literally means "in a riddle" (ἐν  αἰνίγματι).  A riddle is an analogy given through some  resemblance to the truth, though quite often the correspondences are  puzzling and obscure. Hence, "seeing through a glass darkly" means  perceiving obscurely or imperfectly, looking "through" something else  instead of directly apprehending reality. This is contrasted with the  "face to face" (פָּנִים אֶל־פָּנִים)  vision and clarity given in the world to come, when our knowledge will  be clear and distinct, and the truth of God will no longer be hidden.  Being "face to face" with reality means being free of the riddles, the  analogies, the semblances, etc., which cause us to languish in  uncertainty... Now we know in part, but then shall we know in whole.
  In  light of the obscurity of life in this temporary age, we are encouraged  not to lose heart, since though our outer self is wasting away, our  inner self is being raised into newness (ἀνακαινόω) day by day (2 Cor. 4:16).  "For our light and transient troubles are achieving for us an  everlasting glory whose weight is beyond description, because we are not  looking at what can be seen but at what cannot be seen. For what can be  seen is temporary, but what cannot be seen is eternal" (2 Cor. 4:17). 
  Therefore  we "walk by faith, not by sight," as if the invisible is indeed  visible. We must stay strong and keep hope, for through hope we are  saved (Rom. 8:24). Faith is the conviction (ἔλεγχος) of things unseen (Heb. 11:1).  Do not be seduced by mere appearances; do not allow yourself to be  bewitched into thinking that this world could ever be your home.  No, we  are strangers and pilgrims here; we are on the journey to the reach  "the City of Living God, to heavenly Jerusalem, to the assembly of the  firstborn who are enrolled in heaven" (Heb. 12:22-23).  Therefore do not lose heart. Keep to the narrow path. Set your  affections on things above since your real life is "hidden with God" (Col. 3:1-4).  Do not yield to the temptation of despair. Look beyond the "giants of  the land" and reckon them as already fallen. Keep pressing on. Chazak, chazak, ve-nit chazek - "Be strong, be strong, and let us be strengthened!" Fight the good  fight of the faith. Take hold of the eternal life to which you were  called (1 Tim. 6:12).     |  
 
 
  Is Life Worth Living?
 
  
 05.10.12 (Iyyar 18, 5772)   On account of the great transgression of Adam and  Eve, and in light of the ongoing wickedness of mankind, the early sages  Hillel and Shammai debated whether humans should have been created. The  school of Shammai took the view that it would have been better for  humans not to have been created, whereas the school of Hillel opposed  them, saying it was better that humans were created. Finally a vote was  called for and the decision rendered was this: It would have been better  for humans not to have been created than to have been created, but  since we are indeed here, let us search our ways regarding what we are  to do (Eruvin 13b).
  The debate between Hillel and Shammai is not  trivial, nor should it be dismissed out of hand. After all, King Solomon  was described as the wisest man on earth and yet he despaired over the  meaning of life: "Vanity of vanities, all is vanity." Similarly  Shakespeare once said that life was little more than "a tale told by an  idiot, full of sound and fury, signifying nothing." William James once  said, "In the deepest heart of all of us there is a corner in which the  ultimate mystery of things works sadly." This mysterious ache of the  soul asks the haunting question: is life worth living, after all? הֲבֵל הֲבָלִים אָמַר קהֶלֶת הֲבֵל הֲבָלִים הַכּל הָבֶל he·vel  ·  ha·va·lim  ·  a·mar  ·  ko·he·let he·vel  ·  ha·va·lim  ·  ha·kol  ·  ha·vel     "Vanity of vanities," says Kohelet, "vanity of vanities! All is vanity."  (Ecclesiastes 1:1-2)  
  
     Of  course, Christianity clearly agrees with the school of Hillel regarding  the question of whether life is worth living. For example, the  Westminster Catechism states, "Man's chief end is to glorify God and to  enjoy him forever" (an end, it may be said, that is also man's chief  good). Christianity is not a life-denying faith, though it soberly  acknowledges that olam hazeh - this world - is very often a vale  of tears and a place of testing. Suffering and affliction in this  present age are eschatologically justified as the means of apprehending a  greater good. The taking up of the cross is the means to a great future  good: "For our light momentary affliction (θλῖψις: oppression,  "squeezing" (as of grapes), "tsuris") prepares us for an eternal weight  of glory beyond all comparison" (2 Cor. 4:17).  This world is not our home, and we are afflicted with hardship while we  sojourn in our exile. Our hearts "groan" (or "sigh," στενάζομεν) to be  in heaven with the LORD, though our present state of suffering should be  regarded as a temporary and "light" burden that will be fully comforted  in the promised world to come.
  Vanity has an end, chaverim, and  this end affects the entire universe. The prophetic future holds hope  that salvation will be literally cosmic in its sweep: "For the creation  was subjected to vanity (לַהֶבֶל)  not willingly, but because of Him who subjected it, in hope that the  creation itself will be set free from its bondage to corruption and  obtain the freedom of the glory of the children of God" (Rom. 8:20-21). May that day soon come for us, friends!     |  
 
 
  A few thoughts on Prayer...
 
  
 05.09.12 (Iyyar 17, 5772)   God wants your heart, and prayer is the means by  which your heart is offered to Him. "When you pray, rather let thy heart  be without words than thy words be without heart" (John Bunyan). Set  your affections upward, lift up your soul, and inwardly bow in awe  before the Presence of the King who sits upon the Throne of Grace. Pour  out your concerns before Him, since He cares for you. Our prayers are  answered when we are able to let go and trust God's heart for us (Phil. 4:6-7). 
  Since prayer is the expression of the heart, it is vital to understand that it means far more than reciting certain  "religious" words in formulaic petition. God is not interested in empty  prayers any more than he desires heartless sacrifice (Isa. 29:13; Hos. 6:6; Matt. 15:9). King David said (Psalm 35:13): "May what I prayed for happen to me!" (literally, tefillati al-cheki tashuv - "may it return upon my own breast"). Some of our prayers are  conscious words spoken to God, whereas others are unconscious  expressions of inner heart attitudes. Be careful how you think! It is  sobering to realize that our thoughts are essentially prayers being  offered up to God... When we will the good of others we find God's  favor, healing and life. Yeshua spoke of "good and evil treasures of the  heart" that produce actions that are expressed in our words (Luke 6:45).  A midrash states that if someone speaks well of another, the angels above will then speak well of him before the Holy One. 
  "Pray without ceasing" (1 Thess. 5:17).  The Holy One, blessed be He, said to Israel: I bade you pray in the  assembly of your city, but if you cannot pray there, pray in your field,  but if you cannot pray there, pray on your bed, but if you cannot pray  there, "be still and know that I am God" (Midrash). Therefore pray often  -- and sometimes use words... 
  The late Henri Nouwen  wrote, "I am beginning to see that much of praying is grieving," since  the confession of the truth when we "come to ourselves" (Luke 15:17)  is often painful. When we pray to the LORD, however, it's obvious that  we are not imparting to Him any information, since the Master of the  Universe knows all things. As King David wrote: ki ein milah bilshoni, hen, Adonai, yadati khulah: "For there is not a word in my tongue, but, lo, O LORD, you know it altogether" (Psalm 139:4). Yeshua taught us to abstain from using "vain repetitions" in our prayers, since our Heavenly Father knows what we need before we ask Him (Matt. 6:7-8).  Some people think that God is impressed with a large crowd of people  who are praying for the same thing, as if this were not another form of  "vain repetition." The same can be said of being part of a large prayer  list.  No, there is no need for the crowd to offer prayer, since God regards the individual heart of faith as sufficient to move a mountain and cast it into the sea (Matt. 21:21).  One heartfelt prayer that makes real contact with the LORD is better  than thousands of people praying for someone or some situation of which  they know next to nothing on a prayer chain...  True prayer, then, is a  means of reverent listening, or quieting ourselves, so that we might hear what the Spirit of God is saying...  When you pray bekhol levavkha, with all your heart, you apprehend God's glory and express your desire  to Him. You are then enabled to intercede for others by means of the  Holy Spirit with "groanings too deep for words" (Rom. 8:26). 
  Finally, we must remember that prayer is essentially a response to God's call for us... In that sense, prayer is a kind of teshuvah (תְּשׁוּבָה), a word often translated as "repentance," though it's more accurately understood as turning (shuv) to God in response to His call. God's love for us is the question, and  our turning of the heart toward Him is the answer. We are able to turn  to God because the LORD first turns to us: "Father  in Heaven! You have loved us first, help us never to forget that You  are love so that this sure conviction might triumph in our hearts over  the seduction of the world, over the inquietude of the soul, over the  anxiety for the future, over the fright of the past, over the distress  of the moment. But grant also that this conviction might discipline our  soul so that our heart might remain faithful and sincere in the love  which we bear to all those whom You have commanded us to love as we love  ourselves.
  You have loved us first, O God, alas! We speak of it  in terms of history as if You have only loved us first but a single  time, rather than that without ceasing You have loved us first many  things and every day and our whole life through. When we wake up in the  morning and turn our soul toward You - You are the first - You have  loved us first; if I rise at dawn and at the same second turn my soul  toward You in prayer, You are there ahead of me, You have loved me  first. When I withdraw from the distractions of the day and turn my soul  toward You, You are the first and thus forever. And yet we always speak  ungratefully as if You have loved us first only once. 
  - Soren Kierkegaard (Prayers of Kierkegaard) 
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  Countdown to Shavuot...
 
  
 05.08.12 (Iyyar 16, 5772)   We are in the midst of the 49 day "countdown" that  runs from the second day of Passover until the holiday of Shavuot  ("Weeks" or "Pentecost"). This seven week period is called "Counting the  Omer" (סְפִירַת הָעוֹמֶר) in Jewish tradition (Lev. 23:15-16).  During the Temple period, on each of these days an appointed priest  would wave a sheaf (omer) of barley before the LORD as a symbolic  gesture of dedicating the coming harvest to Him. This ceremony was  called tenufat ha-omer ("waving of the sheaf"). On the 50th day,  however, a sample of the first crop of the wheat harvest was baked into  two loaves of leavened bread (called "Shtei Ha-Lechem," שְׁתֵּי הַלֶּחֶם) and waved before the altar as the climactic rite of the season (Lev. 23:15-20). Notice that this was the only time that otherwise forbidden chametz (leaven) was used by the priests for worship (see Lev. 2:11).
  The holiday of Shavuot is regarded as the culmination of the experience of redemption, sometimes called Atzaret Pesach, the "Conclusion of Passover." It is therefore the end (τέλος) or goal  of the redemption experience for believers. Just as the redemption by  the blood of the lambs led to Israel's deliverance and the giving of the  Torah at Sinai (סִינַי), so the redemption by the blood of Yeshua led to the world's deliverance and the giving of the Holy Spirit at Zion (צִיּוֹן).  And just as the covenant at Sinai effectively created the nation of  Israel, so the new covenant at Zion created the worldwide people of God,  redeemed from "every tribe and tongue" (Rev. 5:9).
  The goal of Passover redemption was to set us free to become God's own treasured people (i.e., am segulah: עַם סְגֻלָּה), a light to the nations: ambassadors for Heaven's voice. The outpouring of the Holy Spirit (רוּחַ הַקּדֶשׁ) is therefore the climax of redemption, imparting the presence of the Comforter (παράκλητος) to help us live sanctified lives (Acts 1:8).
 
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  Rooted in Love...
 
  
 05.08.12 (Iyyar 16, 5772)   Faith receives; love gives... Love walks out faith.  We can only give away what we are able to receive, and therefore we ask  God to help us receive so that we can impart hope to those in need (2 Cor. 1:3-5).  We receive from Him so that we might be able to give. Even our  afflictions are permitted so that we can offer consolation to others who  are in need. As St. Francis once prayed, "O Divine Master, grant that I  may not so much seek to be consoled, as to console; to be understood,  as to understand; to be loved, as to love. For it is in giving that we  receive. It is in pardoning that we are pardoned, and it is in dying  that we are born to Eternal Life."  Amen.
  God's love is such that  it is never diminished as it is given away, but instead grows and  multiplies in miraculous ways. This is alluded to by the Hebrew word for  love (i.e., ahavah: אהבה), the gematria of which is thirteen (1+5+2+5=13), but when shared with another it is multiplied: 13 x 2 = 26 - the same value for the Sacred Name (יהוה), i.e., (10+5+6+5=26). 
  Thank  you for being here, for regularly visiting this web site... You  encourage my heart every day. I earnestly ask the LORD God of Israel,  the God of our fathers Abraham, Isaac, and Jacob, to bless you, keep  you, and shine the light of His countenance upon you... "May He grant  you to be strengthened with power through his Spirit in your inner  being, so that the Messiah may dwell in your hearts through faith, and  that you, being rooted and grounded in love, may have strength to  comprehend with all the kedoshim what is the breadth and length  and height and depth, and to know the love of Messiah that surpasses  knowledge, that you may be filled with all the fullness of God" (Eph. 3:16-19).     |  
 
 
  Sincerity of Heart...
 
  
 05.08.12 (Iyyar 16, 5772)   The heart of a child... God prefers sincerity of  the heart, passion borne of mercy, the "weightier matters" of Torah,  more than mere religious rites or sacrifice. "God of my ancestors  Abraham, Isaac, and Jacob, hear my voice. My heart is filled with love  for you, but I am not a learned man, and I am lost for words before  you... The only thing that I know is the letters of the Hebrew alphabet,  so, please, Master of the Universe, accept the letters from me, and  combine them to be words of blessing and praise to Your Name. Aleph...  Bet... Gimmel... Dalet..." (Adapted from a Chassidic folktale) כִּי־רָם יְהוָה וְשָׁפָל יִרְאֶה  וְגָבהַּ מִמֶּרְחָק יְיֵדָע ki · ram · Adonai · ve·sha·fal · yir·eh ve·ga·vo·ah · mi·mer·chak · ye·e·dah    "For though the LORD is exalted, He regards the lowly,  but the haughty He knows from afar." (Psalm 138:6)
 
  
  Hebrew Study Card   Just as the LORD, at the beginning of creation, made the world yesh me'ayin, "out of nothing," so His creative power continues unchanged. God takes what is infinitely nothing, what is worthless, despised, and dead, and creates it new, for the sake  of His glory. He is able to take a dead heart, a heart of stone, and  make it tender and soft through the breath of His Spirit... Therefore  His eyes look upon the lowly, the humble, the poor in spirit, but He  disregards those who lift themselves up in pride.   
 
  Blessed Hunger and Thirst
 
  
 05.07.12 (Iyyar 15, 5772)   What prompts us to keep pressing on, to keep  searching for the LORD? Is it not a sense that something is still  missing from life? Our desire for undying, unconditional love draws us  to the Savior, and therefore our yearning for deliverance is a blessing  in disguise. After all, would we seek God apart from hunger, thirst, yissurim, troubles? Many of us are impelled because we seek release from acute  and painful inner conflict, yet the "thorn in the flesh" is meant to  reveal the sufficiency of grace. תָּמִים תִּהְיֶה עִם יְהוָה אֱלהֶיךָ ta·mim · ti·he·yeh · im · Adonai · E·lo·he·kha    "You shall be wholehearted with the LORD your God" (Deut. 18:13)   In the Sefer Torah (i.e., the handwritten Torah scroll), the first letter of the word tamim ("wholehearted") is written extra LARGE in order to emphasize the importance of the word. The word tamim (תָּמִים)  means "finished," "complete," "perfect" or "thoroughly made." The  Scriptures state that a "double-minded man is unstable in all his ways" (James 1:8). The word translated "double-minded" is dipsuchos (δίψυχος), a word formed from δίς, "twice" and ψυχή, "soul." The word  describes the spiritual condition of having "two souls" that both want  different things at once. It is therefore a state of inner  contradiction, of having two separate minds holding contradictory  thoughts. "How long will you go limping between two opinions?" Obviously  being two-soulled is the opposite of being singlehearted...
  The antidote for having a "double-mind" is explicitly given in the Scriptures: "Draw near to God and He will draw near to you" (James 4:8). For how long? For as long as we have breath, since we will always need His healing touch during the days of our sojourning here on earth.  Often we are not able to let go of our sins until we hurt enough and  get "sick of our sickness." In the world to come we will forever be  healed of our inner conflicts, though in this world we must press on and  keep asking the LORD to give us purity of heart to will one thing.... Don't lose hope. God is there to help us, one day at a time, chaverim.
  A  warning about making resolutions is given by Kierkegaard: "The devil  uses many arts to tempt a human being, by means of high-minded  resolutions, or rather by talk about them and admiration of them,  together with the subsequent distaste when a person sees how little he  can do, wants to induce him to give up everything. No, we creep before  we learn to walk, and to want to fly is precarious. To be sure, there  are great decisions, but even in regard to them the main thing is to  activate one's resolution, lest one become so high-flying in the  resolution that one forgets to walk" (Eighteen Upbuilding Discourses).  Allow me to quote Kierkegaard again in this connection: "Faith expressly  signifies the deep, strong, blessed restlessness that drives the  believer so that he cannot settle down at rest in this world, and  therefore the person who has settled down completely at rest has also  ceased to be a believer, because a believer cannot sit still as one sits  with a pilgrim's staff in one's hand - a believer travels forward..."  (Upbuilding Discourses)     |  
 
 
  Pathways of Chesed
 
  
 [ The following is related to this week's Torah reading (Emor). Please read the Torah portion to "find your place" here. ]
  05.07.12 (Iyyar 15, 5772)   Our Torah portion this week lists the eight main holidays revealed in the Jewish Scriptures. In the Torah, these "holidays" are called "appointed times" (i.e., mo'edim: מוֹעֲדִים), a word which comes from a root meaning witness (עֵד). Other words formed from this root include edah (עֵדָה), a congregation, edut (עֵדוּת), a testimony, and so on. The related verb ya'ad (יָעַד)  means to meet, assemble, or even to betroth.  The significance of the  holy days, then, is for the covenant people of the LORD to bear witness  to God's love and faithfulness. As it is written:   כָּל־אָרְחוֹת יְהוָה חֶסֶד וֶאֱמֶת  לְנצְרֵי בְרִיתוֹ וְעֵדתָיו kol · or·chot · Adonai · che·sed · ve·e·met le·no·tze·rei  · ve·ri·to · ve·e·do·tav    "All the paths of the LORD are love and truth  to the ones guarding His covenant and His testimonies." (Psalm 25:10)
 
  
  Hebrew Study Card    Metaphorically the paths of the Lord (orechot Adonai) are likened to ruts or grooves created by the wheels of a caravan (ארְחָה)  passing repeatedly over the same ground. These paths signify the Divine  Presence journeying with God's children in this world. In temporal  terms, we are able to discern the path by means of the divine calendar. God's love and faithfulness attend to His covenant (brit) and to the commemorations of the yearly "appointed times" which testify  to God's love and faithfulness.  Keeping God's testimonies, then, means  that we will be careful to observe the holidays in order to witness to  God's truth...   
 
