TSTL: Who is the ‘Servant’?

Note:  Notice how the Hebrew Bible translates the selected verses here:

  • “My” is capitalized because the Speaker is YHWH;
  • “servant” is lower case, since Israel is the servant.
  • Notice as well, that Israel is sometimes referred to in the plural “My witnesses” or “My people”
  • but also in the singular as in “My servant”, “My chosen one”, “My messenger”.

Plain and simple reading rules require such consistency when referring to the object/subject.

YHWH’s “servant” in these verses and others not included here, is consistent with the history of Israel.

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Translation: Artscroll English TANACH

 

ISAIAH

 

41:8  But you, O Israel, My servant, Jacob, you whom I have chosen, offspring of Abraham who loved Me—you whom I shall grasp from the ends of the earth and shall summon from among all its noblemen, and to whom I shall say, ‘You are my servant’ — I have chosen you and not rejected you.

 

42:1  Behold  My servant, whom I shall uphold; My chosen one, whom My soul desired; I have placed my Spirit upon him so he can bring forth justice to the nations. . .

vs. 5-8 Thus said the God, HaShem, Who created the heavens and stretched them forth; Who firmed the earth and its produce, Who gave a soul to the people upon it, and a spirit to those who walk on it:  I am HaShem; I have called you with righteousness; I will strengthen your hand; I will protect you; I will set you for a covenant to the people, for a light to the nations; to open blind eyes’ to remove a prisoner from confinement, dwellers in darkness from a dungeon.  

vs. 19-21 Who is blind but My servant and deaf as My messenger whom I send?  Who is blind like the perfected man? Blind like the servant of HaShem?  Seeing much, but heeding not; opening ears, but hearing not? HaShem desired for the sake of [Israel’s] righteousness that the Torah be made great and glorious.

43:1  And now, thus says HaShem, your Creator, O Jacob; the One Who fashioned you, O Israel: Fear not, for I have redeemed you; I have called [you] by name; you are Mine.  

vs. 10-13  You are My witnesses —the word of HaShem — and My servant whom I have chosen, so that you will know and believe in Me, and understand that i am He; before Me nothing was created by a god nor will there be after Me!

vs. 11-13  I, only I, am HaShem, and there is no deliverer aside from Me.  I have foretold and brought salvation and formed you; there was no strange [god] in your midst.  You are My witnesses—the word of HaShem –and I am God.  Even before there was a day, I was He, and there is none who can save from My hand; when I act, who can reverse it?

vs. 20-21, 24-35  My chosen people, this people which I fashioned for Myself that they might declare My praise . . .  But you did not call out to Me, O Jacob, for you grew weary of Me, O Israel .  . rather, you burdened Me with your sins, you wearied Me, with your iniquities.  I, only I, am He Who wipes away your willful sins for My sake, and I shall not recall your sins.

 

44:1-2   But hear now, Jacob, My servant, and Israel, whom I have chosen! Thus said HaShem Who made you and fashioned you from the womb, Who will help  you: Fear not, My servant Jacob and Jeshurun, whom I have chosen.

vs. 21 Remember these things, Jacob and Israel, for you are My servant: I fashioned you to be My servant; Israel, do not forget Me!

 

49:3,6-7  You are My servant, Israel, in whom I take glory . . .I will make you a light for the nations, so that My salvation may extend to the ends of the earth.  Thus said HaShem, the Redeemer of Israel and their Holy One, to the despised soul, to the one loathed by nations, to the servant of rulers: Kings will see [you] and arise, officers will prostrate themselves, because of HaShem, Who is faithful, and the Holy One of Israel, Who has chosen you.

vs. 13-15  Behold, My servant will succeed; he will be exalted and become high and exceedingly lofty. Just as multitudes were astonished over you, [saying] ‘His appearance is too marred to be a man’s, and his visage to be human,’ so will the many nations exclaim about him, and kings will shut their mouths [in amazement] for they will see that which had never been told to them, and will receive things they had never heard.

 

 

 

Genesis/Bere’shith 2 – The Sabbath and Humankind

[This was first posted in 2013,  reposted 2014;   absolutely worth revisiting in 2019!  This 2nd chapter of the book of beginnings has 2 highlights: the Sabbath, and humankind.  There are enough articles about the Sabbath posted on this website, but we have not explored the specifics in the making of ‘humankind’ to where we are satisfied. The Rabbis have their various interpretations included in the commentary here; we do not fully agree with them in everything but it’s always a good starting point to get their opinion first and then work from there—where and why we think differently or deviate from their point of view and mind you, they themselves don’t always agree with each other nor do they follow one trend of thought. 

Image from www.mark7publishing.com

It is good to keep in mind the following with regard the making of humankind:

  • first, we prefer using ‘humankind’ instead of ‘man’, in fact ‘humanity’ is another good term. . .
  • second, in this account of the beginnings, one being is formed from the dust of the ground . . . and that being is gendered, so to speak, as the first ‘male’ (according to traditional interpretation) but consider this:  if “adamah” means ‘humankind’ made from the dust of the ground, what if “adamah” contains the male/female genders at the beginning and then they are split into two? Quite a provocative thought eh? 
  • third,  from within that being is formed the first of the female gender (according to traditional interpretation), but ponder on the previous possibility . . . is it too far-fetched to think that the Creator in His wisdom, created the highlight of all created beings, as one, to be split into male and female, always attracted to each other to fulfill each other, to complement each other?
  • fourth, in keeping with points 2 and 3, there have been discussions, Rabbinic in fact, that the first human being was actually a hermaphrodite because of this Genesis account; that from the first humankind’s ‘side’ (not rib) was taken or separated a ‘humankind’ but of a different gender. Keep chewing on these for now . . .  
 If this narrative about the creation of the first couple is figurative and not literal, then to each his own spin-off, but if it is literal, then reading the original Hebrew transcript would greatly help in our understanding, because from the English rendering, there is already the interpretation of the translator who is naturally if not obviously influenced by his religious orientation, and add to that any sexist views if any, and social influences and pressures.  

If the Creator made humankind male and female, and the command given to them is to ‘multiply’, then procreation is the obvious intention so, where does that fit into the scheme of things in this age where same-sex ‘marriage’ is being foisted upon us as the ‘new normal’?

 

Other issues: Have you checked out the feminist bible version where God is referred to as a ‘she’? How much impact does gender-language have on the thinking of each generation? Oy vey as the Jews would say, what if the bible is retranslated to suit the transgender generation that has come out of the closet, with a vengeance at that?

 

Ultimately, it is not what “men” . . . ahem, better term . . .”humanity” . . .  think that counts, the only question left is: what does God think? In fact, what has the Creator stated about His design of humankind?  This chapter should settle it.

 

Unbracketed commentary is from Pentateuch and Haftorahs, ed. Dr. J.H. Hertz; translation is EF/Everett Fox, The Five Books of Moses with commentary “EF”; additional commentary by Robert Alter “RA” from his translation The Five Books of Moses.–Admin1.]

 

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THE SABBATH

 

The Torah was not originally divided into chapters.  Such divisions originated in the Middle Ages; and, because of its convenience, found its way into the printed Hebrew text.  Sometimes, as here, the division is misleading.  Thus, the next three verses belong to the preceding chapter, and form its worthy and incomparable conclusion.

 

Genesis/Bere’shith 2

 

1  Thus were finished the heavens and the earth, with all of their array.

 

were finished.  The Heb. verb implies not only completion but perfection.

 

host. lit. ‘army’; the totality of the universe conceived as an organized whole, a cosmos.

 

 

2  God had finished, on the seventh day, his work that he had made, and then he ceased, on the seventh day, from all his work that he had made.

 

seventh day. ‘What did the world lack after the six day’s toil’? Rest.  So God finished His labours on the seventh day by the creation of a day of rest, the Sabbath’ (Midrash).

finished.  Better, ‘had finished’ (Mendelssohn, M. Friedlander).

 

rested. Heb. ‘desisted’, from creating.  In the 4th commandment (Exod. XX,11) God is said to have ‘rested’ (vayanach) on the 7th day.  This ascribing of human actions to God is called anthropomorphism, and is employed in the Bible to make intelligible to the finite, human mind that which relates to the Infinite.  The Talmudic saying, ‘The Torah speaks the ordinary language of men,’ became a leading principle in later Jewish interpretation of Scripture.

 

3  God gave the seventh day his blessing, and he hallowed it,

for on it he ceased from all his work, that by creating, God had made.

 

God blessed.  The Creator endowed the Sabbath with a blessing which would be experienced by all who observed it.  On the Sabbath, the Talmud says, the Jew receives an ‘additional soul’, i.e. his spiritual nature is heightened through the influence of the holy day.

 

hallowed. lit. ‘set apart’ from profane usage. The Sabbath demands more than stoppage of work.  It is specifically marked off as a day consecrated to God and the life of the spirit.

 

in creating had made. lit. ‘which God created to make’, i.e. to continue acting (Ibn Ezra, Abarbanel) throughout time by the unceasing operation of Divine laws.  This thought is contained in the Prayer Book (p. 39): ‘In His goodness He reneweth the creation every day continually.’  Or, as the Rabbis say, the work of creation continues, and the world is still in the process of creation, as long as the conflict between good and evil remains undecided.  Ethically the world is thus still ‘unfinished’, and it is man’s glorious privilege to help finish it.  He can by his life hasten the triumph of the forces of good in the universe.

 

[EF]  gave . . . his blessing:  Or, “blessed,” here expanded in English for rhythmical reasons.  by creating, God had made: Hebrew difficult.  Buber’s working papers show numerous attempts at a solution.

 

THE BEGINNINGS OF THE HUMAN RACE

 

(a)  THE GARDEN OF EDEN

 

Chapter II is not another account of Creation.  No mention is made in it of the formation of the dry land, the sea, the sun, moon or stars.  It is nothing else but the sequel of the preceding chapter.  In Chap. I, man is considered as part of the general scheme of created things. Chap II supplements the brief mention of the creation of man in v. 27 of the last chapter, by describing the formation of man and woman and their first dwelling place, as preliminary to the Temptation, and the consequent expulsion from the Garden of Eden in Chap. III.  Only such details as are indispensable for the understanding of the event are given.

 

4  These are the begettings of the heavens and the earth: their being created.  

At the time of YHWH, God’s making of earth and heaven, 

 

These are the generations of the heaven and of the earth. Some consider these words as a summary of the preceding chapter (Rashi).  Elsewhere, however, in 10 different sections of the Book of Genesis, such opening words (‘these are the generations’) always refer to the things that follow: e.g. ‘These are the generations of Noah’ (VI,9), means these are the descendants of Adam.  In the same way, ‘the generations of the heaven and the earth’ here begins the account of man, the offspring of heaven and earth; or, the history of Adam and his family.

 

in the day that. Heb. idiom for ‘at the time when’.

 

LORD God. Heb. Adonay Elohim. The two most important Names of the Deity are here used.  ‘LORD’ is the usual English translation of Adonay.  Adonay is the prescribed traditional reading of the Divine Name expressed in the four Hebrew letters YHWH—which is never pronounced as written.  this Divine Name is spoken of as the Tetragrammaton, which is a Greek word meaning ‘the Name of four letters’.  The High Priest of old pronounced it as written, on the Day of Atonement during the Temple Service; whereupon all the people fell on their faces and exclaimed, ‘Blessed be His Name whose glorious Kingdom is for ever and ever.’ The Heb. root of that Divine Name means ‘to be’; Adonay thus expresses the eternal self-existence of Him who is the Author of all existence.  A possible rendering, therefore, for Adonay is ‘The Eternal’, and this has been adopted in some Jewish versions of Scripture.

 

The other and more general Divine Name is Elohim.  Whereas Adonay is used whenever the Divine is spoken of in close relationship with men or nations, Elohim denotes God as the Creator and Moral Governor of the Universe.  The Rabbis find a clear distinction in the use of these two terms:  Adonay (LORD) describes the Deity stressing His lovingkindness, His acts of mercy and condescension and revelation to mankind; while Elohim (God) emphasizes His justice and rulership.  The Midrash says, ‘Thus spake the Holy One, blessed be He: If I create the world by Mercy alone, sin will abound; if by Justice alone, how can the world endure?  I will create it by both.’  In the first chapter of Genesis, which treats of the Universe as a whole, Elohim (‘God’) is used; but in the second chapter, which begins the story of man, that Divine Name is no longer used along, but together with Adonay (‘LORD God’).  There was soon need for the exercise of the Divine mercy.

earth and heaven. Since the center of interest now turns to man, earth is mentioned before heaven.

 

[RA]  As many modern commentators have noted, the first Creation account concludes with the summarizing phrase in the first half of this verse:  “This is the tale [literally, these are the begettings] of the heavens and the earth when they were created,” these two paired terms, “heavens” and “earth,” taking us back in an envelope structure to the paired terms of the very first verse of the Creation story.  Now, after the grand choreography of resonant parallel utterances of the cosmogony, the style changes sharply.  Instead of the symmetry of parataxis, hypotaxis is initially prominent:  the second account begins with elaborate syntactical subordination in a long complex sentence that uncoils all the way from the second part of verse 4 to the end of verse 7.  In this more vividly anthropomorphic account, God, now called YHWH ‘Elohim instead of ‘Elohim as in the first version, does not summon things into being from a lofty distance through the mere agency of divine speech, but works as a craftsman, fashioning (yatsar instead of bara’, “create”), blowing life-breath into nostrils, building a woman from a rib.  Whatever the disparate historical origins of the two accounts, the redaction gives us first a harmonious cosmic overview of creation and then a plunge into the technological nitty-gritty and moral ambiguities of human origins.

 

5  no bush of the field was yet on earth,

no plant of the field had yet sprung up, 

for YHWH, God, had not made it rain upon the earth,

and there was no human/adam to till the soil/adama— 

 

no shrub. Vegetation remained in the same state as on the day of its creation (see I,11), through lack of rain.

 

not a man. The edible fruits of the earth require not only God’s gift of rain, but also man’s cultivation.  Man must be a co-worker with God in making this earth a garden.

 

[EF] human/adam . . . soil/adama: The sound connection, the first folk etymology in the Bible, establishes the intimacy of humankind with the ground (note the curses in 3:17 and 4:11).  Human beings are created from the soil, just as animals are (v. 19). Some have suggested “human . . . humus” to reflect the word play.

 

 

6  but a surge would well up from the ground and water all the face of the soil;

 

there went up. ‘There used to go up.’ The Heb. verb expresses repeated action.

 

a mist. In Assyrian, the word means the ‘overflow of a river’, and it may here have the same significance.

 

watered. The vegetation did not therefore decay, though there was insufficient moisture for growth.

 

[EF] surge: Or, “flow.”

 

7  and YHWH, God, formed the human, of dust from the soil,

he blew into his nostrils the breath of life

and the human became a living being. 

 

formed.  The Heb. is from the same root, yatzar, as is used of the potter moulding clay into a vessel, possibly to remind us that man is ‘as clay in the hands of the potter.’  The Rabbis point to the fract that in this verse the word for ‘formed’ (vayyitzer) is written with two yods, whereas in v. 19 when relating the creation of animals, it has only one yod.  Man alone, they declare, is endowed with both a Yetzer tob (a good inclination) and a Yetzer ra (an evil inclination); whereas animals have no moral discrimination or moral conflict.  Another explanation is:  man alone is a citizen of two worlds; he is both earth and of heaven.

