If Israel was ‘the chosen’ in the “Old” Testament, are the New Testament believers “the new chosen”?

[First posted in 2014.  We know from reading the “Old Testament” of the Christian Bible, that Israel was clearly the chosen people/nation of the “OT God”.  Christian teaching claims that not only did the New Testament supersede the Old Testament, but that believers in Jesus Christ have collectively taken the place of Israel!   Hence, the virtual Church is the “New Israel.”   Why? Because in their thinking,  Israel failed to fulfill its preordained destiny; read Paul’s Epistle to the Romans to understand the original divine plan that Israel was kept in the dark about (according to him anyway) , and this switching or shifting from one select nation to elected individuals from all nations comprising a major world religion.

 

This is from chapter 4 of MUST READ/MUST OWN: Who are the REAL Chosen People? – by Reuven Firestone. Reformatted and highlighted for this post.Admin 1.]

 

———————————-

 

Chosenness and Covenant in the New Testament

 
Image from exploringbiblicalchristianity.com

Image from exploringbiblicalchristianity.com

The New Testament represents God’s message to the world as conveyed by the acts and words of Jesus. No ordinary prophet, Jesus was God incarnate, so his words and deeds—and the accompanying explanations of their meaning recorded in scripture—are no less than the direct message of God.

 

The original texts of the New Testament were written in Greek and date from about 45 CE to about 145 CE, but the decision as to which of these should be included in the canon of official scripture took centuries to become finalized. This was a process that reflected the particulars of the historical context in which it occurred. That context was the Near East of Late Antiquity.

 

Christianity and the Religious Context of Roman Palestine

 

The late antique Near East was quite different from the ancient Near East discussed in the previous chapters.  Divided between the two great empires of Persia and Rome, religion was much less tribal, more universal both in physical range and worldview. The national religion of Persia was a form of Zoroastrianism, while the national religion of Rome was a kind of paganism that had been profoundly influenced by Greek and Roman pantheism, Greek philosophy, Roman administrative and political interest, and ideas and notions that had been current in the old indigenous Near Eastern religions.

 

As noted earlier, the Jesus movement emerged in an environment in which established religions were under strain. The old Roman system was not meeting the spiritual and religious needs of many Greco-Romans. Similarly, the old biblical system, centered around the Jerusalem Temple, which had been weakened by the loss of Judean political independence, was profoundly challenged by the new ideas represented by Greece and Rome, and somewhat less so by Persian religion and culture. By the year of Jesus’s birth, the religion of biblical Israel had lost much of its luster.  New religious movements were springing up from within the pagan and monotheistic religious worlds, and their leaders naturally competed for influence and support. In the cosmopolitan culture of Roman Judea, they discussed and argued with one another about the tenets and assumptions of their faith.

 

One of these movements coalesced around the person of Jesus. It is now quite clear that Jesus lived his life as a Jew, and his followers were also Jews. But exactly what kind of Jews Jesus and his community represented is not at all clear.

 

Just as the ancient religion of Israel was not monolithic (recall the many religious customs and practices that were uprooted by Josiah’s reforms mentioned in 2 Kings 23), neither was the Judaism at the time of Jesus monolithic. Various movements that are identified as sometimes political and sometimes religious—remember the intimate connection between religion and peoplehood or polity in the Near East—were battling one another in words and deeds over dominance over the Jews of Judea.

 

These were battles about Jewish identity and meaning in a world in which so many of the old assumptions could no longer be certain. Where was God in a world of Roman oppression and weak Jewish leadership? Uncertainty about the future of Israel was endemic. Changes were weakening the unity of the community and the meaning and efficacy of Temple ritual. The resulting insecurity and malaise were shaking the very foundations of Judaism. Many considered an end time immanent, the possibility of an apocalypse that would entirely change the world order.

 

A number of popular movements emerged during this period that intended to bring the Judean community back on track. These included popular prophetic movements and others that we now refer to as messianic movements—groups that expected a political or military redeemer, a descendant of King David, to restore the Davidic monarchy of old. Under Roman occupation, some groups seem to have expected the arrival of a more miraculous figure who would redeem Israel both physically and spiritually, and they attracted followings during Jesus’s lifetime.

 

Jesus’s messianic identity was thus tied intimately to his religious and political context. He preached and ministered in the Galilee, a region in what is today northern Israel, and his association with miracles and compassionate, charismatic leadership gained him disciples and followers.

 
Image from www.yhwh-glory-end-time-ministry.com

Image from www.yhwh-glory-end-time-ministry.com

Jesus was known as a healer who would make things right again. He cast out demons (Mark 1:32-34) and even brought the dead back to life (Matt. 9:18-26), an act that certainly awed his witnesses but was not considered unbelievable (Elijah had done the same in 1 Kings 17:17-24). He argued with his Jewish compatriots over the meaning of God’s will, and like many other Jews, he reminded all who would listen of the immanent coming of God’s kingdom (Mark 1:14-15).

 

Jesus lived at a time and in a place of political and religious instability, a historical period rife with intense argument and polemic. All four Gospels depict Jesus in repeated controversy with Jews, especially scribes and Pharisees, who are portrayed as representing a rigid Jewish establishment perspective that lacked real spirituality (Matt. 23, Mark 12, Luke 20, and John 7).

 

The issues around which Jesus and other Jewish leaders of his time preached and argued with their fellows were never resolved during his lifetime. The controversy and polemic that would become so emblematic of the relationship between the religions of Christianity and Judaism thus actually began as internal arguments among Jews.

 

Jesus had many enemies, both Roman and Jewish, and they are depicted in New Testament sources as conspiring to bring about his demise and death. He was humiliated, physically abused, and then crucified. His ignominious end was a great shock for his followers, who were shattered by the brutal dashing of their highest hopes. But the story did not end with Jesus humiliation. What occurred next was the extraordinary event of the resurrection, not witnessed but nevertheless proven to many, first tentatively by an empty tomb, and then by Jesus’s personal appearance before several of his followers (Matthew 28, Luke 24). And it was the resurrection that proved his redemptive, messianic status, confirmed by Jesus himself, who appeared unrecognized before two of his followers and said,

“’Was not the Messiah bound to suffer in this way before entering upon his glory?’ “Then, starting from Moses and all the prophets, he explained to them in the whole of scripture the things that referred to himself” (Luke 24:26-27).

 

Eventually, and in common with what academics refer to as a process of sect formation and then transition from sect to new religion, the Jesus movement evolved into a separate religious institution. It came to be recognized both by its own adherents and by those outside the community as discrete faith called Christianity, the religion of Christ or “the anointed one” (in Greek, Christos).

 

As this happened, some of the earlier internal Jewish arguments were recast as arguments among believers representing separate faith communities. Because the Gospels were not canonized until at least the third and perhaps even the fourth century, this transition from internal Jewish argument to Jewish-Christian polemic is reflected even in the texts of scripture. And the followers of Jesus did indeed become a separate faith community that stood outside the broadest margins of the movements that we identify as the Jewish movements of Late Antiquity. 

 

The process of separation and differentiation is popularly referred to in academic discourse as the “parting of the ways.” It is complex, and scholars are not in agreement over many of its details. But it is clear that when the two communities recognized their distinct identities as unique and mutually exclusive, the polemic that was built up around the old Near Eastern notion of chosenness reached a high level of intensity.

 

One of the signature differences between the separating faith communities was their notion of covenantal relationship with God.

  • In the Jewish system, which retained the biblical notion of religious peoplehood as it evolved into Judaism, covenantal membership derived from birth of a Jewish mother or formal religious study and conversion. It required circumcision, acknowledgement of the divine origin and eternal validity of Torah, and personal loyalty to the required ritual, civic, and moral-ethical behaviors set down in the Torah and its interpretation. Although Gentiles could be rewarded by God on this earth and even in the world to come, they could not be a part of God’s covenanted people without these.
 
  • Among Christians, on the other hand, after passing through the early period when virtually all followers of Jesus were Jews of one form or another, the overwhelming majority of believers were Gentiles, and circumcision was no longer a requirement for covenant membership. Neither was obedience to what came to be considered by Christians to be an outmoded system of law that had been superseded by God’s grace. Gentiles became part of God’s new covenant through personal faith in the saving power of Jesus as Christ-Messiah. Not only were they welcomed into the new covenantal community, but they also became the exclusive holders of a new covenantal relationship in Christ that excluded all Jews who either would not or could not accept his transcendent status.
 

This position was of course strongly opposed by the Jewish establishment. The Jews were well-established monotheists who were generally deeply respected in Greco-Roman society, even if rather resented. The burden was on the new Christian community to authenticate the new movement in terms that would demonstrate the truth of its claims.