  Keeping your Perspective...
 
  
 05.07.12 (Iyyar 15, 5772)   "To be rich, to be famous?  What do these profit a year hence, when other names sound louder than  yours, when you lie hidden away under ground, along with idle titles  engraven on your coffin? But only true love lives after you - follows  your memory with secret blessings - or precedes you, intercedes for you"  (William Makepeace Thackeray). As Yeshua our Lord said, "For what will  it profit a man if he gains the whole world and forfeits his soul? Or  what shall a man give in return for his soul?" (Matt. 16:26).   
 
  The Principle of Rest...
 
  
 [ The following is related to this week's Torah reading (Emor). Please read the Torah portion to "find your place" here. ]
  05.07.12 (Iyyar 15, 5772)  In Jewish tradition, the Sabbath is regarded as the first and most important of the holy days, since it is both a memorial of God's work of creation (Exod. 20:11; 31:17) and of the redemption from Egypt by the blood of the lamb (Deut. 5:15).  It is "the foremost day of the holy festivals marking the Exodus from  Egypt" recalling the LORD as our King and our Redeemer.  In our Torah  portion this week we read that the seventh day is "a Sabbath of solemn  rest, a holy convocation (מִקְרָא־קדֶשׁ). You shall do no work. It is a Sabbath to the LORD in all your dwelling places" (Lev. 23:3). Notice that the gematria of the phrase, "you shall do no work" (i.e., כָּל־מְלָאכָה לא תַעֲשׂוּ) is 953, the same numeric value as the verse: "Commit your way to the LORD; trust in Him, and He will act" (Psalm 37:5).    וגּוֹל עַל־יְהוָה דַּרְכֶּךָ  וּבְטַח עָלָיו וְהוּא יַעֲשֶׂה gol · al · Adonai · dar·ke·kha u·ve·tach · a·lav · ve·hu · ya·a·seh    "Commit your way to the LORD;  trust in Him, and He will act on your behalf." (Psalm 37:5)
 
  
  Hebrew Study Card    If  we trust in the LORD by refraining from our own devices, He will work  for us, acting on our behalf, so that we find rest for our souls. This  is the true principle of Shabbat - resting in God's provision of grace.  As the Sabbath above, so the Sabbath below. Yeshua cried out, "It is  finished," referring to the work of redemption performed on our behalf.  "Therefore there remains a Sabbath rest for the people of God, for  whoever has entered God's rest has also rested from his works as God did  from His" (Heb. 4:9-10).   
 
  Use the good eye...
 
  
 05.07.12 (Iyyar 15, 5772)  "If you treat me as if I were what I ought to be and  could be, I will become what I ought to be and could be" (Johann von  Goethe). The central rule of Torah is "you shall love your fellow as  yourself" (Lev. 19:18).  Loving others requires having a "good eye," as opposed to a "grudging  eye" that squints in criticism. In Hebrew, a "grudging eye" (ayin tzara) literally means using a "narrow look," that is, refusing to see the  bigger picture. How we choose to see others is often prophetic and is an  exercise of faith. Love "hopes all things... believes all things (1 Cor. 13:7). Choosing to see the potential good in others creates the opportunity for the good to come to life.   וְאָהַבְתָּ לְרֵעֲךָ כָּמוֹךָ אֲנִי יְהוָה ve·a·hav·ta · le·re·a·kha · ka·mo·kha a·ni · Adonai    "You shall love your neighbor as yourself. I am the LORD." (Lev. 19:18)
 
  
  Hebrew Study Card    The  "like-for-like" nature of love means that it is reciprocal. "If I dwell  in Thy Presence today, I will dwell there all days. How that may be I  do not know, but that it may be is my hope." Even in our worst moments the LORD uses the "good eye" to see us, and therefore we can  affirm: "Thou art with me, and thy rod and staff comfort me." As King  David mused, "Where shall I go from your Spirit? Or where shall I flee  from your presence? If I ascend to heaven, you are there! If I descend  to Sheol, you are there" (Psalm 139:8-9). Christ  commands you to "love your neighbor as yourself." But this "as  yourself"? Certainly no wrestler can get so tight a grasp upon his  opponent as that which this commandment gets on our selfish hearts. The  commandment is so easy to understand, and yet we must be broken in  spirit to follow it. As Jacob limped after he had wrestled with God, so  shall our selfishness be broken when it has wrestled with this  commandment. Yet this commandment does not teach that a man should not  love himself; rather, it teaches him the proper kind of self-love.  Christianity presupposes that a man loves himself, and adds that in  loving himself he should also love his neighbor. - Kierkegaard: Works of Love 
 The central commandment of Torah is "you shall love," but such love requires that we believe in the vindication of the good.  Therefore refuse to  accept the world's dark propaganda and dialectic; repudiate the  temptation to embrace cynicism or despair. Don't let the devil and this  world blacken your heart or cause your eye to squint at others in fear.   The spirit of the world traffics in fear, hatred, and death, but we  overcome evil with good. Walk counterculturally, full of faith in the  invisible hand of God. As Luther once said, "If I profess with the  loudest voice and clearest exposition every portion of the truth of God  except precisely that little point which the world and the devil are at  that moment attacking, I am not confessing Christ, however boldly I may  be professing Christ. Where the battle rages, there the loyalty of the  soldier is proved, and to be steady on all the battlefield besides, is  mere fight and disgrace if he flinches at that point."   
 
  Parashat Emor - אמור 
 
  
 [ The following is related to this week's Torah reading (Emor). Please read the Torah portion to "find your place" here. ]
  05.06.12 (Iyyar 14, 5772)   Parashat Emor contains more mitzvot (commandments) regarding holiness than any other Torah portion (the  sages identify no less than 63). In addition, the portion provides a  list of the eight main holidays, or "appointed times" (i.e., mo'edim: מוֹעֲדִים), found in the Jewish Scriptures. These "festivals of life" are sometimes called mikra'ei kodesh (מִקְרָאֵי קדֶשׁ), "times in which holiness is proclaimed" (Lev. 23:2).   Note that this is the first time that the Torah reveals a  comprehensive description of the festivals of the year, which include  the following: - The Sabbath - weekly observance of Shabbat that commemorates God as the Creator of  the world. According to the sages, Shabbat is the most important of the  appointed times, even more important than Yom Kippur and the Ten Days of  Awe. There are 54 weekly Sabbaths in a "leap year" and 50 for regular  years... 
 - Pesach (Nisan 15), also called Passover.
 - Unleavened Bread (Nisan 15-22); note that the Counting of the Omer is first mentioned in this section of Torah (Lev. 23:9-16).
 - Firstfruits (Nisan 17), also called Reishit Katzir.
 - Shavuot (Sivan 6), also called Pentecost.
 - Yom Teru'ah (Tishri 1), also called Rosh Hashanah (note that this is the first time this is revealed in Torah).
 - Yom Kippur (Tishri 10) also called the Day of Atonement.
 - Sukkot (Tishri 15-22) also called Tabernacles (note that this is the first time the commandments to dwell in a Sukkah and to wave the arba minim (four species) are mentioned in the Torah).
 
 Notice  that there is a restatement of the commandment to leave food for the  poor and the stranger (pe'ah, leket, etc.) that appears right in the  midst of the list of the holidays (see Lev. 23:22), which the sages said was intended to remind us to help those in need, especially during these times. Hence the giving of tzedakah is a regular part of the Jewish holidays (e.g., giving ma'ot chittim [מַעוֹת חִטִּים] "money for wheat" during Passover, matanot la'evyonim [מַתָּנוֹת לָאֶבְיוֹנִים]  for Purim, and so on). The sages ask, "Why did the Torah place the  mitzvah of helping the poor while speaking about the holidays and their  particular sacrifices? To teach us the greatness of charity: 'God  credits whoever gives charity to the poor as if they built the Holy  Temple and presented offerings therein to God.'  Giving a gift to the  poor is giving a gift to God Himself!"
  Since there are at least 50 weekly Sabbaths in a Jewish year in addition to the seven prescribed  holidays (not to mention Rosh Chodesh and the other holidays such as  Purim, Chanukah, Israel Independence Day, etc.), it is no wonder that  the Scriptures declare: "A person with a cheerful heart has a continual  celebration" (Prov. 15:15). The moedim are times to cheerfully give thanks to the LORD for all He has done....
 
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   In this connection, notice that the calendar is divided into two equal parts of exactly six lunar months each, both of which center on redemptive rituals and  end with harvests. The first half of the divine calendar begins on Rosh  Chodashim (i.e., Nisan 1; Exod. 12:2), which is followed by the instructions to select the Passover lamb on Nisan 10 (Exod. 12:3), slaughter it in the late afternoon of 14th (Exod. 12:6-7) and eat it on the 15th (Exod. 12:8).  The Passover itself initiated the seven day period of unleavened bread  (from Nisan 15-22), wherein no leaven was to be consumed (Exod. 12:15-20). On an agricultural level, Passover represents spring, the season of the firstfruit harvests (i.e., chag ha-katzir: חַג הַקָּצִיר),  and so on.  On the "other side of the calendar," Yom Teruah (or Rosh  Hashanah) marks the start of the second half of the year (Exod. 23:16, Lev. 23:24), which is followed by the Yom Kippur sacrifice ten days later, on Tishri 10 (Lev. 23:27), followed by the weeklong festival of Sukkot ("Tabernacles") that occurs from Tishri 15-22 (Lev. 23:34-36). On an agricultural level, Sukkot represents the reaping of the fall harvest (i.e., chag ha'asif: חַג הָאָסִף) at the "end of the year" (Exod. 23:16).  In other words, in some respects the fall holidays "mirror" the spring  holidays on the divine calendar, and indeed, both sides of the calendar  represent different aspects of God's redemptive plan for the world.  As  I've written about elsewhere, the spring holidays represent the first  advent of Yeshua (i.e., Yeshua as Suffering Servant, Lamb of God,  Messiah ben Yosef), whereas the fall holidays represent His second  advent (Yeshua as Conquering Lord, Lion of the Tribe of Judah, Messiah  ben David).
  In an attempt to include Chanukah and Purim as apart of the divine calendar revealed in the Torah, the Jewish sages  note that immediately after the LORD revealed these holidays, he  instructed Moses to keep the menorah in the Holy Place of the Mishkan  burning continually (ner tamid) and to provide weekly "showbread," or twelve loaves of bread on the shulchan inside the Holy Place. The sages say that the instructions regarding the oil of the menorah alludes to Chanukah, whereas the lechem ha-panim ("showbread") alludes to hester panim - or "hiding of face" and the nes nistar (hidden miracle) of the Esther story. 
 
  Cycles of Time...
  Instead  of thinking of time as a linear sequence of events (i.e., the  measurement of linear, progressive motion), Jewish thinking tends to  regard it in terms of a spiral or "helix," with a forward progression  delimited by an overarching (and divine) pattern that recurs cyclically  throughout the weeks, months, and years of life. This can be seen in the  Hebrew language itself. Some of the sages note that the Hebrew word for  "year" - shanah (שָׁנָה) - shares the same root as both the word "repeat" (שָׁנָה) and the word "change" (שִׁנָּה). In other words, the idea of the "Jewish year" implies ongoing "repetition" - mishnah (מִשְׁנָה)  - or an enduring "review" of the key prophetic events of redemptive  history as they relived in our present experiences... (The idea that the  events of the fathers were "parables" for us is expressed in the maxim:  מַעֲשֵׂה אֲבוֹת סִימָן לַבָּנִים / ma'aseh avot siman labanim: "The deeds of the fathers are signs for the children.")  The Jewish year then repeats itself thematically, but it also changes from year to year as we  progress closer to the coming Day of Redemption... We see this very  tension (i.e., constancy-change), for example, in the "dual aspect" of  the ministry of Yeshua our Messiah. In His first advent Yeshua  came as our Suffering Servant and thereby fulfilled the latent meaning  of the spring holidays, and in His second advent He will fulfill the  latent meaning of the fall holidays. Nonetheless, we still commemorate  both the "type and its fulfillment" every year during Passover by  extending the ritual of the Seder to express the reality of Yeshua as  the world's "Lamb of God," just as we commemorate the fall holidays in  expectation of His rule and reign as our King....
  None of this is  meant to suggest, by the way, that there isn't an "end point" in the  process - a Day in which we will be with God and enjoy His Presence  forever... The idea of the "cycles" of time, or "timeless patterns in  time," suggests, however, that the "seed" for our eternal life with God  has already been sown - and was indeed foreknown even from the Garden of  Eden, despite the fact that we presently groan while awaiting the glory  of heaven.     |  
 
 
  Shabbat Table Talk (אחרי מות־קדשים)
 
  
 [ This week we have a "double portion" of Torah: Acharei Mot and Kedoshim (i.e., Leviticus 16:1-20:27). Please read the Torah portions to find your place here...  ]
  05.04.12 (Iyyar 12, 5772)   This week we have a "double portion" of Torah. The  first portion (i.e., Acharei Mot) describes the Yom Kippur ritual to  purify the Tabernacle, and the second portion (i.e., Kedoshim) provides a  series of commandments concerning the practical expression of holiness  in daily life: "Speak to all the congregation of the people of Israel  and say to them, You shall be holy, for I the LORD your God am holy" (Lev. 19:2). You can download the Shabbat Table Talks for both these portions here: The  call to live a holy, separate life before the LORD requires that we are  imbued with the truth of God.  We are living in stressful times,  chaverim. The Apostle Paul wrote that the time before the "End of Days"  would be "perilous" (χαλεπός) and full of human depravity (2 Tim. 3:1-5). In light of the raging spiritual war going on all around us, the following needs to be restated: "The important thing is to not lose your mind..."
  The  mind is the "gateway" to your heart, and it is therefore essential to  guard your thinking by immersing yourself in the truth... Fear is often  the result of believing the lie that God is not in control or is  unable/unwilling to help you... "Not losing your mind" therefore means  being grounded in what is real, and it therefore means  understanding your identity and provision as a child of God. "God has  not given us the spirit of fear, but of power (גְּבוּרָה / δύναμις) and of love (ἀγάπη), and of a "sound mind" (σωφρονισμός), lit. a "delivered" mind, "healed" from fragmentation (2 Tim. 1:7). The Greek word "sound mind" (σωφρονισμός) comes from the verb sodzo (σῴζω), meaning "to save," from saos (σάος) "safe," in the sense of being under restraining influence of the Spirit of God... The closest Hebrew word might be musar (מוּסָר), moral "discipline." 
  If  you are afraid of man, understand that this comes not from the Spirit  of God, but rather from the enemy of our souls... God is as close as  your heart and mouth, and therefore we stand in His Presence, and we  must live in awe of Him...  We are not to be like the world that lives  in terror of man, lusting after security from the vain devices of mere  men. No - look to the LORD God Almighty, the Master of the Universe....  "What I tell you in the dark, say in the light, and what you hear  whispered, proclaim on the housetops. And do not fear those who kill the  body but cannot kill the soul. Rather fear Him who can destroy both  soul and body in hell" (Matt. 10:27-28).
  Yeshua  said to Pontius Pilate, "For this reason I was born, and for this  reason I came into the world - to testify to the truth. Everyone who  belongs to the truth listens to my voice" (John 18:38).  "You are to distinguish between the holy (i.e., ha-kadosh: הַקּדֶשׁ) and the common (i.e., ha-chol: הַחל), and between the unclean (i.e., ha-tamei: הַטָּמֵא) and the clean (i.e., ha-tahor: הַטָּהוֹר)" (Lev. 10:10, see also Ezek. 44:23). Just as God separated the light from the darkness (Gen. 1:4), so we are called to discern between (בֵּין)  the realms of the holy and the profane, the sacred and the common, and  the clean and the unclean. Indeed, the Torah states "God called the  light Day, and the darkness he called night," thereby associating His  Name with the light but not with the darkness (Gen. 1:5). "For you all are sons of the light and sons of the day. We are not of the night nor of the darkness" (1 Thess. 5:5). We are instructed therefore to wear the "armor of light" (Rom. 13:12) and to be equipped to wage spiritual warfare in God's Name (Eph. 6:11-18).
  Time is nearly up for this world, chaverim... "The nations rage, their kingdoms totter; He utters his voice, the earth melts. Adonai Tzeva'ot imanu - the LORD of hosts is with us; our fortress is the God of Jacob. Selah" (Psalm 46:6-7).  If you were to die tonight, what would happen to your eternal soul? Are you certain of your acceptance before the Father, and if so, on what basis? There is a way that seems right ... even for the professing Christian. The Messiah admonished us to  "enter by the narrow gate; for the gate is wide and the way is easy that  leads to destruction, and those who enter by it are many" (Matt. 7:14).
  Shabbat Shalom, chaverim, and may the Light of the Divine Presence, the "armor of light"  (Rom. 13:12),  surround you like a fiery shield as you walk by faith, not by sight, in  this dark world... In the Name of Yeshua, the very Light of the World:  Amen.     |  
 
 
  Seeing God's Face...
 