 

dust of the ground. ‘From which part of the earth’s great surface did He gather the dust?’ ask the Rabbis.  Rabbi Meir answered, ‘From every part of the habitable earth was the dust taken for the formation of Adam.’  In a word, men of all lands and climes are brothers.  Other Rabbis held that the dust was taken from the site on which the Holy Temple, with the altar of Atonement, was in later ages to be built.  That means, though man comes from the dust, sin is not a permanent part of his nature.  Man can overcome sin, and through repentance attain to at-one-ment with his Maker.

 

a living soul. The term may mean nothing more than ‘living entity’.  The Targum, however, renders it by ‘a speaking spirit’; viz. personality endowed with the faculty of thinking and expressing his thoughts in speech.

 

[RA]  the human, humus.  The Hebrew etymological pun is ‘adam, “human,” from the soil, ‘adamah.

 

8-17.  THE GARDEN

 

8  YHWH, God, planted a garden in Eden/Land-of-Pleasure, in the east, 

and there he placed the human whom he had formed.

 

garden.  The ancient Versions translate it by the Persian word ‘Paradise’, lit. enclosure or park.

 

eastward.  Either, ‘in the East,’ the home of the earliest civilization; or, situated east of Eden. The Targum translates it,’aforetime.’

 

Eden.  The Heb. word means ‘delight’; but it is probably the name of a country, Edinu (signifying ‘plain, steppe’); and may denote the extensive plain watered by the rivers Tigris and Euphrates.  The phrase ‘Garden of Eden’ became in course of time descriptive of any place possessing beauty and fertility.  In later Jewish literature, it signifies the Heavenly Paradise where the souls of the righteous repose in felicity.

 

[EF] Eden/Land-of-Pleasure:  For another use of the Hebrew root, see 18:12.  The usage here may be a folk etymology; Speiser translates it as “steppe.”

Image from www.slideshare.net

Image from www.slideshare.net

9  YHWH, God, caused to spring up from the soil

every type of tree, desirable to look and good to eat,

and the Tree of Life in the midst of the garden

and the Tree of Knowing of Good and Evil.

 

tree of life. The fruit of which prolongs life, or renders immortal.  The phrase also occurs in a purely figurative sense, e.g. Prov. III,18.

 

the knowledge of good and evil.  The Targum paraphrase is, ‘the tree, the eaters of whose fruits know to distinguish between good and evil.’ The expression ‘good and evil’ denotes the knowledge which infancy lacks and experience acquires (‘Your children, that this day have no knowledge of good or evil’, Deut. I,39). ‘Knowledge of good and evil’ may also mean knowledge of all things, i.e. omniscience; see III,5.

[EF]  Tree of Life: Conferring immortality on the eater of its fruit. Knowing of Good and Evil:  Interpreters disagree on the meaning of this phrase.  It could be a merism (as in “knowledge from A to Z”—that is, of everything), or an expression of moral choice.

 

10  Now a river goes out from Eden, to water the garden,

and from there it divides and becomes four stream-heads. 

 

it was parted.  After passing through the Garden, it divided into four separate streams.

 

[EF] stream-heads: Branches of tributaries.

 

11  The name of the first one is Pishon/Spreader–that is the one

that circles through all the land of Havila, where gold is;

 

Pishon.  Nowhere mentioned in the Bible.

 

Havilah. X,29. NE of Arabia, on the Persian Gulf.  Arabia was famed in antiquity for its gold.

 

12  the gold of that land is good, there too are bdellium and the precious-stone carnelian.

 

bdellium. Possibly the pearl.

 

[EF] bdellium . . . carnelian: Identification uncertain; others suggest, for instance, “lapis” and “onyx.”

 

13  The name of the second river is Gihon/Gusher—that is the one that circles through all the land of Cush.

 

Gihon. Like the Pishon, the identity of this river is a matter of conjecture.

 

Cush. Usually rendered Ethiopia; but it may also denote some territory in Asia.

 

14  The name of the third river is Hiddekel/Tigris—that is the one that goes to the east of Assyria.  

And the fourth river—that is Perat/Euphrates.

 

Asshur.  Assyria; which lies some distance East of the Tigris and possibly includes Babylonia.

 

Euphrates. No further description is given, because it was universally known as ‘the great River’ (Deut. I,7) and ‘the River’ (Exod. XXIII,31, Isa. VII,20).

 

15  YHWH, God, took the human and set him and set him in the garden of Eden, to work it and to watch it.

 

to dress it and to keep it. i.e. to fill it and guard it from running wild.  Not indolence but congenial work is man’s Divinely allotted portion.

 

[EF] work:  A different Hebrew word (here, avod) from the one used in 2:2-3 (melakha).

 

16  YHWH, God, commanded concerning the human, saying:  

From every (other) tree of the garden you may eat, yes, eat, 

 

 ‘See what a great thing is work! The first man was not to taste of anything until he had done some work.  Only after God told him to cultivate and keep the garden, did He give him permission to eat of its fruits’ (Aboth di Rabbi Nathan).

 

[EF]  eat, yes, eat:  Heb. akhol tokhel, literally, “eating you may eat.”  Others use “you may freely eat”; I have followed B-R’s practice of doubling the verb throughout, which retains the sound as well as the meaning. In this passage, as in many instances, I have inserted the word “yes” for rhythmical reasons.

 

[RA]  16-17.  surely eat . . . doomed to die. The form of the Hebrew in both instances is what grammarians call the infinitive absolute: the infinitive immediately followed by a conjugated form of the same verb.  the general effect of this repetition is to add emphasis to the verb, but because in the case of the verb “to die” it is the pattern regularly used in the Bible for the issuing of death sentences, “doomed to die” is an appropriate equivalent.

 

17  but from the Tree of the Knowing of Good and Evil—

you are not to eat from it,

for on the day that you eat from it, you must die, yes die.

 

thou shalt not eat.  Man’s most sacred privilege is freedom of will, the ability to obey or to disobey his Maker.  This sharp limitation of self-gratification, this ‘dietary law’, was to test the use he would make of his freedom; and it thus begins the moral discipline of man.  Unlike the beast, man has also a spiritual life, which demands the subordination of man’s desires to the law of God.  The will of God revealed in His Law is the one eternal and unfailing guide as to what constitutes good and evil—and not man’s instincts, or even his Reason, which in the hour of temptation often call light darkness and darkness light.

 

thou shalt surely die. i.e. thou must inevitably become mortal (Symmachus).  While this explanation removes the difficulty that Adam and Eve lived a long time after they had eaten of the forbidden fruit, it assumes that man was created to be a deathless being.  A simpler explanation is that in view of all the circumstances of the temptation, the All-merciful God mercifully modified the penalty, and they did not die on the day of their sin.

 

[EF] die, yes, die: Others use “surely die.”

 

18-25.  CREATION OF WOMAN

 

18  Now YHWH, God, said:  

It is not good for the human to be alone,

I will make him a helper corresponding to him.

 

it is not good. From this verse the Rabbis deduce that marriage is a Divine institution, a holy estate in which alone man lives his true and complete life.  Celibacy is contrary to nature.

 

a help.  A wife is not a man’s shadow or subordinate, but his other self, his ‘helper’, in a sense which no other creature on earth can be.

 

meet for him. To match him. The Heb. term k’negdo may mean either ‘at his side’, i.e.  corresponding to him.

 

[EF] It is not good: In contrast to the refrain of Gen I, “God saw that it was good.”  corresponding to: Lit. “opposite.”  The whole phrase (Heb. ezer kenegdo) could be rendered “a helping counterpart.”  At any rate, the Hebrew does not suggest a subordinate position for women.

 

[RA]  sustainer beside him.  The Hebrew ezer kenegdo (King James Version “help meet”) is notoriously difficult to translate.  The second term means “alongside him,” “opposite him,” “a counterpart of him.”  “Help” is too weak because it suggests a merely auxiliary function, whereas ezer elsewhere connotes active intervention on behalf of someone, especially in military contexts, as often in Psalms.

 

19  So YHWH, God, formed from the soil every living-thing of the field and every fowl of the heavens

and brought each to the human, to see what he would call it;

and whatever the human called it as a living being, that became its name.

 

Better, The LORD God, having formed out of the ground every beast of the field, and every fowl of heaven, brought them unto the man (S.R. Hirsch, Delitzsch, and W.H. Green). See I,21,25.  The fishes are not alluded to because they are precluded from becoming man’s companions.

 

call them. Man alone has language, and can give birth to languages.  In giving names to earth’s creatures, he would establish his dominion over them (I,26,28).  The name would also reflect the impression produced on his mind by each creature, and indicate whether he regarded it as a fit companion for himself.

 

20.  The human called out names for every herd-animal and for the fowl of the heavens and for every living-thing of the field,

but for the human, there could be found no helper corresponding to him.

 

but for Adam.  The dignity of human nature could not, in few words, be more beautifully expressed (Dillmann).

 

[EF] called out: Or “gave.”  for the human:  Others use “for Adam” or “for a man.”

 

21  So YHWH, God, caused a deep slumber to fall upon the human, so that he slept,

he took one of his ribs and closed up the flesh in its place.

 

deep sleep. As in XV,12, the word implies that something mysterious and awe-inspiring was about to take place.

 

The Creation of Eve, Michelangelo Buonarotti
Image from susan-fama.blogspot.com

one of his ribs. Woman was not formed from the dust of the earth, but from man’s own body.

 

 [EF:  Or possibly sides, paralleling other ancient peoples’ concept of an original being that was androgynous.]

 ‘We have here a wonderfully conceived allegory designed to set forth the moral and social relation of the sexes to each other, the dependence of woman upon man, her close relationship to him, and the foundation existing in nature for the attachment springing up between them.  the woman is formed out of the man’s side; hence it is the wife’s natural duty to be at hand, ready at all times to be a “help” to her husband; it is the husband’s natural duty ever to cherish and defend his wife, as part f his own self’ (Driver).

 

[EF]  ribs: Or possibly, “sides,” paralleling other ancient peoples’ concept of an original being that was androgynous.

 

22  YHWH, God, built the rib that he had taken from the human into a woman

and brought her to the human.

 

made.  lit. “builded’; the Rabbis connected this striking use with the noun ‘understanding,’ intuition, and remarked, ‘This teaches that God has endowed woman with greater intuition than He has man.’

 

[RA] built.  Though this may seem an odd term for the creation of woman, it complements the potter’s term, “fashion,” used for the creation of first human, and is more appropriate because the LORD is now working with hard material, not soft clay.  As Nahum Sarna has observed, the Hebrew for “rib,” tselà, is also used elsewhere to designate an architectural element.

 

23  The human said:  

This-time, she-is-it!  

Bone from my bones,

flesh from my flesh!

She shall be called Woman/Isha,

for from Man/Ish she was taken! 

 

bone of my bones. The phrase passed into popular speech (XXIX,14).

 

woman. The Heb. word is Ishshah; that for man is Ish. The similarity in sound emphasizes the spiritual identity of man and woman.

 

[EF:  she: Lit. “this-one.”]

 

[RA]  The first human is given reported speech for the first time only when there is another human to whom to respond.  The speech takes the form of verse, a naming-poem, in which each of the two lines begins with the feminine indicative pronoun, zo’t, “this one,” which is also the last Hebrew word of the poem, cinching it in a tight envelope structure.

 

24  Therefore a man leaves his father and his mother and clings to his wife,

and they become one flesh. 

 

shall a man leave. Or, ‘therefore doth a man leave his father and his mother, and doth cleave . . . and they become one flesh.’ Rashi says: ‘These words are by the Holy Spirit: i.e. this verse is not spoken by Adam, but is the inspired comment of Moses in order to inculcate the Jewish ideal of marriage as a unique tie which binds a man to his wife even closer than to his parents.

The Biblical ideal is the monogamic marriage; a man shall cleave ‘to his wife’, not to his wives.  The sacredness of marriage relations, according to Scripture, thus goes back to the very birth of human society; nay, it is part of the scheme of Creation.  The Rabbinic term for marriage means lit. ‘the sanctities,’ sanctification; the purpose of marriage being to preserve and sanctify that which had been made in the image of God;  one entity, sharing the joys and burdens of life.

 

[RA]  Therefore.  This term, ‘alken, is the formula for introducing an etiological explanation: here, why it is that man separates from his parents and is drawn to join bodily, and otherwise, to a woman.

 

25  Now the two of them, the human and his wife, were nude, yet they were not ashamed.

 

not ashamed.  Before eating of the forbidden fruit, they were like children in the Orient, who in the innocence and ignorance of childhood run about unclothed.

 

[RA]  And the two of them. But characteristically, the narrative immediately unsettles the neatness of the etiological certainty, for the first couple are two, not one flesh, and their obliviousness to their nakedness is darkened by the foreshadow of the moment about to be narrated in which their innocence will be lost.

 

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[Straight Text/No Commentary]

ROBERT ALTER’S THE FIVE BOOKS OF MOSES/GENESIS
CHAPTER 2
Then the heavens and the earth were completed, and all their array. And God completed on the seventh day the task He had done, and He ceased on the seventh day from all the task He had done. And God blessed the seventh day and hallowed it, for on it He had done. And God blessed the seventh day and hallowed it, for on it He had ceased from all His task that He had created to do. This is the tale of the heavens and earth when they were created.
 
On the day the LORD God made earth heavens, no shrub of the field being yet on the earth and no plant of the field yet sprouted, for the LORD God had not caused rain to fall on the earth and there was no human to till the soil, and wetness would well from the earth to water all the surface of soil, then the Lord God planted a garden in Eden, to the east, and He placed there the human He had fashioned. And the LORD God caused to sprout from the soil every tree lovely to look at and good for food, and the tree of life was in the midst of the garden, and the tree of knowledge, good and evil. Now a river runs out of Eden to water the garden and form there splits off into four streams. The name of the first is Pishon, the one that winds through the whole land of Havilah, where there is gold. And the gold of that land is goodly, bdellium is there, and lapis lazuli. And the name of the second river is Gihon, the one that winds through all the land of Cush. And the name of the third river is Tigris, the one that goes to the east of Ashur. And the fourth river is Euphrates. And the LORD God took the human and set him down in the garden of Eden to till  it and watch it. And the LORD God commanded the human, saying, “From every fruit of the garden you may surely eat. But from the tree of knowledge good and evil you shall not eat, for on the day you eat from it, you are doomed to dies.” And the LORD God said. “It is not good for the human to be alone, I shall make him a sustainer beside him.” And the LORD God fashioned from the soil each beast of the field and each fowl of the heavens and brought each to the human to see what he would call it, and whatever the human called a living creature, that was its name. And the human called names to all the cattle and to the fowl of the heavens and to all the beast of the field, but for the human no sustainer beside him was found. And the LORD God cast a deep slumber on the human, and he slept, and He took one of his ribs and closed over the flesh  where it had been, and the LORD God built the rib he had taken from the human into a woman and He brought her to the human. And the human said:
 
“This one at last, bone of my bones
and flesh of my flesh,
this one shall be-called Woman,
for from man was this one taken.”
 