 

Those who followed Jesus naturally found support for the truth of his mission in the world around them, and like the Jesus of Luke 24:27 who explained to his disciples how references in “the whole of scripture”—meaning the Hebrew Bible—pointed to his messiahship, they look to the Hebrew Bible for support as well. Those who believed in Jesus saw clear scriptural proofs and prophecies of his birth, mission, death, and resurrection. They also saw that the chosen, covenantal relationship between God and Abraham depicted in scripture was actually a proof of the new chosen status of those who had faith in Christ.

 

Chosen through Faith

 

Romans 4 are devoted to making sense of the mystery of God having chosen Abraham.

 

“What does scripture say? ‘Abraham put his faith in God, and that faith was counted to him as righteousness” (4:3).  

 

Abraham was chosen by God for his faith rather than for his obedience, for his relationship with God began even before he was asked to prove his obedience to God through circumcision and the establishment of the covenants (4:4-12).

 

“It was not through law that Abraham and his descendants were given the promise that the world should be their inheritance but through righteousness that came from faith” (4:13).

 

The following few verses make the case that obedience to the law, which was the cornerstone of emerging rabbinic Judaism, was not the real purpose of God’s chosen relationship with Abraham. Abraham’s is having been chosen by God was, rather, on account of his faith, and that faith includes, by extension, faith in resurrection and salvation through Jesus.

 

If the heirs are those who hold by the law, then faith becomes pointless and the promise goes for nothing. . .The promise was made on the ground of faith in order that it might be a matter of sheer grace, and that it might be valid for all Abraham’s descendants, not only for those who hold by the law, but also for those who have Abraham’s faith , for he is father of us all. . . His faith did not weaken. . . And that is why Abraham faith was “counted to him as righteousness.The words, “counted to him” were meant to apply not only to Abraham but to us; our faith too is to be “counted,” the faith in the God who raised Jesus our Lord from the dead; for he was given up to death for our misdeeds, and raised to life for our justification. (Rom.4:14-25) 

 

The letter of James argues the same point and concludes by connecting God’s special designation of Abraham as “loving friend” with Abraham absolute faith.

 

“Was it not by his action, in offering his son Isaac upon the altar, that our father Abraham was justified? Surely, you can see faith was at work in his actions, and by these actions, his faith was perfected? Here was fulfillment of the words of scripture: Abraham put his faith in God, and that faith was counted to him as righteousness,’ and he was called ‘God’s friend’” (James 2:21-23).

 

As important as Abraham is to Christianity, however, the new symbol of God’s most intimate relationship with humanity is Jesus. Jesus represents the quintessence of intimacy, and God’s love for Jesus, God’s own son, becomes transferred through Jesus’s sacrifice to all those who would have faith in him.  At one level, then, the chosen is Jesus, described in the New Testament as the divinely chosen descendent of David identified as the Messiah:

 

Do not be afraid, Mary, for you have found favor with God. And behold, you will conceive in your womb and bear a son, and you shall call his name Jesus. He will be great, and will be called the Son of the Most High; and the Lord God will give to him the throne of his father David, and he will reign over the house of Jacob forever; and of his kingdom, there will be no end. (Luke1:30-33)

 

The subtext for this passage is 2 Samuel 7:12-13, when God tells David,

 

“When your days are fulfilled and you lie down with your fathers, I will raise up your offspring after you, one of your own issue, and I will establish his kingship. He shall build a house for My name, and I will establish his royal throne forever. I will be a father to him, and he shall be a son to Me …Your house and your kingship shall ever be secure before you; your throne shall be established forever.”

 

In a later passage in the same Gospel, the actual words used by God to confirm Jesus’ authoritative status includes the idiom of chosenness:

 

“There came a cloud which cast its shadow over them; they were afraid as they entered the cloud, and from it a voice spoke: ‘This is My son, My Chosen; listen to him’” (Luke 9:35).

 

Other passages also single our Jesus as symbolic of the chosen relationship with God.

  • Not only is Jesus God’s chosen son (consider the subtext of Isaac as the one chosen for Abraham’s unfulfilled sacrifice in Gen. 22),
  • but he also becomes the actual sacrifice whose blood becomes “the blood of the covenant, shed for many for the forgiveness of sins” (Matt. 26:38; Mark 14:24).
  • He is the” good shepherd” who will lead his flock directly to God:
      • “I am the door; anyone who comes into the fold through me will be safe. He will go in and out and find pasture…
      • I am the good shepherd;
      • I know my own and my own knows me, as the Father knows me and I know the Father: (John 10:9-15).
 

Those who follow the extraordinary and divinely chosen Jesus gain a part of Jesus’s extraordinary blessing. Their faith in Jesus’s incomparable merit actually brings a certain merit upon them, and that merit includes a kind of personal election. Many Greco-Romans and a few Jews, indeed, entered into the fold through Jesus.

 

Most Jews, however, seem not to have followed him, yet they nevertheless claimed to have the chosen status of Abraham’s descendants without following Jesus. They represent the establishment religion in the New Testament, and whether or not some Jews actually intended to kill Jesus, there can be no doubt that they opposed him vigorously.

 

The Gospel of John accuses them of plotting Jesus’s death, and notes how they would cite their genealogical relationship with Abraham to prove their elect status. Jesus turns the idiom of kinship relationship on its head by accusing them, metaphorically, of acting as if they were children of the devil rather than of Abraham.         

 

 “I know that you are descended from Abraham, yet you are bent on killing me because my teaching makes no headway with you. I tell what I have seen in my Father’s presence; you do what you have learned from your father.”

They retorted, “Abraham is our father, ”“If you were Abraham’s children,” Jesus replied, “you would do as Abraham did. As it is, you are bent on killing me, because I have told you the truth, which I heard from God. That is not how Abraham acted. You are doing your own father’s work”. They said, “We are not illegitimate; God is our father, and God alone.” Jesus said to them, “If God were your father, you would love me, for God is the source of my being, and from him I come. I have not come of my own accord; He sent me. Why do you not understand what I am saying? It is because my teaching is beyond your grasp. Your father is the devil and you choose to carry out your father’s desires. He was murderer from the beginning, and is not rooted in the truth; there is no truth in him. When he tells a lie he is speaking his own language, for he is a liar and the father of lies.” (John 8:37-44).

 

By Jesus’ day, conversion was both a possibility and a reality. In fact, many Greco-Romans who were neither Jewish nor Christian “shopped the market” during the first century CE and later in search of more personally relevant religion. This was the largest potential pool of religious consumers, and some early church fathers noted in their writings how Greco-Romans listened to both Jewish and Christian leaders and attended various worship services.

 

Both rabbinic Judaism and Christianity represented newly emerging religious movements during the period, but because Judaism insisted that it was carrying the banner of biblical religion, Jews were also represented in the New Testament as the religious establishment, though the most powerful religious establishment was actually represented by the Roman state through worship of the emperor. 

 

Primogeniture and Promise

 

If a new religious movement attacks the establishment head-on and aggressively, the polemical assault may not only cause it to suffer more from the results of direct confrontation, but it may also alienate potential followers who are considering their religious options before joining any movement. Successful new religious movements sometimes work subtly with authenticating symbols, therefore, and in ways that will accomplish the opposite of the desire of the establishment to denigrate them.

 

In the following passage in Romans 11, for example, Paul starts off as if affirming the unique chosen status of Israel but then subverts that notion through a brilliant argument based on well-known biblical symbols and motifs:

 

I ask then: Has God rejected his people? Of course not! I am an Israelite myself, of the stock of Abraham, of the tribe of Benjamin. God has not rejected the people he acknowledged of old as his own. Surely you know what scripture says in the story of Elijah—how he pleads with God against Israel: “Lord, they have killed your prophets, they have torn down your altars, and I alone am left, and they are seeking my life.” But what was the divine word to him? “I have left myself seven thousand men who have not knelt to Baal.” In just the same way at the present time a “remnant” has come into being, chosen by the graced of God. But if it is by grace, then it does not rest on deeds, or grace would cease to be grace. What follows? What Israel sought, Israel has not attained, but the chosen few have attained it. The rest were hardened. . . I ask, then: When they stumbled, was their fall final? Far from it! Through a false step on their part salvation has come to the Gentiles, and this in turn will stir them to envy… It is to you Gentiles that I am speaking. As an apostle to the Gentiles, I make much of that ministry, yet always in the hope of stirring those of my own race to envy, and so saving some of them. For it their rejection has meant the reconciliation of the world, what will their acceptance mean? Nothing less than life from the dead! (Rom. 11:1-15)

 

A similar reworking of earlier symbols may be found in it same epistle:

 

Not all descendants of Israel are truly Israel, nor, because they are Abraham’s offspring, are they all his true children; but in the words of Scripture, “Through the line of Isaac your descendants shall be traced” [Gen. 21:21]. That is to say, it is not those born in the course of natures who are children of God; it is the children born through God’s promise who are reckoned as Abraham’s descendants. (Rom. 9:7-8)

 

The critical subtext for this passage is Genesis 21:10-13: 

 

She said to Abraham, “Cast out that slave-woman and her son, for the son of that slave shall not share in the inheritance with my son Isaac.”