  
 [ This week we have another "double portion" of Torah: Acharei Mot and Kedoshim (i.e., Leviticus 16:1-20:27). Please read the Torah portions to find your place here...  ]
  05.03.12 (Iyyar 11, 5772)   A Roman emperor once asked Rabbi Joshua if the  universe had a ruler. The sage answered, indeed, the LORD is the Creator  of all things, as it is written, "In the beginning, God created the  heavens and the earth." The emperor then asked, "Why is God not like the  emperor of Rome, who is seen twice a year so that people may know and  worship him?" Rabbi Joshua said that unlike human kings, the LORD was  too powerful for people to see; as it is written in the Torah: "No  person shall see Me and live."  The emperor was skeptical, however, and  insisted that unless he could physically see God, he would be unable to  believe. Rabbi Joshua then pointed to the sun high in the sky: "Look  into the sun and you will see God." The emperor tried to look into the  sun, but was forced to cover his eyes to keep them from burning: "I  cannot look into the sun," he said. Joshua then replied: "Listen to  yourself: If you cannot look into the sun which is but one of God's  creations, how can you expect to look at God?" (Sefer HaAggadah)
  It  is interesting to compare this story with another... Leo Tolstoy tells  the parable of an old cobbler who despaired of life and yearned to  finally see God. In a dream one night a heavenly voice told that he  would see God's face the very next day. The cobbler began the day on the  alert, hoping to catch a glimpse of God, but he was distracted when he  encountered a needy family. They were cold and desperate, so he took  them in and cared for them. The day passed and as he finally laid down  to sleep, the cobbler realized he had completely forgotten to look for  God.  He apologized to God and once again asked to die... As he fell  asleep he dreamed that he saw the family he had helped walking by when  the heavenly voice then said, "Rest assured: you saw God today in the  faces of those you helped." "Truly, as you did it to one of the least of  these, you did it to me" (Matt. 25:40).   וְאָהַבְתָּ לְרֵעֲךָ כָּמוֹךָ אֲנִי יְהוָה ve·a·hav·ta · le·re·a·kha · ka·mo·kha a·ni · Adonai    "You shall love your neighbor as yourself. I am the LORD." (Lev. 19:18)
 
  
  Hebrew Study Card    "He  who does not love his brother whom he has seen cannot love God whom he  has not seen... Beloved, let us love one another, for love is from God,  and whoever truly loves has been born of God and knows God. Anyone who  does not love does not know God, because God is love" (1 John 4:7-8).  By faith we are able to behold the Divine Light within other people who  are created in God's image. May God first open our hearts and then our  eyes.   
 
  The Heart of Prayer...
 
  
 05.02.12 (Iyyar 10, 5772)  The late Henri Nouwen (1932-1996) wrote, "I am  beginning to see that much of praying is grieving," and that rings true  to my heart. When we pray to the LORD, it's obvious that we are not  imparting to Him any information, since He knows everything, of course.  As King David wrote: ki ein milah bilshoni, hen, Adonai, yadati khulah: "For there is not a word in my tongue, but, lo, O LORD, you know it altogether" (Psalm 139:4). Yeshua taught us to abstain from using "vain repetitions" in our prayers, since our Heavenly Father knows what we need before we even ask Him (Matt. 6:7-8).  The real business of prayer is to give voice to the cry of our heart,  to express our need for God's love, and to offer up sincere thanks to  Him for the gift of eternal life... שִׁמְעָה־תְפִלָּתִי יְהוָה וְשַׁוְעָתִי הַאֲזינָה אֶל־דִּמְעָתִי אַל־תֶּחֱרַשׁ כִּי גֵר אָנכִי עִמָּךְ תּוֹשָׁב כְּכָל־אֲבוֹתָי shim·ah · te·fil·la·ti · Adonai · ve·shav·a·ti · ha·a·zi·nah el · dim·a·ti · al · te·che·rash · ki · ger · a·no·khi · i·makh to·shav · ke·khol · a·vo·tai    "Hear my prayer, O LORD, and give ear to my cry; hold not your peace at my tears! For I am a sojourner with you, a guest, like all my fathers."
  (Psalm 39:12)
 
     Hebrew Study Card    Soren  Kierkegaard once wrote that the purpose of prayer is not to influence  God but rather to change the nature of the one who prays. When we get  past our words -- our chatter, the insecurities that rise from our  hearts, the cares of the day, even our hopes and dreams -- then we are  sufficiently quieted to encounter God. It is then that we can truly  listen and begin to apprehend something of God's glory.... It is then  that we can grieve over our lives and the lives of others in naked  dependence upon God.
  Ultimately prayer is a way of listening for the heart of the LORD. As Kierkegaard also wrote, "A person usually  desires far too many things, lets his soul flutter with every breeze.  But he who prays knows how to make distinctions; little by little he  gives up that which according to his earthly conception is less  important, since he does not really dare to come before God with it...  To pray is not to listen to oneself speak but is to become silent and to  remain silent, to wait until the one praying hears from God."
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  Pilfering Grace from the Gospel...
 
  
 05.02.12 (Iyyar 10, 5772)  The New Testament says that "the righteousness of  God" is revealed to the heart of faith, since "the righteous shall live by faith" - tzaddik be'emunato yicheh (צַדִּיק בֶּאֱמוּנָתוֹ יִחְיֶה) [Rom. 1:17; Hab. 2:4]. This is the righteousness of God manifested apart from the law (Rom. 3:21), or the "righteousness [of God] imputed apart from works" (Rom. 4:6).  Regarding the justification of Abraham, the apostle Paul writes, "Now  to the one who works, his wages are not counted as a gift but as his  due, but to the one who does not work but trusts in him who justifies the ungodly, his faith is counted as righteousness" (Rom. 4:4-5).  "He did not waver in unbelief about the promise of God but was  strengthened in faith, giving glory to God. He was fully convinced that  what God promised he was also able to do, and therefore it was credited  to Abraham as righteousness" (Rom. 4:20-22). "For by grace (חֶסֶד) you have been saved through faith (אֱמוּנָה), and this is not your own doing; it is the gift of God, not a result of works, so that no one may boast" (Eph. 2:8-9).   Salvation is not the result of human merit or the mere adherence to  certain religious rituals, since "the righteous shall find life" by trusting in the Lord's imputed righteousness. As it is written, "salvation belongs to the LORD." הִנֵּה עֻפְּלָה לא־יָשְׁרָה נַפְשׁוֹ בּוֹ  וְצַדִּיק בֶּאֱמוּנָתוֹ יִחְיֶה hin·nei  u·pe·lah  lo  ya·she·rah  naf·sho   bo ve·tzad·dik  be·e·mu·na·to   yich·yeh    "Behold, his soul is puffed up; it is not upright within him,  but the righteous shall find life by means of his trust." (Hab. 2:4)
       Hebrew Study Card v'tzaddik be'emunato yich'yeh: "The righteous shall find life through trusting." Faith is the essence of all true Torah from heaven, since apart from  faith we are spiritually dead and "powerless (ἀδύνατος) to please God" (Heb. 11:6).  Indeed the very purpose of creation is to receive the love of the  Creator, and consequently whoever disregards or suppresses this truth  necessarily fails to apprehend the essential reason for his or her  existence. As David said, "The LORD is near to all who call upon Him -  to all who call upon Him in the truth" (Psalm 145:18).  God is near to the honest soul who confesses the truth about his need,  though God distances himself from the proud and "puffed up" soul...
  In general, Jewish tradition seems to go two ways with the idea of Torah as halakhah (i.e., law). On the one hand, it tends to enumerate the various legalities of the Scriptures and to engage in halakhic (legal) discussions regarding "case law," yet on the other hand it  seeks to distill the various commandments to more general principles  that are fewer and fewer in number. For example, in the Talmud (Makkot  23b-24a) the discussion goes from an enumeration of the 613 commandments identified in the written Torah, to David's reduction of the number to 11 (Psalm 15), to Isaiah's reduction of the number to six (Isaiah 33:15-16); to Micah's reduction to three (Micah 6:8); to Isaiah's further reduction to two (Isaiah 56:1); to  the one essential commandment by Habakuk ("But the righteous shall live by his faith" - Hab. 2:4). In this connection is instructive to note that the apostle Paul had earlier distilled the all of the commandments of the Torah to this same principle of faith (Rom. 1:17, Gal. 3:11, Heb. 10:38).
  In light of the New Testament's emphatic teaching that faith in God's love is central, we have to wonder how much Rabbinical Judaism (unwittingly) "borrows"  hope from the message of Yeshua and the gospel... After all, after the  Second Temple had been destroyed (in direct fulfillment of the prophecy  of Yeshua), Judaism had to "reinvent" itself apart from the legalities  of the Torah (e.g., the laws of the sacrificial system constitute more  than 40% of the commandments). If the rabbis appeal to the authority of  the "oral law," however, we must remember that the Mishnah was not  compiled until 200 years after the time of Yeshua and the  apostles... Even today we see this "borrowing of grace" among the  rabbis. They assume that the Torah's commandments have somehow been  "suspended," despite the fact that the need for blood atonement, etc.,  is central to all Torah-true faith, and indeed, is the central idea of the revelation given at Sinai itself... The rabbis want a "righteousness apart from the law" but are  unwilling to turn to Yeshua as their Savior and LORD... They must do teshuvah and understand that apart from Yeshua, there is no life. (This is not  unlike the atheist who likewise "steals" hope despite the implications  of their dismal worldview... After all, the atheist still wants to be  able to talk about love, hope, goodness, and so on, though these words  are used to hide from the metaphysical tragedy of their lives.) 
  Of  course institutionalized Christianity may also "pilfer grace," since it  can cling to oblique forms of legalism or proffer forgiveness without  the need for real conviction.... As I said yesterday, Christianity is easy if it is merely regarded as "interesting" or "insightful," since then  it pleases people and requires nothing in return. Even easier it is to flatter others, to tickle their ears, and to build up their ego in the name of spirituality or religion. However, when the demand comes, when people understand that there is a real and eternal  obligation to authentically live in light of its truth - even to their  own potential loss - then the interest quickly fades... 
  There is simply no grace of God given apart from Yeshua, and it is only through Him that any soul may find salvation (Acts 4:12). Whoever has the Son has the life; whoever does not have the Son of God does not have life (1 John 5:12).     |  
 
 
  The LORD will preserve you...
 
  
 [ Life  in Messiah is a journey back home... The following is meant to assure  you that God is with you, even in moments of darkness, and He will help  you reach the goal... ]
  05.02.12 (Iyyar 10, 5772)    "I am sure of this, that he who began a good work in you will bring it  to completion (ἐπιτελέω) at the Day of Yeshua the Messiah" (Phil 1:6).  The LORD is able to guard you (φυλάξαι) from stumbling and to present  you blameless before the presence of His glory with great joy (Jude 1:24). "He will preserve you (βεβαιόω) to the end, guiltless in the Day of our Yeshua the Messiah" (1 Cor. 1:8). He who calls you is faithful; He will surely do it (1 Thess. 5:24). "The Lord is faithful (נֶאֱמָן הוּא): He will establish you and guard you against the evil one" (2 Thess. 3:3). סוֹמֵךְ יְהוָה לְכָל־הַנּפְלִים  וְזוֹקֵף לְכָל־הַכְּפוּפִים so·mekh · Adonai · le·khol · ha·no·fe·lim ve·zo·kef · le·khol · ha·ke·fu·fim    "The LORD upholds all who are falling and raises up all who are bowed down." (Psalm 145:14)
 
     Hebrew Study Card   A  midrash relates that just after creation the sheep complained to God  saying, "O Creator of the universe, you have created many evil creatures  who pursue me to slay me... but you have given me no defense." God  asked the sheep, "What shall I do for you? Would like sharp teeth or  fierce claws or poisoned fangs?" The sheep said, "No, I haven't the  fierce nature to use such things; I would rather be helpless than  cruel..." God then said, "You please me because you wish to remain  gentle and kind, but I will not leave you without protection. See, I  have given you a coat of thick wool, white and soft as snow. Go now and  show yourself to Adam, and he will love you for it. He will make  clothing and blankets for himself and his family. So he will keep you  close and protect you from all your enemies." And the sheep did so.  Therefore just as sheep are given a shepherd to protect them from  predators, so the LORD is our Shepherd who protects us from evil. 
  Therefore  of the LORD it is written, "He will tend his flock like a shepherd; he  will gather the lambs in his arms; he will carry them in his bosom, and  gently lead those that are with young" (Isa. 40:11). As the Good Shepherd has said, "Fear not, little flock, for it is your Father's good pleasure to give you the kingdom" (Luke 12:32).  "For I know the plans I have for you," declares the LORD, "plans for  shalom and not for evil, to give you a future and a hope" (Jer. 29:11). יְהוָה יִגְמר בַּעֲדִי  יְהוָה חַסְדְּךָ לְעוֹלָם  מַעֲשֵׂי יָדֶיךָ אַל־תֶּרֶף Adonai · yig·mor · ba·a·di Adonai · chas·de·kha · le·o·lam  ma·a·sei · ya·de·kha · al · te·ref    "The LORD will fulfill His purpose for me; Your steadfast love, O LORD, endures forever. Do not let go of the work of Your hands!" (Psalm 138:8)
 
     Hebrew Study Card   Note that I translated the verb teref (תֶּרֶף) - which comes from the verb rafa (רָפָה) - as "let go," as if the hands were slackened. "The LORD is your keeper (יְהוָה שׁמְרֶךָ); the LORD is your shade on your right hand" (Psalm 121:5).  "As for you, O LORD, you will not restrain your mercy from me; your  steadfast love and your faithfulness will ever preserve me" (Psalm 40:11). Because God's chesed (love) endures forever, we have confidence that His passion will never  relent for our eternal good. O LORD, tighten your grip on me and never  let me go!
  Who is like the LORD our God among the so-called gods of the nations? Let us make our boast in Him alone (1 Cor. 1:31; Psalm 105:3; Jer. 9:23-24). YHVH is the First and the Last, and every knee shall bow to Him in praise (Isa. 44:6; 45:22-24; Phil. 2:10).  His is the Name above all other names, and it is only through the grace  of the LORD our God Yeshua that any soul finds salvation, since there  eternal life in no one else (Acts 4:12). Whoever has the Son has the life; whoever does not have the Son of God does not have life (1 John 5:12). Therefore yehi shem Adonai mevorakh: "Let the Name of the LORD be blessed." מִי־כָמכָה בָּאֵלִם יְהוָה  מִי כָּמכָה נֶאְדָּר בַּקּדֶשׁ  נוֹרָא תְהִלּת עשֵׂה פֶלֶא mi · kha·mo·khah · ba·e·lim · Adonai mi · ka·mo·khah · ne·dar · ba·ko·desh no·ra  te·hil·lot · o·seh · fe·leh    "Who is like you, O LORD, among the gods? Who is like you, majestic in holiness, awesome in praise, doing wonders?" (Exod. 15:11)
 
     Hebrew Study Card     
 
  Love's Greater Strength...
 