Therefore does a man leave his father and his mother and cling to his wife and they become one flesh. And the two of them were naked, the human and his woman, and they were not ashamed.

Who was Paul, really?

Image from amazon.com

Image from amazon.com

[First posted 2012; reposted for review during the Christian lenten season.

 

Whenever we can’t do better than the writer of any article, we do the next best thing: feature the whole writing, or present excerpts from it.  

 

One of our highly recommended books on Christian history is Charles Freeman’s A New History of EARLY CHRISTIANITY.  Our hope is that our readers will be encouraged to get their own copy for their study and library after having a taste of parts of this highly recommended book.  

 

Chapter Five of Freeman’s history is titled:  What did Paul Achieve?  Condensed and lightly edited.  Instead of posting separate articles, we are listing them all here, please check them all out, it will be worth your time to get to know this towering figure who really was the founder of Christianity.  Find out if true!

 

Admin 1]

 

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Image from www.goodreads.com

Image from www.goodreads.com

PAUL DOMINATES ANY HISTORY OF EARLY CHRISTIANITY.  

 

He is the loner who made Christianity universal, the authoritarian who wrote in terms of the equality of all before God.  He transformed the spiritual teacher of Galilee into the crucified and risen Christ.  Yet it is impossible to write more than a fragmentary account of his life.  The sources that survive, perhaps six or seven letters of the many he must have written, and the narrative of his activities in the Acts of the Apostle, are not full enough even to provide an accurate chronology.  The context in which his letters were composed can only be guessed at and it is difficult to find a consistent theology in them.  Even though there is a tradition which portrays Paul as if he were a detached scholar, his theology is deeply rooted in his frustrations.  His personality was complicated and his relationship with others were often tempestuous.  All this makes it challenging to provide a fair assessment of his achievement.

 

As for many ‘teachers’ in the Greek world, Paul’s fame meant that a variety of texts were later ascribed to him.  Only seven of the so-called Pauline letters of the New Testament are now fully accepted as genuine:  

 

  • Romans
  • 1 & 2 Corinthians
  • Galatians
  • 1 Thessalonians
  • Philippians
  • Philemon  

The earliest surviving letter, that to the Galatians, was probably written in AD 49; the most mature and influential statement of Paul’s theology, the Letter to the Romans, in about 57 and his last surviving letter, to the Philippians in 61 or 62.  These letters provide direct evidence of Paul’s responses to the Christian communities with whom he had contact.  They are the primary sources of Paul’s life and beliefs even if one can never know how representative they are of his total output. Although the personality of Paul keeps breaking through (in all its rawness in Chapter 4 of 1 Corinthians or the Letter to the Galatians, for instance) and at times his eloquence reaches an intensity which places the letters among the finer literary achievements of the ancient world, they are steeped in the rhetorical conventions of his time.  Historical accuracy may have been sacrificed to the self-dramatisation that was necessary to make an impact on his readers.  As a documentary account of events they must be treated with caution.

 

The Acts of the Apostles, the second half of which features some account of Paul’s travels and his encounters with the emerging Christian communities, was probably written some thirty years after the events it describes.  Its author, Luke, may even have been a companion of Paull, or close to those who were, and he covers events in relative detail from between AD 50 and 60 when Paul arrives, under armed escort, in Rome.  It is not known how many letters of Paul, if any, Luke himself had seen or whether he had seen others which are now lost to us. (There is not a single mention of Paul’s letter writing in Acts.)  Many scholars discount Acts as accurate history.  it is certainly true that Acts is selective, many events are not clearly described and Luke may have created a much more harmonised life of Paul than the letters suggest.  One estimate is that while Chapters 1-8  cover the events of three years, Chapter 9-28 stretch over 25 and concentrate on relatively few events within that time span.  The tensions with the Corinthians, which play a major part in Paul’s letters, are not mentioned in Acts at all.  In short Luke never set out to provide a biography of Paul:  rather his aim, if one takes the text as a whole, is to describe the progress of the gospel, highlighting the events which he believed contributed to this.  Yet, there is a narrative that does outline journeys of Paul that can be traced on the map.  Above all Acts provides a vivid picture of the struggle that Paul had with the communities he visited and the turbulence of his experiences fits well with the passion of the letters.

 

Even Paul’s birth date can only be guessed at.  Acts refers to Paul as ‘young’ at the time he began persecuting Christians in the AD 30s and his gruelling missionary journeys of the 50s suggest a man no older than his 40s so the first decade of the century seems most plausible.  His background and education reflect the melting pot that the east had become.  He was born, as a Jew, in Tarsus, a lively trading city that was capital of the Roman province of Cilicia.  He may have absorbed, in his childhood or later, an education in rhetoric, including the effective writing of letters, and a smattering of Greek philosophy, above all Stoicism and, perhaps, Platonism.  He was sent to study in Jerusalem at the school of the well-known teacher Gamaliel.  He must have picked up Aramaic while he was living in Jerusalem but he later refers to himself as a Pharisee and this suggests that he had made a rigorous study of the Torah in the original Hebrew.  Nevertheless his own use of scriptures in his letters always draws on the Greek version, the Septuagint.

It is hard to imagine a greater contrast in Jewish backgrounds than that between Paul and Jesus.  

 

  • Paul was a Roman citizen, brought up in a Greek-speaking city and at ease with urban life.  He was well educated and aware of two competing cultures, Greek and Jewish.  
  • Jesus had no education other than what he had absorbed from the synagogue, his background was rural and remote from city life, and his region appears to have been untouched by the Greeks.  
  • Paul was never tolerant of others and was unlikely to have been able to grasp, or even be sympathetic to, the very different context of rural Galilean Judaism.  
  • Jesus’ life and teachings simply do not figure in his letters and speeches.

Perhaps the most intriguing feature of Paul’s background is his Roman citizenship.  By this time the whole of the free population of Italy had been granted Roman citizenship and many Italians had migrated to the Greek east rather as colonists (Philippi was an established colony of citizens, for instance), merchants or administrators.  Roman citizenship among the native populations of the east, on the other hand, was still rare.  Citizenship could be granted to distinguished individuals, as it was for Josephus, the Jewish historian favoured by the Romans, but Paul would never have qualified on his own merits.  However, it was a remarkable feature of Roman law that once a master freed his slaves their descendants acquired full citizenship.  In all likelihood Paul was the son of a freedman, one released from slavery by  Roman master.  When he was in Jerusalem he may even have attended the ‘Synagogue of the Freedman’ mentioned in Acts 6:7 — Jews from Cilicia are specifically mentioned as members of its congregation.  His references to slavery, the coming of Christ for all, ‘slave and free’, and his support for Onesimus, the escaped slave on behalf of whom he writes to his owner Philemon, need to be read in light of this probability.  To have an elevated position as a Roman citizen but only because one’s father had been a slave left one in an ambiguous social position.  Perhaps this explains why Paul so often felt himself an outsider.

 

Next:  Revisit:  Paul 2 – From Saul to Paul, from historic Jesus to cosmic Christ

The Tree of Life is the Torah -2

[This was first posted in 2012, buried in our pile of over 1000 articles since we opened this website that year.  When a visitor clicks forgotten posts, it gives us reason to revisit and check if still relevant and still reflective of our Sinaite thinking today.  Rarely if ever have we changed our position on our foundational beliefs set at the beginning of our Sinai pilgrimage; what normally happens is we add more insights as we progressively learn.  There is a “prequel” to this which is about the earthly “tree of life”:  What is “the Tree of Life”? –1 and you might want to check this out as well:  The fruit of the righteous is a tree of life – Proverbs 11:30Admin1]

 

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 Proverbs 3:1-18:

Image from www.jewishgiftplace.com

Image from www.jewishgiftplace.com

My child, do not forget My Torah, and let your heart guard My commandments, for they add to you length of days and years of life and peace. Kindness and truth will not forsake you. Bind them upon your neck; inscribe them on the tablet of your heart, and you will find favor and goodly wisdom in the eyes of God and man.  

 

Trust in YHWH with all your heart and do not rely upon your own understanding.  In all your ways know Him, and He will smooth your paths. Do not be wise in your own eyes; fear YHWH and turn away from evil.  It will be health to your navel and marrow to your bones.  Honor YHWH with your wealth, and with the first of all your produce, then your storehouses will be filled with plenty and the wine of your vats will burst forth.  My child, do not despise YHWH’s  discipline, and do not despise His reproof, for HaShem admonishes the one He loves, and like a father He mollifies the child.  Praiseworthy is a person who has found wisdom, a person who can derive understanding [from it], for its commerce is better than the commerce of silver, and its produce [is better] than fine gold.  It is more precious than pearls, and all your desires cannot compare to it.  Length of days is at its right; and its left, wealth and honor.  Its ways are ways of pleasantness and all its pathways are peace.  

 

It is a tree of life to those who grasp it, and its supporters are praiseworthy.[AST]

 

 

One interesting interpretation of the tree of life focuses not so much on the tree itself but on the angelic “cherubim” that guard it in the garden of Eden. There are only two places in the Tanach where the cherubim appear: the first time is in Genesis 3:23 when Adam and Eve were being directed with flaming swords away from the tree.

 

hqdefaultSo HaShem God banished him from the Garden of Eden, to work the soil from which he was taken.  And having driven out the man, He stationed at the east of the Garden of Eden the Cherubim and the flame of the ever-turning sword, to guard the way to the Tree of LIfe. [AST]

 

Imagine two symbolic trees at the center of the garden of Eden.  Partaking of the tree of life is connected with living forever, while partaking of the tree of the knowledge of good and evil is accompanied with the warning “you shall surely die.”  So the choice is for life, or for death.

 

The first couple are exposed to both trees, are given two choices, but a prohibition is attached to only one tree.  How ironic it is that Eve, followed by Adam, chose to partake of the prohibited tree with the death sentence so that true to the warning, both suffer the consequence of their choice: exile from the garden, curses specific to the woman, man, and the serpent, and a time limit to their physical life on earth.

 

Now, if the story ended there, we would have a 3-chapter Bible with a magnificent beginning and a tragic and sad ending.  Thankfully, the story continues  . . . .

 

The next appearance of the cherubim is in Exodus 37, when instructions are given to Moses for the construction of the Tabernacle:

 

Cherubimvs 7 He made two Cherubs of goldhammered out did he make them –from the two ends of the Cover: one Cherub from the end of one side and one Cherub from the end of the other; from the Cover did he make the Cherubs, from two ends. The Cherubs were with wings spread upward sheltering the Cover with their wings, with their faces toward one another; toward the Cover were the faces of the Cherubs. [AST] 

 

The ark of the covenant with the mercy seat in the wider context of the Tabernacle in the Wilderness is connected with the Presence of YHWH among His chosen people.  But that is not all; Moses is instructed to keep some items in the ark or the chest:

 

Deuteronomy 31:24-26  

So it was that when Moses finished writing the words of this Torah onto a book, until their conclusion: Moses commanded the Levites, the bearers of the Ark of the Covenant of HaShem, saying, “Take this book of the Torah and place it at the side of the Ark of the Covenant of HaShem, your God, and it shall be there for you as a witness.

 

We are supposed to make the connection:

  • the cherubim guard the tree of life in the garden;
  • the cherubim are part of the design in the Ark;
  • the Torah is placed in the Ark of the Covenant;
  • Proverbs 3 calls the Torah the tree of life.
 

In the final speech of Moses before the 2nd generation Israelites who were about to enter the promised land, he reiterates all of YHWH’s commandments and urges his people to ‘choose life’.

 

Deuteronomy 31:15-16, 19-20  

See—I have placed before you today the life and the good,  and the death and the evil, that which I command you today, to love HaShem, our God, to walk in His ways, to observe His commandments, His decrees, and His ordinances; then you will live and you will multiply, and HaShem, your God, will bless you in the Land to which you come, to possess it. . . . I call heaven and earth today to bear witness against you: I have placed life and death before you, blessing and curse; and you shall choose life, so that you will live, you and your offspring–to love HaShem your God, to listen to His voice and to cleave to Him, for He is your life and the length of your days, to dwell upon the land that HaShem swore to your forefathers, to Abraham, to Isaac, and to Jacob, to give them.

 

Now what does it mean for a living breathing being to ‘choose life’? None of us who were born ever chose life; we were simply part of the natural reproduction process, we are the consequence of our parents’ choices. They chose life for us.  So now that we are alive, how are we to choose life again?  What is Moses saying?

 

It must be a life connected with the Source of Life, YHWH, the life He prescribes where?  In His Torah!  A life of obedience to YHWH’s commandments is blessed while living on this earth, in our lifetime . . . but is that all?  The context here does not go any further; it doesn’t have to, we just trust that this life on this earth is not the end for those who love and obey the Eternal God.

 

 

Image from mtofolives.ning.com

“LIGHTS OF LIFE” – Image from mtofolives.ning.com

Choose life, partake of the tree of life—YHWH’s TORAH.

 

Read next:

https://sinai6000.net/choose-life-how-3/

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The Tree of – ‘the Knowledge of’/’the Knowing of’ – Good and ‘Evil’/Good and ‘Bad’

Image from en.wikipedia.org

Image from en.wikipedia.org

[First posted February 24, 2014.  We have since updated to adding yet another translation, this time by Richard Elliott Friedman who authored THE HIDDEN BOOK IN THE BIBLE which we will be featuring soon in the category MUST READ/MUST OWN.  The reason his translation is mentioned here is because he uses a different word for this tree, calling it “the tree of knowledge of good and bad” — not to be different or unique, but with a claim that the original shortened version of the first prose narrative imbedded in the regular translations of the Torah used that kind of simple language.  What is the difference between ‘evil’ and ‘bad’?  This early, without having read Friedman’s book, hazard a guess. Then check out the MUST READ/MUST OWN feature that will be posted later. Curious?—-ADMIN1.]

 

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Three images from which we can infer a non-literal reading and interpretation of Genesis 3:

  • the talking serpent
  • the tree of life
  • the tree of ‘the knowledge of’/’the knowing of’ good and evil

We do not encounter these in the natural world where we function so a basic reading rule (if not plain common sense) tells us to resort to thinking metaphorically.

 

We have dealt with the serpent symbolism; we consistently refer to the Tree of Life as the Torah; but we haven’t really expounded on this third tree—third, because there were all the other unnamed real and natural tree species from which Adam and Eve could freely eat. If the prohibition involved only one tree, then they could also have partaken of the Tree of Life which is at the center of the garden surrounded by all the other species of trees.

 

Genesis/Bereshith  2:9

 

[RA] And the LORD God caused to sprout from the soil every tree lovely to look at and good for food, and the tree of life was in the midst of the garden, and the tree of knowledge, good and evil. 

 

[EF]  YHWH, God, caused to spring up from the soil

every type of tree, desirable to look at and good to eat,

and the Tree of Life in the midst of the garden

and the Tree of the Knowing of Good and Evil.