The matter distressed Abraham greatly, for it concerned a son of his. But God said to Abraham, “Do not be distressed over the boy or your slave; whatever Sarah tells you, do as she says, for it is through the line of Isaac that your descendants shall be traced. As for the son of the slave woman, I will make a nation of him too, for he is your seed.”

 

This is a critique of the Jewish claim of chosenness based lineage. Paul’s argument is that God’s mysterious choice of Isaac over Ishmael for the covenantal chosen relationship is explained by the fact that earlier in the narrative, God promised that Abraham would have a second child, who would be named Isaac through Sarah. Therefore, while Ishmael was indeed Abraham’s firstborn son, he was simply a normal child, whereas Isaac was divinely promised and thus attained a preferred, chosen status.

 

In the biblical system of primogeniture, a father’s firstborn son served as the primary inheritor. Ishmael thus should have attained higher status than his younger brother, Isaac. Yet Isaac, who was born miraculously in Abraham and Sarah’s old age and according to God’s promise, was accorded higher status by God.

 

According to this reading, simple genealogy is trumped by divine intent. In the same way, says Paul, the Jewish prior claim to chosenness based on direct blood-kinship with Abraham in trumped by the divine promise to those who follow Jesus as Christ- Messiah.

 

The same analogy is made in an extremely powerful way in Galatians 4:21-31:

 

Tell me now, you who are so anxious who are so anxious to be under the law will you not listen to what the law says? It is written there that Abraham had two sons, one by his slave and the other by his free-born wife. The slave-woman’s son was born in the course of nature, the free woman’s through God’s promise. This is an allegory. The two women stand for two covenants. The women stand for two covenants. The one bearing children into slavery is the covenant. The one bearing children into slavery is the covenants. The one bearing children into slavery is the covenant that come from Mount Sinai: that is Hagar. Sinai is a mountain in Arabia and it represents the Jerusalem of today, for she and her children are in slavery. But the heavenly Jerusalem is the free woman; she is our mother!… Now you, my friends, like Isaac, are children of God’s promise, but just as in those days the natural-born son persecuted the spiritual son, so it is today. Yet what does scripture say?  “Drive out the slave and her son, for the son of the slave shall not share the inheritance with the son of the free woman.” [cf. Gen 21:10] You see, then, my friends, we are no slave’s children; our mother is the free woman. It is for freedom that Christ set us free. Stand firm, therefore, and refuse to submit again to the yoke of slavery.

 

The inheritance in this passage is the blessing of God through Jesus as Christ-Messiah. Inheritance is not simply attained by kinship relationship. It must be acquired through God’s intentionally, and that intentionality is expressed through the very personhood of Jesus.

 

Many other New Testament passages could be cited to show how important the competition was for being the real chosen of God. One of the most powerful and famous is the anonymous letter to the Hebrews 8:6-13, referenced above:

 

In fact, the ministry, which has fallen to Jesus, is as far superior to [Israel’s] as are the covenant he mediates and the promises upon which it is legally secured. Had the first covenant been faultless, there would have been no need to look for a second in its place. But God, finding fault with them, says,

“The days are coming, says the Lord, when I will conclude a new covenant with the house of Israel and the house of Judah. It will not be like the covenant I made with their forefathers when I took them by the hand  to lead them out of Egypt; because  they did not  abide by the terms of the  covenant, and I abandoned them, says the Lord. For the covenant I will make with the house of Israel after those days, says the Lord, is this: I will set My laws in their understanding and write them on their hearts ; and I will be their God, and they shall be My people. And they shall not teach one another, saying to brother and fellow-citizen.’ Know the Lord!’  For all of them, high and low, shall know Me; I will be merciful to their wicked deeds, and I will remember their sins no more.”

By speaking of a new covenant, He has pronounced the first one old; and anything that is growing old and aging will shortly disappear.

 

The bulk of this passage is a citation of Jeremiah 31:31-34 Biblical scholars consider the Jeremiah passage to be part of a larger prophecy of consolation and restoration directed to the northern kingdom of Israel that had been destroyed by the Assyrians years earlier. The interpretation of the letter to the Hebrews is that the “new covenant “refers to one to one established between God and a new religious community that will replace the old.

 

This is one of the powerful texts that claim the supersession of Christianity as the “true Israel” (the Latin phrase is verus Israel). In this passage, the subtext of Jeremiah 31 is brought right into the text to demonstrate and strengthen the point. In this view expressed there, the new covenant represents a new dispensation, a new relationship between God and a replacement “chosen.” The old claim to chosenness has no meaning because God has ended that relationship. The new chosen reflects the most perfect articulation of the divine will.

 

Chosenness as a Zero- sum situation

 

The arguments that we have been reading reveal the view that the role of covenanted community was possible for one side only. In the language of game theory, the competition for divine election is depicted in these texts as a “zero-sum” situation:

    • there can be only one elected,
    • only one chosen at any time.
    • If the Israelites are chosen,
    • the Christians cannot be, and vice versa.
    • Only one form of monotheism is valid.
 

The assumption was born in a period when the Israelites were the only community to arrive at the notion of monotheism. There was only one form of monotheism in the world of ancient Israel, or at least only one that could be known to them. The other expressions of monotheism or proto-monotheism mentioned above never survived. All other human communities and nations known to Israel were polytheists. Because the one Great was ”none of the above,” meaning that God was not  limited to being like a  tribal  god of any of the nations—and only Israel realized this—then only Israel could be chosen by the true  God. There was only one chosen, and that chosen was Israel.

 

The notion of a single chosen is deeply embedded in the chosenness texts of the Hebrew Bible:

 

Exodus  19:5-6: “You Shall be My treasured possession among all the peoples, for all the earth is Mine.” 

Leviticus 20:26: “I have set you apart from other peoples to be Mine.”

Deuteronomy 7:6: “The Lord your God chose you to be His treasured people.”

Deuteronomy 14:2: “The Lord your God chose you from among all other peoples on earth to be His treasured people.”

Isaiah 42:1: ”This is My servant, whom I uphold, My chosen one, in whom I delight.”

 

The notion of a single chosen became a dominant theme of Christianity as well, but the difference was that rather than being a religious peopledhood as in ancient Israel, and then rabbinic Judaism, the chosen in Christianity was a voluntary religious community, one of voluntary believers. But only those within that clearly defined community benefit from the new expression of divine election:

 

”He who believers and is baptized shall be saved but he who does not believe shall be condemned” (Mark 16:16).

 

Given the repeated statements of unique status, it is not surprising that the first two monotheistic religious system to emerge out of the fall of the Jerusalem Temple agreed that there could only be one true monotheism. 

Quid est Veritas – 4 – Old Truth, New Truth, Half Truth, All Truth and Nothing But . . .

 

[First posted in 2013;  another “looking back, moving forward” post; always good to remember the beginnings of our journey toward Sinai6000,  if only to appreciate how far we have ‘travelled’ in Torah re-education/rediscovery in the last six years!—Admin1]

 

 

For a whole year, no one seemed to notice the slight change we made on the borrowed quotation from some unknown source about TRUTH that is printed on the scroll that acts as the banner that greets the visitor who purposely or accidentally lands on this website. The original 2nd line was about laziness that is content with half-truth.”

 

We discovered this quote way back in the 1990s when we were still diehard Christians,  frantically propagating Christianity’s version of truth to “save souls”.  One of us first spotted it on a decorative wall hanging and shared it with the others; thankfully ELZ@S6K had written it down because most of us had forgotten about it.  

 

When we reorganized as Sinai 6000, we remembered the quotation and fortunately ELZ still had it in her notebook.  Why did we change the original quote, would “Source Unknown” surface to slap our wrists for deviating from the original? Whoever penned the lines definitely expressed our sentiments 100%, and we are so grateful to “Anonymous” whoever he or she is.  Actually, the original wall hanging attributed it as “An Old Hebrew Prayer” which would have fitted so neatly in our reorganized belief system . . . .but after googling it, all claims indicated “Source Unknown.”

 

Now why change “half truths” to “old truths”?  Because it perfectly reflects the Sinai 6000 journey from “New Testament” truth— which to us is “old” (although “Half Truth” could have fitted just as well)—to “Old Testament” truth which is the original OLD but was NEW to us.  Follow?

 

It is indeed the right prayer to grace our banner, for that is what Sinai 6000 is all about: the unquenchable quest for Truth. If a visitor does not retain what he has read in our many articles, we hope this ‘Truth quote’ will continue to linger in his soul and as a result, he will pursue for himself, from all sources, as much as he can learn about God and man and the life we are commanded to live. There are many “Truth” sources to choose from but a seeker will eventually learn to be discerning, know what to swallow, and what to spit out.

 

Will we ever arrive at the whole truth and nothing but . . .?  Most likely not.  For now, we’re keeping it simple and we really did choose the best quote for this website and for our S6K’s  raison d’etre.