  
 05.01.12 (Iyyar 9, 5772)   Among other things, the cross of Messiah teaches us to distrust the realm of mere appearance in order to discern what is real, abiding, and true... The cross transposes the values of this world by revealing that the inner is not the outer,  and vice versa. At the cross the holy becomes the profane, the righteous  becomes the condemned, and - baruch Hashem - the other way around.  The cross is the place of great exchange (2 Cor. 5:21).  For those enslaved by the "matrix" of this world, the message of the  cross is regarded as "foolishness," since the world cannot comprehend  how grace can overturn "karma" (i.e., law); however,  to those who are saved, the cross represents the very power of God (1 Cor. 1:18).  The cross of Messiah overturns the heartless wisdom of this world by  offering God's heart and love for the world's outcasts...
  We "walk by faith, not by sight," and therefore we must live as if the invisible is visible... The LORD God Almighty is on the throne, despite the prevalence of wickedness and depravity in  this world. The Scriptures foretell of the increase of wickedness during  the prophesied "End of Days" before the Great Tribulation (2 Tim. 3:1-5), yet meanwhile the LORD continues to offer His forbearance and salvation to the world, "not willing that any should perish, but that all should turn to Him in teshuvah" (2 Pet. 3:9).  God's forbearance is a demonstration of His great strength, since "in  order to forgive sin, it is necessary to have power, just as one must  have power in order to return strength to the sick."  As Tolstoy once  wrote, "Do not think that courage lies only in boldness and power. The  highest courage is the courage to be above your rage and to love a  person that has offended you." גֵּוִי נָתַתִּי לְמַכִּים וּלְחָיַי לְמרְטִים  פָּנַי לא הִסְתַּרְתִּי מִכְּלִמּוֹת וָרק ge·vi · na·ta·ti · le·mak·kim · u·le·cha·yai · le·mo·re·tim pa·nai · lo · his·tar·ti · mik·li·mot · va·rok    "I gave my back to those who strike, and my cheeks to those  who pull out the beard; I hid not my face from disgrace and spitting." (Isa. 50:6)
 
       This verse unquestionably refers to the public scourging of Yeshua our LORD, since there is no evidence that Isaiah ever underwent such treatment (see Luke 18:32).  Yeshua was brutally whipped, his beard was literally ripped or torn off  his face (the Septuagint renders it, "and my cheeks to blows"), and he  was shamefully spat upon – despite being the King of kings of kings...  Despite being mocked and humiliated, the Messiah did not retaliate, nor  did he invoke divine power to avenge himself or protect his honor and  office. The Apostle comments: "When he was reviled, he did not revile in  return; when he suffered, he did not threaten, but continued entrusting  himself to the One who judges justly" (1 Pet. 2:23).  There is strength that cannot be overcome by the carnal world and its  devices; there is the heart of God that decrees his love is stronger  than death itself.
  Part of the Torah of Yeshua (תּוֹרַת ישׁוּעַ) is to love our enemies and to do good to them (Matt. 5:44; Luke 6:27). Likewise, the apostle commands to overcome evil with goodness (Rom. 12:21).  Being able to love our enemies is truly miraculous, because we are naturally wired to seek revenge  when others hurt us... Loving an enemy is surely the highest form of  love, and therefore only God can help us do this, chaverim. "What I tell  you in darkness, that speak ye in light: and what ye hear in the ear,  that preach ye upon the housetops. And fear not them which kill the  body, but are not able to kill the soul: but rather fear him which is  able to destroy both soul and body in hell" (Matt. 10:27-28).
  Leo Tolstoy tells this story about suffering wrong for the sake of God's love: "Abu Ganifakh  died in a prison in Baghdad in which he'd been put by Caliph al-Mansur  for refusing to accept the teaching of Kaad. Once, before his death,  when this famous spiritual teacher received a heavy blow from a guard,  he told the man who hit him, "I could render you an injury after you  have done an injury to me. I could complain to the Caliph, but I will  not complain. In my prayers, I could tell God about this offense which  you have done to me, but I will refrain from this. During the day of the  Final Judgment I could ask divine revenge for your act, but even if  this day comes today, and even if I knew that my prayer would be heard,  even then I would enter paradise only with you." (A Calendar of Wisdom) 
 It is natural to  love our friends and to hate our enemies, but it requires a radically  transformed heart to be able to love one's enemies: "If you love those  who love you, what reward do you have? Do not even the tax collectors do  the same?" (Matt. 5:46-47; Luke 6:32). As Tolstoy said, it takes more courage, more heart, to rise above your rage and to forgive and love a person that has harmed you. That requires a miracle, lev chadash v'ruach chadashah (לֵב חָדָשׁ וְרוּחַ חֲדָשָׁה), a "new heart and and a new spirit" directly imparted by the hand of the Living God (Ezek. 36:26).
  Anthony  de Mello asks, "Is it possible for the rose to say, 'I will give my  fragrance to the good people who smell me, but I will withhold it from  the bad?' Or is it possible for the lamp to say, 'I will give my light  to the good people in this room, but I will withhold it from the evil  people'? Or can a tree say, 'I'll give my shade to the good people who  rest under me, but I will withhold it from the bad'? These are images of  what love is about." In other words, love suffers long and is kind; it  bears all things, believes all things, hopes all things, endures all  things" (1 Cor. 13:4,7).
  Underneath a lot of our anger is hurt, or anyway the fear of being hurt...  Our fear is often rooted in this world and our dread  over temporal loss. May the LORD our God help us walk by faith, not by  sight, as if the invisible is indeed visible... We affirm that the LORD  is forever on the Throne and will never be deposed; therefore may we be  looking to Him alone as the Source of our strength and power -- even to  love our enemies. 
 
  Postscript: Christianity is easy if it is merely regarded as "interesting" or "insightful," since then  it pleases people and requires nothing in return. Even easier it is to flatter others, to tickle their ears, and to build up their ego in the name of spirituality or religion! However, when the demand comes, when people understand that there is a real and eternal  obligation to authentically live in light of its truth - even to their  own potential loss - then the interest quickly fades... Here is a test  case, a way to examine our hearts: "Love your enemies, do good to those  who hate you" (Luke 6:27).     |  
 
 
  The Central Duty to Love...
 
  
 [ This week we have another "double portion" of Torah: Acharei Mot and Kedoshim (i.e., Leviticus 16:1-20:27). Please read the Torah portions to find your place here...  ]
  05.01.12 (Iyyar 9, 5772)   Our Torah portion this week (Acharei Mot - Kedoshim)  contains the central verse, "You shall love your neighbor as yourself; I  am the LORD" (Lev. 19:18).  The commandment of "Ahavat Yisrael" (i.e., "Love others as yourself")  is generally regarded as the most fundamental of the Torah.  The Talmud  recounts that when challenged by a pagan to teach the meaning of the  Scriptures "while standing on one foot," Hillel said, "What is hateful  to you, do not do to your neighbor: that is the whole Torah and the rest  is commentary; go and learn it." Hillel summed up the Torah as "doing  no harm" toward others (i.e., the "Silver Rule"), which agrees with the  Apostle Paul's statement, "Love does no wrong to a neighbor; therefore  love is the fulfillment (πλήρωμα) of the law" (Rom. 13:10).  Of course Yeshua earlier taught His followers, "whatever you wish that  others would do to you, do also to them, for this is the Law and the  Prophets" (Matt. 7:12; 22:36-40).
  Some  of the mystics have said that when two people love one another, the  Holy One reigns between them. This is alluded to by the Hebrew word for  love (i.e., ahavah: אהבה), the gematria of which is thirteen (1+5+2+5=13), but when shared with another it is multiplied: 13 x 2 = 26 - the same value for the Sacred Name (יהוה),  i.e., (10+5+6+5=26).  In other words, when we love, esteem, and respect  one another, the LORD's presence is multiplied and revealed among us (1 John 4:7-8).   וְאָהַבְתָּ לְרֵעֲךָ כָּמוֹךָ אֲנִי יְהוָה ve·a·hav·ta · le·re·a·kha · ka·mo·kha a·ni · Adonai    "You shall love your neighbor as yourself. I am the LORD." (Lev. 19:18)
 
  
  Hebrew Study Card     In  this connection, it is interesting to note that the gematria for the  Hebrew commandment, "You shall love your neighbor as yourself" (i.e., וְאָהַבְתָּ לְרֵעֲךָ כָּמוֹך) equals 820, the same value as the word yekidashti (וְקִדַּשְׁתִּי), "And I [the LORD] will sanctify" (Exod. 29:44).  When God commands us to "love your neighbor as yourself," he graciously  includes the addendum: "I am the LORD," which the sages understood to  mean, "I will help you to do this," or (in this case) "I will sanctify  you through your acts of lovingkindness." 
  Of course followers of Yeshua have a profound obligation to love and care for one another (John 13:34, 15:12,17, Rom. 13:8; 1 Thess. 4:9; 1 Pet. 1:22, 1 John 3:11, etc.). After all, in this world the only tangible way we can express our love for God is by extending gemilut chasadim (loving acts) to others (James 2:15-17, 1 John 3:17, 4:20). Indeed, our obligation to love and care for others can even preempt our outward duty to love God Himself. For example, what good is it to  "tithe mint and cumin" and yet neglect the needs of those who are  suffering (Matt. 23:23)? 
  Tragically, the idea of "loving" or "serving" God can even be used as a pretext for rejecting those with whom we might disagree... What else explains religious  hatred, hidebound denominational prejudices, and other forms of  sanctimonious humbug at work in the various world religions of today?   Even in so-called Christian churches we see this sort of bigotry at  work.  As Yeshua forewarned: "the hour is coming when whoever kills you  will think he is offering service to God" (John 16:2). Sadly this sometimes applies even to those who claim to love and worship the Prince of Peace (שַׂר־שָׁלוֹם).  The world's religious zealots are routinely trying to "do God a favor"  by hating and even killing others... This is the "Jihad-version" of  religiosity - a terrible sickness of spirit.  In light of the redemptive  love and grace of God, can there really be anything more perverse than  this?
  Love is the central idea of all true Torah. Though there  are some slight language differences between the Exodus and Deuteronomy  versions of the Ten Commandments, both begin with "I AM" (אָנכִי) and both end with "[for] your neighbor" (לְרֵעֶךָ).  Joining these together says "I am your neighbor," indicating that the  LORD Himself is found in your neighbor. When we love our neighbor as  ourselves (אָהַבְתָּ לְרֵעֲךָ כָּמוֹךָ),  we are in effect demonstrating our love for the LORD.  We must learn to  disregard the claims of our ego and cling to the idea of chesed. So who is your neighbor? You are -- to every other soul you may encounter this day...
 
 
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 April 2012 Site Updates
    Don't trade your soul...
 
   04.30.12 (Iyyar 8, 5772)    Knowing about God is not the same thing as personally trusting Him with your life... This is the distinction between emunah (אֱמוּנָה) and bittachon (בִּטָּחוֹן)  I tried to explain last week. Theologians sometimes rationalize God so  that we can hide from Him, perhaps because they are afraid to really  trust Him and believe. Mere knowledge about God, however, can never  substitute for passionate faith. If all we have is objective knowledge about God, then we are simply professors, since genuine faith wrestles through the pain, the ambiguity, the heartache - yet still holds on to God's love. "Though he slay me, yet I will hope in Him." Of course this does not mean that we are irrational in our faith, because passion is given by the Spirit of truth. "The  heart has its reasons of which reason knows nothing," just as true love  needs no justification. This works the other way around, too. People who  refuse to trust God are seeking ways to justify their spiritual mutiny.
  Simply knowing about God can lead to a sense of "distance," to theological abstractions, to  dogmas and creedal formulas. Often denominational differences are  founded on such supposed "knowledge about" God, and therefore they are  invariably based on ignorance, pretense, and self-righteousness. Besides  the enmity caused by the game of theological one-upmanship, the split  between the head and heart can lead people to seek for emotional  satisfaction in things other than an authentic relationship with the  Living God. Many of our more carnal sins center on the loss of hope for  love. Because of our despair, we may return to the old comforts of the  flesh, instead of pressing through the immediate desire to discover our  longing for eternity, that is, for God's love... I wonder how many sins  have been committed because people feel homesick for eternity.
  Perhaps the greatest danger is for people to become so numb that they subsist in a state of indifference, no longer concerned about questions concerning their eternal destiny.  Love then becomes "for other people" (not for them), and the connection  between their desire and their deepest need becomes entirely severed.  People lose heart and then feel powerless to change. And because they  give up hope, they trade their eternal passion for vain trivialities;  they become more concerned about television or the outcome of some  sporting event than with their eternal souls... They become willing to  traffic their souls for the sake of the world and its meretricious  promises (Luke 9:25). 
  Chaverim,  it is time to wake up: There is appearance, and there is reality; there  is the significant, and there is the trivial; there is the good and  their is the evil. Even the ancient philosopher Plato noted, "The  struggle to be good or bad is important, indeed much more important than  people think." It is astonishing that so many neglect the eternal  questions and then pass into oblivion...   יֵשׁ דֶּרֶךְ יָשָׁר לִפְנֵי־אִישׁ  וְאַחֲרִיתָהּ דַּרְכֵי־מָוֶת yesh · de·rekh · ya·shar · lif·nei · ish ve·a·ha·ri·tah · dar·khei · ma·vet    "There is a way that seems right to a man,  but its end is the way to death." (Prov. 16:25)
 
  
  Hebrew Study Card    This  is a truly frightening possibility – that a man can become so  self-deceived that he esteems the mere fantasy of his conceit to be true  "righteousness" before heaven, and therefore he never bothers to  undergo self-examination and to seriously question whether he may  be mistaken. Alas, is it not a truism of human nature that people are  inherently proud, full of themselves, and forever right in their own  eyes? Everyone believes they are right, that they are justified, that  they have a right to their own personal convictions and opinions --  which may be a sign of pride that will lead to a fall. Leaning on your  own understanding is a recipe for spiritual disaster. This line of  thinking enables the adulteress to ply her sin and then wipe her mouth,  excusing herself in her own eyes (Prov. 30:20).  Dreadful self-deception! And yet it is not only non-Christians who seek  to excuse themselves by suppressing the voice of conscience; no - many professing Christians will be shocked to discover that they fooled  themselves with their false piety and the charade of their faith: "On  that day many will say to me, 'Lord, Lord, did we not prophesy in your  name, and cast out demons in your name, and do many mighty works in your  name?' And then will I declare to them, 'I never knew you; depart from  me, you workers of lawlessness.'"(Matt. 7:22-23).
  Blaise  Pascal once wrote: "I can feel nothing but compassion for those who  sincerely lament their doubt, who regard it as the ultimate misfortune,  and who, sparing no effort to escape from it, make their search their  principal and most serious business. But as for those who spend their  lives without a thought for this final end, I view differently. This  negligence in the matter where they themselves, their eternity, their  all are at stake, fills me more with irritation than pity: yea, it  astounds and appalls me... (Pensees, 427).
  Regarding the  seriousness of life and our need for spiritual sobriety, Kierkegaard  comments: "Listen to the cry of a woman in labor at the hour of giving  birth - look at the dying man's struggle at his last extremity, and then  tell me whether something that begins and ends thus could be intended  for enjoyment." No, we are in a school here, and disciples are called  learners. We have one opportunity to learn before our allotted time is  up and then we will face our eternal judgment (Heb. 9:27). 
  Unfulfilled love in your heart is a disguised longing for eternity, for God's love... God loves you ahavat olam - with an everlasting love and perfect love - and therefore we find  ourselves homesick for eternity. This longing is a hint, a call, for you  to return home:   מֵרָחוֹק יְהוָה נִרְאָה לִי  וְאַהֲבַת עוֹלָם אֲהַבְתִּיךְ  עַל־כֵּן מְשַׁכְתִּיךְ חָסֶד me·ra·chok · Adonai · nir·ah · li ve·a·ha·vat · o·lam · a·hav·tikh al · ken · me·shakh·tikh · cha·sed    "The LORD appeared to me from far away.  I have loved you with an everlasting love;  therefore I have drawn you in my love." (Jer. 31:3)
 
  
  Hebrew Study Card    Note that the word translated "I have drawn you" comes from the Hebrew word mashakh (מָשַׁךְ),  meaning to "seize" or "drag away" (the ancient Greek translation used  the verb helko (ἕλκω) to express the same idea).  As Yeshua said, "No  one is able to come to me unless he is "dragged away" (ἑλκύσῃ, same  word) by the Father" (John 6:44). God's love, His chesed, woos us, takes us captive, and then leads us to the Savior... 
  Now, more than ever before we need to be sober, vigilant, and on guard from the enemy of our souls (1 Pet. 5:8).  The evil one knows his time is short, and he is working with greater  diabolical fervor to enslave and destroy souls. May God give us the  power to tread on him, to confound his schemes, and to upend his designs  for this world. May the LORD help us stand strong and to fight yet  another day against the power of the lie. And most importantly, may the  LORD show us His mercy, compassion, and love by helping each of us to  earnestly, honestly, and truly trust in Him.... May He keep us from  distractions, from lusts of various kinds, from exchanging the best for  some finite good, and for settling to merely know about Him rather than  to truly trust His heart... In Yeshua's Name: Amen.
 
  Note: I should add that there is nothing wrong with appreciating some of the  things of this world, though in comparison with knowing God, these  things should be regarded as "dung" (σκύβαλα), that is, excrement. On the other hand, only those who die to this world really know how to  love it, since they understand what the world really is, and it is  impossible to truly love something that is not real.     |  
 
 
  Accepting True Freedom
 
  
 04.30.12 (Iyyar 8, 5772)  "If the Son shall set you free, you shall be free indeed" (John 8:36).  The sages say, "Being free means that I am in the place I am supposed  to be." In other words, freedom means surrendering, accepting, and  yielding to God's path of blessing for you. This a place of great  spiritual contentment where you are liberated from the slavery of fear  and disappointment.  Yeshua lived in this freedom, since He completely  yielded Himself to His father's daily care (John 5:19; 8:29; 14:10).
  Surrendering yourself to God's care is also the means of finding self-acceptance. God knows all your sins and has paid for them upon the cross, and  therefore His love for you is the basis for which you can properly  forgive and accept yourself... A Yiddish proverb reads, "If I try to be  someone else, who then will be like me?"  When you die, God won't ask  why you weren't more like Moses, Elijah, etc., but rather, why you  weren't more like the person He recreated you to be. No one else can do  the things you are called to do, and therefore God created you as a  distinct individual who reflects His glory in a unique way... "To the  one who conquers I will give a white stone, with a new name written on  the stone that no one knows except the one who receives it" (Rev. 2:17).  Those who trust Yeshua as their Savior can intellectually understand  and emotionally trust that God is working all things together for good  in their lives (Rom. 8:28).    כְּרַחֵם אָב עַל־בָּנִים רִחַם יְהוָה עַל־יְרֵאָיו ke·ra·chem  ·  av  ·  al  · ba·nim ri·cham  · Adonai · al ·  ye·re·av    "As a father shows compassion to his children, so the LORD shows compassion to those who fear him." (Psalm 103:13)
 
  
    May God help us "let not our hearts be troubled" because He has promised never to leave nor forsake us (Heb. 13:5).  "Be still, and know that I am God" (Psalm 46:10).   As the old spiritual song goes, "He's got the whole world, in His  hands... he's got you and me baby, in His hands..." May the LORD our  Heavenly Father help us trust in Him. Amen.   
 