 

So this tree against which the Creator issues the first prohibition bears a particular fruit:  knowledge; not just knowledge of anything or everything, but specifically “good” and “evil.”  Everett Fox’s wording is interesting:  “the Tree of the Knowing” — of what?  “of Good and Evil” (capitalized).  It makes one think, is there a difference in “Knowledge of” and “the Knowing of”?  

 

The dictionary defines “Knowledge’ as: 

1 facts, information, and skills acquired by a person through experience or education; the theoretical or practical understanding of a subject
• what is known in a particular field or in total; facts and information : the transmission of knowledge.

• Philosophy true, justified belief; certain understanding, as opposed to opinion.

 

2 awareness or familiarity gained by experience of a fact or situation

 

As for “Knowing”:

 

  • showing or suggesting that one has knowledge or awareness that is secret or known to only a few people: a knowing smile.
  •  chiefly derogatory experienced or shrewd, esp. excessively or prematurely so : today’s society is too knowing, too corrupt.
  • done in full awareness or consciousness : a knowing breach of the order by the appellants.

 

One can begin to understand and appreciate the difficulty translators face because ultimately when the language of translation does not have the exact equivalent for the word/meaning in the original language, translators turn into interpreters as well. And we, readers, are dependent on them to gain an understanding of the text, meaning, we either buy their spin or not.

 

Why the fuss over Knowledge/the Knowing here? Because it is strange that the testing of the first couple, representative humanity, is about gaining ‘knowledge’.  Is it so wrong to want to know two sides of any issue, is that not what having free will is all about, choosing between a minimum of two, whether right choice or wrong choice?  Do the words “good” and “evil” mean the same as “right” and “wrong”?

 

Now how could one tree contain two opposite fruits? That’s like eating something that could make you healthy enough to live longer and at the same time sick enough to shorten your life. But that’s not fair, is it?  Unless what is meant is that the tree bears two kinds of fruit: a good fruit different from an evil fruit. Depending on what we happen to pick,  it’s like a “hit or miss” guessing game where every fruit looks alike so that you can’t tell which is which; in effect, the consequence betrays which one you happen to pick. But that’s not fair either, plus —where is free choice if this is the case?

 

Choice was already made in partaking of the fruit, so what does it matter which fruit is picked? The evil is in the exercise of free will to disobey a divine command, not in the fruit.  In fact, a lot of things in nature are neutral — not good or bad — but depending on how man uses it, it could turn one or the other. Ponder that. 

 

Here are a few other points to chew on:

 

  • First the “good.” 
    •  Is the “good” in the tree the same quality as the “good” and “very good” that the Creator pronounced on His whole creation?  Why use “good” when it can be outdone by “very good”?  Or better and best? Why not “perfect” as befitting divine standard?  Ever wonder if the original Hebrew is translatable to a word other than “good”?  Perhaps “right” is the better word, since right is right, period, can’t be more or less right and most or least right, right?

 

  • Next, the word “evil.” 
    • Just as darkness is the absence of light, evil is the absence of right, in effect all that is not right; in a word “wrong” in God’s eyes.
    • Sin is the word we use for—-
        •  violation of God’s command, 
        • disobedience to His expressed will for any situation; 
        • sometimes explained as “missing the mark,” 
        • not hitting the target,  
        • missing the bullseye (God’s requirement) which is obedience.
If, after creating man in His image and likeness, God never spoke to man, never gave instructions, left man to follow his own instincts and inclination, then God cannot fault man for not knowing what is right or wrong in His eyes.  The profile we have of the Creator at this early stage of the book of beginnings is that just like a loving father would instruct his innocent and naive children to keep them from doing harm to themselves and others, the Creator God did exactly that.  

 

Notice however that in this context, unlike in the Sinai comprehensive revelation, He did not spell out blessings for obedience, only consequences for disobedience. Why?

 

Obviously, the first couple were enjoying unlimited blessings just from living in Eden. Would Adam balk at performing any of the DO’s? Name the species, reproduce your own kind, eat a vegetarian diet, enjoy the Edenic environment and best of all, direct access to the Creator Himself—one blessing after another, what’s not to like! Why would the first couple even want to change a situation like that?  God has provided everything they would ever need outside of themselves. . . and more . . . within themselves, within each one of us is that spark of divine’ image and likeness which is most likely connected to free will and responsible choice to enable us to align our will with God’s will.

 

Knowledge of the good, Adam and Eve already had.  They knew the very source of all good and blessing, the Creator Himself.  The one thing lacking in their perfect life? Knowledge of ‘evil’, perhaps we could use “wrongdoing” (since “right” as in sync with God’s revealed will).

 

In the setting of this story, that knowledge is not only available but readily accessible through the fruit of a particular tree right beside the Tree of Life in the middle of the garden. The text does not say if they partook of the Tree of Life which was among the permitted species to eat from; instead their attention, or let’s be accurate, the woman’s attention turned toward the ‘can’t-have’.  Is this a typical human pitfall, an initial curiosity moving toward attraction and growing to obsession on what is prohibited?  For those who do allow themselves to go that route, it is. A simple resolution to go on a diet is already fraught with potential failure, and anyone who has allowed himself to reach the point of addiction where he gets in bondage to any substance can understand the beginning of Havva/Eve’s desire for self-satisfaction.

 

Self is ultimately where the struggle is resolved: self above all, self over others, self over God.  No wonder the Torah constantly re-directs our focus on God first, and others next, for through selflessness ultimately comes self-satisfaction. 

 

To wrap up:

 

  • The tree of knowledge of good and evil could actually be a literal tree, any of the existing species but which is labeled by God as such for a purpose only within this context;
  • The purpose as it turns out is to use it as a prohibition to test the obedience of the first couple.
  • It symbolizes two choices in life connected with one’s relationship with God—right as in obedience to His command and wrong or evil or sin,  a violation;
  • The tree being outside of man and not within him is not to be confused with the two inclinations within man that give him the chance  to exercise his free will;
  • We have within ourselves free will to make one choice: a consistent pattern of rightful behavior is good for self and others and is pleasing to God.
    • Right is aligned with God’s standards for human behavior toward Him and fellowmen.
    • Wrong thinking leads to wrong actions that are harmful to self and others.
    • Is there a place for neutrality and what does it ultimately stand for? Probably not:  when you abstain from voting for a candidate, could that be construed as—you are not FOR that candidate?

www.alc.com.pt

 In the end, there is nothing magical or mystical about this tree, just as there is nothing healing about the bronze serpent of Numbers 21:1; it is the God Who uses these symbols Who deserves our focus and fixation.

The Tree of Life leads to knowledge of Him; the Tree of the knowledge of Good and Evil leads to knowledge of ourselves, what is in us, what we are capable of doing.   

How well do you know yourself?

Be aware of the inherent good in you to choose and do what is right in YHWH’s eyes, and even more so, beware of your potential to choose and do evil which has consequences for yourself and others.  

 

That ‘serpent of desire’, remember?

 

 

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The Jesus Mysteries

[First posted in 2012.  In the interest of resource sharing, we are featuring only Chapter 1 of this book; again, enough to whet your appetite to get a copy for your library, if you want to learn more.  While the discoveries of the authors of this book led them to shed their Christian faith, it did not lead them to the same path we, Sinaites, have rediscovered. Where it did lead them, you have to find out for yourself.  Reformatting and color-coding ours.–Admin1.]
 
The complete title of this book is :  The Jesus Mysteries:  Was the “Original Jesus” a Pagan God?
Authors: Timothy Freke and Peter Gandy
It has an interesting dedication: This book is dedicated to the Christ in you.
Source:  downloadable as an ebook from amazon.com.
 
Contents
Chapter 1 The Unthinkable Thought
Chapter 2 The Pagan Mysteries
Chapter 3 The Diabolical Mimicry
Chapter 4 Perfected Platonism
Chapter 5 The Gnostics
Chapter 6 The Jesus Code
Chapter 7 The Missing Man
Chapter 8 Was Paul a Gnostic?
Chapter 9 The Jewish Mysteries
Chapter 10 The Jesus Myth
Chapter 11 An Imitation Church
Chapter 12 The Greatest Story Ever Told
Notes
Bibliography
Who’s Who
Index
Copyright Page
 ———————————————————–
 
 Chapter 1 The Unthinkable Thought
 
Jesus said, “It is to those who are worthy of my Mysteries that I tell my Mysteries.”
The Gospel of Thomas
 
On the site where the Vatican now stands there once stood a Pagan temple. Here Pagan priests observed sacred ceremonies, which early Christians found so disturbing that they tried to erase all evidence of them ever having been practiced. What were these shocking Pagan rites? Gruesome sacrifices or obscene orgies perhaps? This is what we have been led to believe. But the truth is far stranger than this fiction.
 
Where today the gathered faithful revere their Lord Jesus Christ, the ancients worshipped another godman who, like Jesus, had been miraculously born on December 25 before three shepherds. In this ancient sanctuary Pagan congregations once glorified a Pagan redeemer who, like Jesus, was said to have ascended to heaven and to have promised to come again at the end of time to judge the quick and the dead. On the same spot where the Pope celebrates the Catholic mass, Pagan priests also celebrated a symbolic meal of bread and wine in memory of their savior who, just like Jesus, had declared: He who will not eat of my body and drink of my blood, so that he will be made one with me and I with him, the same shall not know salvation.
 
When we began to uncover such extraordinary similarities between the story of Jesus and Pagan myth we were stunned. We had been brought up in a culture which portrays Paganism and Christianity as entirely antagonistic religious perspective. How could such astonishing resemblances be explained? We were intrigued and began to search farther.
 
The more we looked, the more resemblances we found. To account for the wealth of evidence we were unearthing we felt compelled to completely review our understanding of the relationship between Paganism and Christianity, to question beliefs that we previously regarded as unquestionable and to imagine possibilities that at first seemed impossible. Some readers will find our conclusions shocking and others heretical, but for us they are merely the simplest and most obvious way of accounting for the evidence we have amassed.
 
We have become convinced that the story of Jesus is not the biography of a historical Messiah, but a myth based on perennial Pagan stories. Christianity was not a new and unique revelation but actually a Jewish adaptation of the ancient Pagan Mystery religion. This is what we have called The Mysteries Thesis. It may sound far-fetched at first, just as it did initially to us. There is, after all, a great deal of unsubstantiated nonsense written about the “real” Jesus, so any revolutionary theory should be approached with a healthy dose of skepticism. But although this book makes extraordinary claims, it is not just entertaining fantasy or sensational speculation. It is firmly based upon the available historical sources and the latest scholarly research. While we hope to have made it accessible to the general reader, we have also included copious notes giving  sources, references, and greater detail for those who wish to analyze our arguments more thoroughly.
 
Although still radical and challenging today, many of the ideas we explore are actually far from new. As long ago as the Renaissance, mystics and scholars saw the origins of Christianity in the ancient Egyptian religion. Visionary scholars at the turn of the nineteenth century also made comparable conjectures to our own. In recent decades, modern academics have repeatedly pointed toward the possibilities we consider. Yet few have dared to boldly state the obvious conclusion that we have drawn. Why? Because to do so is taboo.
 
For 2,000 years the West has been dominated by the idea that Christianity is sacred and unique while Paganism is primitive and the work of the Devil. To even consider that they could be parts of the same tradition has been simply unthinkable. Therefore, although the true origins of Christianity have been obvious all along, few have been able to see them, because to do so requires a radical break with the conditioning of our culture. Our contribution has been to dare to think the unthinkable and to present our conclusions in a popular book rather than some dry academic tome. This is certainly not the last word on this complex subject, but we hope it may be a significant call for a complete reappraisal of the origins of Christianity.
 
The Pagan Mysteries
 
In Greek tragedies the chorus reveals the fate of the protagonists before the play begins. Sometimes it is easier to understand the journey if one is already aware of the destination and the terrain to be covered. Before diving deeper into detail, therefore, we would like to retrace our process of discovery and so provide a brief overview of the book.
 
We had shared an obsession with world mysticism all our lives which recently had led us to explore spirituality in the ancient world. Popular understanding inevitably lags a long way behind the cutting edge of scholarly research and, like most people, we initially had an inaccurate and outdated view of Paganism. We had been taught to imagine a primitive superstition, which indulged in idol worship and bloody sacrifice, and dry philosophers wearing togas stumbling blindly toward what we today call science. We were familiar with various Greek myths, which showed the partisan and capricious nature of the Olympian gods and goddesses. All in all, Paganism seemed primitive and fundamentally alien. After many years of study, however, our understanding has been transformed.
 
Pagan spirituality was actually the sophisticated product of a highly developed culture. The state religions, such as Greek worship of the Olympian gods, were little more than outer pomp and ceremony. The real spirituality of the people expressed itself through the vibrant and mystical “Mystery religions.” At first underground and heretical movements, these Mysteries spread and flourished throughout the ancient Mediterranean, inspiring the greatest minds  of the Pagan world, who regarded them as the very source of civilization.  
 
Each Mystery tradition had exoteric Outer Mysteries, consisting of myths, which were common knowledge, and rituals, which were open to anyone who wanted to participate.  There were also esoteric Inner Mysteries, which were a sacred secret known only to those who had undergone a powerful process of initiation.  Initiates of the Inner Mysteries had the mystical meaning of the rituals and myths of the Outer Mysteries revealed to them, a process that brought about personal transformation and spiritual enlightenment.  
 
The philosophers of the ancient world were spiritual masters of the Inner mysteries. They were mystics and miracle-workers, more comparable to Hindu gurus than dusty academics.  the great Greek philosopher Pythagoras, for example, is remembered today for his mathematical theorem, but few people picture him as he actually was—a flamboyant sage, who was believed to be able to miraculously still the winds and raise the dead.  
 
At the heart of the mysteries were myths concerning a dying and resurrecting godman, who was known by many names.  In Egypt he was Osiris, in Greece Dionysius, in Asia Minor Attis, in Syria Adonis, in Italy Bacchus, in Persia Mithras.  Fundamentally all these godmen are the same mythical being.  As was the practice from as early as the third century BCE, in this book we will use the combined name Osiris-Dionysus to denote his universal and composite nature, and his particular names when referring to a specific Mystery tradition.  
 
From the fifth century BCE philosophers such as Xenophanes and Empedocles had ridiculed taking the stories of the gods and goddesses literally.  They viewed them as allegories of human spiritual experience.  The myths of Osiris-Dionysus should not be understood as just intriguing tales, therefore, but as a symbolic language, which encodes the mystical teachings of the Inner Mysteries.  Because of this, although the details were developed and adapted over time by different cultures, the myth of Osiris-Dionysus has remained essentially the same.  
 
The various myths of the different godmen of the Mysteries share what the great mythologist Joseph Campbell called “the same anatomy.”  Just as every human is physically unique yet it is possible to talk of the general anatomy of the human body, so with these different myths it is possible to see both their uniqueness and fundamental sameness.  A helpful comparison may be the relationship between Shakespeare’s Romeo and Juliet  and Bernstein’s West Side Story.  One is a sixteenth-century English tragedy about wealthy Italian families, while the other is a twentieth-century American musical about street gangs.  On the face of it they look very different, yet they are essentially the same story.  Similarly, the tales told about the godmen of the Pagan Mysteries are essentially the same, although they take different forms.  
 