 

Just look at the other choices we could have taken, none reflect us to a T:

 

Had we not ended up choosing this perfect quotation, we might have chosen the Pilate quote which is a rewrite of the Gospel verse by Tim Rice, l yricist of Andrew Lloyd Webber’s “Jesus Christ Superstar”:

 

“And what is ‘truth’?

Is truth unchanging law?

We both have truths.

Are mine the same as yours?”

[Pilate: ‘Quid est veritas?’ – Gospel Truth? – 1]

 

NSB@S6K 

logo-e1422801044622

Satisfaction – What? Who? Why?

LETTER..0001

[I found this handwritten text in my folder;

I don’t know– who wrote it, when I got it, and why do I even have it?  I’m guessing that it was written by Sinaite ELZ who had contributed many posts to this website when she was still ‘with us’,, that is, living on earth. 

 

Please check out:

 

Even if the signature is hardly legible . . . still, I am attributing it to her,  because it sounds like her, and the signature appears closest to her name.   However, if the real author reads this post and will bother to correct me so he/she can claim the credit for it, that would be most welcome because, of course, we want to give credit where credit is due! Or,  if any friend/acquaintance of the real author recognizes this quote, please let alert us!  But until the real author makes that claim, we will attribute this to Sinaite ELZ. —Admin1]

 

 

 ——————————-

 

 

             Satisfaction  . . .

is what we hope to find

in the midst of the monotony in our lives;

and delectation of the simplest kind

may result in brief content,

if only for a passing moment.

 

Here one minute and gone the next ,

it often leaves us anxious and vexed.

And makes us think of plans and ways

to lengthen the measure of its stay.

 

It seems we are allowed tiny pleasures

to help us get through from day to day.

A momentary kiss…

is something to treasure

and will keep the lonesome demons at bay

though not entirely drive them away

till we find ourselves another amusement

that beguiles us but is sadly evanescent.

 

The stratagem to extend satisfaction

simply lies in your own volition.

Decide to cherish it for what it was,

Don’t think of why,

Think just because.

Don’t cling to time like a grasping vine

that wrings the essence out of its beauty.

Its way of being is simply a mystery

that may never be solved by you or me.

To keep satisfaction is to constantly recall:

how wonderful it was to fall,

to remember fondly things once said,

so they live forever in your head.

To be constantly satisfied

is therefore found…

 in spinning those memories

round and round.

What does the God of Israel require of Gentiles?

Image from www.myjewishlearning.com

Image from www.myjewishlearning.com

[First posted in 2014;  —Admin1]

 

————-

 

Sinaites were invited to a gathering of Jewish men (and their partners) who have formed a local Jewish club in our city of residence.  The occasion for the gathering was to meet a young Jewish rabbi . . . he looked like the stereotype you see in movies:  black hat, black suit, white shirt, beard.

 

We were introduced, and since the president of the Jewish Club was still under the impression we were ‘Jew-wannabe’, he added “they are interested in joining Judaism.”

 

I immediately corrected ‘no, we’re not interested in joining; we have done our homework on Judaism, it is not for us.’

 

The Rabbi asked, ‘so what are you then?’

 

And that’s always the opening for us to get a foot in the door, so to speak, of anyone even vaguely interested in what we stand for:  “We refer to ourselves as Sinaites.”

 

R:  “And what is a Sinaite.?”

 

In a nutshell, we explained:  “We are gentiles who live the Torah.  We don’t aspire to become Jewish or join Judaism; we recognize that the God of Israel has already delineated the lines between Israel and the rest of the world, the nations, Gentiles.  We know which laws and commandments apply to us from the Torah; we have isolated these from the ones specific for Israel and Israel only.”

 

We related our surprise upon discovering that the masses of slaves that left Egypt during the Exodus were a ‘mixed multitude’ of Jacob’s descendants and slaves from other nations, Gentiles.

 

No visible reaction.

 

R:  “So what have you concluded as applicable to you?”

 

S6K:  “Briefly:

    • the 10 commandments,
    • the dietary laws of Leviticus 11, and
    • 3 out of the 7 feasts of Leviticus 23.”

R:  “Which feasts?”

 

S6K:

1)The weekly Sabbath,

2) Shavuot which is the anniversary of the giving of the Torah, and

3) Yom Kippur since all men, whether Jew or Gentile sin against God and fellow-humans and need to repent of their sins.

 

This time he nodded, then asked further:  “And how did you arrive at all this?”

 

We said, ” by studying what is uniquely for Israel and what is universal for all humankind.”

 

He thought for a while, then said, “This is an interesting perspective, I have not heard of it.  I was exposed to the teaching of Rabbi Menachem Mendel Schneerson” and he gave us a calling card.

 

On one side of the card is a picture of Rabbi Schneerson with the text:

 

“The Rebbe calls You.  The seven Universal Noahide Laws that G-d gave to Moses on Mt. Sinai apply to all mankind.  The leader and prophet of our time, Rabbi Menachem Mendel Schneerson, calls on us to unite around these precepts, for they are the secure foundation upon which to build society and a happier life for everyone.”

Moschiach is on his way.  Our part is to greet him by adding acts of goodness and kindness.”  — The Rebbe, CNN 1991

 

Long live our master, teacher, and Rebbe.  King Moschiach, forever!”

 

www.7for70.com

 

On the other side of the card is this:   THE SEVEN UNIVERSAL LAWS The Way to True Peace

 

1.  Believe in One G-d:

Reject any form of idol worship.

2.  Honor G-d:

Do not blaspheme.

3.  Preserve Human Life:

Do not murder.

4.  Respect Family Relationships:

Do not commit adultery, incest, homosexuality, etc.

5.  Respect Property:

Do not steal.

6.  Respect G-d’s Creatures:

Do not eat the flesh of an animal that is still alive.

7.  Establish honest Courts.

And a Just Legal System.

 

What was on the card struck us as strange, coming from a Rabbi, this one in front of us and the Rabbi Schneerson whose writings we have read in our Jewish resources.

 

Our discussion was cut short because the social gathering had ended, so we did not have time to express our view on the Universal Laws that apply to gentiles, embraced by the Noahide Movement.

 

We would have wanted to comment that we never read in the Torah text that such laws were given on Sinai, unless Rabbis made an out-of-context determination which they do in their books.

 

It makes sense since, in the NT Book of Acts, the Jerusalem Council made a resolution about gentiles coming to the synagogue (we have a post about this) and what should they be required to obey since they’re not Jews? (Acts 15).  We were taught by our Christian bible teachers that actually those requirements fall under Noahide laws, that’s the first time we heard of Noahide.

 

To move on:  the Sinaite position is expounded in the articles under the category SINAI6000 but briefly:   In the progressive revelation of our Lord YHWH’s Will for humanity, we learn gradually through His interaction with handpicked figures or people groupings He communicated within the Torah books:

  • He had specific commands given to the first couple for testing their free will to obey or disobey His instructions, with specific consequences for the latter;
  • Then as early as Cain we learn God’s position on the principle on which Torah living is based:  “Am I my brother’s keeper?”
  • With Noah, we learn of His wrath toward evil caused by sinful humanity, but also we see His mercy and get a glimpse of His being a covenant-making Deity who makes promises He keeps and who uses visual signs in nature, such as the rainbow, to serve as a perpetual reminder to  humankind (or those paying attention and believing that the flood account was real).

 In general, that is as much as one can glean from the narratives starting with the Creation to the Flood.  If the Creator/God who interacted with these figures stopped there, then that is all we are privileged and limited to know, but since He didn’t stop there and in fact went on with more teaching points in the tower of Babel, the call of Abraham, the specific line that issued from Abraham and Sarah that led to the formation of the distinct people who would carry the name of the third patriarch Yaakov/Yisrael—-well, then it is only reasonable and logical to conclude that with more light and more revelation, we go as far as the Self-Revealing God allows us to go.  And that would lead us to Sinai where the Torah was given, simultaneous with the birth of the chosen nation.

 

We could have joined Noahides, remembering them from our Christian bible study; in fact we checked them out and considered the possibility of affiliating ourselves with them . . . but after much research and discussion and deliberation, we concluded the Sinai revelation superseded the Seven Universal Laws determined by Noahides (or Rabbis) for Gentiles.  In fact, admittedly we were puzzled to read on the Rabbi’s card about Noahides because as far as we understand, the TORAH is for all humanity, Jew and Gentile; that is why the multitude that left Egypt and stood before the REVELATOR on Sinai was, according to Exodus, a MIXED multitude, not just Israelites.  The message is clear: Torah is to be modeled by Israel for the Gentiles/Nations to witness that the Torah life focusing on other-centeredness is the ideal for life in community.  What are commandments 5-10 for when one lives alone?

 

Perhaps now that one Rabbi has heard  and understood our position, who knows, Sinai 6000 might be added to his calling card, to distribute to Gentiles who might  consider Sinaite-ism instead of Noachide-ism as the alternative to Judaism.  