  Parashat Acharei Mot-Kedoshim
 
  
 [ This week we have another "double portion" of Torah: Acharei Mot and Kedoshim (i.e., Leviticus 16:1-20:27). Please read the Torah portions to find your place here...  ]
  04.30.12 (Iyyar 8, 5772)    This week's Torah portion (Acharei Mot-Kedoshim)  moves from the preceding instructions regarding ritual purity (tahora) to recall the earlier tragic incident of Nadab and Abihu, the two sons  of Aaron who were killed when they offered "strange fire" upon the Altar  of Incense during the dedication of the Tabernacle (Lev. 10:1-2).  Because these priests came close to the Holy Place in an incorrect  manner and were killed, the LORD further instructed Moses to tell Aaron  that he should enter the Holy of Holies only in the prescribed manner  once a year, during Yom Kippur (i.e., the "Day of Atonement"). 
  On  this solemn day, considered the holiest of the year, Aaron was  instructed to perform special purification rituals which would atone for  the sins of Israel. Unlike any other priestly functions performed  throughout the year, part of the avodah of Yom Kippur was performed  within the Kodesh Ha-kodashim (i.e., the Holy of Holies) itself, which the sages called avodat penim (the "inner" service). The other part of the service was called avodat chutz, the "outer service." During the "outer" parts of service, Aaron was  required to wear the regular High Priestly garments, called bigdei zahav (the "golden garments," because they were made using gold threads), and  during the "inner" part of the service he was required to wear four  linen garments called bigdei lavan, the "white garments," instead.
  At  the start of the Yom Kippur avodah, Aaron was instructed to remove his  "golden garments" and to immerse himself in a mikveh. Next he would  clothe himself in the white linen garments (symbolizing humility),  slaughter a bull for a personal sin offering, and collect its blood in a  special basin (which he brought into the Holy Place). Aaron then went  back to the courtyard, took a shovelful of embers from the Copper Altar,  and returned to the Holy Place to gather some holy incense (ketoret)  from the Golden Altar. After this, Aaron first approached the Holy of  Holies and went past the veil (parochet) to enter the inner  sanctuary, where he carefully burned two handfuls of ketoret to fill the  chamber with thick smoke. He then left the Holy of Holies to bring the  basin of blood from the sin offering and re-entered the inner chamber to  sprinkle the blood once upward and then seven times downward before the  kapporet (i.e., "Mercy Seat") of the Ark. 
 
      Two  goats - similar in every respect - were selected earlier and were  waiting in the courtyard of the Tabernacle. Aaron was instructed to  "draw lots" to identify the purpose for each goat. One lot was inscribed  "for the LORD" (לַיהוָה) and the other was inscribed "for Azazel" (לַעֲזָאזֵל).  After the lottery, the goat designated "for the LORD" was slaughtered  as sin offering on behalf of the people and its blood collected in a  basin, whereas the goat "for Azazel" was marked with a red band around  its horns and left at the gate of the courtyard. Later in the service,  Aaron would confess the sins of the community of Israel over the this  goat, which would then be "sent to Azazel" in the desert (Lev. 16:5-10; 21-22). For this reason, the other goat is called se'ir mishtale'ach - the "sent goat," which was translated into English as the "scapegoat" by William Tyndale....
  After  Aaron slaughtered the goat for the people's sin offering, he repeated  the same procedure he had performed earlier for his personal sin  offering. Aaron brought the blood of the goat "for the LORD" before the  Ark of the Covenant in the Holy of Holies and sprinkled it once upward  and then seven times downward before the kapporet. After doing this,  Aaron combined the sacrificial blood of the goat and the bull into  another basin and applied this mixture to the corners and top of the  Golden Altar of Incense. 
  Later, the fat and entrails of both the  bull and the goat were burned on the Copper Altar in the courtyard,  though the hide and the flesh of both were taken out of the Tabernacle  to be entirely burned outside the camp.
  After purifying  the Tabernacle, Aaron returned to the gate of the courtyard and laid  both hands upon the head of the other goat (designated "for Azazel" [לַעֲזָאזֵל],  a name that may refer either to the accusing angel or to a mountainous  location) and confessed all of the sins and transgressions of the  people. This "scapegoat" was not slaughtered, however, but was driven  away into exile in the wilderness, carrying "all their iniquities unto a  land not inhabited" (Lev. 16:22).  Aaron next returned to the Tent, immersed himself in a mikveh, and  changed back into "golden clothes." He then proceeded to offer two whole  burnt offerings – one for himself and one for the people – to complete  the purification process. After these sacrifices, Aaron underwent yet  another mikveh, changed back into his white linen garments, and removed  the censer of burnt incense from the Holy of Holies. Finally he changed  back into his golden garments to finish his evening work as the High  Priest. Aaron would offer the regular evening offerings, kindle the  lamps of the Menorah, burn incense on the Golden Altar, and so on. 
  This elaborate ritual was ordained to be a decree (chok) for Israel, and the day of Yom Kippur was to be observed every year as a  time of "affliction and mourning" for all the people. In three separate  passages in the Torah, the people are told "the tenth day of the  seventh month" (Tishri) is the Day of Atonement (יוֹם הַכִּפֻּרִים). It shall be a sacred occasion for you: you shall afflict your souls" (Lev. 16:29-34, 23:26-32, Num. 29:7-11). 
  The  portion ends with further instructions about making sacrifices,  including the prohibition against offering any animal sacrifices apart  from the rites of the Tabernacle. The consumption of blood was  explicitly forbidden, since blood was reserved for sacrificial purposes  upon the altar. Finally, the portion presents a list of forbidden sexual  relationships, concluding with the general prohibition against  following the abhorrent practices of other nations.
  Yom Kippur and the Gospel
  Note: For more about the relationship between Passover and Yom Kippur, see the article entitled, Yom Kippur and the Gospel.     |  
 
 
  One day at a time...
 
  
 04.27.12 (Iyyar 5, 5772)   In the Gospel of Matthew we read these words of our  LORD Yeshua the Messiah: "Therefore do not be anxious about tomorrow,  for tomorrow will be anxious for itself. Sufficient for the day is its  own trouble" (Matt. 6:34).  Kierkegaard comments: "If there is no next day for you, then all  earthly care is annihilated. When the next day comes, it loses its  enchantment and its disquieting insecurity. If there is no next day for  you, then either you are dying or you are one who by dying to  temporality has grasped the Eternal, either one who is actually dying or  one who is really living... The one who rows a boat turns his  back to the goal toward which he is working. So it is with the next day.  When, with the help of the Eternal, a person lives absorbed in today,  he turns his back to the next day. The more he is eternally absorbed in  today, the more decisively he turns his back to the next day." Amen.   May God help us live for Him today. Today is the day of salvation; today  may we hear His voice.   שִׁירוּ לַיהוָה שִׁיר חָדָשׁ שִׁירוּ לַיהוָה כָּל־הָאָרֶץ  שִׁירוּ לַיהוָה בֲָּרכוּ שְׁמוֹ  בַּשְּׂרוּ מִיּוֹם־לְיוֹם יְשׁוּעָתוֹ shi·ru · ladonai · shir · cha·dash; shi·ru · ladonai · kol ·ha·a·retz shi·ru · ladonai · ba·ra·khu · she·mo; ba·se·ru · mi·yom · le·yom · ye·shu·a·to     "Oh sing to the LORD a new song; sing to the LORD, all the earth! Sing to the LORD, bless his Name; tell of his salvation from day to day."
  (Psalm 96:1-2)
 
  
  Hebrew Study Card    It  is the saddest thing of all if a human being goes through life without  discovering his need for God. Therefore blessed indeed are the poor in  spirit, for theirs is the kingdom of heaven (Matt. 5:3).  It is a "blessed fault" to understand our inner poverty, to know  anguish of heart, and to be able to abide in God's salvation one day at a  time....   
 
  Gossip and Chicken Feathers...
 
  
 [ The following is related to this week's Torah (Tazria-Metzora)....  Please read the Torah portions to "find your place" here. ]
  04.27.12 (Iyyar 5, 5772)   According to the sages, the punishment for evil gossip, or "lashon hara" (לָשׁוֹן הָרָה) was a spiritual malady called tzara'at, which  could only be healed using spiritual methods. In midrashic literature,  lashon hara is likened to idol worship and other grievous sins. Indeed,  spreading an evil report about another person is likened to soul murder,  since the shamed person's face turns white, as if blood was drained  from their countenance. The sages call the gossiper hamotzi ra, "one who brings forth evil" (a play on the Hebrew word hametzora), and  they often illustrate the danger of spreading evil reports through  various folk tales, such as the following.  A  woman came to her rabbi to confess that she was addicted to gossiping  and spreading rumors about her neighbors. She pleaded for his help. How  could she change her ways? "Pluck a chicken," the rabbi said, "and  scatter its feathers along the road from your home to the town square.  Then return the way you came, gather the feathers in a basket, and bring  them to me. When you have done this, I will give you my answer. 
  The  woman agreed to do this and the next day she returned, but lo! the  basket was nearly empty. "Rabbi, " she said, I followed your  instructions. I plucked the chicken and scattered its feathers, but when  I returned the way I had come, the wind had scattered the feathers in  all directions." She pointed to the basket: "These are all I could  collect."
  Now you see, my dear child, the rabbi said sadly,  "gossip is like those feathers; once it is scattered, it cannot be  retrieved. It flies off in all directions, doing damage wherever it  reaches. As our sages have said, 'What is spoken in Rome may kill in  Syria' (Midrash Rabbah). The rabbi raised a finger to his lips, "When  you hear gossip, practice silence." (Rossel: Essential Jewish Stories, 276)   
 People  who enjoy gossiping about others are sometimes likened to a group of  chickens that  flap their 'feathers,' squawking about, preening, and  posturing. Often these people cluck out judgments regarding others in  the "chicken coop," putting them down in a vain attempt to feel better  about themselves, but in reality they are guilty of harming other  people. King David likened them as "fiery beasts" with teeth as spears  and arrows, and whose tongues are like sharp swords (Psalm 57:4). 
  Almighty  God, the King of the Universe, has the right and authority to judge us  all, though He bears our sins and instead offers us grace, love and  forgiveness... In response, understand the need to sanctify your speech  and to observe the practice of shemirat ha-lashon (שְׁמִירַת הַלָּשׁוֹן),  guarding your words.. Whatever you say is echoed throughout eternity  and will be reheard on the day of judgment (Matt. 12:36-37). Therefore,  as you forgive, so you shall be forgiven; as you judge others, so shall  you be judged... 
  Shabbat Shalom, chaverim. May the LORD  interrupt whatever we are planning so that we can find our rest Him...  And blessed be God for the LORD Yeshua, who is willing to touch lepers  and make them whole. Amen.     |  
 
 
  O Blessed Fault...
 
  
 04.27.12 (Iyyar 5, 5772)   "O LORD, is it possible to really change? There is  so much of me that is in need of help, I know not where to begin. Not  just my past, O God, but my present hour is haunted by frailty and  failure. Is there any likelihood that tomorrow will find me stronger,  more righteous, or more reconciled with you? No, for you won't love me  any more that you do right now... Help me, then, to abide in your love,  trusting that you will do within my heart what I am unable (or  unwilling) to do for myself. And even if tomorrow I should repeat the  same old sins, help me understand that you love me just the same, and  that you will never give up on me; you will never repudiate me. Help me  to know that your love is stronger than the sickness of my sin. Amen."   כִּי־פְשָׁעַי אֲנִי אֵדָע  וְחַטָּאתִי נֶגְדִּי תָמִיד ki · fe·sha·ai · a·ni · ei·da' ve·cha·ta·ti · neg·di · ta·mid    "For I know my transgressions,  and my sin is ever before me" (Psalm 51:3)
 
  
    O  blessed fault - the dread sin that breaks my heart before the LORD...  Were it not for anguish of heart, how would I have sought the solace and  healing of my Savior? Sorrow was God's messenger to my need. The fault  of my sin occasioned God's mercy and grace, "for where sin abounded,  grace did much more abound" (Rom. 5:20). The law was given by Moses, but love and faithfulness (חֶסֶד וֶאֱמֶת) come through Yeshua our Messiah (John 1:17). In  tears a man once confessed a sin to the Rabbi of Apt and told him how  he atoned for it. The tzaddik laughed. The man went on to tell what more  he intended doing to atone for his sin, and the rabbi kept on laughing.  The man wanted to continue, but the laughter robbed him of the power to  speak. He stared at the tzaddik in horror. And then his soul held its  breath, and he heard a voice deep within. He realized how trivial all  his fuss about atoning had been, and instead he turned to God... 
 Because  Yeshua sacrificed Himself for our sins on the cross, the question no  longer concerns what we must do to find atonement through religious  rites or acts of penitence -- as if these might somehow assuage or  propiate God's disappointment over our sin. No, the remedy is far more  profound and costly, and only God Himself could pay the price for our  atonement. But because of Yeshua, we now may simply turn to God for the love and healing we so desperately need... This is the meaning of teshuvah. God has made the way for us to be received, loved, and accepted - despite the stain of our sins (Heb. 9:11-28).  Jesus paid the penalty for your sins, and the only real question  remains: Will you believe it? Will you accept that you are accepted by  the love of God?
  The Name YHVH means "God is Present" and near,  as close as your heart. The LORD is near, even when you feel lost and  far away. Turn away from any evil you have done: do not keep it in mind,  but instead see it in light of the greater good of God's love,  patience, and forgiveness for you... See your sin only in relation to  the cross. Resolve today by the power and truth of God's very love to  turn away from darkness to His marvelous light.     |  
 
 
  The Power of Forgiveness
 
  
 04.26.12 (Iyyar 4, 5772)   In the Gates of Repentance it is written: "I hereby forgive all who have hurt me, all who have  wronged me, whether deliberately or inadvertently, whether by word or by  deed. May no one be punished on my account.  And as I forgive and  pardon those who have wronged me, may those whom I have harmed forgive  me, whether I acted deliberately or inadvertently, whether by word or by  deed."  Amen... 
  Yeshua taught us to pray "forgive us as we  forgive others," which implies that our forgiveness (of others) is the  measure of our own forgiveness. In other words, as we  forgive others, so we experience forgiveness ourselves... Forgiveness  releases the hurt, the anger, and the disappointment so these feelings  do not inwardly consume and exhaust our souls. And yet forgiveness must  be self-directed, too, since refusing to forgive yourself denies or  negates the forgiveness given from others. Forgiving yourself means  admitting that you act just like other people, that you are human, and  that you are in need of reconciliation too. We have to move on, past the  shame, and to turn back to hope. As a Yiddish proverb puts it, "You are  what you are, not what you were..." 
  It is written, "in many things we offend all," and therefore we must confess our sins one to another to find healing (James 5:16). However the practice of love overlooks a multitude of sins, and if we do not condemn those who offend us, then  we will not need to forgive them for their offenses. Walking in God's  love sets us free from the slavery of negative emotions such as  resentment, bitterness, anger, unresolved grief, and so on. 
  I  love this affirmation and prayer attributed to Eusebius of Caesarea (c.  263-339 AD): "May I be the friend of that which is eternal and abides.  May I never quarrel with those nearest me; and if I do, may we be  reconciled quickly. May I never devise evil against anyone; and if any  devise evil against me, may I escape uninjured and without any desire to  hurt them. May I love, seek, and attain only that which is good. May I  wish for the happiness of all and the misery of none. May I never  rejoice in the ill-fortune of one who has wronged me. When I have done  or said what is wrong, may I never wait for the rebuke of others, but  always rebuke myself until I make amends."     |  
 
 
  Faith of Skin Horse...
 
  
 04.26.12 (Iyyar 4, 5772)   God gives us special graces, especially in light of  the poignant passing of days, with our thwarted hopes, aching bones, and  keenings of the heart for lasting deliverance.  This gift of divine  despondency helps us to "make contact" with the Real, the True, and the  Abiding, the One who is so infinitely great that He is infinitely small  at the same time... "Real  isn't how you are made," said the Skin Horse. "It's a thing that  happens to you. When a child loves you for a long, long time, not just  to play with but REALLY loves you, then you become Real. It doesn't  happen all at once. You become.  It takes a long time....  Generally, by  the time you are Real, most of your hair has been loved off, and your  eyes drop out and you get loose in the joints and very shabby. But these  things don't matter at all, because once you are Real you can't be  ugly, except to people who don't understand." (Margary Williams, The  Velveteen Rabbit) 
 In  light of the Velveteen Rabbit imagery, it is God Himself who is the  Child who loves us into the state of reality...  Sometimes, in darker  moments of the soul, the Spirit announces this to the heart of faith as  "Though He slay me, yet will I trust in Him" (Job 13:15), while at other  times, we are able to hear the words of the wise Skin Horse as words  meant for us... 
  May the LORD help us all share the faith of Skin Horse.   
 
  Shemirat Ha-Lashon - שְׁמִירַת הַלָּשׁוֹן
 
  
 [ The following is related to this week's Torah (Tazria-Metzora)....  Please read the Torah portions to "find your place" here. ]
  04.26.12 (Iyyar 4, 5772)   According to the sages, tzara'at ("leprosy") was a punishment for evil gossip, or "lashon hara" (לָשׁוֹן הָרָה).  In midrashic literature, lashon hara is regarded as equal to idol  worship, sexual immorality, and murder, and the one who indulges in it  defiles his mouth so that even words of Torah and prayer are corrupted.  "From the same mouth come blessing and cursing; brothers, these things  ought not to be so" (James 3:10).  The sages even go further: "Lashon Hara is worse than murder. One who murders, murders but one; however, one who speaks  lashon hara kills three: the one who speaks it, the one who hears it,  and the one of whom it is spoken."  Lashon hara is likened to "emotional  homicide" caused by publicly shaming another. According to the Talmud,  the shamed person's face is drained of blood and turns white, and  therefore humiliation is called halbanat panim, "whitening the face." Therefore the sages identify the metzora (i.e., leper) with hamotzi ra, "one who brings forth evil," and they stress shemirat ha-lashon, the "guarding of the tongue," as a cardinal virtue of the righteous. 
  The  story is told of a peddler who used to travel throughout the land  crying out, "Who wants to buy the elixir of life?" Huge crowds would  draw around him. Rabbi Yannai was sitting and explaining Torah in his  room and heard the peddler's calls. So he went to him and asked to  purchase some of this elixir. The peddler responded, "Neither you nor  people like you require what I have to sell." The rabbi pressed him so  that the peddler went to him and took out a book of Psalms reading the  verse: "Who is the man that desires life and wants to see good? Keep  your tongue from evil!" Rabbi Yannai responded with amazement, "All my  life I have read this verse and didn't understand how this was to be  explained, until this peddler came and made it clear to me" (Midrash Rabbah). Before he met the peddler, the rabbi thought the verse referred solely  to the reward in the world to come, but it never occurred to him that it  referred to this life as well. Guarding the tongue promoted health and  avoided those stresses that hasten death. 
  Yeshua the Messiah  went well beyond these requirements and told us that whatever is spoken  in this life is "echoed" throughout eternity and will be reheard upon  the day of judgment: "I tell you, on the day of judgment people will  give account for every careless (ἀργὸν) word they utter, for by your  words you will be justified, and by your words you will be condemned" (Matt. 12:36-37).  We are especially warned against making promises we might break: "Let  what you say be simply 'Yes' or 'No'; anything more than this comes from  evil" (Matt. 5:37).  Therefore the Holy Spirit says through David: "What man is there who  desires life and loves many days, that he may see good? Keep your tongue  from evil and your lips from speaking deceit."    מִי־הָאִישׁ הֶחָפֵץ חַיִּים  אהֵב יָמִים לִרְאוֹת טוֹב נְצר לְשׁוֹנְךָ מֵרָע וּשְׂפָתֶיךָ מִדַּבֵּר מִרְמָה mi  · ha·ish · he·cha·fetz · chai·yim o·hev · ya·mim · lir·ot · tov ne·tzor · le·shon·kha · me·ra  · us·fa·te·kha · mi·da·ber · mir·mah    "What man is there who desires life  and loves many days, that he may see good?  Keep your tongue from evil and your lips from speaking deceit" (Psalm 34:12-13)
 
  
  Hebrew Study Card    The  tongue also refers to our "self talk," or the inner monologue within us  that reveals our heart's condition: "For out of the abundance of the  heart the mouth speaks" (Matt. 12:34). If we are admonished to guard our lips, then for all the more reason we must guard our hearts (Prov. 4:23-24). If troubles presently beset you, learn to regard them as the "troubles of love" (i.e., yissurei ahavah: יִסּוּרֵי אַהֲבָה), that is, challenges that God is using for your good. After all, your life itself is evidence of God's chesed, his gracious love, for you, and you believe that God works all things together for good to those who love Him (Rom. 8:28).  Conversely, "Whoever guards his mouth and his tongue, guards his soul from troubles" (Prov. 21:23). "Death and life are in the hand of the tongue" (Prov. 18:21), and therefore refraining from evil talk not only prevents death but also adds to life.
  When  we speaking with deceit (or with guile), we speak with a  "forked-tongue," saying one thing with the lips but intending something  else within the heart. The inner and the outer are to be unified in our  lives, and we are to be free of duplicity. Do not be a hypocrite who  pretends to be something you are not (Prov. 3:9). 
  Guarding  your tongue is evidence that you are truly fearing the LORD, since the  passage is preceded with the statement: "Come, children, listen to me: I  will teach you the fear of the LORD" (Psalm 34:11).  Fearing the LORD means being filled with the wonder of the Divine  Presence. The one who fears the LORD will "see good," that is, he will  see the goodness of his surroundings in the light of God's Presence.  Seeing the good in others, using ayin tovah (a good eye), is therefore the contrary of lashon hara, or slander. Our words should be used to upbuild, edify, and esteem  others, not to tear them down. Lashon hara is evidence, then, of a  critical spirit, an evil eye, and a suspicious heart. We must look to  God for the miracle of seeing the truth of His goodness in all things.
  Those  who think it easy to control the tongue have likely never really tried  to do so. "The tongue is a small member, yet it boasts of great things.  How great a forest is set ablaze by such a small fire! And the tongue is  a fire, a world of unrighteousness. The tongue is set among our  members, staining the whole body, setting on fire the entire course of  life, and set on fire by hell" (James 3:5-6).   Ultimately, controlling your tongue is a matter of controlling your  inner thoughts, your heart, and your attitude (shemirat ha-lev).  Therefore we are admonished to be "quick to hear, slow to speak, slow to  anger," since the anger of man never works the righteousness of God (James 1:19). May the LORD our God help us always to speak with grace, "seasoned with salt" (Col. 4:6); and may we all "speak the truth in love to grow up in every way" (Eph. 4:15).     |  
 
 
  A Real Savior for Real Sinners...
 
  
 04.25.12 (Iyyar 3, 5772)   Why do we pretend that we aren't incorrigible  sinners in need of a miracle?  Why do we have trouble admitting the  truth about our great need? The Scriptures admonish: "Confess your  faults one to another, and pray one for another, that you may be healed.  The prayer of a righteous person has great effectiveness" (James 5:16). Notice that the prayer of the righteous is effective because it is grounded in reality. "Confession" (i.e., ὁμολογία) means forsaking pretense by  accepting the truth about yourself; it means "saying the same thing"  (ὁμολογέω) that reality reveals...  It has been said that we are only as  sick as the secrets we keep. The LORD is called the God of Truth (אֵל אֱמֶת), and the Spirit of Truth testifies to the honest of heart... God does not encounter fictional sinners, but only real and awful ones... He is not interested in the "outside of the cup" as much as what the cup contains, that is, with the inner recesses of heart. If you haven't discovered how difficult obedience is, then you've but trifled with the idea of obedience. The  Savior is not merely a "helper" who enables us to "keep it together,"  but rather is the One who delivers us from the real, grievous, and most  damnable of iniquities by means of the intervention of his Divine Power.  The seriousness of our condition is measured by the seriousness of its  cure - namely, by the sacrifice of God the Son upon the cross for our  sins.   לֵב טָהוֹר בְּרָא־לִי אֱלהִים וְרוּחַ נָכוֹן חַדֵּשׁ בְּקִרְבִּי lev · ta·hor · be·ra·li · E·lo·him, ve·ru·ach · na·khon · cha·desh · be·kir·bi    "Create for me a pure heart, O God, and renew a right spirit within me" (Psalm 51:10)
 
   Hebrew Study Card  When King David cried out to the Lord, "Create in me a clean heart, O God," he did not use the Hebrew word yatzar (יָצַר), which means to "fashion" or "form" something from pre-existing material (Gen. 2:7), but he instead used the word bara (בָּרָא), a verb exclusively used in the Torah to refer to God's direct creation of the cosmos (Gen 1:1).   In other words, King David understood that no amount of reformation of  his character would be enough, and therefore he appealed to that very  power of God that alone could create yesh me'ayin, or "out of nothing." Such is the nature of the remedy we require.   
 
  Cleansing of the Leper...
 
  
 [ The following is related to this week's Torah (Tazria-Metzora)....  Please read the Torah portions to "find your place" here. ]
  04.25.12 (Iyyar 3, 5772)   Although the priest needed to go "outside the camp" to examine a metzora (i.e., "leper"), the person still needed to "be brought" to the priest to meet him there (Lev. 14:2-3).  In other words, the afflicted one was required to meet the priest  "half-way," a principle of teshuvah (repentance) expressed in Hashivenu (הֲשִׁיבֵנוּ): "Return us to You, LORD, and we shall return" (Lam. 5:21). Like the prodigal son who returns home, God waits for us at the "edge" of the camp to meet us half-way.
  The  case of the metzora reveals that God sometimes disciplines his child  with temporary "exile" so we can rediscover our need for His healing  touch. God imparted the spiritual disease of tzara'at to "remind"  us of our sin and need for atonement, and the purification ritual was  meant to illustrate our need for spiritual rebirth. The gracious aim of  affliction, then, is to "wake us from our slumbers" in order to reveal  the way of life... As C.S. Lewis once said, "God whispers to us in our  pleasures, speaks to us in our conscience, but shouts in our pains: It  is His megaphone to rouse a deaf world." שׁוּבָה יְהוָה חַלְּצָה נַפְשִׁי הוֹשִׁיעֵנִי לְמַעַן חַסְדֶּךָ shu·vah · Adonai · ha·le·tzah · naf·shi ho·shi·ei·ni · le·ma·an · chas·de·kha    "Turn, O LORD, deliver my life; save me for the sake of your steadfast love." (Psalm 6:4)
 
  
  Hebrew Study Card    A student once asked his rebbe: "Do we get punished for our  sins in this world?" His succinct response was, "Only if we are made  fortunate..." Paradoxically, punishment from God may be a blessing in  disguise, since there is no worse state in this life than to be  untouched by need, suffering and testing; there is nothing more dreadful  than to be forgotten or overlooked by God (Rom. 1:28).  Being afflicted with "tzara'at" is a blessed state, since it reveals  the nature of our lethal disease - and leads us back to the "edge of the  camp" where God gives us healing....
  Note: For more on this subject, see "Cleansing of the Leper."   
 
  Happy Birthday, Israel!
 
  
 [ Yom  Huledet Same'ach, Israel!  Happy 64th Birthday to the miraculous people  of the miraculous promised land! May God make your numbers like the  stars in heaven! ]
  04.24.12 (Iyyar 2, 5772)   Tomorrow at sundown we celebrate Israel's Independence Day, called Yom Ha'atzma'ut (yohm ha-atz-ma-OOT) in Hebrew (יוֹם הָעַצְמָאוּת). The word atzma'ut  (independence) comes from atzmi - "my bones" (i.e., etzem: עֶצֶם). The name reminds us of the God's glorious promise to revive the "dry bones" (עֲצָמוֹת) of Israel by bringing the Jewish people back from their long exile (Ezek. 37:1-6). Son of man, can these bones live?
  But why should Christians care about ethnic Israel?  After all, many Christian denominations advocate some version of "Replacement Theology"  and regard the promises God made to the Jewish people as belonging  exclusively to their church...  The existence of the modern State of  Israel therefore evokes little thanks to God from these groups, and some  of their ranks even regard Israel's revived presence on the world stage  as an embarrassment to their typically "liberal" theology.  Hence we see the (remarkably  bad) phenomena of so-called "Christian" church denominations that  express anti-Israel sentiment, even asking their followers to divest investments in Israel on behalf of the "Palestinians," etc. 
  Briefly,  we should care about Israel because the existence of Jewish people -  and of the nation of Israel in particular - demonstrates that God is faithful to the covenant promises He made to Abraham, Isaac, and Jacob (e.g., Gen. 15:9-21).  The perpetuity of the Jewish people - despite so much worldwide and  satanic hatred over the millennia - is an awesome testimony of God's  faithful love (Jer. 31:35-37).  עַם יִשְׂרָאֵל חַי / am Yisrael chai: "The people of Israel live!" Israel is a sign of the "sure mercies of David" (חַסְדֵי דָוִד הַנֶּאֱמָנִים) that are revealed in Yeshua, the Jewish Messiah (Isa. 55:1-6).   Moreover, the New Covenant itself, as foretold by the prophet  Jeremiah, explicitly promises the perpetuity of the Jewish people  thoughout the ages (Jer. 31:31-37): Behold, the days are coming, declares the LORD (יהוה), when I will make a new covenant (בְּרִית חֲדָשָׁה)  with the house of Israel and the house of Judah, not like the covenant  that I made with their fathers on the day when I took them by the hand  to bring them out of the land of Egypt, my covenant that they broke,  though I was their husband, declares the LORD. But this is the covenant  that I will make with the house of Israel after those days, declares the  LORD: I will put my law (תּוֹרָה)  within them, and I will write it on their hearts. And I will be their  God, and they shall be my people. And no longer shall each one teach his  neighbor and each his brother, saying, 'Know the LORD,' for they shall  all know me, from the least of them to the greatest, declares the LORD.  For I will forgive their iniquity, and I will remember their sin no  more."
  Thus says the LORD (יהוה),  who gives the sun for light by day and the fixed order of the moon and  the stars for light by night, who stirs up the sea so that its waves  roar– the LORD of hosts (יהוה צְבָאוֹת) is his name: "If this fixed order departs from before me, declares the LORD, then shall the offspring of Israel (זֶרַע יִשְׂרָאֵל) cease from being a nation (גּוֹי)  before me forever." Thus says the LORD: "If the heavens above can be  measured, and the foundations of the earth below can be explored, then I  will cast off all the offspring of Israel (זֶרַע יִשְׂרָאֵל) for all that they have done, declares the LORD. – Jer. 31:35-36 
 According  to this theologically critical passage, if you saw the sun shine today  or the stars in the night sky, you can be assured that God's promise to  preserve the "offspring of Israel" -- i.e., zera Yisrael -- is in  effect.  Indeed, in the world to come, heavenly Jerusalem will have the  names of the twelve tribes of Israel engraved upon its gates (Rev. 21:12). Note well that this is the only occurrence in the entire Tanakh (i.e., "Old Testament") that the New Covenant (בְּרִית חֲדָשָׁה)  is explicitly mentioned... It is a foundational passage of Scripture  for those who claim to be followers of the Jewish Messiah.
  In this connection, let me ask you a simple question.  If the King of the Jews is our hope and lives inside our hearts by faith, and if the King of the Jews calls Jerusalem the "City of the Great King" (Psalm 48:2, Matt 5:35), then it only makes sense that we would heed King David's admonition to "ask for the peace of Jerusalem..." שַׁאֲלוּ שְׁלוֹם יְרוּשָׁלָםִ יִשְׁלָיוּ אהֲבָיִךְ sha·a·lu  · she·lom ·  ye·ru·sha·la·yim, · yish·la·yu  · o·ha·va·yikh    "Ask for the well-being of Jerusalem; May those who love you be at peace" (Psalm 122:6).
 
   Download Study Card King  David was a great prophet. Note that the phrase "sha'alu shalom  Yerushalayim" actually reveals truth about our Savior Yeshua the  Messiah.  The word sha'alu actually means "ask" (as in ask a sheilah, a question).  Shalom is a Name of Yeshua, since He indeed is Sar Shalom (the Prince of Peace).  The word Jerusalem means "teaching of peace"  (the "Jeru" at the  beginning of the word comes from the same root as  the word Torah, which means teaching), so the phrase could be  construed as "ask about the Prince of Peace and His Teaching."  Yeshua  is indeed the rightful King of Jerusalem who is coming soon to reign  over all the earth.  מָרַן אֲתָא יְשׁוּעַ / Maranatha Yeshua! "Behold, I am coming soon, bringing my recompense with me, to repay everyone for what he has done" (Rev. 22:12). 
  Postscript: All the blessings Christians enjoy ultimately come from the root of  God's covenants with Israel... Yeshua our Savior was born the King of  the Jews, and plainly said salvation is "from the Jews" (Matt. 2:2; 27:11; John 4:22).  The Apostle Paul clearly warned those who think the church has  "replaced" Israel: "Remember it is not you who support the root, but the  root that supports you" (Rom. 11:18). This doctine is so foundational that it may be righly said that how you think about Israel will affect every other area of your theology. For more on this subject, see the article, "Is Christianity Anti-Jewish?"     |  
 
 
  The Leper Messiah...
 
  
 [ The following is related to this week's Torah (Tazria-Metzora)....  Please read the Torah portions to "find your place" here. ]
  04.24.12 (Iyyar 2, 5772)   "The Messiah -- what is his name?... The sages say,  the Leper Scholar..." (Sanhedrin 98b). But how was it that Yeshua was  able to touch the metzora ("leper") and yet remain clean himself (Matt 8:1-4)? Only because He is the LORD (יהוה), the true Healer. Just as Yeshua spoke with greater authority than Moses (Matt. 5:21-48), so He was able to do what Moses (and those under the Levitical system of worship) could not do -- namely, reach down in compassion and take away the uncleanness  from our lives.... Yeshua's blood creates the "waters of separation" (מֵי נִדָּה). He is the fulfillment of the "Red Heifer" sacrifice. Only Yeshua enters the "leper colony" of humanity and takes away our tzara'at (sin) by becoming ish machovot (אישׁ מַכְאבוֹת), a leper Himself, the Just for the Unjust, that He might make us acceptable before the LORD. כִּי־אַתָּה אֲדנָי טוֹב וְסַלָּח  וְרַב־חֶסֶד לְכָל־קרְאֶיךָ ki · at·tah · Adonai · tov · ve·sal·lach ve·rav · che·sed · le·khol · ko·re·e·kha    "For you, O Lord, are good and forgiving,  abounding in steadfast love to all who call upon you." (Psalm 86:5)
 
  
  Hebrew Study Card    Just as a body can become sick with illness, so can the soul: "I said, 'O LORD, be gracious to me; heal my soul (רְפָאָה נַפְשִׁי), for I have sinned against you!'" (Psalm 41:4). If you feel your sins biting you, and your heart is wavering and beginning to tremble, take your place on the outside of the camp, where the lepers are standing, for they are the ones for  whom the Gospel is intended.... Yeshua enters the leper colony to touch  the leper. He seeks and saves the lost.  The message of God's love and  forgiveness is received only by those who understand how much they need  it, to the self-confessed lepers of the soul... The gospel is sure  remedy for the sick, not the healthy; it is for the sinner, not the  saint. For those who accept Yeshua as their Redeemer, sin is turned  right through the pain He bore on the cross, and forgiveness is a matter  of sheer grace, not merit. There is joy in heaven for one sinner who  turns to God in repentance, and this implies that every time you go to  the LORD in your brokenness, in the truth of your need for Him, He will  receive you with divine happiness. 
  Note: For more on this subject, see the article, "The Leper Messiah."     |  
 
 
  Shadows and Reality...
 
  
 04.23.12 (Iyyar 1, 5772)   Sometimes we seem to forget that we are not home  yet... Socrates said that philosophy, when done correctly, was "practice  for death," since the passing shadows of this world pointed to  unchanging good, our true end. Likewise Yeshua our Messiah taught us to  take up the cross and die daily (Luke 9:23). 
  It is difficult for us to die, to let go, however, because we are attached to this world, and we often abide under the worldly illusion that we  will live forever, that tomorrow will resemble today, and that heaven  can wait...  History is littered with crumbling monuments offered to the  idols of this world. The Scriptures are clear, however: "The present  form (τὸ σχῆμα) of this world is passing away" (1 Cor. 7:31), and the heart of faith seeks a city whose Designer and Builder is God Himself (Heb. 11:10).  "So we do not lose heart. Though our outer self is wasting away, our  inner self is being renewed day by day... For the things that are seen  are turning to dust, but the things that are unseen endure forever (2 Cor. 4:16-18).  Because of our sin, creation was made "subject to vanity," though God  has overcome the dust of death by giving us an unshakable hope (Rom. 8:20). אָדָם לַהֶבֶל דָּמָה  יָמָיו כְּצֵל עוֹבֵר a·dam · la·he·vel · da·mah ya·mav · ke·tzel · o·ver    "Man is like a breath;  his days are like a passing shadow." (Psalm 144:4)
 
  
     The truth that hakol over (הַכּל עוֹבֵר), "everything passes" like a shadow, should help us keep our perspective  regarding the various moments of testing we all face in this life. As  Nachman of Breslov once said, "The whole earth is a very narrow bridge, and the important thing is never to be afraid" (כָּל־הָעוֹלָם כֻּלּוֹ גֶּשֶׁר צַר מְאד וְהָעִקָּר לא לְפַחֵד כְּלָל).  Yeshua is the Bridge to the Father, the narrow way of passage that  leads to life. He has overcome the world and its vanities. He calls out  to us in the storm saying, "Take heart. It is I; be not afraid" (Matt. 14:27).  When Peter answered the call and attempted to walk across the stormy  waters, he lost courage and began to sink, but Yeshua immediately  reached out his hand and took hold of him, saying, "O you of little  faith, why did you doubt (lit., think twice)?"   
 
  Sufficient unto the day...
 
  
 04.23.12 (Iyyar 1, 5772)   Who among us has not experienced loss? While we cannot escape suffering in this life, God can give us heart to face the struggle...  "You shall love the LORD thy God will all thy heart – particularly while you are in the midst of bewilderment, testing, and affliction. As  the prophet Job once exclaimed, "The LORD gave and the LORD has taken  away; may the Name of the LORD be blessed."  יְהוָה נָתַן וַיהוָה לָקָח  יְהִי שֵׁם יְהוָה מְברָך Adonai · na·tan,  vadonai · la·kach: ye·hi · shem · Adonai · me·vo·rakh    "The LORD gave and the LORD has taken away; may the Name of the LORD be blessed." (Job 1:21)
 
  
  Hebrew Study Card    We had nothing when we were born into this world, and all that we now have was given to us by hashgacha pratit - the providential plan of God.  As the LORD graciously gave, so He has  the prerogative to take away. Pain, suffering, and even death itself  surely do not come by accident but are rather part of the inscrutable  will of God, who works all things together for the good of creation. Gam zu l'tova – this too is "for the good," even if the good is not revealed in the  moment.  Job refused to blame God for his troubles, but instead he  understood that whatever God does (or allows) must itself good, and  there is no reason to doubt this, even if in the present there is  tribulation – indeed, even the throes of death. "Every good gift and  every perfect gift is from above, coming down from the Father of the  heavenly lights, with whom there is no variation or shadow due to  change" (James 1:17).  As it is written, lo yimna-tov laholekhim be'tamim (לא יִמְנַע־טוֹב לַהלְכִים בְּתָמִים), "no good thing does he withhold from those who walk in completeness" (Psalm 84:11), and you are made complete (תָּמִים)  because of the finished work of Messiah on your behalf.  Do not be  afraid of His providence: no good thing will the LORD withhold from  you....
  When Paul wrote, "in everything give thanks" (1 Thess 5:18), surely he understood the prospect of real suffering. It is through "much tribulation" that we enter the kingdom of God (Acts 14:22).  We do not ask God to insulate us from all troubles, but rather to be given the courage to carry on  despite the troubles. Hence one of our standard prayers in the tradition  is: בָּרוּךְ אַתָּה יהוה הַנּוֹתֵּן לַיָּעֵף כּחַ/ barukh attah Adonai ha-notef lai'ya'ef koach: "Blessed are You, LORD, who gives strength to the weak." 
  We cannot escape suffering in this life, but God gives us heart to face the struggle. Each day contains the opportunity to serve God even in the midst of trouble (Matt. 6:34). We cannot control much of what happens to us in this life, so our task is to sanctify time and trust that God will meet our true needs.  Taking refuge in God  means personally trusting in His goodness for your soul, despite  circumstances that might tempt you to lose heart. שָׁמְרָה נַפְשִׁי וְהַצִּילֵנִי  אַל־אֵבוֹשׁ כִּי־חָסִיתִי בָךְ sha·me·rah · naf·shi · ve·hatz·tzi·lei·ni al · e·vosh · ki · cha·si·ti · vakh    "Guard my soul and deliver me!  Let me not be put to shame, for I take refuge in you" (Psalm 25:20)
 
  
  Hebrew Study Card    al evosh, ki chasiti vakh - "Let me not be ashamed, for  I take refuge in You" - I am trusting in your mercy, your goodness,  your forgiveness... The sages liken this to a man who was found  wandering about at night, whom the city wardens sought to arrest. The  man shouted out to them: "Leave me be: I am the son of the king's  daughter!" The next day they brought the man before the king and told  him the story. When the king asked him why he had lied, the man said,  "When I saw they wanted to arrest me, to save myself I said I was your  grandson." The king then turned to the wardens and said, "Let him alone.  I do not want him to be humiliated for having put his trust in me." The  point of this mashal (parable) is that if an earthly king can  deliver someone based on such trust, how much more shall the Lord, who  delivers us with the salvation procured at the expense of His dear Son?
  In  this life we must learn to trust and let go... It is said in Rabbi  Meir's name: "With clenched fists we enter this world, as if to say,  'the whole world is mine to acquire'; with hands wide open we leave the  world, as though to say, 'I have acquired nothing in this world.'" As  the Apostle Paul earlier had said, "for we brought nothing into this  world, and it is certain we can carry nothing out" (1 Tim. 6:7).  Let us then live each day for what is eternally significant, letting go  of what needs to be let go, so that we are made ready to come before  the Divine Presence. May God "grant us the serenity to accept the things  we cannot change, the courage to change the things we can, and the  wisdom to know the difference." May He renew a steadfast spirit within  you and keep you from bitterness and despair, chaverim.
  Note: Our consolation in suffering, given by God, is intended to bring solace to others (2 Cor. 1:3-4).  As Kierkegaard once wrote, "What is a poet? An unhappy man who in his  heart harbors a deep anguish, but whose lips are so fashioned that the  moans and cries which pass over them are transformed into ravishing  music. His fate is like that of the unfortunate victims whom the tyrant  Phalaris imprisoned in a brazen bull, and slowly tortured over a steady  fire; their cries could not reach the tyrant's ears so as to strike  terror into his heart; when they reached his ears they sounded like  sweet music. And men crowd around the poet and say to him, "Sing for us  soon again" - which is as much as to say, "May new sufferings torment  your soul, but may your lips be fashioned as before; for the cries would  only distress us, but the music, the music, is delightful" (Either/Or). Often it is the secret wound that gives movement to the spaces between  the words, and that movement is what ministers to others. At any rate,  we trust that God will redeem our troubles and help us be a blessing to  those around us.     |  
 
 
  Israeli Independence Day Wed. - Thur. April 25th-26th, 2012
 
  
 [ Yom Huledet Same'ach, Israel!  Happy 64th Birthday to the miraculous people of the miraculous promised land! ]
  04.23.12 (Iyyar 1, 5772)   After the Jewish people had suffered for nearly 2,000 years of exile as foretold by both Moses (Lev. 26:38, 44; Deut. 28:64-64) and the Hebrew prophets (Isa. 43:5-6; Jer. 30:11; Joel 3:2; Ezek. 36:8-10; Hos. 9:1-10,  etc.), Israel was miraculously reborn as a nation in their ancient  homeland on May 14, 1948 (Iyyar 5, 5708). Today Jews across the world  celebrate Iyyar 5 as Israel Independence Day. 
  The word atzma'i (עַצְמָאִי) means "independent" in Hebrew; and atzmaut (עַצְמָאוּת) means independence, from atzmi - "my bones" (עֶצֶם). Hence the "Day of Independence" is called Yom Ha'atzmaut in Hebrew. The name reminds us of God's promise to revive the "dry bones" (עֲצָמוֹת) of Israel by bringing the Jewish people back from their long exile: הִנָּבֵא עַל־הָעֲצָמוֹת הָאֵלֶּה וְאָמַרְתָּ אֲלֵיהֶם  הָעֲצָמוֹת הַיְבֵשׁוֹת שִׁמְעוּ דְּבַר־יְהוָה  כּה אָמַר אֲדנָי יהוה לָעֲצָמוֹת הָאֵלֶּה  הִנֵּה אֲנִי מֵבִיא בָכֶם רוּחַ וִחְיִיתֶם hin·na·vei · al · ha·a·tza·mot · ha·el·leh · ve·a·mar·ta · a·ley·hem: ha·a·tza·mot · ha·ye·ve·shot · shim·u · de·var · Adonai; ko · a·mar · Adonai · E·lo·him · la·a·tza·mot · ha·el·leh hin·neh · a·ni · me·vi · va·khem · ru·ach · vich·yi·tem    "Prophesy over these bones, and say to them,  O dry bones, hear the word of the LORD.  Thus says the Lord GOD to these bones:  Behold, I will cause breath to enter you, and you shall live" (Ezek. 37:4-5)
     "So I prophesied as he commanded  me, and the breath came into them, and they lived and stood on their  feet, an exceedingly great army. Then he said to me, "Son of man, these  bones are the whole house of Israel (כָּל־בֵּית יִשְׂרָאֵל).  Behold, they say, 'Our bones are dried up, and our hope is lost; we are  indeed cut off.' Therefore prophesy, and say to them, Thus says the  Lord GOD: Behold, I will open your graves and raise you from your  graves, O my people. And I will bring you into the land of Israel (אַדְמַת יִשְׂרָאֵל).  And you shall know that I am the LORD, when I open your graves, and  raise you from your graves, O my people. And I will put my Spirit within  you, and you shall live (וְנָתַתִּי רוּחִי בָכֶם וִחְיִיתֶם),  and I will place you in your own land. Then you shall know that I am  the LORD; I have spoken, and I will do it, declares the LORD" (Ezek. 37:10-17).
  עַם יִשְׂרָאֵל חַי / am Yisrael chai: "The people of Israel live!" The nation of Israel is God's "super sign" that He is faithful to His covenant promises (Jer. 31:35-37). Celebrating Israel's independence acknowledges God's loyal love for us all...
 
    |  
   Note:  In 1951 the Israeli Knesset established the day immediately before Israel's Independence Day as Israel's Memorial Day (i.e. Iyyar 4). In practical terms, then, both holidays are combined and linked on the calendar (Iyyar 4-5), though their starting date can  be postponed or begun early, depending on whether there is a conflict  with the weekly Sabbath day. For instance, this year the two holidays  will start a day earlier (i.e., Iyyar 3rd) because Iyyar 5th is the Sabbath. For best results, always check a good Jewish calendar.   
 
  Parashat Tazria-Metzora
 
  
 [ The following is related to this week's Torah (Tazria-Metzora)....  Please read the Torah portions to "find your place" here. ]
  04.22.12 (Nisan 30, 5772)   This week we have a "double portion" of Torah: Tazria and Metzora.   According to traditional Jewish commentators, this section of Scripture  primarily concerns the relationship between the sin of lashon hara ("the evil tongue") and the divinely imparted affliction of tzara'at, sometimes (inaccurately) translated as "leprosy." 
  I  used to think lashon hara concerned cases of obvious abuse of the  tongue, for example, slandering another person or using profanity. Now  while these are certainly cases of lashon hara, the concept is larger  than that, and includes saying something bad about another person even if it happens to be true. In other words, lashon hara is gossip, spreading evil (even if true) reports, or expressing a negative or critical spirit about others. Such behavior is explicitly forbidden in Lev. 19:16. 
  The penalty for lashon hara was tzara'at, a skin condition that could only be diagnosed by a kohen (priest),  not a doctor. In other words, it was a spiritual malady that required  spiritual discernment to treat. If someone was diagnosed with tzara'at,  they were forced to leave society and undergo a period of mourning and teshuvah (repentance). 
  In traditional Jewish thinking, lashon hara is one of the worst of sins, and God is said to punish those who speak such with middah-keneged-middah -- "measure for measure" justice. Since spreading evil reports divided  others and caused isolation and loneliness, the metzora shall be  afflicted (with tzuris, troubles) and separated from the fellowship of Israel.  Indeed, some of the sages point out that the word metzora (one afflicted with tzara'at) is related to the phrase, motzi ra (one who speaks evil), and thereby conclude that evil speech is the  principal cause of the disease itself. Obviously we should flee from the  sin of lashon hara!  May God help each of us to always "speak the truth  in love" (Eph 4:15, 25). 
  Yeshua told us that "out of the abundance of the heart the mouth speaks" (Matt. 12:34),  and further warned us about the unthinking use of our words: "But I say  unto you, that every idle word that men shall speak, they shall account  for in the day of judgment. For by your words you shall be justified,  and by you words you shall be condemned" (Matt. 12:36-37). Note, however, that this does not mean that we are excused from making righteous judgments (John 7:24).   Sometimes it is the mark of a coward to refrain from speaking the  truth.  As Albert Einstein once said, "The world is a dangerous place,  not because of those who do evil, but because of those who look on and  do nothing."  We must "speak the truth in love," even if that means  sometimes offending those who wish to excuse or overlook evil  behavior...
  A midrash states that when the children of Israel  first heard the laws of tzara'at, they despaired and became very afraid.  Moses reassured them by telling them that tzara'at was a sign from God  that they were indeed a holy nation, since it is His way of encouraging  them to do teshuvah in order to be in fellowship with Him.  Likewise God  sometimes disciplines us for our sins (Heb 12:7-8) for the purpose of granting us the gift of teshuvah (2 Cor. 7:10).   We must therefore strive to make our conversation and the inmost  intent of our hearts "captive to the obedience of the Mashiach," blessed  be He (Matt. 5:37; Eph. 4:29; Col. 3:8; 2 Cor. 10:5; 1 Tim 4:2; etc.).
  In the Brit Chadashah, we read how Yeshua healed various "lepers" and even touched them (Matt. 8:2-3, Mark 1:40-41).  But how could He do this without Himself becoming tamei (unclean)?  Ah, this is a good sheilah (question),  but it is directly answered when we apprehend that Yeshua is none other  than YHVH who came in the flesh.  For remember, it was the prerogative  of the LORD God of Israel to "touch" those afflicted with tzara'at and  heal them based on their teshuvah, and in like measure, Yeshua entered  the "leper colony" of humanity to heal those who cried out to Him.  He  is the same yesterday, today, and forever, and His love reaches down to  those who are afflicted and oppressed on account of their uncleanness.  If you call upon Him, He will likewise touch you and restore you to  fellowship with God.  Blessed be His Name forever.
  One  final note of hope: Many of us are in various states of denial regarding  our own sinful condition and need for deliverance, which can be  illustrated by the case of the metzora and its progression in the life  of the afflicted.  
  A doctor friend of mine once reminded me that  tzara'at was an infectious condition.  As long as the affliction was  spreading across the body, the person was metzora and therefore tamei (unclean), but if the tzara'at (finally) covered the person from head to toe, he was to be considered "clean" (Lev. 13:12-13).   In other words, in some cases the metzora needed to be entirely  covered with their affliction before they were set free, and this  further reminds me of our need to be fully identified with the death of  Yeshua in order to experience the resurrection life!  It is only by  understanding how radical the need for our deliverance that Yeshua's  healing touch can be manifest.     |  
 
 
  What do you (really) want?
 
  
 04.20.12 (Nisan 28, 5772)   If you were to ask God for just one thing, what  would it be? Personal happiness? A peaceful family life? Physical or  emotional health? Money to relieve your financial distress? Personal  power and respect?  Romance or a satisfying love life? Honestly, what is  the ruling passion of your life? What gets you out of bed in the  morning? What are you really seeking? What gives you hope in the life?  King David gives his answer: אַחַת שָׁאַלְתִּי מֵאֵת־יְהוָה אוֹתָהּ אֲבַקֵּשׁ  שִׁבְתִּי בְּבֵית־יְהוָה כָּל־יְמֵי חַיַּי  לַחֲזוֹת בְּנֹעַם־יְהוָה וּלְבַקֵּר בְּהֵיכָלו a·chat · sha·al·ti · me·et · Adonai, · o·tah · a·va·kesh shiv·ti · be·vet · Adonai · kol · ye·mei · chai·yai la·cha·zot · be·no·am · Adonai · u·le·va·ker · be·he·kha·lo    "One thing have I desired of the LORD, that will I seek after:  that I may dwell in the house of the LORD all the days of my life,  to envision the beauty of the LORD and to inquire in his Temple." (Psalm 27:4)
  Hebrew Study Card    In this verse, King David says,  "One thing I ask of the Lord; that is what I will seek." Notice  immediately that David asked for one thing – not many things.  He  did not come with a litany of requests.  He was not double minded,  wanting and hating the good.  As Kierkegaard said, "purity of the heart  is to will one thing." David sought the best he could find. He wanted  the "pearl of great price."
  The verb translated "I will seek" (avakesh) comes from the verb bakash meaning "to desire." The noun form, bakashah, means a request (in modern Hebrew the word bevakasha means "as you wish" or "you're welcome").  The verse could therefore be  read as, "The one thing I ask from the Lord is that which I will desire." 
  This  is a prayer for surrender. "Lord, I pray to you not as I understand  You, but as You understand Yourself..." The "one thing" that David  wanted above all else was to know the Lord - to "behold the beauty of  the Lord, and to inquire in His Temple." This is what we need. We need  eyes of wonder; we need eyes that are open to the glory and Presence of  God - in everything. 
  Desire itself is a "neutral" thing, of course. "The flesh lusts against the spirit, and spirit against the flesh" (Gal. 5:17).   Most of us desire things that do not ultimately satisfy us. This is  the "default" mode. We settle for trifles. We yield to petty desires  that do not quench the eternal thirst within us.  We cheat ourselves of  the eternal for the sake of temporal.  Kierkegaard calls such boredom  the root of all evil.  It is the "spirit" of the flesh - the inner  restlessness that leads to discontent.
  Having spiritual desire is  a great gift from heaven, because through it we first realize what we  really want and need.  Our eye becomes "single" (Luke 11:34).  The mark of spirituality (ruchaniyut) is wonder and contentment. The "beauty of the Lord" is to be filled  with glory and peace.  If we consciously delight ourselves in the Lord,  He has promised to give us the desires of our heart (Psalm 37:4).  Seek first the Kingdom of God (Matt. 6:33).
  David understood that seeking God required "all the days of my life" (כָּל־יְמֵי חַיַּי) – as preparation for eternity. This life (olam hazeh) is a likened to a shadowy corridor leading to the world to come. David wanted to dwell (יָשַׁב) or to abide before the Divine Presence all his days, so that he would be prepared for his promotion to come. 
  So again, if you were to ask God for just one thing, what would it be?     |  
 
 
  Know Him in all your ways...
 
  
 04.19.12 (Nisan 27, 5772)  The Hebrew word emunah (אֱמוּנָה), often rendered as "faith" in many English translations, comes from the root word aman (אָמַן),  which means to rest securely or rely upon (and from which we get the  word "amen"). The root word occurs for the first time in the Torah in  connection with Abraham: "And he believed (וְהֶאֱמִן) the LORD, and He counted it to him as righteousness" (Gen. 15:6).  Abraham was declared tzaddik (righteous) because he believed and understood that the LORD would fulfill His promise to him to become  the father of a multitude, despite his old age.  Abraham's faith was  cognitive in the sense that he knew the character of God and relied upon  God's promise.
  If emunah describes the cognitive dimension of faith, the word bittachon (בִּטָּחוֹן) describes its emotional dimension. The word bittachon comes from a root word (בָּטָח) that means to trust, "to lean upon," to feel safe and secure. Bittachon describes emotional acceptance of the goodness of the LORD.  Some of the sages have said that while emunah represents a state of  understanding (בִּינָה)  that God is intimately involved in all the events of the universe,  bittachon means personally trusting in God in every situation for your  good.... Rabbi Bechaya put the distinction this way: "Everyone who  trusts has faith, but not everyone with faith trusts." Bittachon is an  intuitive awareness of the personal love of God for your life, coupled  with complete trust that He cares for you (Rom. 8:28). It is an expectation that the love of God is for you, too. בְּטַח אֶל־יְהוָה בְּכָל־לִבֶּךָ וְאֶל־בִּינָתְךָ אַל־תִּשָּׁעֵן בְּכָל־דְּרָכֶיךָ דָעֵהוּ וְהוּא יְיַשֵּׁר ארְחתֶיךָ be·tach · el · Adonai · be·khol · lib·be·kha ve'el · bi·na·te·kha · al · tish·a·en be·khol · de·ra·khe·kha · da·ei·hu · ve·hu · ye·ya·sher · or·cho·te·kha    "Trust in the LORD with all your heart, and do not lean on your own understanding. Know Him in all your ways, and He will straighten your paths." (Prov. 3:5-6)
 
  
  Hebrew Study Card    "In all your ways know Him," that is, in all that you put your hand to do look for the Divine Presence and guidance (1 Cor. 10:31). As King David stated, "I have set the Lord always before me, because He is at my right hand, I shall not be moved" (Psalm  16:8). Likewise you must consciously make up your mind that you are  standing before your Creator and King: da lifnei mi attah omed, "know before Whom you stand."  If you are trusting God bekhol libekha, with all your being -- with an undivided heart -- without ambivalence or double-mindedness, then have confidence that you are doing God's will (1 John 5:15). "All your deeds should be done le'shem shamayim (לְשֵׁם שָׁמַיִם) - for the sake of heaven" (Pirke Avot 2:17). The Malbim comments that the phrase "know Him in all your ways" uses the word derakhim (דֶּרֶכִים), a word used to refer to general ways of knowing God through His revealed character (e.g., generosity,  kindness, humility, etc.), while the phrase, "he will make your paths straight" uses the word orekhim (אוֹרְחוֹת),  a word that suggests particular application in daily life. Trusting in  the LORD brings inner light from the Holy Spirit wherein the our way is  made "yashar" (upright), the same word used in names "Jeshurun" and  "Yisrael."
  Note: Though we are to know the LORD in all our ways, both cognitively and emotionally, surely it is possible for someone to have emunah but not bittachon, head but not heart. This is the case of the  mere "professor" of faith who does not know  the LORD existentially within his or her heart. Theologians and  philosophers can "understand" that God exists, they can "assent" that He  (alone) is the Creator of the universe who acts in justice, they can  even claim that the Scriptures are true, and yet they can be in a state  of profound spiritual darkness (James 2:19).  "The devil is a better theologian than any of us and is a devil still."   On the other hand, it is also possible to have bittachon without  emunah, that is, heart without head... This is the case of a gullible  soul that is willing to accept any "wind of doctrine" even if it clearly  contradicts the truth of the Scriptures. For example, people who stress  the "sweetness and light" of God are often offended at the prospect of  God's judgment for sin, or those who chase after spiritual gifts or seek  manifestations of the spirit are often misled by charlatans...  To be  balanced, we need both emunah and bittachon - we need doctrine with affection, head with heart, "spirit and truth" (John 4:23-24). For more on this subject, see the article "Emunah and Bittachon."     |  
 
 
  Cowardice of the Crowd
 
  
 [ Yom HaShoah, or "Holocaust Remembrance Day," is observed on Nisan 27,  which this year runs from sundown on Wed. April 18th until sundown Thur.  19th... ]
  04.19.12 (Nisan 27, 5772)  Yom HaShoah,  or "Holocaust Remembrance Day," marks Israel's day of commemoration for  the approximately six million Jews, including over a million children,  who perished as a result of the actions carried out by Nazi Germany and  its accomplices. It was inaugurated in 1953 and is annually observed on  the 27th day of the month of Nisan, just a few days after Passover Week  in the spring.  In stark contrast to the celebration of freedom  commemorated during Passover, Yom HaShoah marks a very difficult time  when we revisit specters of absolute evil and again ask haunting  questions about the power and presence of malevolence in our world.  Often we are left speechless over the cruelty and depravity of human  beings. It all seems so inexplicable, so needlessly horrible, so  senseless and so vile...  We may feel powerless, despondent, or full of  indignation, but still we ask ourselves, how could this have happened?
  Simply put, the Holocaust was the result of cowardice and self-deception... The systematic, institutionalized, and "politically correct" murder of  the Jewish people was made possible solely because people forfeited their God-given responsibility to live as authentic individuals by surrendering their will to "the crowd."  Giving up your identity to join a gang inevitably leads to  fragmentation of the soul, potentially inviting in a "legion of demons."  Regardless of whether it's a gang of thugs running an inner city  neighborhood, or the pressure to keep quiet over ethical misconduct at  your place of work, or the desire to feel "approved" as a good citizen  of the state, or even the pressure to conform to a particular religious  group, in either case, "losing yourself" in the midst of the crowd is an  evasion, a cop-out, and a desecration of the image of God within  you. Indeed following the crowd is a form of slavery where you  surrender your freedom for the sake of a supposed sense of security...  You become self-deceived because you no longer "own" yourself but became  the ward of "another."  Becoming a member of a crowd makes you into a  copy or similitude, a shadow rather than a person of substance. 
  Popular  leaders know how to work and bribe the crowd - whether they are big  business leaders, professional politicians, or leaders of large  religious organizations. Often they have the charisma that appeals to  human vanity and oratory to "tickle the ears" of those who hear them  speak. Politicians and "community organizers" understand how the crowd  marginalizes the individual, how the voice of reason and conscience are  suppressed, thereby eradicating the conviction and character of the  solitary individual. Therefore the true prophet is always "a voice  crying in the wilderness," an outsider to the crowd, always in  collision with the world and its devices. The crowd-pleaser, on the  other hand, carefully crafts his words for the applause of the mob. The  crowd-pleaser is a flatterer and therefore the very antithesis of  the prophet.  Politicians and demagogues are masters at appealing to  the gut instincts and lusts of a crowd, and therefore they are  inveterate liars. They entice subgroups to follow their directives, to  form self-regulating gangs, and to reward those who unquestioningly  accept their "group-think." Leaders of the crowd invariably "see past"  the individual and regard only numbers, general popularity, special  interests, and the abstract role of "the people" in general. This also  occurs in various church settings, too, where the approval of the crowd  is more important that the needs of individual people. Indeed, it is  often the case that the larger the church group, the more bureaucratic its portrayal of a personal Savior; likewise, the more the church becomes like a bureaucracy, the  more it obscures the ability of the individual to be touched by the  Spirit of God. Many churches today follow their pastors for the same  reasons the world follows its leaders.  As Dietrich Bonhoeffer wrote,  "Every cult of personality that emphasizes the distinguished qualities,  virtues, and talents of another person, even though these be of an  altogether spiritual nature, is worldly and has no place in the  Christian community; indeed, it poisons the Christian community... Where  there is a crowd there is a hunger for a crowd identity and the lust to  have a worldly king over them who will give them that identity" (Life  Together). הִכָּנְסוּ דֶּרֶךְ הַפֶּתַח הַצַּר  כִּי רָחָב הַפֶּתַח  וּמְרֻוַּחַת הַדֶּרֶךְ הַמּוֹלִיכָה לַאֲבַדּוֹן  וְרַבִּים הַהוֹלְכִים בָּה hi·kan·su · de·rekh · ha·pe·tach · ha·tzar ki · ra·chav·  ha·pe·tach u'me·ru·va·chat · ha·de·rekh · ha·mo·li·chah · la'a·va·don ve·rab·bim · ha·ho·le·khim · bah    "Enter by the narrow gate. For the gate is wide and the way is easy that leads to destruction, and those who enter by it are many." (Matt. 7:14) Notice that Yeshua said the path to heaven is narrow. It is not "the great highway" that crowds of people tread. Few go  there, and even those few individuals who tread the way do so in  solitude, misunderstood and often rejected by others. Ultimately the  "strait gate" (στενῆς πύλης) is Yeshua Himself, who is ha'sha'ar (הַשַּׁעַר), the gateway to the Kingdom (John 10:7).   The narrow gate is small, humble, and therefore inconspicuous to the  adulterous crowd that seeks only "signs and wonders." The gate is  narrow, and few there be that find it.  "If any man will open the  door, I will come into him..."  The sages ask, "Why is the world to  come created with the letter Yod? (the least of the alphabet)? Because  "the righteous which are in it are few."  The gate is narrow because we  are laden with pride and need to divest ourselves of our self-will to  enter through... We must come to the end of our own agenda to enter the  way of God's salvation. 
  Likewise the Apostle Paul wrote, "Do you  not know that in a race all the runners run, but only one receives the  prize? So run that you may obtain it" (1 Cor. 9:24).  This is not a race in competition with others as much as it is a race for you to become an individual before God, since only "one" receives the prize. The prize is for all who run the race, but only those who run as individuals before God may obtain it... Just as an earthly race indicates  perseverance and individual stamina, so each of us must be earnest in  our race to God.
  It is the fear of man that drives many of us to  say and think in ways that are self-deceptive and sinful. By assigning  for ourselves labels, by aligning ourselves with certain doctrines or  ideologies, by engaging in certain formulaic rituals, etc., we hope to  rid ourselves of the dread that we are eternally responsible for our own  personal decisions. "Group-think" and accepting the propaganda of mass media are tools used by social engineers to enslave you. The devil's logic is always that of mediation, compromise, consensus, synthesis. How many of us are willing to sell our very souls for the  creature comforts vainly promised by this world and its princes? How  many of us have the resolute faith to turn away from the will of the  crowd and face ourselves?
  The Holy Spirit speaks to individuals, as if your singular soul was the chief end of God's creation. God's  words are never directed to the crowd. As Kierkegaard notes: "The truth  can neither be communicated nor be received without being before the  eyes of God, nor without God's help, nor without God being involved as  the middle term (mediator), since God is the truth. It can therefore  only be communicated by and received by "the single individual" in  contrast to the abstract, the fantastic, impersonal, "the crowd" - "the  public," which excludes God as the middle term - since the personal God cannot be the middle term in an impersonal relation. Honoring every individual  human is the fear of God and the love of "the neighbor..." Yet never  have I read in the Holy Scriptures this command: "You shall love the  crowd;" even less: "You shall recognize in the crowd the court of last  resort in relation to the "truth." It is clear that to love the crowd is  the way to all sorts of temporal and worldly advantage, yet it is untruth; for the crowd is untruth" (That Solitary Individual). 
  We must never forget what happened to the Jewish people under Hitler.  The Holocaust was made possible because people timidly refused to stand apart from the group to serve as bold witnesses of the truth. And the great  risk of our age is the revival of political fascism that attempts to  again control, disarm, and violate people's freedom all for the supposed  greater good of the "state." We must remember that silence in the face  of evil is itself evil: "First they came for the communists, and I  didn't speak out because I wasn't a communist. Then they came for the  trade unionists, and I didn't speak out because I wasn't a trade  unionist. Then they came for the Jews, and I didn't speak out because I  wasn't a Jew. Then they came for me, and there was no one left to speak  out for me" (Martin Niemöller). 
  There are instances when we must  be willing to sacrifice our lives rather than to violate a commandment  of Torah, such as being forced to murder someone upon pain of death.  In  other words, it is better to undergo kiddush Hashem (die as a  martyr) than to commit certain sins, such as murder, incest, or being  forced to renounce our faith. In these cases the sages say yehareg ve'al ya'avor (יֵהָרֵג וְאַל יַעֲבוֹר),  "be killed rather than transgress." May the LORD God of Israel help  each of us to "remember and never forget" that we must  personally stand  for the truth - even should that mean kiddush Hashem for us.  Amen.     |  
 
 
  Beginning at the beginning...
 
  
 04.18.12 (Nisan 26, 5772)  It's been quipped that self-righteous people are  those who know the Bible's commandments, decrees, and judgments, and can  "fake" observance better than those who don't.... Are you uptight about  laws, rituals, and rule-following behaviors? Do you squint the eye when  you see people act in ways that you disapprove? God wants your heart,  chaverim. Obey the first commandment - to love the LORD your God with  all your heart - before you go about trying to correct others. כִּי חֶסֶד חָפַצְתִּי וְלא־זָבַח  וְדַעַת אֱלהִים מֵעלוֹת ki · che·sed · cha·fatz·ti · ve·lo · za·vach  ve'da·at · E·lo·him · me·o·lot    "For I desire faithful love and not sacrifice; and the knowledge of God more than burnt offerings." (Hosea 6:6)
  Hebrew Study Card    The heart is what needs cure: "The devil is a better  theologian than any of us and is a devil still" (Tozer). "The Bible is  very easy to understand. But we Christians are a bunch of scheming  swindlers. We pretend to be unable to understand it because we know very  well that the minute we understand, we are obliged to act accordingly"  (Kierkegaard). Faith is the real work of our lives - living, breathing,  eating, drinking the truth.... We get caught up in doctrinal matters,  when the real concern is our heart of faith. "It is so hard to obey  because it is so hard to believe..." Let's quit the pretense, and put  away the religious charades. In Alcoholics Anonymous, it is well known  that only a drunk can help a drunk. The same is true for sinners: only  sinners can really help sinners. Formal religions often do not help,  since they are structured on the assumption that there is an "in group"  and an "out group," and, should the religious elite forget that we all  sick and in need of healing, they are nothing but blind guides who will  lead people right into the ditch.
  We must always remember that  knowledge should serve the greater aim of love. Beware of people who  want to "fix" your theology without taking the time to know your  heart... Beware of those who want to correct you with a few words "in  the love of Jesus" that serve as the darts thrown from the enemy.  You  can no more understand a person's theology through an isolated statement  or comment than you can understand their heart based on an isolated  episode in their life. You have to take the time to understand things in context, and just because you do not understand does not make the other person beholden to you... The first duty of love is to listen to another... Let every man be swift to hear, slow to speak, slow to wrath (James 1:19).     |  
 
 
  Note:  April 2012 updates continue here.
   
 
 
 
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