The more we studied the various versions of the myth of Osiris-Dionysus, the more it became obvious that the story of Jesus had all the characteristics of this perennial tale.  Event by event, we found we were able to construct Jesus’ supposed biography from mythic motifs previously relating to Osiris-Dionysus:
  • Osiris-Dionysus is God made flesh, the savior and “Son of God.”
  • His father is God and his mother is a mortal virgin.
  • He is born in a cave or humble cowshed on December 25 before three shepherds.
  • He offers his followers the chance to be born again through the rites of baptism.
  • He miraculously turns water into wine at a marriage ceremony.
  • He rides triumphantly into town on a donkey while people wave palm leaves to honor him.
  • He dies at Eastertime as a sacrifice for the sins of the world.
  • After his death he descends to hell, then on the third day he rises from the dead and ascends to heaven in glory.
  • His followers await his return as the judge during the Last Days.
  • His death and resurrection are celebrated by a ritual meal of bread and wine, which symbolize his body and blood.
These are just some of the motifs shared between the tales of Osiris-Dionysus and the biography of Jesus.  Why are these remarkable similarities not common knowledge?  Because, as we were to discover later, the early Roman Church did everything in its power to prevent us perceiving them.  It systematically destroyed Pagan sacred literature in a brutal program of eradicating the Mysteries—a task it performed so completely that today Paganism is regarded as a “dead” religion. 
 
Although surprising to us now, to writers of the first few centuries CE these similarities between the new Christian religion and the ancient Mysteries were extremely obvious.  Pagan critics of Christianity, such as the satirist Celsus, complained that this recent religion was nothing more than a pale reflection of their own ancient teachings.  Early “Church fathers,” such as Justin Martyr, Tertullian, and Irenaeus, were understandably disturbed and resorted to the desperate claim that these similarities were the result of diabolical mimicry.  Using one of the most absurd arguments ever advanced, they accused the Devil of “plagiarism by anticipation,” of deviously copying the true story of Jesus before it had actually happened in an attempt to mislead the gullible!  These Church fathers struck us as no less devious than the Devil they hoped to incriminate.  
 
Other Christian commentators have claimed that the myths of the Mysteries were like “pre-echoes” of the literal coming of Jesus, somewhat like premonitions or prophecies.  this is a more generous version of the diabolical mimicry theory, but seemed no less ridiculous to us.  There was nothing other than cultural prejudice to make us see the Jesus story as the literal culmination of its many mythical precursors.  Viewed impartially, it appeared to be just another version of the same basic story.  
 
The obvious explanation is that as early Christianity became the dominant power in the previously Pagan world, popular motifs from Pagan mythology became grafted onto the biography of Jesus.  This is a possibility that is even put forward by many Christian theologians.  The virgin birth, for example, is often regarded as an extraneous later addition that should not be understood literally.  Such motifs were “borrowed” from Paganism in the same way that Pagan festivals were adopted as Christian saints’ days.  This theory is common among those who go looking for the “real” Jesus hidden under the weight of accumulated mythological debris.
 
Attractive as it appears at first, to us this explanation seemed inadequate.  We had collated such a comprehensive body of similarities that there remained hardly any significant elements in the biography of Jesus that we did not find prefigured by the Mysteries.  On top of this, we discovered that even Jesus’ teachings were not original, but had been anticipated by the Pagan sages!  If there was a “real” Jesus somewhere underneath all this, we would have to acknowledge that we could know absolutely nothing about him, for all that remained for us was later Pagan accretions!  Such a position seemed absurd.  Surely there was a more elegant solution to this conundrum?
 
The Gnostics
 
While we were puzzling over these discoveries, we began to question the received picture of the early Church and have a look at the evidence for ourselves.  We discovered that far from being the united congregation of saints and martyrs that traditional history would have us believe, the early Christian community was actually made up of a whole spectrum of different groups.  These can be broadly categorized into two different schools.  On the one hand there were those we will call Literalists, because what defines them is that they take the Jesus story as a literal account of historical events.  It was this school of Christianity that was adopted by the Roman Empire in the fourth century CE, becoming Roman Catholicism and all its subsequent offshoots.  On the other hand however, there were also radically different Christians known as Gnostics.
 
These forgotten Christians were later persecuted out of existence by the Literalist Roman Church with such thoroughness that until recently we knew little about them except through the writings of their detractors.  Only a handful of original Gnostic texts survived, none of which were published before the nineteenth century.  This situation changed dramatically, however, with a remarkable discovery in 1945, when an Arab peasant stumbled upon a whole library of Gnostic gospels hidden in a cave near Nag Hammadi in Egypt.  This gave scholars access to many texts which were in wide circulation among early Christians, but which were deliberately excluded from the canon of the New Testament—gospels attributed to Thomas and Phillip, texts recoding the acts of Peter and the 12 disciples, apocalypses attributed to Paul and James, and so on.
 
It seemed to us extraordinary that a whole library of early Christian documents could be discovered, containing what purport to be the teachings of Christ and his disciples, and yet so few modern followers of Jesus should even know of their existence.  Why hasn’t every Christian rushed out to read these newly discovered words of the Master?  What keeps them confined to the small number of gospels selected for inclusion in the New Testament?  It seems that even though 2,000 years have passed since the Gnostics were purged, during which time the Roman Church has split into Protestantism and thousands of other alternative groups, the Gnostics are still not regarded as a legitimate voice of Christianity.
 
Those who do explore the Gnostic gospels discover a form of Christianity quite alien to the religion with which they are familiar.  We found ourselves studying strange esoteric tracts with titles such as Hypotasis of the Archons and The Thought of Norea.  It felt as if we were in an episode of Star Trek —and in a way we were.  The Gnostics truly were “psychonauts” who boldly explored the final frontiers of inner space, searching for the origins and meaning of life.  These people were mystics and creative free-thinkers.  It was obvious to us why they were so hated by the bishops of the Literalist Church heirarchy.
 
To Literalists, the Gnostics were dangerous heretics.  In volumes of anti-Gnostic works—an unintentional testimony to the power and influence of Gnosticism within early Christianity—they painted them as Christians who had “gone native.”  They claimed they had become contaminated by the Paganism that surrounded them and had abandoned the purity of the true faith.  The Gnostics, on the other hand, saw themselves as the authentic Christian tradition and the orthodox bishops as an “imitation church.”  They claimed to know the secret Inner Mysteries of Christianity, which Literalists did not possess.
 
As we explored the beliefs and practices of the Gnostics we became convinced that the Literalists had at least been right about one thing:  the Gnostics were little different from Pagans.  Like the philosophers of the Pagan Mysteries, they believed in reincarnation, honored the goddess Sophia, and were immersed in the mystical Greek philosophy of Plato.  Gnostics means “Knowers,” a name they acquired because, like the initiates of the Pagan Mysteries, they believed that their secret teachings had the power to impart Gnosis—direct experiential “Knowledge of God.”  Just as the goal of the Christian initiate was to become a Christ.
 
What particularly struck us was that the Gnostics were not concerned with the historical Jesus.  They viewed the Jesus story in the same way that the Pagan philosophers viewed the myths of Osiris-Dionysus—as an allegory that encoded secret mystical teachings.  This insight crystallized for us a remarkable possibility.  Perhaps the explanation for the similarities between Pagan myths and the biography of Jesus had been staring us in the face the whole time, but we had been so caught up with traditional ways of thinking that we had been unable to see it.
 
The Jesus Mysteries Thesis
 
The traditional version of history bequeathed to us by the authorities of the Roman Church is that Christianity developed from the teachings of a Jewish Messiah and that Gnosticism was a later deviation.  What would happen, we wondered, if the picture were reversed and Gnosticism viewed as the authentic Christianity, just as the Gnostics themselves claimed?  Could it be that orthodox Christianity was a later deviation from Gnosticism and that Gnosticism was a synthesis of Judaism and the Pagan Mystery religion?  This was the beginning of the Jesus Mysteries Thesis.
 
Boldly stated, the picture that emerged for us was as follows.  We knew that most ancient Mediterranean cultures had adopted the ancient Mysteries, adapting them to their own national tastes and creating their own version of the myth of the dying and resurrecting godman.  Perhaps some of the Jews had, likewise, adopted the Pagan Mysteries and created their own version of the Mysteries, which we now know as Gnosticism.  Perhaps initiates of the Jewish Mysteries had adapted the potent symbolism of the Osiris-Dionysus myths into a myth of their own, the hero of which was the Jewish dying and resurrecting godman Jesus.
 
If this was so, then the Jesus story was not a biography at all but a consciously crafted vehicle for encoded spiritual teachings created by Jewish Gnostics.  As in the Pagan Mysteries, initiation into the Inner Mysteries would reveal the myth’s allegorical meaning.  Perhaps those uninitiated into the Inner Mysteries had mistakenly come to regard the Jesus myth as historical fact and in this way Literalist Christianity had been created.  Perhaps the Inner Mysteries of Christianity, which the Gnostics taught but which the Literalists denied existed, revealed that the Jesus story was not a factual account of God’s one and only visit to planet Earth, but a mystical teaching story designed to help each one of us become a Christ. 
 
The Jesus story does have all the hallmarks of a myth, so could it be that that is exactly what it is?  After all, no one has read the newly discovered Gnostic gospels and taken their fantastic stories as literally true; they are readily seen as myths.  It is only familiarity and cultural prejudice that prevent us from seeing the New Testament gospels in the same light.  If those gospels had also been lost to us and only recently discovered, who would read these tales for the first time and believe they were historical accounts of a man born of a virgin, who had walked on water and returned from the dead?  Why should we consider the stories of Osiris, Dionysus, Adonis, Attis, Mithras, and the other Pagan Mystery saviors as fables, yet come across essentially the same story told in a Jewish context and believe it to be the biography of a carpenter from Bethlehem?
 
We had both been raised as Christians and were surprised to find that, despite years of open-minded spiritual exploration, it still felt somehow dangerous to even dare think such thoughts.  Early indoctrination reaches very deep.  We were in effect saying that Jesus was a Pagan god and that Christianity was a heretical product of Paganism!  It seemed outrageous.  Yet this theory explained the similarities between the stories of Osiris-Dionysus and Jesus Christ in a simple and elegant way.  They are parts of one developing mythos.
 
The Jesus Mysteries Thesis answered many puzzling questions, yet it also opened up new dilemmas.  Isn’t there indisputable historical evidence for the existence of Jesus the man?  And how could Gnosticism be the original Christianity when St. Paul, the earliest Christian we know about, is so vociferously anti-Gnostic?  And is it really credible that such an insular and anti-Pagan people as the Jews could have adopted the Pagan Mysteries?  And how could it have happened that a consciously created myth came to be believed as history?  And if Gnosticism represents genuine Christianity, why was it Literalist Christianity that came to dominate the world as the most influential religion of all time?  All of these difficult questions would have to be satisfactorily answered before we could wholeheartedly accept such a radical theory as the Jesus Mysteries Thesis.
 
The Great Cover-Up
 
Our new account of the origins of Christianity only seemed improbable because it contradicted the received view.  As we pushed farther with our research, the traditional picture began to unravel completely all around us.  We found ourselves embroiled in a world of schism and power struggles, or forged documents and false identities, of letters that had been edited and added to, and of the wholesale destruction of historical evidence.  We focused forensically on the few facts we could be confident of, as if we were detectives on the verge of cracking a sensational “whodunit,” or perhaps more accurately as if we were uncovering an ancient and unacknowledged miscarriage of justice.  For, time and again, when we critically examined what genuine evidence remained, we found that the history of Christianity bequeathed to us by the Roman Church was a gross distortion of the truth.  It was becoming increasingly obvious that we had been deliberately deceived, that the Gnostics were indeed the original Christians, and that their anarchic mysticism had been hijacked by an authoritarian institution which had created from it a dogmatic religion—and then brutally enforced the greatest cover-up in history.  
One of the major players in this cover-up operation was a character called Eusebius who, at the beginning of the fourth century, compiled from legends, fabrications, and his own imagination the only early history of Christianity that still exists today.  All subsequent histories have been forced to base themselves on Eusebius’ dubious claims, because there has been little information to draw on.  All those with a different perspective on Christianity were branded as heretics and eradicated.  In this falsehoods compiled in the fourth century have come down to us as established facts.  
Eusebius was employed by the Roman Emperor Constantine, who made Christianity the state religion of the Empire and gave Literalist Christianity the power it needed to begin the final eradication of Paganism and Gnosticism.  Constantine wanted “one God, one religion” to consolidate his claim of “one Empire, one Emperor.”  He oversaw the creation of the Nicene Creed—the article of faith repeated in churches to this day—and Christians who refused to assent to this creed were banished from the Empire or otherwise silenced.
This “Christian Emperor then returned home from Nicaea and had his wife suffocated and his son murdered.  He deliberately remained unbaptized until his deathbed so that he could continue his atrocities and still receive forgiveness of sins and a guaranteed place in heaven by being baptized at the last moment.  Although he had his “spin doctor” Eusebius compose a suitably obsequious biography for him, he was actually a monster—just like many Roman Emperors before him.  Is it really at all surprising that a “history” of the origins of Christianity created by an employee in the service of a Roman tyrant should turnout to be a pack of lies?
Elaine Pagels, one of the foremost academic authorities on early Christianity, writes:
It is the winners who write history—their way.  No wonder, then, that the traditional accounts of the origins of Christianity first defined the terms (naming themselves “orthodox” and their opponents “heretics”); then they proceeded to demonstrate—at least to their own satisfactions—their triumph was historically inevitable, or, in religious terms, “guided by the Holy Spirit.”  But the discoveries [of the Gnostic gospels] at Nag Hammadi reopen fundamental questions.
History is indeed written by the victors.  The creation of an appropriate history has always been part of the arsenal of political manipulation.  The Roman Church created a history of the triumph of Literalist Christianity in much the same partisan way that, two millennia later, Hollywood created tales of “cowboys and Indians” to relate “how the West was won” not “how the West was lost.”  History is not simply related, it is created.  Ideally, the motivation is to explain historical evidence and come to an accurate understanding of how the present has been created by the past.  All too often, however, it is simply to glorify and justify the status quo.  Such histories conceal as much as they reveal.  To dare to question a received history is not easy.  It is difficult to believe that something that you have been told is true from childhood could actually be a product of falsification and fantasy.  It must have been hard for those Russians brought up on tales of kindly “Uncle Joe” Stalin to accept that he was actually responsible for the deaths of millions.  It must have strained credibility when opposing his regime claimed that he had in fact murdered many of the heroes of the Russian revolution.  It must have seemed ridiculous when they asserted that he had even had the images of his rivals removed from photographs and completely fabricated historical events.  Yet all these things are true.
It is easy to believe that something must be true because everyone else believes it.  But the truth only comes to light by daring to question the unquestionable, by doubting notions which are so commonly believed that they are taken for granted.  The Jesus Mysteries Thesis is the product of such an openness of mind.  When it first occurred to us, it seemed absurd and impossible.  Now it seems obvious and ordinary.  The Vatican has constructed upon the site of an ancient Pagan sanctuary because the new is always built upon the old.  In the same way Christianity itself has as its foundations the Pagan spirituality that preceded it.  What is more plausible than to posit the gradual evolution of spiritual ideas, with Christianity emerging from the ancient Pagan Mysteries in a seamless historical continuum?  It is only because the conventional history has been so widely believed for so long that this idea could be seen as heretical and shocking. 
Recovering Mystical Christianity
As the final pieces of the puzzle were falling into place, we came across a small picture tucked away in the appendices of an old academic book.  It was a drawing of a third-century CE amulet.  We have used it as the cover of this book.  It shows a crucified figure which most people would immediately recognize as Jesus.  Yet the Greek words name the figure Orpheus Bacchus, one of the pseudonyms of Osiris-Dionysus.  To the author of the book in which we found the picture, this amulet was an anomaly.  Who could it have possibly belonged to?  Was it a crucified Pagan deity or some sort of Gnostic synthesis of Paganism and Christianity?  Either way it was deeply puzzling.  For us, however, this amulet was perfectly understandable.  It was an unexpected confirmation of the Jesus Mysteries Thesis.  The image could be that of either Jesus or Osiris-Dionysus.  To the initiated, these were both names for essentially the same figure.
The “chance” discovery of this amulet made us feel as though the universe itself was encouraging to us to make our findings public.  In different ways the Jesus Mysteries Thesis has been proposed by mystics and scholars for centuries, but has always ended up being ignored.  It now felt like an idea whose moment has come.  We did, however, have misgivings about writing this book.  We knew that it would inevitably upset certain Christians, something that we had no desire to do.  Certainly it has been hard to be constantly surrounded by lies and injustices without experiencing a certain amount of outrage at the negative misrepresentation of the Gnostics, and to have become aware of the great riches of Pagan culture without feeling grief that they were so wantonly destroyed.  Yet we do not have some sort of anti-Christian agenda.  Far from it.
Those who have read our other works know that our interest is not in further division, but in acknowledging the unity that lies at the heart of all spiritual traditions—and this present book is no exception.  Early Literalist Christians mistakenly believed that the Jesus story was different from other stories of Osiris-Dionysus because Jesus alone had been a historical rather than a mythical figure.  This has left Christians feeling that their faith is in opposition to all others, which it is not.  We hope that by understanding its true origins in the ongoing evolution of a universal human spirituality, Christianity may be able to free itself from this self-imposed isolation.
While the Jesus Mysteries Thesis clearly rewrites history, we do not see it as undermining the Christian faith, but as suggesting that Christianity is in fact richer than we previously imagined.  The Jesus story is a perennial myth with the power to impart the saving Gnosis, which can transform each one of us into a Christ, not merely a history of events that happened to someone else 2,000 years ago.  Belief in the Jesus story was originally the first step in Christian spirituality—the Outer Mysteries.  Its significance was to be explained by an enlightened teacher when the seeker was spiritually ripe.  these Inner Mysteries imparted a mystical Knowledge of God beyond mere belief in dogmas.  Although many inspired Christian mystics throughout history have intuitively seen through to this deeper symbolic level of understanding, as a culture we have inherited only the Outer Mysteries of Christianity. We have kept the form, but lost the inner meaning.  Our hope is that this book can play some small part in reclaiming the true mystical Christian inheritance.
 