 

You think!?

 

 

      NSB@S6K
logo 

Sig-4_16colors

 

 

A Sinaite’s Musical Liturgy – 2nd Sabbath of October 2019

Image from jp.depositphotos.com

Image from jp.depositphotos.com

[Singing the Sabbath liturgy is a Sinaite’s ‘prayerful tribute in music’ to the God we love and worship.  We take our cue from Christian hymnologists who were inspired not only to pay tribute to the Christian God but to teach the flock through the lyrics of simple tunes. That is why they wrote 4 or more stanzas; it was a good way to let doctrine sink into the hearts and minds of the faithful.  Unfortunately at church, song leaders do not appear to know this effective ‘teaching tool’ or perhaps the one-hour ‘service’ is running out of time and so they would sing only the first stanza or the first and the last, not realizing the intent of lyricists.  

Preaching through songs is effective, somehow the memory better retains words set to music.  We are following their lead and hope you are familiar with the music; lyrics have been revised according to Torah teaching.   Again, our apologies to the lyricists for replacing their original words but as we keep justifying it, we’ve been familiar with the tunes as former Christians but no longer agree with the original message; still, imitation is the best compliment.

And since we have attached the instrumental accompaniment to the hymns, there is no more reason NOT to sing our Sabbath liturgy.  May our God YAHUWAH be pleased with our efforts to glorify Him through our Sabbath liturgy. —Admin1.]

——————————–

 

KINDLE THE SABBATH LIGHTS

 

 

[OriginalTune:  “Come thou long-expected Jesus” 

or “Alleluia Sing to Jesus” – Revised Lyrics according to Sinaite creed

and Retitled:  “Let Us Kindle the Sabbath Candles”]

Image271

  1.  Let us kindle the Sabbath candles,

their glow will flow

straight into our eyes,

Like the gleam from the Light of TORAH

which reaches deep

in heart and in mind.

CHO:  When the darkness

fades in the distance

as kindled lights move

to take up its space,

Shadow and dimness

that darken the heart and mind of man 

brighten up when His WORD  is heard.

2.  Let us kindle the LIGHT of TORAH,

its glow will flow to brighten our lives.

Let our minds be enlightened daily

by WORDS of Life, from the GIVER of Life.

CHO: Sabbath lights in our hearth and home 

keep on glowing long after sunset has come,

TORAH continues to light up each day and every day

through the week till next Sabbath  comes.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

3.  Israel, you’re the servant light glowing

through the world’s dark days and dark nights;

Firstborn son and God’s suff’ring servant,

You’ve journeyed through your depths and your heights!

Cho:  May your lamp always shine so brightly

that all humanity won’t miss the sight,

 Servanthood, Sonship is yours, truly yours and yours alone,

Till we get to the end of days.

 

4.   Lord YAHUWAH, You’re LORD of Sabbath,

Creator God, You’re Sovereign and King.

Primal LIGHT Who illuminated this world

to give us reason to sing:

 Cho:  Hallelu YAH, praise Lord YAHUWAH,,

Our God of LIGHT and of LOVE and of LIFE,

How can we serve You and love You

and share Your TRUTH and LIGHT,

Live Your WAY and just do what’s RIGHT!

 

 

Psalm 111 

1  Praise the Lord

I will extol the Lord with all my heart

in the council of the upright and in the assembly.

2  Great are the works of the Lord;

they are pondered by all who delight in them.

3  Glorious and majestic are his deeds,

and his righteousness endures forever.

4  He has caused his wonders to be remembered;

the Lord is gracious and compassionate.

5  He provides food for those who fear him;

he remembers his covenant forever.

6  He has shown his people the power of his works,

giving them the lands of other nations.

7  The works of his hands are faithful and just;

all his precepts are trustworthy.

8  They are established forever and ever,

enacted in faithfulness and uprightness.

9  He provided redemption for his people;

he ordained his covenant forever—

holy and awesome is his name.

10  The fear of the Lord is the beginning of wisdom;

all who follow his precepts have a good understanding.

To him belongs eternal praise.

 

 

BLESSINGS

[Original Tune:  Oh how He loves you and me, Revised Lyrics]

Image from ourdailyblessinglife-amyb.blogspot.com

Image from ourdailyblessinglife-amyb.blogspot.com

 

1.  For all the joys of our days,

For untold blessings always,

This wine we drink

symbolizes our joy,

Thank You, dear Father,

thank one another,

for joy we share on this day.

2.  Thank You for bread that we share,

for Your provisions and care,

We bless You back for the blessings You give,

How can we love You, just as You love us,

Oh,  how He loves you and me!

 

[Pray specific blessings upon family and other loved ones. 

Name them:  parents, siblings, children,  relatives;

friends, staff, special people with specific needs, concerns.]

 

 

  SHABBAT MEAL

Image from curtis.loftinnc.com

Image from www.beitsimcha.com

Image from www.beitsimcha.com

 

 

 

HAVDALAH 

[Original Tune:  Lead me to Calvary, Revised Lyrics]

Image from discoversinai.net

Image from discoversinai.net

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

LORD of my life, please light my way, 

all through the darkness be,

Lest I get lost, can’t find my way, 

over my life, please be!

 

Thou art my SHEPHERD, lead me to

pastures of green to feed.

Call out my name that I may hear 

warnings that I should heed.

 

CHO:  Lest I forget Thy voice I heard,

Lest I remember not Thy word,

Lest I forsake the True Path I’ve tread,

Lead me back, LORD, to Thee.

 

Teach me just like the Israelites, 

all that I need to be,

Show me just how to sacrifice, 

Show me what pleases Thee.

 

Best of all that I own and have, 

unworthy tho’ they be,

Best of my mind and soul and will, 

All are reserved for Thee.

 

CHO:  Lest I fall short of Thy command,

Lest I let go of Thy precious Hand,

Light up my path, my eyes, my life,

Lead me back, LORD, to Thee. 

 

Image from Edzzy Quotes

Image from Edzzy Quotes

 

Shabbat shalom to all Sabbath-Keepers

among our Christian, Messianic, Unaffiliated friends and colleagues,

On behalf of  the Sinai 6000 Core Community,

 

    NSB@S6K

AIbEiAIAAABDCNPkvrXuucmdeSILdmNhcmRfcGhvdG8qKGJkZTc0YTk3NmUxMGM4OTAzZjk5MDhkMjdkZDI2ODQ3OTliYmQ2MDkwAe5UdNp0lvYvCf8bjAFEJOY_fdsj

Q&A: That recurring question about Israel’s ‘chosen-ness’…

[First posted in 2012, shortly after we started this website.  When a visitor clicks old posts, it gives us the opportunity to review it and decide if it is still relevant to our ever-developing current understanding and convictions. This week, Israel is again in the news, battling it out with an old old enemy that refuses to allow it to exist.  Hence, this repost.—Admin1.]

 

—————————

Question:  

What are we Gentiles supposed to be doing in the meantime?? That is, while we’re waiting for the the Jews to get their act together and save the world…

 

Answer: Sinai 6000 Perspective

 

For starters, let’s get a few things straight. This is how we have figured it out for our group:

 

  •  Israel was not “chosen” to “save the world”  but to model the lifestyle God requires for people to be able to live together in harmony and peace, with an OTHER-centeredness and GOD-centeredness.  TORAH spells that out;  take care of the underprivileged, the poor, the stranger among you, the widows, the children, be kind to your slaves, etc.   The reason for having wealth is to be in the position to bless others; that’s how God takes care of His world.
  • Israel’s “chosen-ness” is spelled out as early as Deuteronomy 7 and 9, nothing about them deserves being chosen; it’s GOD’s sovereign choice, He formed them historically and genealogically; they didn’t “get it” until after they lost the land, the Temple, the kingdom during the Babylonian exile, when the only thing they did have was the Torah.  And that’s when the pendulum swung the other way; they got totally Torah-focused, observant, fenced God’s commandments with their own man-made rules and traditions to avoid violating them.  Eventually they did fulfill their mandate to be the ‘light to the gentiles” . . . the Hebrew Bible was attached to the “New Testament” and is there to be read by all; unfortunately, who’s REALLY reading, and if they are, who TRULY UNDERSTANDS?
  • With chosen-ness is grave responsibility . . . as it is with freedom is responsibility . . . Israel fails over and over, according to their own history recorded in the Hebrew Scriptures. What nation would write about their failures the way Israel has done in TNK?  You’d think they’d edit that to make themselves look good, instead they look sooooooooo bad! By the time they do get it right, the persecution gets worse and guess who does the persecuting worse than anyone else, the Christians! Hitler points to Christian writers like Martin Luther, etc. to justify his agenda to annihilate the Jews
  • An excellent book to read on the heavy responsibility of being God’s Light-bearer to the gentiles is Jonathan Sack’s To Heal a Fractured World:  The Ethics of Responsibility.