 

 
 

Jesus and . . . Horus Who?

[First posted in 2012.  Jesus we know, but who is “Horus”?   

 

This article is from near death.com/experiences/origen046.html it will probably be dismissed by some  as a ‘questionable’ source.  We post it along with all the other articles in this website which challenge the divinity claims that founders of Christianity have imposed upon the historical Jesus.  

 

This article discusses too many uncanny similarities in the life of Jesus and some pagan deities for them to be mere coincidences, perhaps they’re contrived?  But which is which?  Between Christian history, recurring pagan myths, and the original revelation of the True God YHWH on Sinai,  one’s belief in the Christian version of God based on Christian doctrines and scriptures might be shaken enough for one to check out the foundations of that religion that claims its source in Abrahamic faith.  This is the path the Sinaite has taken and look where it has brought us?

 

Update 2018:  A counter balance to any claim adds to our understanding of how–in this day and age– we can check out almost every topic that makes a claim.  So, for another side to the data presented in this post, please check out this site:  https://www.ancient.eu/Horus/Admin1]

Image from www.eyeofhorus.biz

Image from www.eyeofhorus.biz

 

Jesus as a Reincarnation of Horus

 

Jesus was referred to as the chief cornerstone (i.e., capstone) – a reference to an Egyptian pyramid. The chief cornerstone of the pyramid is same symbol for Horus, the Egyptian god and savior. Like the Egyptian pharoah, Jesus was called a shepherd who rules the nations with a staff. Horus was a popular Egyptian god who was the son of Osiris and Isis. Osiris and Horus were both solar deities. Osiris was the setting sun, Horus the rising sun. Jesus is the rising Son and the morning star. The pharoah was considered to be an incarnation of Horus (also known as “Amen-Ra,” the sun god). In the same way, Jesus is considered to be the incarnation of his heavenly Father. Horus was the lamb of God who took away the sins of the world. Horus had an adversary named “Set”. Jesus’ adversary was “Satan”.

 

The story of Horus can be found in “The Egyptian Book of the Dead (also known as the “Papyrus of Ani”) written over 3,000 years before the birth of Christ.

 

Identical Life Experiences

 

  1. It is written that both Horus and Jesus existed before their incarnations.
  2. Horus was born of the virgin Isis on December 25th in a cave/manger.
  3. Horus’ birth was announced by a star in the East and attended by three wise men.
  4. The infant Horus was carried out of Egypt to escape the wrath of Typhon. The infant Jesus was carried into Egypt to escape the wrath of Herod. Concerning the infant Jesus, the New Testament states the following prophecy: “Out of Egypt have I called my son.” (Matt. 2:15)
  5. He was a child teacher in the temple and was baptized by Anup the Baptizer when he was thirty years old.
  6. He had twelve disciples and performed miracles such as feeding bread to the multitude and walking on water.
  7. He raised one man, El-Azar-us, from the dead.
  8. He transfigured on a mount.
  9. He also had titles such as the “way, the truth, the light, the Messiah, God’s anointed Son, the Son of Man, the good shepherd, the lamb of God, the Word, the Morning Star, the light of the world.
  10. He was “the Fisher,” and was associated with the lamb, lion and fish (“Ichthys”).
  11. Horus’s personal epithet was “Iusa,” the “ever-becoming son” of “Ptah,” the “Father.”
  12. Horus was called “KRST,” or “Anointed One.
  13. He was crucified, buried in a tomb and resurrected.
  14. The adoration of the Virgin and Child is connected with both the adoration of Isis and the infant Horus and the adoration of Mary and infant Jesus. In the catacombs at Rome are pictures of the baby Horus being held by the virgin mother Isis, the original “Madonna and Child.”
  15. Concerning the writing of the Gnostics, C. W. King, a noted English author, says: “To this period belongs a beautiful sard in my collection, representing Serapis,…whilst before him stands Isis, holding in one hand the sistrum, in the other a wheatsheaf, with the legend: ‘Immaculate is our lady Isis,’ the very term applied afterwards to that personage who succeeded to her form, her symbols, rites, and ceremonies” (Gnostics and Their Remains, p. 71).
  16. Osiris, Isis, and Horus are the principal trinity of the Egyptian religions. God the Father, Jesus the Son, and the Holy Spirit is the Christian trinity. Dr. Inman affirms the Egyptian roots of the Christian trinity “The Christian trinity is of Egyptian origin, and is as surely a pagan doctrine as the belief in heaven and hell, the existence of a devil, of archangels, angels, spirits and saints, martyrs and virgins, intercessors in heaven, gods and demigods, and other forms of faith which deface the greater part of modern religions” (Ancient Pagan and Modem Christian Symbolism, p. 13).
  17. Dr. Draper says: “For thirty centuries the Egyptians had been familiar with the conception of a triune God. There was hardly a city of any note without its particular triads. Here it was Amum, Maut, and Khonso; there Osiris, Isis, and Horus” (Intellectual Development, Vol. I, p. 191).
  18. Dr. Draper stated: “Views of the Trinity, in accordance with Egyptian tradition, were established. Not only was the adoration of Isis under a new name restored, but even her image standing on the crescent moon reappeared. The well-known effigy of that goddess, with the infant Horus in her arms, has descended to our days in the beautiful artistic creations of the Madonna and Child.” (Conflict, p. 48).
  19. Mrs. Besant believes that Christianity has its main roots in Egypt: “It grew out of Egypt; its gospels came from thence [Alexandria]; its ceremonies were learned there; its Virgin is Isis; its Christ, Osiris and Horus.”
  20. There are two stories connected with Horus that is analogous to stories found in the Old Testament. The hiding of the infant Horus in a marsh by his mother undoubtedly parallels the story of the hiding of the infant Moses in a marsh by his mother. When Horus died, Isis implored Ra, the sun, to restore him to life. Ra stopped his ship in mid-heaven and sent down Thoth, the moon, to bring him back to life. The stopping of the sun and moon by Isis recalls the myth of the stopping of the sun and moon by Joshua.

 

“Osiris, I am your son, come to glorify your soul, and to give you even more power.” – Horus, (Book of the Dead, Ch. 173)

 

“Now is the Son of Man glorified and God is glorified in him.

If God is glorified in him, God will glorify the Son in himself, and will glorify him at once.” Jesus, (John 13:31-32)

 

  

 

A Sinaite checks out ‘messiah’ claims for Jesus

  [First posted in 2012; reposted every year during Easter week. This was written by Sinaite “BAN” who, together with her husband “VAN” have attended and finished masteral studies in Asia Theological Seminary (ATS) and together, have been leaders in Christian congregations they have joined and served in for more than half a century of their Christ-centered journey.  They were also among the original incorporators of a Messianic congregation in their city of residence which they were members of for about a decade . . . until they investigated the roots of their Christian faith and the origins of the New Testament books and made a crucial decision to leave the religion they have been part of for more than half a century of their lifetime. —Admin1,] 
 

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For 2,000 years now, Christianity has proclaimed that Jesus is the messiah. It is important to understand why biblically this is not so.  The purpose is not to disparage Christianity, but rather to clarify the biblical position.  The more data that is available, the better informed choices people can make about their spiritual path.

 

Torah believers do not accept Jesus as the messiah for a very basic reason.   Torah believers  believe the coming messiah is an anointed man of God, not divine in any way.  This is what the Old Testament says. This belief has its foundation in numerous biblical references, and understands the “Messiah” to be a human being, without overtones of deity or divinity , who will bring about  certain changes in the world and fulfill certain criteria before he can be acknowledged as the “Messiah”.  The Messiah is compared to King David (Jeremiah 30:9, Ezekiel 34:23-24, 37:24-25).   

 

We do not concern ourselves with the messiah’s identity for he is a person and his coming does not change the essence of our relationship with God which is the most important fact of our spiritual life.  Old Testament does not in any way say that God would descend into the level of man.  The idea that God would clothe Himself in flesh is the embodiment of idolatry therefore we must declare our utmost opposition to it.

 

Image from mymorningmeditations.com

 

Christians ask, “Why do you not accept Jesus as the messiah?”  The answer is simple.  Jesus did not fulfill any of the requirements for the job.  If he never qualified, it is not even a question of rejection.  God stated the messiah’s qualifications in HIS WORD.  The identity of the messiah is not up to man to proclaim.  The so-called messiah’s performance will validate his identity.

 

Here are some reasons which deny why Jesus is the messiah.  Christians have a list of prophecies that claim Jesus had fulfilled, but examine the list and one will find that it is just an attempt at working out New Testament passages to reflect Old Testament prophecies.

 

The state of our world today proves the messiah has not yet come.  When the messiah arrives, it will not be necessary for his identity to be subject to debate, for the world would be so drastically changed for the better that it would be absolutely incontestable.

 

What prophecies did Jesus fulfill?

 

According to the prophets, the most basic missions of the messiah are:

     1.  To cause all the world to return to God and His teachings in the Torah;
     2.  To restore the royal dynasty to the descendants of David;
     3.  To rebuild the temple and Jerusalem;
     4.  To gather Jews from all over the world and bring them back to Israel;
     5.  To re-establish the Sanhedrin;
     6.  Restore the sacrificial system;
     7.  Sabbatical year and Jubilee will once again be observed.

[Isaiah 2:1-4,  Zephaniah 3:9, Hosea 2:20-24, Amos 9:13-15, Isaiah:15-18, 60:15-18, Micah 4:1-4 , Zech.8:23, 14:9, Jeremiah 31:33-34, Isaiah 11:1-9, Jeremiah 23:5-6, 30:7-10, 33:14-16, Ezekiel 34:11-31, 27:21-28, Hosea 3:4-5]

 

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Which of the above has Jesus fulfilled?  Why did he not fulfill them the first time he came?  The concept of a second return does not exist in the OT.

 

What the OT proclaims is, when the messiah comes, he fulfills all the prophecies once and for all.  He will influence men to serve and worship the ONE TRUE GOD with a pure heart.

Christians ignore this truth because when Jesus came, it did not happen.  The early church fathers then had to redefine the role of the messiah to fit the life of Jesus.

 

  • First, they have to proclaim that Jesus had resurrected.
  • Then, the Scripture had to be examined with the purpose of finding what no one had ever seen there before –  the death of Jesus the Messiah, evidence that the messiah would be killed without bringing peace to the world or redemption of Israel, which is why (Isaiah 53, which they say refer to Jesus) is of utmost importance to Christians.
  • Then, the expectation of a second coming, wherein Jesus would fulfill what he should have done at his first coming.
  • And finally, there had to be a rational explanation of the first coming and its painful end.

The profound reason of the first coming was to shift  the function of Jesus from an evidential level (the only level Scripture emphasizes ) where it could be tested by logic and reason – to an unseen level – where a leap of faith is needed.  The messiah’s mission for the first coming, was not the redemption of HIS PEOPLE, iSRAEL, for this did not happen, but the atonement for original sin.

 

This is a complete reworking of the Torah’s message.  For Torah believers, if the biblical prophecies’ description of the messiah’s requirements have not been fulfilled, then there is only one explanation, the Messiah has not yet come.  We can be subjected to ridicule, mockery and contempt when we proclaim this, but a truthful evaluation of the facts makes it painful for Christians to accept.

 

We who adhere to what the Torah states can only repeat the words of departed faithful, “We believe with complete faith in the coming of the messiah, and though he may tarry, we shall wait for him every day.”

 

The messiah to come is not GOD, but a human being—but he will be the greatest leader and wisest teacher who would ever live.  His God-given talents, he will use to bring perfect justice and harmony to mankind.

 

Jesus, the man/god Christianity made him into, did accomplish a lot to turn people away from idolatry and taught and urged the Jews of his time to turn to the ONE TRUE GOD, repent of their sins and to follow and obey the commandments of GOD.  He never claimed the role which was given him by the early church fathers. His message was always, “OBEY WHAT YHWH COMMANDS.”