Q:  So while Jews can’t get their act together what do we gentiles do? 

 

If we’ve learned TORAH, we obey! It’s as simple as that.  For every little thing you learn and do, that’s one more person doing what’s right, whether or not Jews get their act together. You become a light-bearer yourself.

 

Hanukkah, the Jewish festival is not one of the original 7 feasts of Leviticus but—if you truly understand its significance not only to Jews but to gentiles, this festival of lights is a good introduction to deeper truths.  The hanukkiah menorah [9 stem] has that center light which is called the “servant candle” or if done with original olive oil, it’s the “servant light.”  The servant [Isaiah 40-50] is Israel, God’s light-bearer.  They did succeed through the preservation of God’s original revelation in Torah [5 books of Moses], and through the witness of their history and position in world current affairs, that the God on Sinai continues to work His Will through them.  The re-established nation of Israel is secular, yet it is the only country that observes Shabbat — the commandment that testifies to Who is the Creator, the same self-revealing God on Sinai.

 

Our problem is, our exposure to Torah has been through Christian teaching, infused with New Testament theology that goes TOTALLY counter to original Torah. Christianity invented original sin, need for a savior, Satan and fallen angels, virgin birth, etc. ,  an EXCLUSIVE theology decided upon by councils of men.

 

Jesus supposedly teaches in the Gospels that if you as much as look at another woman, you’ve already committed adultery . . . not so . . . we’re always exposed to temptations around us, so thoughts and inclinations will crop up all the time but we don’t have to succumb. We are given FREE WILL and FREE CHOICE, just like Adam and Eve, Cain . . . God’s warning to Cain says it all  . . . sin is crouching at your door . . . but you can dominate it . . . God didn’t say you are helpless because you inherited Adam’s sinful nature, etc. etc.   {Read Ezekiel 18 that says children don’t inherit their father’s sins, each is responsible for his own].

 

Deuteronomy and Joshua say “choose today whom you will serve” . . . it’s always a choice.  But people have to be enlightened with Torah to have a choice, and to understand it.  You’ll never understand “Old Testament” as taught by Christianity, you will understand many ways to understand OT through Jewish teaching.  And that’s why it’s good to start over and learn from the rabbis. Our Sinai 6000 group have gone the rounds in Jewish websites; we don’t get “confused” at all, the Jewish perspective is simply so different from the Christian. It’s time to start learning from them.  But your study should not end there, with the Jews . . . we are gentiles; there are instructions specific to Jews and there are others that are universal to all nations, to gentiles.  Learn which is which by reading the context of isolated passages used as prooftext.  We have many articles here to help you through that process of relearning how to read the Hebrew Scriptures.  Please avail of them.

 

NSB@S6K

logo

The fruit of the righteous is a tree of life – Proverbs 11:30

Source: jewishlearningworks.org

Source: jewishlearningworks.org

[First posted on June 7, 2012.

 

The Hebrew Scriptures often communicate divine truths in fictional as well as historical narratives.  We read story after story about God in conversation or interacting with men from Genesis through Deuteronomy. Teachings, instructions and laws, as well as examples,  are embedded in these stories.  That is why they are so much easier to grasp and remember than theological treatises full of abstract words.   Many stories follow one after the other so that sometimes, readers do not know how to distinguish what are historical narratives as well as who are historical figures as opposed to prototypes, archetypes, metaphors, parables.

 

Christians/Messianics tend to read the bible literally while Jews warn against doing so, teaching instead how to learn to distinguish literal from figurative, to recognize when the language switches from one to the other.  Easy for Jews to do that, they read in the original biblical language of Hebrew while we read it in translation.

 

To 21st century readers, the Torah sometimes reads as a fairy tale told with childlike simplicity. Many find it difficult to relate to details that are not in contemporary experience. For instance, the story about Adam and Eve, the talking serpent, 2 trees.  The better way to approach biblical narratives is to expect both literal and figurative within the same story and learn to determine when you’re moving from one to the other.

 

We won’t try to elaborate on that rule of thumb here, but try applying it on verses that stump you. In this story of Adam and Eve, think of it as a way of explaining how the first man and woman violated a commandment which resulted in some consequences for them.  That the commandment involves a forbidden tree, the name of which immediately gives us a clue that the story is figurative; we see no such tree in this world but we can relate to the temptation to go against a divine commandment and suffer consequences.  The other tree mentioned in the story, we also don’t recognize among tree species; however its very name points to a quality and quantity of life if we partake of its fruit.  

 

Here’s an interesting perspective offered by a Jewish website that teaches Torah living as well as how to read and understand Hebrew. –Admin1].

 

————————–

 

What will give us eternity?

 

The tree of life appears in two aspects in the Hebrew Bible.

 

For me until now, as a Biblical Hebrew teacher, I was thinking only about the first one that is found in the Garden of Eden’s story. The eternity is the option to live forever, the option of immortality, the outcome of eating two fruits, the forbidden one and the one that we couldn’t reach.

 

 When you read the story in Genesis 2-3,  the tree of life is not the hero.  We can find the tree of life three times in the story.

 

The first time is in Genesis 2:9:

 

“וַיַּצְמַח יְהוָה אֱלֹהִים, מִן-הָאֲדָמָה, כָּל-עֵץ נֶחְמָד לְמַרְאֶה, וְטוֹב לְמַאֲכָל–וְעֵץ הַחַיִּים, בְּתוֹךְ

הַגָּן, וְעֵץ, הַדַּעַת טוֹב וָרָע.”

“And out of the ground made the LORD God to grow every tree that is pleasant to the sight, and good for food; the tree of life also in the midst of the garden, and the tree of the knowledge of good and evil.”

 

 

The tree of life is found between two trees, The one Adam could eat and the one that he couldn’t.  The only information about this tree we can assume is its location in the garden.  He is not an outsider;  he is inside the garden without any doubt.

 

Rashi mentioned in his commentary that the tree is the middle of the garden. Ramban added that the tree of knowledge was also located there and that the tree of life has fruits that gave long life and not eternity.   One of the sages of Israel said in Genesis  Rabbah that the tree could live for 500 years  (the long life is actually for the tree and not for the man!)

 

When the story ends the tree appears one more time as written in Genesis 3:22-24

“וַיֹּאמֶר יְהוָה אֱלֹהִים, הֵן הָאָדָם הָיָה כְּאַחַד מִמֶּנּוּ, לָדַעַת, טוֹב וָרָע; וְעַתָּה פֶּן-יִשְׁלַח יָדוֹ, וְלָקַח גַּם מֵעֵץ הַחַיִּים, וְאָכַל, וָחַי לְעֹלָם. וַיְשַׁלְּחֵהוּ יְהוָה אֱלֹהִים, מִגַּן-עֵדֶן–לַעֲבֹד, אֶת-הָאֲדָמָה, אֲשֶׁר לֻקַּח, מִשָּׁם. וַיְגָרֶשׁ, אֶת-הָאָדָם; וַיַּשְׁכֵּן מִקֶּדֶם לְגַן-עֵדֶן אֶת-הַכְּרֻבִים,

וְאֵת לַהַט הַחֶרֶב הַמִּתְהַפֶּכֶת, לִשְׁמֹר, אֶת-דֶּרֶךְ עֵץ הַחַיִּים”

 

“And the LORD God said, Behold, the man is become as one of us, to know good and evil: and now, lest he put forth his hand, and take also of the tree of life, and eat, and live forever: Therefore the LORD God sent him forth from the garden of Eden, to till the ground from whence he was taken. So he drove out the man; and he placed at the east of the garden of Eden Cherubims, and a flaming sword which turned every way, to keep the way of the tree of life.”

 

Here it states clearly that if the man would eat from the tree, he will live forever and would be as G-d and as his angels.  Therefore, G-d prevents man of two things:

  • the attendance in the garden itself and
  • the arrival to the tree of life.

 

However, always the question of how can we live forever is asked.
At the same time, when Plato wrote his beautiful words and fables, sat down another wise man, according to the tradition that was Solomon, and wrote the same idea in the book of Proverbs.

 

In Proverbs 3:15 it is written: 

“עֵץ-חַיִּים הִיא, לַמַּחֲזִיקִים בָּהּ; וְתֹמְכֶיהָ מְאֻשָּׁר”

“She is a tree of life to them that lay hold upon her, and happy is every one that holdest her fast”

 

‘She’ is the wisdom and the one who holds it is ‘a tree of life’.   

 

From that verse, I understood that the wisdom has some kind of eternity. When you will learn Biblical Hebrew, you will see that is the difference between the definite article and the indefinite article.  However, in this verse, it doesn’t matter– the eternity remains!
The same idea, by the way, appears also in Proverbs 11:30

“פְּרִי-צַדִּיק, עֵץ חַיִּים…”

“The fruit of the righteous is a tree of life…”

 

When a person is wise and righteous,

he lives forever,

even if he is not with us. 

 His ideas, his actions and his behavior

were, are and will be

a model to us!

Journey of Faith – Sarah’s déjà vu

 [First posted August 6, 2012; yes it has been that long and therefore deserves a revisit. If Abraham had a ‘deja vu’, so did Sarah. 
As previously explained, this series titled “Journey of Faith” is the Sinaite’s interpretation, separated from the three commentaries normally featured in chapter by chapter discussions.  Our translation of choice is Everett Fox The Five Books of Moses.  
It is ideal for students to read the chapter first without resorting to commentaries, if only to check for themselves if they can arrive at an understanding of the scripture without help.  The tendency of all, understandably, is to rely on outside help for comprehension, because we receive the text in translation and we are six millennia removed from the culture and times and people of these books of antiquity.  Still, we Sinaites believe that YHWH the Great Communicator can speak through the ages and right into our minds and hearts, in our times, in whatever culture we’re in, even if the language we speak and read His words in are non-Hebraic.  
We might miss much in translation but the basic message comes through:  Worship YHWH, He is One, and learn what He has revealed on Sinai.  The Torah is the source.—Admin1.]

——————————-

 

 

At the appointed time, Sarah gives birth to the promised heir, Isaac.

 

 

1 Now YHVH took account of Sara as he had said,
YHVH dealt with Sara as he had spoken. 
2 Sara became pregnant and bore Avraham a son in his old age,
at the set-time of which God 
had spoken to him.
3 And Avraham called the name of his son, who was born to him,
whom Sara bore to him:
Yitzhak/He Laughs.
4 And Avraham circumcised Yitzhak his son at eight days old, as God had commanded him.

 

A word about divine requirement for circumcision for babies 8 days old:  [http://www.bibleevidences.com/medical]

 

 

For centuries scholars must have been perplexed by God’s law of circumcision which required the procedure to be performed on the 8th day after birth (Gen 17:12, Gen 21:14, Lev 12:3, Luke 2:21). Medical researchers recently discovered that the two main blood clotting factors, Vitamin K and Prothrombim, reach their highest level in life, about 110% of normal, on the 8th day after birth. These blood clotting agents facilitate rapid healing and greatly reduce the chance of infection. You can verify with any Obstetrician that the 8th day of life is the ideal time for a circumcision, and that any circumcision done earlier requires an injection of Vitamin K supplement.

 

A medical survey has also reached the conclusion the there is less infection among females whose sexual partners are circumcised [http://www.guttmacher.org/pubs/journals/2817902.html].

 

 

The Creator of the magnificent human body and its processes did not leave mankind ignorant about how to live a healthy life. Way before medical research wised up about sterilization and quarantine, the Israelites were already given instructions about how to avoid and contain disease in YHWH’s Book of Life as early as the instructions recorded in Leviticus.

 

5  Avraham was a hundred years old when Yitzhak his son was born to him.
 6 Now Sara said:  
God has made laughter for me,
all who hear of it will laugh for me.  
7 And she said:
 Who would have declared to Avraham:
Sara will nurse sons?  
Well, I have borne him a son in his old age!  
8  The child grew and was weaned,
and Avraham made a great drinking-feast on the day that Yitzhak was weaned.  
9  Once Sara saw the son of Hagar the Egyptian-woman, whom she had borne to Avraham, laughing . . . .
10  She said to Avraham:
 Drive out this slave-woman and her son,
for the son of this slave-woman shall not share-inheritance with my son, with Yitzhak!  

 

Here we go again:

 

    • Hagar got in trouble with Sara the first time around when she developed an ‘attitude’ for having produced for Abraham an heir in Ishmael;
    • now it’s Ishmael who’s in trouble with Sarah for showing an ‘attitude’ toward her son Isaac.

 

What’s really going on here? Is the problem with Sara/Sarah feeling envious, jealous, or simply being protective of her and Isaac’s interests, or is the problem with Hagar and Ishmael?

 

Regardless of which, Abraham in both cases  accedes to his wife’s command without as much as a plea for the mother/son, even if he did not agree with her.

 

11 The matter was exceedingly bad in Avraham’s eyes because of his son.

 

The reason is, God confirms it is the wise thing to do and after all, YHWH has promised blessings upon Ishmael, simply because he is Abraham’s son as well, even if he’s not the promised heir.

 

 Note that Abraham has two firstborns, but of different mothers. If YHWH promised to take care of Ishmael, then mother and son will be alright in God’s care, even in the wilderness of Beersheba.

 

12 But God said to Avraham:
Do not let it be bad in your eyes concerning the lad and concerning your slave-woman;
in all that Sara says to you, hearken to her voice,
for it is through Yitzhak that seed will be called by your (name).
13 But also the son of the slave-woman-a nation will I make of him,
for he too is your seed.
14 Avraham started-early in the morning,
he took some bread and a skin of water and gave them
to Hagar-placing them upon her shoulder—together with the child and sent her away.
She went off and 
roamed in the wilderness of Be’er-sheva.
15 Now when the water in the skin was at an end, she threw the child under one of the bushes,
16 and went and sat by herself, at-a-distance, as far away as a bowshot,
for she said to herself:
Let me not see the child die!
So she sat at-a-distance, and lifted up her voice and wept.
17 But God heard the voice of the lad,
God’s messenger called to Hagar from heaven and said to her:
What ails you, Hagar? Do not be afraid,
for God has heard the voice of the lad there where he is.
18 Arise, lift up the lad and grasp him with your hand,
for a great nation will I make of him!
19 God opened her eyes, and she saw a well of water;
she went, filled the skin with water, and gave the lad to drink. 
20 And God was with the lad as he grew up,
he settled in the wilderness, and became an archer, 
a bowman. 
21 He settled in the wilderness of Paran, and his mother took him a wife from the land of Egypt

 

It is natural that Hagar would marry off Ishmael with a woman from her own people.

 

22 It was at about that time that Avimelekh, together with Pikhol the commander of his army,
said to Avraham: 
God is with you in all that you do. 
23 So now, swear to me here by God:
If you should ever deal falsely with me, with my progeny and my posterity . . . !
Rather, faithfully, as I have dealt with you, deal with me, and with the land in which you have sojourned. 
24 Avraham said:
I so swear. 
25 But Avraham rebuked Avimelekh
because of a well of water that Avimelekh’s servants had seized. 
26 Avimelekh said:
I do not know who did this thing,
nor have you ever told me, nor have I heard of it apart from today. 
27 So Avraham took sheep and oxen and gave them to Avimelekh,
and the two of them cut a covenant. 
28 Then Avraham set seven ewe-lambs of the flock aside. 
29 Avimelekh said to Avraham:
What mean these seven ewe-lambs that you have set aside? 
30 He said:
Indeed, these seven ewe-lambs you should take from my hand,
so that they may be a witness for me that I dug this well. 
31 Therefore that place was called Be’er-sheva/Well of the Seven-swearing,
for there the two of them swore (an oath). 
32 Thus they cut a covenant in Be’er-sheva.
Then Avimelekh and Pikhol the commander of his army arose and returned to the land of the Philistines. 
33 Now he planted a tamarisk in Be’er-sheva
and there he called out the name: YHVH God of the Ages. 
34 And Avraham sojourned in the land of the Philistines for many days.

 

Word gets around about the God of Abraham. It is possible people worshipped the same God as Abraham, they just didn’t know Him as He had revealed Himself to Abraham.

 

Abimelech and Pikhol didn’t say “your God is with you in all you do” but that “God is with you in all you do.”  God is not with them, but they can see He’s with Abraham.  They believe Abraham as he swears “in Elohim.”  Do they have the opportunity to know more about this God? Of course, all they need to do is seek to know Him and ask Abraham.

 

In our day, is there any reason to be ignorant about the God of Abraham . . . the God of Isaac and Jacob? The same God of Israel and the Hebrew Scriptures? There is no excuse not to know except the excuse of not wanting to know which is no excuse.

 

People have said to us “leave me in my religion” or “I don’t want to be confused” or “why do you think you know better” or “how do you know your truth is the real truth”? There are so many competing voices out there claiming to know THE TRUTH.

 

Well, we could be like Abimelech and Piyskol, recognize that Abraham’s God is the True God so follow Abraham’s journey of faith and get to know Abraham’s God.

 

While the few sample verses apply to Israel in context, every true seeker can personalize them; after all, YHWH is the God of all people, not just of Israel, not just of the patriarchs and surely, even if Israel was His firstborn son who was to be the “light to the nations”, it is the very nature of the God of Israel to wish to be known,  His Name declared beyond the boundaries and the nation of Israel,  for that has been the very purpose for which they were “called” and “chosen” — for the whole world to learn about YHWH, the God who has spoken on Sinai and whose revelation has been recorded by Israel in the TNK:

 

[EF]  Deuteronomy/Dabarim 4:29

 But when you seek YHWH your God from there you will find (him), if you search for him with all your heart and with all your being.

 

[AS]  Isaiah/Yeshayahu 45:22: 

Turn to me and you will be saved, all ends of the earth, for I am God and there is no other.  

 

 

[AS] Isaiah/Yeshayahu 65:24  

It will be that before they call I will answer; while they yet speak I will hear.

[AS] Jeremiah/Yirmeyahuw 33:3

Call to Me and I will answer you; and I will tell you great and mighty things that you do not know.

 

NSB@S6K

logo

October 22 – Day to Celebrate The Torah of YHWH

According to the Jewish Calendar which we regularly check so we could celebrate with Israel the days that are of national importance to them,     is Simchat Torah , “Day of Celebrating the Torah”.

 

To observant Jews like the Rabbis and those who practice Judaism, the TORAH is the end-all and be-all of life and why not? The TORAH is the lifestyle prescribed by the God of Israel, to His chosen people, according to their Sacred Scriptures.

 

While the ‘religious’ among the Jews of today celebrate the giving of the TORAH to Israel, what about us Gentiles who are not of Israel but worship the God who revealed himself to and through Israel?  Should we celebrate this “Jewish” feast?

 

Why not?   The Torah was given to Israel by the God who chose them to be His “light to the Gentiles”.  What does that “light” symbolize?

 

We have many posts on this website explaining the reason why God had to create a people/nation to represent Him and His prescribed Way of Life to the rest of the world.

 

Please check out these posts:

With a reading list like that, what else need we add at this point, eh?  So, get started, dear visitor/reader, if you haven’t read any of those on the list.  We have nothing new to add to what we’ve already elaborated in all those posts!

 

Celebrate the TORAH by reading it, studying it, learning from it,

and most important of all, applying it to life!  In short, LIVE THE TORAH LIFE!

 

Start on October 22, 2019 which has been designated as the . . . read the title of this post again!

 

And when you read the TORAH,

recite the Rabbi’s BLESSING FOR THE TORAH:

 

 

Blessed are You,

YHWH, our God, 

King of the Universe,

Who gives us the

TORAH of TRUTH, 

so that we may study,

live and learn,

and be changed by it;

so that we may have righteous judgment

and Your Spirit of Love;

so that we may keep Your commandments,

do them,

and live in them,

and teach them

to our children,

and our children’s children.

 

 

 

      AMEIN!

    NSB@S6K

logo-e1422801044622

A Sinaite’s Musical Liturgy – 4th Sabbath of October

[As former Catholics/Evangelicals/Messianics, we Sinaites have committed many Christian hymns to memory.  We love the music, yet can no longer sing the lyrics . . . so what to do? The next best thing!  Since imitation is the best compliment (that is our excuse anyway), we’ve borrowed the music, rewritten the lyrics according to our current belief system. . . . though for hymns whose original lyrics we are in agreement with, we do not tamper with the message.  Music is a teaching tool—meaningful lyrics are not only sung but remembered, probably more effectively and with lasting impact than a sermon from the pulpit.
For those who wish to use our liturgy for your Sabbath celebration, you are most welcome to it.  If you are not familiar with the original tune, simply recite the words; either way it works.  Have a joy-full Sabbath!–Admin1.]
——————————
KINDLE THE SABBATH LIGHTS

 

Image from flyinghorsesense.com

Image from flyinghorsesense.com

 

[Tune:  Immortal, Invisible God Only Wise/Original Lyrics]

 

1.  Immortal, invisible God only wise;

In light inaccessible hid from our eyes;

most blessed, most glorious, the Ancient of Days,

Almighty, victorious, Thy great Name we praise!

 

2.  Unresting, unhasting, and silent as light; 

Nor wanting, nor wasting, Thou rulest in might:

Thy justice like mountains high soaring above,

Thy clouds which are fountains of goodness and love.

 

3.  To all life Thou givest, to both great and small,

In Thee all life livest, the True Life of all.

We blossom and flourish as leaves on the tree,

and wither and perish but naught changeth Thee.

 

4.  Great Father of glory, pure Father of Light!

Thy angels adore Thee, all veiling their sight:

All praise we would render:  O help us to see,

T’is only the splendor of light hideth Thee!

 
Image from pabloperez.com

Image from pabloperez.com

[Original Tune: Crown Him with Many Crowns/REVISED Lyrics]

 

1. Crown Him with many crowns,  

YAHUWAH on His throne,

Hark! how the heavenly anthem drowns 

all music but its own!

Awake my soul and sing 

of Him Who madeth me,

O hail Him as our matchless King

 through all eternity.

 

2.  Crown Him the LORD of Love,

receive His grace, don’t hide,

Rich blessings are within our reach 

when He is glorified:

All angels in the sky

 bow down before His might,

As downward scans His wandering eye, 

when lives are set aright.  

 

3.  Crown Him the LORD of LIFE,

all hail His gift of Breath,

Let’s dedicate our life unto HIM

between our birth and death,

His glories we now sing, 

our Source of Life on high,

Who promised blessings for all those

who live His Torah Life.

 

4.  Crown Him the Lord on High 

Who sits upon His Throne,

Whose spoken word created all worlds, 

yet His Name is unknown . . .

To Him be endless praise, 

from every tongue and race,

YAHUWAH is the God we serve 

all through our end of days.

 

[CJB] Psalm 91

1 You who live in the shelter of Elyon, who spend your nights in the shadow of Shaddai,
2  who say to ADONAI, “My refuge! My fortress” My God, in whom I trust!”—
3  he will rescue you from the trap of the hunter and from the plague or calamities;
4 he will cover you with his pinions, and under his wings you will find refuge; his truth is a shield and protection.  
5 You will not fear the terrors of night or the arrow that flies by day
6  or the plague that roams in the dark, or the scourge that wreaks havoc at noon.  
7   A thousand may fall at your side, ten thousand at your right hand; but it won’t come near you.  
8   Only keep your eyes open and you will see how the wicked are punished.
9  For you have made ADONAI, the Most High, who is my refuge, your dwelling-place.  
10  No disaster will happen to you, no calamity will come near your tent;
11  for he will order his angels to care for you and guard you wherever you go.  
12  They will carry you in their hands, so that you won’t trip on a stone.  
13   You will tread down lions and snakes, young lions and serpents you will trample underfoot.  
14  “Because he loves me, I will rescue him; because he knows my name, I will protect him.  
15  He will call on me, and I will answer him.  I will be with him when he is in trouble.  I will extricate him and bring him honor.  
16  I will satisfy him with long life and show him my salvation.”
Image from persevereandtrust.blogspot.com

Image from persevereandtrust.blogspot.com

 

 

Sing hallelujah to the LORD; sing hallelujah to the LORD;
Sing hallelujah, sing hallelujah, Sing hallelujah to the LORD.
[Original Tune: ” Bread of the World” – Revised Lyrics]
We praise our GOD of Lovingkindness,
Whose Grace and Mercy overflows,
This wine we drink, this bread we share,
are symbols of His Love and Care.
LORD,  bless our men, LORD,  bless our women,
LORD, bless our children where they are,
May they know You, adore and love You,
For that would bring much joy to our lives.
[Break bread, raise wine glass and make a toast—
 “To LIFE!” – “L’Chaim!” “Mabuhay!”]
 

 

  SABBATH MEAL
Image from galleryhip.com

Image from galleryhip.com

TORAH STUDY
Image from www.cllnswbpgfx.com

Image from www.cllnswbpgfx.com

HAVDALAH
[Tune:  Be Still My Soul/REVISED lyrics]

1.  Be still, believer in the One True God, 

Bear patiently this darkened world we see . . .

Be not surprised at doubts and much resistance, 

for minds have been misled for centuries,

It takes much time to open ears and eyes, 

that have been used to falsities and lies.

 

2.  Be still, believer in the God Who gave 

His revelation once and for all time,

to a mixed multitude who heard His voice;

His Presence sensed in thunder and in light,

That Revelation is for Jews and Gentiles,

the very first step for unending miles.

 

3.  Be still, believer in the God Who spoke

His words through Moses who preserved them all,

Whose very Fingers etched His Words on stone:

Commandments for the sake of humankind,

for good, for peace, for comfort and direction,

to light the path for those who’ve lost their way.

 

4.  Be still, believer in the God of wonders,

Creator, Lord, Provider, Shepherd, King,

So full of grace, of love, of truth and more . . .

Whose mercy and compassion never fails,

Witholding justice to repentant sinners,

A patient God Who waits for lives to change.

 

5.  Be still, believer in our God YAHUWAH,

Call on His Name, declare His Name to all:

From Sinai’s heights, down to the lowest valleys,

YAHUWAH’s voice rings loud and clear today,

For earnest seekers with an open mind,

‘forgotten’ Truth is not so hard to find.

Image from www.youtube.com

Image from www.youtube.com

In behalf of Sinai 6000 Core Community,

 

 

NSB@S6K 
logo