 

We all want God in our lives, and we all want to do the right thing.  We are now living in very special times.  God is moving the hearts of men – as declared by the prophet Haggai – as the time when the very heavens and earth will be shaken.  Men are hungry to know the truth and to seek it with all their hearts.

Let us look for the truth where God had revealed it to us.  Let us seek the truth in His Word, the Torah.

 

BAN@S6K

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Q: Where in the Torah does the God of Israel ever express His demand for human sacrifice for forgiveness of sin?

[This timely resurrection of this article first posted in 2012 is reposted every year  during this  season when a major world religion commemorates the sacrifice of  representative ‘human-divinity’ or ‘divine-humanity’ to satisfy the justice of God who himself chooses to be  the ‘sacrifice’ because no mere human fits the bill, or so the NT posits.

 

Image from www.telegraph.co.uk

Image from www.telegraph.co.uk

In the country base of Sinaite 6000, hundreds of ‘penitents’ flog themselves, carry crosses during the Passion Week of the Christian Easter celebration. A few are actually nailed to the cross.  Why do they do this? To fulfill a vow they have made to God, to atone for their sins, to emulate what their Savior did for their redemption, and—as I overheard one penitent over the radio, to win the ‘yes’ of a woman he proposed to.   Lately, heavy crosses are no longer the prop, replaced by light portable wooden crosses so that the penitent could just carry it on his/her shoulder during the days prior to Good Friday crucifixion hour, that would be about 3 PM.  

 

Image from www.shutterstock.com

Image from www.shutterstock.com

How could some religious adherents stray so far from the original requirements of the One True God?  Tradition and culture predominate over study and scriptural re-education, unfortunately.  

 

Is the One True God, YHWH, pleased with all these misguided efforts to placate and appease Him, mostly out of ignorance of His real and simpler requirement–i.e., repent and return to Him?  Is His original Sinai Revelation inaccessible so that man has no way of seeking and learning His revealed Truth?  Every Christian Bible has Part I where this Truth could be verified.  Is there any excuse to continue to be ignorant in this day and age?  What think you, dear reader? —Admin1]

 

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 To borrow the title of a Hollywood epic:  The Greatest Story Ever Told. 

 
catholicchurches.in

catholicchurches.in

The Eternal Invisible Immortal God decides to take on human flesh to be born as a helpless baby, from a virgin mother impregnated by the Holy Spirit, with utter disregard for the reputation of Mary, with no consideration of the embarrassment of her betrothed Joseph, in violation of His own commandment #7.

 

Why?  So that at age 30 in human time and in human flesh (“incarnation”), God Himself can teach another Way for humans to reach Himself:  that Way is belief in Him as human first, then later as human-divine, a totally new personality from how He revealed Himself consistently in His previous revelation in the TNK, the Hebrew Scriptures which became obsolete according to the teachings of the New Testament; hence TNK was retitled “Old Testament.”

 

Why?  Because supposedly,  the first human couple violated His one command not to eat from the Tree of Knowledge of Good and Evil, and therefore all their progeny have been tainted with “original sin” which cannot be forgiven except by the shedding of blood, specifically human blood of a divinity . . . sounds contradictory but that’s part of the greatest story ever told.

 

So?  Well, God made temporary provisions for animal blood to be acceptable until such time that the perfect human being can shed his blood to erase original sin once and for all time. It’s part of the OT symbolism and prophecy to be fulfilled in NT as taught in ‘progressive revelation’.

 

And?  Since there is no perfect man, obviously God Himself had to become man and sacrifice Himself to satisfy His own demand for His own perfect divine justice.

 
www.andrewcorbett.net

www.andrewcorbett.net

Really? Yes, and in the process He started revealing Himself as not ONE  [which He had been drumming repeatedly and consistently into the Israelite hardheads who kept going after other gods] but He suddenly changed His own equation to accommodate two more persons within Himself to create a Trinity. This, despite His nonstop repeated declarations in the OT that He is One, He does NOT CHANGE, there is NO OTHER God but He, none before and none after. ‘Immutable’ is the word for this divine attribute.

 
Image from www.israel-a-history-of.com

Image from www.israel-a-history-of.com

WOW! Indeed, and so He functions on earth alternating or simultaneously as Father, Son, and Holy Spirit, take your pick on which one you want to deal with at any time; but since we relate best to the human 2nd person who did all the work from creation to crucifixion [as we are later made to believe by the author of John], He as 2nd person is to be the focus of our worship, with the consent of the practically ignored [except by pentecostals] 3rd person and the overshadowed and almost forgotten 1st person.

 

No problem! Just believe, have faith!

 

Not so fast.  There are so many problems we now see in the simple salvation story but let’s focus on just one here:

 

 

Where in the original revelation of God does He ever express His demand for human sacrifice?

 

Apologists will immediately bring up Abraham and the sacrifice of Isaac as commanded by God Himself. But when that story is carefully read in the context of Abraham’s life of faith and the unique and never to be repeated test of obedience that God subjects Abraham to, it becomes clear from its happy ending  that it was simply no more than that—a test. Divine intervention at just the crucial moment and the provision of a ram in Isaac’s stead were obviously pre-arranged.

 

 Is there any recurrence or specific statement of God that human sacrifice  pleases Him?  On the contrary, there is instead clear and repeated condemnation of human sacrifice, one of the abominable practices of the nations. What kind of a God would lay out a law that He HImself would on occasion violate ?  That’s not our Adonai YHWH Who revealed His Will on Sinai, as recorded in the Torah and the Hebrew Scriptures.

 

 

Image from www.slideshare.net

Image from www.slideshare.net

So on what does the New Testament base its justification of the sacrifice of the human-divine Jesus as the only way to satisfy God’s justice, so that all sins might be forgiven, including original sin?  

 

The best way to understand is always to read the verses that directly refer to human sacrifice in the Tanach; however, there are none to be found except Abraham’s preempted sacrifice of Isaac.

 

 

 There are references to Jephthah’s vow in Judges 11:30-40 and in 2 Samuel 21:1-11, the incident between David and the Gibeonites [please read these for background on your own].  These incidents are debatable, since the human sacrifice resorted to appear to be more the result of men’s unwise decisions and not God’s explicit demand. God detests human sacrifice which the pagans were doing in sacrificing their children to the fire god Molech [Jeremiah 7:31 and others].

 

Let us not forget that when we read scripture, isolated incidents that seem to go counter to the overall understanding or teaching are exactly that–isolated—and not to be made a prooftext against the general and sure declaration from the mouth of God and certainly not to be made into a doctrine.  There is usually a reasonable explanation for these isolated texts, but for sure, what God condemns, He is consistent throughout Scripture and does not’ suddenly change to confuse us.  

 

Much is made of the shedding of Jesus’ blood in the New Testament

[RED for CAUTION!]

 

Hebrews 9:22

And according to the Law, one may almost say,  all things are cleansed with blood, and without shedding of blood there is no forgiveness.

 

So let us then follow the blood symbolism, this time starting with the New Testament, then trace it back to the Tanach.

 

This article was originally meant to be #5 in the series on the biblical diet of Leviticus 11 where blood consumption is strictly prohibited; however, you will understand why it has been separated from simple diet issues, even if symbolic blood in the New Testament is substituted by the fruit of the vine in Communion/Lord’s Supper.

 

 

Image from avoiceinthewilderness.org

Image from avoiceinthewilderness.org

In conjunction with this article, please read 

TORAH 101: What were the animal sacrifices all about? – Jewish Perspective

 to put the Temple offerings (specifically animal ‘sacrifices’ and blood symbolism in its proper perspective since it is often misunderstood. We can only cover so much in each article so we try to keep each discussion simple, easy to follow, in digestible doses which readers can swallow or spit out.]

 

Compare these verses from NT with the verses in OT:

 

Image from imgbuddy.com

Image from imgbuddy.com

Mt. 26:27-29 – And when he had taken a cup and given thanks, He gave it to them, saying “Drink from it all of you; for this is My blood of the covenant, which is poured out for many for forgiveness of sins. But I say to you, I will not drink of this fruit of the vine from now on until that day when I drink it new with you in My Father’s kingdom.”

 

Mk. 14:23-25 – And when He had taken a cup, and given thanks, He gave it to them; and they all drank from it. And He said to them, “This is My blood of the covenant, which is poured out for many. Truly I say to you, I shall never again drink of the fruit of the vine until that day when I drink it new in the kingdom of God.”

 

Lk. 22:20 – And in the same way He took the cup after they had eaten saying, “This cup which is poured out for you is the new covenant in my blood.”

 

1 Cor. 10:16 – The cup of blessing which we bless, is it not the communion of the blood of Christ? The bread which we break, is it not the communion of the body of Christ?

 

1 Cor 11:25-34 – For I received from the Lord that which I also delivered to you that the Lord Jesus in the night in which He was betrayed took bread; and when He had given thanks, He broke it, and said “This is My body, which is for you; do this in remembrance of Me.”  In the same way, He took the cup also, after supper, saying, “This cup is the new covenant in My blood: do this, as often as you drink it, in remembrance of Me.” For as often as you eat this bread and drink the cup, you proclaim the Lord’s death until He comes. Therefore whoever eats the bread and drinks the cup of the Lord in an unworthy manner, shall be guilty of the body and the blood of the Lord.  But let a man examine himself, and so let him eat of the bread and drink of the cup.  For he who eats and drinks, eats and drinks judgment to himself, if he does not judge the body rightly.  For this reason many among you are weak and sick, and a number sleep.  But if we judged ourselves rightly, we should not be judged.  But when we are judged, we are disciplined by the Lord in order that we may not be condemned along with the world.  So then, my brethren, when you come together to eat, wait for one another.  If anyone is hungry, let him eat at home, so that you may not come together for judgment. And the remaining matters I shall arrange when I come.

 

Eph. 1:7 – In Him we have redemption through his blood, the forgiveness of our trespasses, according to the riches of His grace . . .

 

Eph. 2:13But now in Christ Jesus ye who sometimes were far off are made nigh by the blood of Christ.

 

Col. 1:19-20 For it was the Father’s good pleasure for all the fulness to dwell in Him, and through Him to reconcile all things to Himself, having made peace through the blood of His cross; through Him, I say, whether things on earth or things in heaven.

 

Heb. 9:6-7Now when these things have been thus prepared, the priests are continually entering the outer tabernacle, performing the divine worship, but into the second only the high priest enters, once a year, not without taking blood, which he offers for himself and for the sins of the people committed in ignorance.Heb. 9:14 – How much more shall the blood of Christ, who through the eternal Spirit offered himself without spot to God, purge your conscience from dead works to serve the living God?

 
Image from sabbathsermons.com

Image from sabbathsermons.com

Hebrews 9:11-15  But when Christ appeared as a high priest of the good things to come, He entered through the greater and more perfect tabernacle not made with hands, that is to say, not of this creation;and not through the blood of goats and calves, but through His own blood.  He entered the holy place once for all, having obtained eternal redemption.  For if the blood of goats and bulls and the ashes of a heifer sprinkling those who have been defiled, santify for the cleansing of the flesh, how much more will the blood of Christ who through the eternal Spirit offered Himself without blemish to God, cleanse your conscience from dead works to serve the living God.  And for this reason He is the mediator of a new covenant, in order that since a death has taken place for the redemption of the transgressions that were committed under the first covenant, those who have been called may receive the promise of the eternal inheritance.

 

Heb. 10:18- – Therefore, even the first covenant  was not inaugurated without blood.  For when every commandment had been spoken by Moses to all the people according to the Law, he took the blood of the calves and the goats, with water and scarlet wool and hyssop, and sprinkled both the book itself and all the people, saying, “THIS IS THE BLOOD OF THE COVENANT WHICH GOD COMMANDED YOU.” And in the same way he sprinkled both tabernacle and all the vessels of the ministry with the blood.  And according to the Law, one may almost say,  all things are cleansed with blood, and without shedding of blood there is no forgiveness.  

 

 

Heb. 10:29 – Of how much sorer punishment , suppose ye, shall he be thought worthy, who hath trodden under foot the Son of God, and hath counted the blood of the covenant, wherewith he was sanctified, an unholy thing, and hath done despite unto the Spirit of grace?

 

Heb. 12:24 – And to Jesus the mediator of a new covenant, and to the sprinkled blood, which speaks better than the blood of Abel.

 

Heb. 13:20 – Now the God of peace , that brought again from the dead our Lord Jesus, that great shepherd of the sheep, through the blood of the everlasting covenant,

 

1 Pet. 1:2 –  according to the foreknowledge of God the Father, by the sanctifying work of the Spirit, that you may obey Jesus Christ and be sprinkled with His blood: May grace and peace be yours in fullest measure.

 

1 Pet. 1:19But with the precious blood of Christ, as a lamb without blemish and without spot:

 

1 Jn 1:7 – But if we walk in the light, as He Himself is in the light, we have fellowship with  one another, and the blood of Jesus his Son cleanses us from all sin.

 

Rev. 1:5 – And from Jesus Christ, the faithful witness, and the first born of the dead, and the ruler of the kings of the earth. To Him who loves us, and released us from our sins by His blood.

 

Rev. 5:9 And they sang a new song, saying, “Worthy art Thou to take the book, and to break its seals: for Thou wast slain, and didst purchase for God with Thy blood men  from every tribe an tongue and people and nation. . .”

 

Rev. 12:11 – And they overcame him because of the blood of the Lamb, and because of the word of their testimony; and they loved not their lives even to the death.

 

What does God require according to the Hebrew Scriptures?

 

Image from www.barnesandnoble.com

Image from www.barnesandnoble.com –

[AST]  Exodus 12:13
And the blood shall be to you for a token upon the houses where ye are: and when I see the blood , I will pass over you, and the plague shall not be upon you to destroy you, when I smite the land of Egypt.

 

[EF]  Exodus 12

YHWH said to Moshe and to Aharon in the land of Egypt, saying:  

Let this New-Moon be for you the beginning of New-Moons, the beginning-one let it be for you of the New-moons of the year.  

Speak to the entire community of Israel, saying:  

On the tenth day after this New-Moon

they are to take them, each-man, a lamb, according to their Father’s House, a lamb per household.  

And if there be too few in the house for a lamb,

he is to take (it), he and his neighbor who is near his house, by the computation according to the (total number of) persons;

each-man according to what he can eat you are to compute for the lamb.  

A wholly-sound male, year-old lamb shall be yours, from the sheep and from the goats are you to take it.  

It shall be for you in safekeeping, until the fourteenth day after this New-Moon,

and they are to slay it—the entire assembly of the community of Israel—between the setting times.  

They are to take some of the blood and put it onto the two posts and onto the lintel,

onto the houses in which they eat it.  

They are to eat the flesh on that night, roasted in fire, and matzot,

with bitter-herbs they are to eat it.  

Do not eat any of it raw, or boiled, boiled in water,

but rather roasted in fire, its head along with its legs, along with its innards.  

You are not to leave any of it until morning;

what is left of it until morning, with fire you are to burn.  

And thus you are to eat it:  

your hips girded, your sandals on your feet, your sticks in your hand;

you are to eat it in trepidation—

it is a Passover-Meal to YHWH.  

I will proceed through the land of Egypt on this night

and strike down every firstborn in the land of Egypt, from man to beast,

and on all the gods of Egypt I will render judgment,

I, YHWH.  

Now the blood will be a sign for you upon the houses where you are;

when I see the blood, I will pass over you,

the blow will not become a bringer-of-ruin to you, when I strike down the land of Egypt.  

This day shall be for you a memorial,

you are to celebrate it as a pilgrimage-celebration for YHWH,

throughout your generations, as a law for the ages you are to celebrate it!  

 

Exodus 24:8   “And Moses took the blood, and sprinkled it on the people, and said, Behold the blood of the covenant, which the LORD hath made with you concerning all these words.

 

[EF] Exodus 24:1-8

 

Now to Moshe he said:  

Go up to YHWH,

but they, they are not to approach,

and as for the people—they (too) are not to go up with him.

So Moshe came

and recounted to the people all the words of YHWH and all the regulations.  

And all the people answered in one voice, and said:  

All the words that YHWH has spoken, we will do.  

And Moshe wrote down all the words of YHWH.  

He started-early in the morning,

building a slaughter-site beneath the mountain

and twelve standing-stones for the twelve tribes of Israel.

 Then he sent the (serving-) lads of the Children of Israel,

that they should offer-up offerings-up, slaughter slaughter-offerings of shalom for YHWH—bulls.  

Moshe took half of the blood and put it in basins,

and half of the blood he tossed against the slaughter-site.  

Then he took the account of the covenant

and read it in the ears of the people.  

They said:

All that YHWH has spoken, we will do and we will hearken!  

Moshe took the blood, he tossed it on the people

and said:

Here is the blood,of the covenant

that YHWH has cut with you

by means of all these words.                                   

 

Exodus 29:16 
And thou shalt slay the ram, and thou shalt take his blood, and sprinkle it round about upon the altar.
Ex. 30:10And Aaron shall make an atonement upon the horns of it once in a year with the blood of the sin-offering of atonements: once in the year shall he make atonement upon it through your generations: it is most holy unto the LORD.

(Please read the whole chapter 30 of Exodus/Shemoth to understand the context of the isolated verse.)

 

Leviticus 1:5 – And he shall kill the bullock before the LORD: and the priests, Aaron’s sons, shall bring the blood, and sprinkle the blood round about upon the altar that is by the door of the tabernacle of the congregation.

(Please read the whole chapter of Leviticus/Waiqrah 1 to get to the context of the verse.)

 

Leviticus 16:5 – And he shall take of the congregation of the children of Israel two kids of the goats for a sin-offering, and one ram for a burnt-offering.

(Please read through the whole chapter 16 of Leviticus for the context of the verse.)

 

Leviticus 17:11 For the life of the flesh is in the blood: and I have given it to you upon the altar to make an atonement for your souls: for it is the blood that maketh an atonement for the soul.

(Please read through Chapter 17 of Leviticus for the context of the verse.)

 

Zech. 9:11As for thee also, by the blood of thy covenant I have sent forth thy prisoners out of the pit wherein is no water.

 (Please read the whole chapter of Zechariah 9 to understand the context of the verse.)

 

 

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In search of the Historical Jesus – The Closing of the Western Mind

Image from amazon.com

Image from amazon.com

[First posted in 2012,  in time for the Lenten Season when Christianity commemorates the life, death and resurrection of their acclaimed Savior.  Many of our posts at this time will focus on the claims of Christianity.

 

This post is about  Charles Freeman’s The Closing of the Western Mind:  The Rise of Faith and the Fall of Reason. 

 

Here’s a listing in the Table of Contents:

 

  1. Thomas Aquinas and “The Triumph of Faith”
  2. The Quest for Certainty
  3. The Quest for Virtue
  4. Changing Political Contexts – Alexander the the Coming of the Hellenistic Monarchies
  5. Absorbing the East, Rome, and the Integration of Greek Culture
  6. “All Nations Look to the Majesty of Rome” – The Roman Empire at its Height
  7. The Empire in Crisis, the Empire in Recovery – Political Transformations in the Third Century
  8. Jesus
  9. Paul, “The Founder of Christianity”
  10. “A crowd that lurks in corners, shunning the light” – The First Christian Communities
  11. Constantine and the Coming of the Christian State
  12. “But what I wish, that must be the canon” – Emperors and the Making of Christian Doctrine
  13. “Enriched by the Gifts of Matrons” – Bishops and Society in the 4th Century
  14. Six Emperors and a Bishop – Ambrose of Milan
  15. Interlude – Quintus Aurelius Symmachus and the Defence of Paganism
  16. The Ascetic Odyssey
  17. Eastern Christiantiy and the Emergence of the Byzantine Empire 395-600
  18. The Emergence of Catholic Christianity in the West, 395-640
  19. “We Honor the Privilege of Silence which is without Peril” – The Death of the Greek Empirical Tradition
  20. Thomas Aquinas and the Restoration of Reason

 

The ebook is downloadable on the kindle app from amazon.com; paperback is a mere $0.99 and hardback $2.99, definitely a book that is worth more than that!  Condensed and slightly edited, sub-titles added for this post.  Again to ‘whet your appetite’ enough to get a copy for your library, we are featuring  Chapter 8: JesusAdmin1.]

 

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Modern Biblical Scholarship

 

The past 30 years have been especially fruitful for the study of early Christianity.  This is partly because the churches appear more to be relaxed about the uncertainties of research findings but also because the available sources, particularly the range of Jewish texts, preeminent among them the Dead Sea Scrolls, have expanded enormously.  We are better able to set Jesus within a historical context than at any time since the 1st century.  If we can sum up the rich diversity of modern scholarship, it is distinguished both by the acceptance of the essential Jewish-ness of Jesus and by a fuller understanding of what it means to say that Jesus was Jewish in the 1st century of the Christian era.  While traditional interpretations of Jesus have seen him as somehow apart from Judaism, his mission always focused on the outside world, it is now argued not only that he preached and taught within Judaism but even that he was advocating a return to traditional Jewish values.  Nevertheless, the continuing lack of Jewish sources for Jesus’ life means that any interpretation of his role and mission has to be made with caution.

 

There are only a few historical references to Jesus outside of the New Testament and one of these, by the Jewish historian Josephus , may have been rewritten by Christians at a later date.  The earliest New Testament sources are Paul’s letters, written in the 50s, not much more than 20 years after Jesus’ crucifixion, but they say virtually nothing about Jesus’ life.  Later than Paul, but drawing on earlier material are the 4 surviving Gospels, written for early Christian communities int he Gentile (Greco-Roman) world.  As Luke reminds his readers in the opening verse of his Gospel, there were many other accounts of Jesus’ activities (scholars suggest that there may have originally been some 20 Gospels), but these are now all lost apart from the odd fragment; the 4 we know were accepted as canonical (authoritative) during the 2nd century.  Other later non-canonical texts, such as the Gospel of St. Thomas, which does survive (in part) from the 2nd century, and the mass of material from the Nag Hammadi library (a collection of papyrus codices of works from the 3rd to 5th centuries discovered at Nag Hammadi in modern Egypt in 1945-46, some of which draw on 2nd century sources), are probably too late to be of much historical value.  All 4 Gospels, as well as Paul’s letters, were originally written in Greek, although on occasion they preserve Jesus’ words in their original Aramaic.  There is no account of Jesus’ life written from a Jewish perspective, unless one interpret’s Matthew’s Gospel in this light.  Also lost is a rich oral tradition–it is known that until A.D. 135 many Christian communities preferred to pass on their knowledge of Jesus by word of mouth.  Only a tiny proportion of what was originally recorded, whether orally or in writing, about Jesus has survived; some texts simply disappeared, others were suppressed as interpretations of Jesus evolved in the early Christian communities.  The very fact that there are 4 different accounts of Jesus’ mission and that these reached their final form some decades after his crucifixion suggests that a coherent historical (and, equally, a coherent spiritual or divine) Jesus will be difficult to recover.

 

 

Who wrote the Gospels?

 

Most scholars now assume that Mark is the earliest of the surviving Gospels, perhaps written about A.D. 70, forty years after Jesus’ death.  It is the shortest of the canonical Gospels and begins with Jesus’ baptism by John the Baptist and ends in its original version with the discovery of the empty tomb. (In other words, there are no birth stories and the resurrection accounts were added later).  It is believed to have been written for a Christian community in Rome and composed to be read aloud to them.  Then follow Luke (after 70) and Matthew (between 80 and 90), drawing on a common (lost) source (known as “Q,” from the German Quelle, or “source”) as well as on Mark.  There is no agreement among scholars as to where Luke’s Gospel was written, but there is a degree of consensus in the belief that Matthew’s was written for a community in Antioch in Syria.  These 3 are known as the Synoptic Gospels (the word “synoptic,” “with the same eye,” reflecting their shared perspective on Jesus’ life).  The lasts of the canonical Gospels, that of John, dated from about A.D. 100, is very different from the earlier 3 and is a more considered theological interpretation of Jesus’ life in which, for the first time, he is presented as divine.  In one or 2 instances, the accounts of Jesus’ trial, for example, John appears to draw on an independent witness and in some ways his Gospel, though the most removed from events, may in fact be the most historically accurate.

 

The Gospels are not written as history or biography in the conventional sense.  Events are shaped to provide a meaning for Jesus, partly through his teachings and partly through his trial and death (recounted in detail in all 4 Gospels) and resurrection.  The earliest sources on which they draw appear to have been sayings of Jesus (assembled in collections known as “pericopes,” from the original Greek word for “a cutoff section”), which were placed in contexts created by the Gospel writers themselves.  (The same pericopes appear in different contexts in different Gospels, as one can see when comparing Luke’s Sermon on the Mount, 6:17-49, with Matthew’s much longer version, which incorporates material used elsewhere by Luke in his Gospel.)  The selection, placing and development of the sayings vary from one Gospel to another, but one common theme, which is approached differently in each Gospel, is the question of how Jesus was to be related to his Jewish background at a time, some decades after the crucifixion, when the Christian communities were spreading into the Gentile world.  The issue can be explored by taking Matthew’s Gospel (highlighted here because it was the most influential of the 3 Synoptic Gospels in the early Christian centuries) as an example.

 

Matthew, as has been seen, shares a common source with Mark and also draws on “Q.” but there are a number of emphases in his Gospel that are unique.  One is the bringing together of Jesus’ ethical teachings in the Sermon on the Mount, a version which is 3 times as long as the compilation by Luke, actually a “Sermon on the Plain” rather than “the Mount.”  Another involves the relating of Jesus’ birth and life back to earlier Jewish prophecies; throughout his Gospel Matthew is concerned to place Jesus’ teaching into the context of earlier scripture.  Yet Matthew depicts Jesus himself as firmly, indeed violently, rejected by Jews—Pilate, for instance, is shown as reluctant to order the crucifixion until urged to do wo by the Jewish crowds (27:22, “Let him be crucified!”).  There is also in Matthew (but not in Mark or Luke) a powerful indictment of the scribes and Pharisees (23:13-33).  So Matthew appears to be depicting a Jesus who is an important ethical teacher who can be seen as a fulfillment of Jewish prophecies, but who at the same time rejects Jewish sects and is rejected by the Jews themselves.  Another central theme of Matthew is Jesus’ warning of”a burning furnace” for those who have done evil and “eternal punishment” for those who neglect his demands to feed the hungry or clothe the naked (Matthew 13:36-43 and 25:31-46).  Many Jews did not believe in an afterlife, but some talked of sheol,  a shadowy “grave” or “pit,” where departed spirits live, or Gehenna, a place of torment based on an actual valley in Judaea where human sacrifices had taken place.  It is Gehenna to which Jesus refers in Matthew’s telling of his indictment of the Pharisees.

 

To establish how these emphases might relate to Matthew’s own concerns, attempts have been made to establish the audience for whom Matthew was writing.  One view is that Matthew led a community that was Jewish in origin and still saw itself as Jewish, despite the fact that its devotion to Christ had led to its ostracism by orthodox Jewish communities. It is usually suggested that this was in Antioch at a time when Judaism was narrowing its boundaries after the destruction of Jerusalem and the Temple by the Romans in A.D. 70.  Determined that his community survive, Matthew, according to this interpretation, presented Jesus as the hoped-for Messiah, prophesied in the scriptures, but as a Messiah who has been rejected and betrayed by his own people.  Such ideas of betrayal and renewal ran deep in Jewish history, and Matthew places Jesus within this tradition.  Once again the Jews have betrayed the one who is sent from God, says Matthew, but this does not mean that Judaism in itself is at an end.  Jesus had come “not to abolish but to complete [the Law].”  It would remain in place “till heaven and hearth disappear . . . until its purpose is achieved” (Matthew 5:17-18).  Matthew thus presents Jesus as spearheading a Jewish renewal, even if it is one that has not been recognized by his own people.  Matthew believes that his community has replaced the Jews as guardians of his Messiahship.  One of the verses Matthew attributes to Jesus (21:43) is particularly telling here:  “I tell you then, that the kingdom of God will be taken from you [i.e., those Jews who have rejected me] and given to a people who will produce its fruit,” by implication Matthew’s community.  Matthew also lays greater stress than the other Synoptic Gospels on the church as an institution. Peter, whose Christianity, like Matthew’s, was set within Judaism, is given a leadership role by Jesus, and there is specific mention of the community having disciplinary powers (18:15-20).  This approach to Matthew’s Gospel has been summed up as follows:

 

[Matthew’s Jewish] community defines itself as the last sanctuary for the preservation of those fundamentals of Israel’s faith.  It tries desperately to live up to its true calling, as represented in these responsibilities to preserve true holiness.  But it is also inclined to be bitter and vengeful; this typical and entirely understandable, desire for vengeance (upon the Pharisees in particular) is expressed in the notion of eternal punishment and the principle of just requittal.

 

When Matthew’s text was adopted as one of the 4 canonical texts by the emerging churches of the Gentile world, its origin as a Jewish text was glossed over, and Matthew’s rejection of those Jews who had betrayed Jesus was transformed by later Christians into a justification for rejecting all Judaism — the cry of the crowd in Jerusalem.  “His blood be on us and on our children!” (27:25), was to be frequently quoted in the diatribes that many of the Church Fathers launched against Judaism as a religion, something Matthew can hardly have intended.  Again, the doctrine of eternal punishment in hell, which was further developed in the early church by interpreting Matthew’s verse “Many are called by few are chosen” (22:14) to suggest that a majority of human beings would suffer eternal punishment, became an entrenched and highly influential part of Christian teaching.  It is equally important, of course, to note the enormous influence of the Sermon on the Mount on Christian ethics. This is the challenge the Gospels pose for the historian—their own versions of Jesus were shaped to meet the needs of their immediate audience, yet when adopted into the canon they were interpreted to fit the needs of the emerging church.  Is it possible to “decode” the Gospel texts so as to place Jesus back into his original background?  Some scholars argue that it is now virtually impossible to find “the real Jesus” under the layers of later developments; others believe that something can be reconstructed from the material in the Gospels.  This latter will be what is attempted here.

 

Check out the sequels: