Did the Apostle Paul Permit the Eating of All Meats? A Messianic Examination of 1 Timothy 4:1-5

Setting the Table for our Discussion Here Today

 

This is “Did the Apostle Paul Sanction/Permit the Eating of all Meats? A Messianic Examination of 1 Timothy 4:1-5.”

 

Our discussion here today will serve as another installment to our massive Paul and Hebrew Roots series that is designed to address those hard-to understand and challenging Pauline passages that many in denominationalism have twisted, misinterpreted, and misrepresented to further their anti-Torah gospel and agenda (2 Peter 3:15-16).

 

Now, some of you who have been following our Paul and Hebrew Roots series for any appreciable length of time may be wondering why we are so abruptly shifting our focus away from the Book of Romans to today’s discussion of a passage in 1 Timothy.

 

Well, here’s why.

 

A very dear brother and long-time supporter of this ministry asked me to clarify for him the actual meaning of 1 Timothy 4:1-5, which I was happy to do. But after responding to him, it occurred to me that maybe it was time that I shared my thoughts and understanding of this passage with you all as well, here on TMTO.

 

And just so you’re aware beloved, we will return to our examination of Romans, Abba willing, in our next installment to this series.

 

 

 

Our Focus Passage of 1 Timothy 4:1-5

 

But in case you’re not familiar with this key Pauline passage, it reads as follows:

 

 Now the Spirit speaketh expressly, that in the latter times some shall depart from the faith, giving heed to seducing spirits, and doctrines of devils; 2 Speaking lies in hypocrisy; having their conscience seared with a hot iron; 3 Forbidding to marry, and commanding to abstain from meats, which God hath created to be received with thanksgiving of them which believe and know the truth.  4 For every creature of God is good, and nothing to be refused, if it be received with thanksgiving: 5 For it is sanctified by the word of God and prayer. (1Ti 4:1-5 KJV)

 

This passage is often saddled with Peter’s/Kefa’s Joppa rooftop vision of a sheet descending from heaven with all sorts of unclean animals. And an unnamed voice instructs Kefa to rise, kill, and eat the creatures on the sheet, with the admonishment of “what Yah has made clean, he must not consider as unclean” any longer (Acts 10:11-13). And of course, the anti-Torah crowd has chosen to ignore the full context of Kefa’s vision here by insisting that the dietary laws along with the rest of Torah has been done away with. But the one with eyes to see and ears to hear will find Kefa later in this same chapter of Acts 10 interpreting his own vision. And that interpretation had absolutely nothing to do with Yah’s people being permitted to consume unclean meats or whatever foods they so choose outside of Torah’s instructions.

 

But as we all are aware, expressed truth, even when its right out in the open, is rarely enough to sway one who is hell-bent on disobeying his or her Creator’s instructions to them at all costs.

 

Now, if you recall our very last TMTO discussion entitled “Does Torah Cause Someone to Sin More? A Messianic Examination of Romans 5:20”, we identified that focus passage as another one of those challenging Pauline passages (at least challenging to us Messianics/Netzarim) that on the surface appears to be anti-Torah in meaning. That is, these difficult passages appear on the surface to be that of Paul telling his readers that the Torah has been done away with.

 

In today’s focus passage, a standard, rote, mechanical reading of the text, outside the framework of all reasonable contextual understanding (i.e.., taking into consideration the previous verses of Ephesians leading up to our focus passage; taking into account the apostle’s entire body of writings; taking into account the teachings of Master Yahoshua Messiah; taking into account the cultural, historical, situation-on-the-ground prompting the apostle to write the passage in the first place; not taking the passage in question as a stand-alone-scriptural soundbite), that when read outside the contextual framework, the focus passage would seem to support an understanding that the apostle was affirming to Timothy, in particular verses 4 and 5, that the consumption of all meats—whether clean or unclean—was henceforth and forevermore permissible. Amen…

 

But is this indeed the case? Was the apostle affirming to Timothy, who was well versed in Torah and the Gospel that Yahoshua taught through his mentor Paul: Was the apostle affirming here in this and other similar passages, that the mitzvot/the commandments regulating the consumption of meats by Yah’s set-apart people had become null and void? Well, the denominationalists, anti-Torah crowd certainly believe and teach that this was what the Apostle to the Gentiles was advocating.

 

 

So, today beloved, we will delve into 1 Timothy 4:1-5 and determine whether the denominationalists are correct in their understanding of this passage.

 

The Necessity of Employing a Pro-Torah Mindset in our Examination of 1 Timothy 4:1-5

 

Now, as I mentioned in our last installment, before we go any further in our discussion, I need you to first put on your pro-Torah-glasses and recall all that we’ve discussed about the apostle’s hard to understand, difficult to interpret passages, and apply those principles to the examination of our focus passage here today.

For if we approach this passage outside the contextual-framework of the whole of scripture—and the context of the whole of scripture is that it is pro-Torah—from Genesis/Beresheit through to Revelation—from the original covenant to the renewed covenant—if we reject the contextual-framework of scripture, we will be easy prey for the manipulators/twisters of scripture.

For our bible and our Faith were in fact founded upon Yah’s eternal, holy, and righteous ways, which are inextricably linked to His Torah, and which forms the basis upon which a substantive, covenant relationship with the Creator of the Universe rest.

 

 

We Need Not Be Fooled by the Anti-Torah Crowd

 

Brethren, with 100% certainty I can tell you that the Apostle Paul was NOT doing an about-face on the Torah-prohibition against consuming unclean meats (as stipulated in Leviticus/Vayiqra 11 and Deuteronomy/Devarim 14) here in our focus passage.  And for anti-Torah denominationalists who have made it their mission in life to take our focus passage and others like it, and promote a lawless, grace-perverted gospel, they are in danger of finding themselves and those whom they’ve tricked into believing their false teachings, named among the “children of disobedience” (Ephesians 2:2; 5:6; Colossians 3:6) and “children of wrath” (Ephesians 2:3) and being called “least in the Kingdom of Heaven” (Matthew 5:19). But rather, the apostle is advocating Torah-living for Yah’s people by challenging and confronting the anti-Torah false teachings of the proto-Jewish-Gnostics of his day:

(5) But the aim of our instruction is love that comes from a pure heart, a good conscience, and a sincere faith. (6) Some have strayed from these and turned away to empty discussion. (7) They want to be teachers of the law (ie., of Torah), but they do n ot understand what they are saying or the things they insist on so confidently. (8) But we know that the law is good if someone uses it legitimately (1 Timothy 1:5-8; NET).

And so, here are a few things to keep in mind as we proceed along in our discussion:

  1. Neither Yahoshua Messiah, or for that matter, the Apostle Paul, had the authority to reverse Yah’s Torah-provisions, including those provisions regulating clean and unclean foods.

 

  1. To falsely accuse the apostle of being the face of the denominationalist’s anti-Torah agenda, rejects everything that the apostle taught and professed as it relates to his unshakable loyalty and adherence to Yah’s Torah and the Faith once delivered.

 

  1. The circumstances prompting the apostle to write what he wrote in our focus passage is pretty evident throughout the body of his writings, in particular what he wrote in the first-two-verses leading to our focus passage. And that has to do with teachers within the Body of Messiah causing people to err from the tenets of the faith once delivered by way of “seducing spirits and doctrines of devils” (1 Timothy 4:1-2).

 

Therefore, it is my hope, trust, and prayer that by the time we leave here today, we will all be in a better position to accurately explain our focus passage, as well as earnestly contend for the true faith once delivered (Jude 1:3).

 

So, let’s get into this.

 

Examining 1 Timothy 4:1-5

 

Prerequisites to Truly Understanding our Focus Passage

 

In order to accurately understand our focus passage, it is vitally important to first gain as clear an understanding of the contextual framework of this letter as possible. That means understanding who wrote the letter and to whom it was written. As well as it is important to gain as much of an understanding of what may have prompted the writing of the letter in the first place: the issues; the events; the circumstances; and the situation on the ground in Ephesus at the time Shaul wrote this letter to Timothy.

 

Therefore, I am a staunch advocate for reading the entire letter of First Timothy to gain this contextual understanding of all the moving parts associated with our focus passage. Because if we don’t survey the whole letter (which by the way, we’ll only be doing a cursory survey of the letter here in our discussion today for the sake of time), if we don’t survey the whole letter beforehand we will be forced to interpret our focus passage in isolation—as a scriptural soundbite–not having all the whys and wherefores needed to piece together the puzzle which is our passage. And so, our aim is to reduce the chance or eliminate the likelihood of misunderstanding and misinterpreting our passage.

 

We must always remember beloved, that this, as well as all the other Pauline letters, were not written to us as individuals, nor were they written to the general Body of Messiah. Contrary to denominational-conventional wisdom, these letters were never intended to be church operational and doctrinal manuals. In the case of these three-letters—first and second Timothy and Titus, they were originally written as personal, although professional correspondences, that the apostle wrote to two very important individuals on his evangelistic team; both of whom the apostle had tasked with overseeing key regional Messianic Assemblies. And these assemblies were experiencing challenges and problems and the negative influences of various religious cooks, all of which needed to be aggressively addressed to not cause the work that the apostle had put into developing these assemblies to naught. And so, these letters provide us, some 2,000-years removed, a snapshot of the apostle’s struggles to keep the Messianic Assemblies he oversaw from failing or entirely succumbing to the evils of false teachers and their teachings.

 

So, the apostle was insistent on these two men—Timothy and Titus–staying true to the doctrines and truths that he’d taught them and basically, imitate his boldness and zeal for the Faith and their offices.

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First Timothy, along with the two other Pastoral Letters of Second Timothy and Titus, were written by the apostle Shaul (aka Paul), with Luke possibly acting as the apostle’s secretary or scribe.

 

It is believed by some New Testament scholars that the apostle wrote his first letter to Timothy while traveling to or evangelizing Macedonia. And His target audience was not the Body of Messiah as Denominationalists assert, but rather His partner in ministry, Timothy, whom he’d previously placed over the Messianic Assembly in Ephesus.

 

We find in the opening verses of First Timothy chapter one that the apostle had left Timothy to oversee the Ephesian Assembly:

 

(1) From Paul, an apostle of Messiah Yahoshua by the command of Yah our Savior and of Messiah Yeshua our hope, (2) to Timothy, my genuine child in the faith. Grace, mercy, and peace from Yah the Father and Messiah Yahoshua our Master! (3) As I urged you when I was leaving for Macedonia, stay on in Ephesus to instruct certain people not to spread false teachings, (4) nor occupy themselves with myths and interminable genealogies. Such things promote useless speculations rather than Yah’s redemptive plan that operates by faith (NET).

 

We also learn in the same chapter that Shaul viewed Timothy as his “child” in the Faith (1 Timothy 1:18).

 

We also learn that Timothy hailed from Lystra in Asia Minor (Acts 20:4). Shaul informs that Timothy was the son of a Greek father and a Jewish mother:

 

“I (Paul) recall your (Timothy) sincere faith that was alive first in your grandmother Lois and in your mother Eunice, and I am sure is in you” (2 Timothy 1:15; NET).

 

So then, Shaul establishes Timothy as the overseer of the Messianic Assembly in Ephesus. And in so doing, the apostle gives Timothy some marching orders moving forward:

 

(1) Instruct certain people not to spread false teachings (1 Timothy 1:3).

 

An example of such nefarious individuals is found in the apostle’s mention of Hymenaeus and Alexander, who he described as having shipwrecked their faith and who he personally handed over to hasatan to be taught not to blaspheme (1 Timothy 1:19-20).

 

(2) Instruct the members of the Assembly in Ephesus to not occupy themselves with myths and “interminable genealogies” (1 Timothy 1:4).

 

(3) Fight the good fight (1 Timothy 1:18).

 

(4) That petitions, prayers, intercessions, and thanks be offered on behalf of all people during assembly gatherings and fellowships (1 Timothy 2:1-4). And he includes both men and women participating in these community prayers exercising appropriate deportment and appearance (1 Timothy 2:8-15).

 

 

 

In this letter, Shaul seems keen on reaffirming in Timothy’s mind the central doctrines of his ministry, which was Yah’s redemptive plan, and a trusting faith in Yahoshua Messiah (1 Timothy 1:4b). But to this end, the apostle asserts the relevancy and efficacy of Torah when properly employed and lived/walked out in a believer’s life (1 Timothy 1:8).

 

And besides the obvious, why was the apostle so keen on getting Ephesus back on track in terms of the assembly adhering to the doctrines taught them by Shaul? Because of the influence that false teachers such as Hymenaeus and Alexander were and would later have over Yah’s Assemblies (1 Timothy 4:1-2). And it would seem that such false teachings were originating from a twisting of Torah by certain Jewish converts to the faith: Possibly Jewish Gnostics.

 

Here’s Shaul’s assessment of these influencers:

 

(7) They (that is, these false teachers/influencers) want to be teachers of the law (presuming Torah, possibly aspects of the Talmud, but more than not, the written Torah), but they do not understand what they are saying or the things they insist on so confidently. (8) But we know that the law is good if someone uses it legitimately, (9) realizing that law/Torah is not intended for a righteous person, but for lawless and rebellious people, for the ungodly and sinners, for the unholy and profane, for those who kill their fathers or mothers, for murderers, (10) sexually immoral people, practicing homosexuals, kidnappers, liars, perjurers—in fact, for any who live contrary to sound teaching (1 Timothy 1; NET modified).

 

Also, in question here in this letter are those who were involved in promoting various genealogies and speculations (1 Timothy 1:4).

 

Now, for the sake of time and avoiding going down rabbi-holes that are not tied to our focus passage, we will not delve into this particular passage. Suffice to say, the apostle is laying out a case against such false teachers that were operating in the Ephesian Assembly to Timothy.

 

The best background information as it relates to the Ephesian Assembly that Timothy was set to oversee, besides the Book of Ephesians itself, can be found in the Book of Acts. And in the Book of Acts, we find that Shaul left the nascent assembly in the care of Priscilla and Aquila. Priscilla and Aquila were a Roman Jewish couple who were expelled from Rome during Emperor Claudius’ purge of the Jews from Italy. It’s a fair guess that this couple were members of the Roman Messianic Assembly that endured some significant persecution under Emperor Nero. Shaul meets this couple in Corinth and recruits them to be members of his evangelistic team. They travel with Shaul to Ephesus and the apostle leaves them there to oversee the nascent Ephesian Assembly (Acts 18).

 

The budding Ephesian Assembly could not have been in better hands under the watchful eyes of Aquila and Priscilla as they were well versed in the Faith once delivered. This is evidenced by the couple educating the visiting evangelist Apollos—described by Luke as an eloquent speaker with a thorough knowledge of the Tanach. The limits of his understanding of the Faith once delivered were derived from him being a disciple of Yochanan (aka John) the Immerser (Acts 18:24-28).

 

But it appears that after the departure of Priscilla and Aquila (seemingly back to their hometown of Rome) and Apollos, the Ephesian Assembly sort of dissolved: possibly as a result of her not having competent leadership. Luke’s narration does not provide us any clear explanation as to why the Ephesian Assembly faded out in its first iteration. But we do know that Shaul returned to Ephesus and established another foothold in that city. He was successful in locating and ministering to a handful of disciples; in addition to his preaching in the city’s synagogue for three-months, “disputing and persuading the things concerning the Kingdom of Yah” (Acts 19:8). Unfortunately, it would appear, the synagogue members were not very accepting of the Apostle’s Gospel Message, prompting Shaul to move his evangelical operations to the “School of Tyrannus” and refocus his efforts on making disciples of Ephesian Gentiles (Acts 19:9). And it appears that this School of Tyrannus was a center for various forms of Greek learning. It was clearly open to accommodating and facilitating the Apostle’s work in Ephesus. And the apostle worked out of that facility for the better part of two-years (Acts 19:9-10).

 

It turns out that Ephesus and the School of Tyrannus became the central hub of Shaul’s global evangelistic operations (Acts 19:10b). Consequently, the apostle’s influence was greatly felt in the city during those two years. And we find in verses 11-19 a situation that may help us understand our focus passage a little better. For we find in these two verses that the Apostle’s influence—the delivering of the Word of Truth with power, and the miraculous being manifested through him and his team—led to many of the city’s Jewish mystics (or Gnostics) converting to the Faith and becoming members of into the assembly.

 

Now, it’s these so-called Jewish mystics or Jewish Gnostics (if you will) who continued to practice their religion even after coming into Faith, that likely caused the Ephesian Assembly to, in some degree, fall into the morass of “syncretism.” Syncretism is the merging of belief-systems into a single religion. Thus, these Jewish magicians/mystics–some have referred to them as nascent or proto-Jewish Gnostics–likely infused their Jewish mystic beliefs—possibly early-early Kabbalistic beliefs—into the True Faith once delivered. These New Age Jews taught heretical doctrines such as the ones mentioned in our focus passage, whereby members of the assembly were encouraged to not marry and to abstain from the consumption of all meats. These Gnostics seemed to practice some form of asceticism.

 

Asceticism is defined as “a severe self-discipline and avoidance of all forms of indulgences” for purposes of getting closer to God or to achieve some religious purpose (Oxford Dictionary). And despite these mystics or magicians or proto-Gnostics being Jewish in terms of their culture, biology, and basic Hebrew/Jewish beliefs, their pagan, gnostic beliefs, and practices betrayed their Hebraic Roots. These taught principles and doctrines that were contrary to Torah.

 

J.K. McKee, author of “A Survey of the Apostolic Scriptures for the Practical Messianic” described the negative impact that these proto-Gnostic influencers’ posed on Shaul’s work in the region:

 

“…Paul and Timothy were increasingly endangered by a Judaizing-gnostic counter mission which was likely quite akin to some of the false ideas present in Colossae” (Colossians 2:8-3:4).

 

The Colossae Parallel

 

So, what was happening in Colossae that would parallel what was happening in Ephesus?

 

Well:

 

  • There appeared to exist a significant focus on empty, deceitful philosophies that were consistent with various human traditions related to fallen spirit beings. These hot topics had gripped the imaginations of the members of the Colossae Assembly, all but overshadowing all teachings of and about Yahoshua Messiah.

 

  • The members of the assembly were having to endure criticisms and judgments from outsiders regarding the basic elements of their Faith, such as the food laws, the weekly Sabbath, New Moon celebrations, and the Feasts of Yah. Those passing judgment on those who were Torah-honoring in the Assembly were heavily distracted by gnostic-beliefs and pagan-infused-worship, such as a syncretized religion focusing on angels.

 

  • Members of the Colossian Assembly, even after being converted to the True Faith Once Delivered, were in many cases still clinging to the pagan ways of the world from which they originally came, with a focus on the evil spirits of this world. It’s not clear, but it’s conceivable that these individuals were still communicating and reacting to the natural elements of this world from a pagan-rich, spiritual perspective. Remember the Jewish Gnostics in Ephesus and their books of magic? Witchcraft. Soothsaying. Fortune-telling. Necromancy. And the like (Acts 19:19).

 

  • Many members remained focused on the carnal and things of the flesh, and not so much spiritual things.

 

And so, it’s all this background knowledge that helps form the basis of understanding what the apostle was truly saying in our focus passage. It’s not what the Denominationalists and their anti-Torah machine have been putting out to the world all these many centuries. Just because Shaul was the Great Apostle to the Gentiles, he was not granted any special powers and authority to do away with Torah. Not even Yahoshua was granted such authority:

 

(17) Think not that I am come to destroy the law, or the prophets: I am not come to destroy, but to fulfill. (18) For verily I say unto you, till heaven and earth pass, one jot or one tittle shall in no wise pass from the law, till all be fulfilled. (19) Whosoever therefore shall break one of these least commandments, and shall teach men so, he shall be called the least in the kingdom of heaven: but whosoever shall do and teach them, the same shall be called great in the kingdom of heaven (Matthew 5:17-20; KJV).

 

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Our Focus Passage is an Indication of the Insidious and Pervasive Nature of False Teachings and Teachers in the Early Assemblies

 

Our focus passage is clearly another indication of the pervasiveness of false teachers and their teachings that were infiltrating the first-century assemblies. And all indications are that many of these false teachers were proto-Jewish-Gnostics, although in Shaul’s day, Gnosticism had not fully come into its own. And please don’t get me wrong beloved, converted Gentiles were not to be excluded from this group of false teachers and their false teachings. For these too brought into the Faith once delivered, the pagan-rich-baggage of their former lives. The apostle makes mention of such things with his phrase “philosophy, vain deceit after the tradition of men, after the rudiments of the world…the rudiments (or elemental spirits) of the world… (Colossians 2:8, 20; KJV).

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So, with all this background information that we’ve accumulated, we can now move forward and directly examine our focus passage and see if we can accurately interpret or decipher what the apostle was writing to Timothy.

4:1-2.    The latter time departing from the faith

Now the Spirit speaketh expressly, that in the latter times some shall depart from the faith, giving heed to seducing spirits, and doctrines of devils; 2 Speaking lies in hypocrisy; having their conscience seared with a hot iron; (1Ti 4:1-2 KJV)

In these two verses, the apostle mentions that in the later days, brethren would depart from the fundamental elements and understanding, and teachings of the true Faith once delivered. And if you read this particular verse carefully, it’s not so much that people will “leave” the faith, as some have interpreted. But rather, folks will occupy themselves with false and misguided teachings that the apostle describes as originating with “deceiving spirits and demonic teachings.”

We see evidence strewn throughout the apostle’s body of writings that he truly believed he and the assemblies were living in the last days. And certainly, here in verse one, we see an example of this belief:

 

“Now the Spirit explicitly says that in the later times (ie., the “acharit-hayamim”) some will desert the faith…” and so forth.

 

And so, the apostle, having this ominous perception that the end times were right upon him and his evangelistic work. Consequently, this ominous belief that the apostle possessed gave rise to this constant feeling that the “obedience of faith” that he’d preached and taught the assemblies he oversaw could conceivably be supplanted by “grievous wolves” (Acts 20:28-31). These “grievous wolves would prey upon the members of the Body of Messiah and draw them away from the truth of the Gospel.

 

But as far as Shaul was concerned, the “acharit-hayamim” (aka the end times) had already descended upon the Body of Messiah:

 

“…the ends of the world are come” he writes (1 Corinthians 10:11b).

 

Shaul was acutely aware that many members of the Body of Messiah, even in some of the assemblies he oversaw, were falling away from the original, pure faith once delivered. Their substitute for the true faith being a syncretized religion that originated from deceiving spirits and demons. In this case, the members of the Ephesian Assembly were being drawn into a proto-or nascent-Jewish Gnosticism that could not have come from anyplace other than the pit of hell.

 

And so, this verse forms sort of an introduction to that which will come in the remaining three-verses of our focus passage regarding the consumption of meats by Yah’s people. For if we understand that Shaul’s focus was on the Ephesian Messianics being influenced by false teachings coming from deceiving spirits and demonic teachings, we can better understand what the apostle meant when he wrote that “every creature of God is good, and nothing should be refused if it’s received with thanksgiving” (1 Timothy 4:4).

So then, in verse 2, Shaul mentions that there were hypocritical liars in the Body of Mashiyach who were putting forth these false teachings that were occupying the minds of the brethren. These Shaul describes as having their minds so desensitized to the Truth of Yah’s Word—including the Truth of Yah’s Torah which Shaul taught to the assemblies he oversaw—that they were no longer capable of recognizing the Truth even if it were to bite them in their behinds.  

And so, the apostle’s focus becomes that of these lying, hypocritical false teachers and in the following verses, he is going to expound—highlight—some of their false teachings.

4:3-5. The False Teachings of the Ephesian Gnostics that Timothy was Instructed to be on the Look-out For

3 Forbidding to marry, and commanding to abstain from meats, which God hath created to be received with thanksgiving of them which believe and know the truth.  4 For every creature of God is good, and nothing to be refused, if it be received with thanksgiving: 5 For it is sanctified by the word of God and prayer. (1Ti 4:3-5 KJV)

Here the apostle mentions that these false, lying, hypocritical teachers were (1) prohibiting marriage, an institution that Yah sanctified. And (2) these false teachers were requiring the brethren to “abstain from foods that Yah created to be received with thanksgiving by those who believe and know the truth” (NET).  

What are those foods that the apostle is saying these false teachers are prohibiting the brethren from consuming? Well, the Hebraic understanding of what we ARE TO consume as food and what we are NOT to consume is spelled out in Leviticus/Vayiqra 11 and Deuteronomy/Devarim 14:1-21. Yah had Moshe write down for us what He considers to be food and what He considers not to be food.

Contrary to denominationalists’ conventional wisdom, the apostle here in in these three verses was confronting the issue of “asceticism.” As pious and admirable as asceticism may appear to many people around the world today and throughout history, it is not of Yah, but of man. Yah established the institution of marriage for several reasons, which we won’t get into in this discussion. (But I would recommend that you check out our discussion on Biblical Marriage if you are led to do so.) And for someone to teach against the institution of marriage, outside of one’s own personal conviction to not marry, such as with Shaul (Romans 14:5-6, 14-17, 20; 1 Corinthians 8:8, 13; 10:23-11:1; Colossians 2:16-23), is presumptuous and it serves only to second guess Yah.

The Catholic Church for instance, has erroneously used the apostle as their priestly role model, forbidding their priests from marrying. Which I’ve always found curious, especially given the fact that even the Levitical High Priests were expected to marry. Why would Catholic Priests have an alternative expectation?

 

Now, the abstinence of foods that Yah created to be received with thanksgiving as Shaul referenced here is not at all related to “kashrut,” or the orthodox Jewish dietary laws. Which is in and of itself interesting, given that the dietary asceticism the apostle is referring to here, was being taught and likely enforced upon certain Ephesian Assembly members by Messianic Jews. For these proto-nascent-Gnostic Jews were twisting Yah’s food laws to such a degree that the one coming into their syncretized religion would view the consumption of sanctioned and sanctified meats as evil or carnal.    

So, Shaul here is basically telling Timothy that these shysters—these bootleg preachers so to speak—are preaching and teaching against Torah precepts. Not, however, against Torah precepts as the denominationalists-anti-Torah crowd would have us believe. But rather, they were preaching and teaching that the brethren should abstain from those meats that Father Yah has sanctioned as food. These false teachers were seemingly teaching a full abstinence from all meats—both clean and unclean. And it seems that these folks were somehow teaching that these clean foods were not clean—that they were not to be eaten by Yah’s set-apart people. It appears they were teaching and preaching some form of veganism, which Yah never required his people to engage in. Yah deemed that certain animals were clean and should and could be eaten by his people.  

And since Yah provided these animals for our consumption—the clean animals that is—we as Yah’s elect are to receive them with thanksgiving.  

Therefore, in verse 4, the apostle makes a definitive statement that any clean food that Yah has permitted in His Torah may be eaten by His people, and that Yah’s people are not to be hesitant in receiving and consuming these foods, but to receive and consume them with thanksgiving. For Yah provided and set these foods apart for His people to eat. And He set them apart for us to eat by stating it in His Torah and we give thanks for that food when we bless the Eternal with our thanksgiving prayers each time we sit down to eat.  

Yes, the denominationalists—the anti-Torah folks—have taken our focus passage well out of its contextual framework. And they’ve done so by leaving out ignoring or simply reading over verses 1 and 2, which I stated earlier, sets the stage for what the apostle was confronting in his message to the Evangelist Timothy. Shaul, a Torah-loving “emissary” of Yahoshua Messiah, would never advocate any of Yah’s people consuming forbidden, unsanctioned, unclean meats or foods. He taught Torah and he stood by Torah through and through.  

Therefore, we really must take everything the apostle writes in context. And yes, sometimes his writings are extremely challenging to understand. But once we know what the apostle truly stood for, his writings are not all that difficult to understand.

The Bottom Line Regarding the Yah’s People Keeping the Food Laws

So, when we take into consideration all that we’ve discussed relating to our focus passage, we can safely conclude that the apostle was strictly addressing false teachings that targeted Torah-instructions related to (1) marriage and (2) meat consumption by Yah’s people.

It was clear that these false teachings, which I believe were tied to a growing Jewish Gnostic influence (1 Timothy 1:7—those who the apostle described as wanting to be teachers of Torah even though they did not understand either what they were saying or the matters about which they make confident assertions); this threat not only happening in Ephesus, but in other assemblies that Shaul oversaw. Shaul was obviously concerned about the negative influence these Gnostics were having on assembly members, and thus he sought to not only make his young protege aware of the threat, but to also instruct him to act against the false teachers’ influences in the assemblies.

Now, I get that these false Torah-teachers weren’t proposing an outright violation of Torah as the denominationalists have made this passage out to be. But rather, these proto-Gnostics (if you will) were imposing upon the Ephesian Assembly, a form of syncretized, “austerity” or “asceticism”—that was meant to deprive or deny oneself of Yah-sanctioned things such as marriage and meats—as a means of ascending and communing with God. But the uniquely packaged, syncretized message/religion of these proto-Gnostics conflicted with the Gospel that Yahoshua and Shaul preached and taught. The Gospel that Yahoshua and Shaul preached and taught made provision for the only Way (no pun intended) to Yah. And the only Way to Yah was through a trusting faith in the Person and Ministry of our glorious Master Yahoshua Messiah (Ephesians 2:8; 2 Timothy 1:9).

So, this is really what this passage is about. It has nothing to do with Paul somehow overriding and doing away with Torah for Christians. But rather, it was about Shaul and his evangelistic team’s ongoing war against a hasatan-demon-created belief-system that the false-teachers and their teachings promised would bring one closer to the Creator of the Universe. It was about the ongoing efforts by Shaul to contend for the true faith once delivered and to push back on those who sought to cause members of the Body to essentially deny the cross—the execution stake—i.e.., the cross of Yahoshua and His atoning sacrifice and spilled blood to repair the breach that has existed between Yah and His human creation since the fall.

 

_____________________________________________________________________

Ephesus cleaned up the false-teaching problem that the apostle was concerned about in our focus passage today by the time Yochanan/John the Just wrote the Book of Revelation:

“I know your works as well as your labor and steadfast endurance, and that you cannot tolerate evil. You have even put to the test those who refer to themselves as apostles (but are not) and have discovered that they are false” (2:2).

And that is certainly a good thing.

However, Master did tell the Ephesian Assembly that He was upset over their forsaking their first love amid their cleaning up the false teachings and ridden themselves of false teachers (Revelation 2:4-5).

Now, many have surmised and speculated as to what Master meant by the Ephesians having left their first love. But what we can probably safely decipher from this statement is that the Assemblies had in general become cold towards their Master and quite possibly towards one another. These no longer possessed the zeal and love they once had when they first came to Faith in Mashiyach. We know that Ephesus was a wealthy Greco-Roman city. And it is quite possible that many of the Assembly members had grown complacent as it related to the required love for Mashiyach and for one another.

I will, at the risk of taking liberties with an unsubstantiated interpretation of this passage, that the Ephesian Assembly’s loss of love may even have involved them being disobedient to the teachings of Master Yeshua. Master counsels the Ephesians to assess how far they’d fallen from that first love, and to “do the deeds you did at the first” (Revelation 2:5).

As it related to that first-love that the Ephesians had seemingly lost, Master made it a point to say to His disciples:

“If you love Me, keep My commandments” (John/Yochanan 14:15; NKJV).

“He who does not love Me does not keep My words…” (John/Yochanan 14:24; NKJV).

“A new commandment I give to you, that you love one another, as I have loved you, that you also love one another” (John/Yochanan 13:34; NKJV).

You see, it’s one thing to rid ourselves of false teachings and heretical false teachers (which we absolutely need to be on guard for and make sure we don’t tolerate them in our midst). But it’s another thing to lose the very love that we had for the things of the Faith that we received when we came to Faith. It’s vitally important to maintain that first love. For the consequences of one not maintaining that first love is for Master Yahoshua Messiah Himself, as He cautioned the Ephesians, removing our lampstand from its place (Revelation 2:5).

Specifically, what is meant by Master removing the Ephesians’ lampstand is not entirely clear. But it sure sounds as though Yeshua Himself is suggesting that He will separate those who’ve lost their first love, from His True Body and from any opportunity to enter and be a part of His coming Kingdom:

(22) On that day, many will say to Me, ‘Master, Master, didn’t we prophesy in your Name, and in your Name cast out demons and do many powerful deeds?’ (23) Then I will declare to them, ‘I never knew you. Go away (depart) from Me, you lawbreakers (ie., you workers of iniquity)” (Matthew 7; NET modified). 

 

Action:

 

So then beloved, it falls upon each of us to stay the course as it relates to our walking out this faith. Yah requires us, as He did with the righteous remnant of Judah just before the Babylonian invasion:

“…the just (i.e.., the Tzedek; the righteous) shall live by [his] faith” (Habakkuk 2:4).

Indeed, there are several difficult passages in scripture that the enemy has twisted and misinterpreted and misrepresented to coax and bamboozle Yah’s people to transgress His Torah.

But Master stated to His disciples back in the day:

(19) Whosoever therefore shall break one of these least commandments, and shall teach men so, he shall be called the least in the kingdom of heaven: But whosoever shall do and teach them, the same shall be called great in the kingdom of heaven. (20) For I say unto you, that except your righteousness shall exceed the righteousness of the scribes and Pharisees, ye shall in no case enter into the kingdom of heaven” (Matthew 5:19-20; KJV).

Beloved, the leaders and teachers and preachers of this world do not have a heaven nor hell to place any of us in. They themselves are subject to Yah’s wrath and righteous judgment if they are not rightly dividing His “Word of truth.” And that’s exactly why I don’t take what I do here each week on TMTO lightly. I have a huge responsibility on my shoulders to tell you the Truth as Yah has made provision for me to do so. Otherwise, if I take liberties with Yah’s Truth, I stand to reap His wrath. And I’ll be frank with you: I absolutely gotta make it into the Kingdom. And so, I don’t want to do anything that will compromise or prevent that.

I said all this because I want you to be acutely aware of what the Truth is, and to not be ensnared in the false teachings—the anti-Torah—grace perversion of the Church Triumphant. As well as I want us all to be ready and capable of giving every person an answer who asks us for a reason of the hope that is in us (1 Peter/Kefa 3:15).  This is all part and parcel of our contending earnestly for the faith once delivered (Jude 1:3).

We answer to Yah, not the Church Triumphant. Which means, contrary to denominationalist-conventional wisdom, we have freedom in Messiah (2 Corinthians 3:17). Torah-living frees us from the bondage of sin and of men. We are married to a new Master and are now to live under His house-rules. And those house-rules are His Torah.

The apostle Shaul told his Colossian readers to not allow any individual judge them in meat, or in drink, or in respect to a moedim or set-apart day-or feast-day, or a new moon, or a sabbath day, as these are all shadows of good things to come; the reality of which is our glorious Messiah, Yahoshua (Colossians 2:16-17).

Besides, why would we want to defile these temples with that which is not food (1 Corinthians 6:19)? Yah’s presence deserves a holy place in which to dwell. So, let us not defile these temples of ours with that which is not food, but only that which leads to a healthy and sound body, mind, and spirit, so that Yah gets the glory and honor He so justly deserves.

And lastly, let us not get tangled up and misled by extreme religious practices that promise a closer relationship with the Creator of the Universe. Our covenant relationship with Yah is based entirely upon our trusting Faith in the Person and Ministries of Yeshua Messiah. And we please our Father in Heaven when we walk before Him perfectly and obey His Torah.

Shabbat Shalom.

Shavuatov.

Take care.

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Does Torah Cause Someone to Sin More? A Messianic Examination of Romans 5:20

Goal:

 

This is “Does Torah Cause Someone to Sin More? A Messianic Examination of Romans 5:20.”

 

And so, our survey of the hard-to-understand—those challenging Pauline passages—takes us in today’s installment of TMTO, to Romans 5:20.

 

And the KJV rendering reads:

 

“Moreover the law entered, that the offense might abound. But where sin abounded, grace did much more abound…”

 

Now, I believe this is definitely one of those challenging and hard to understand Pauline passages that the Apostle Kefa may have been referring to when he wrote:

 

(15) And regard the patience (ie., longsuffering) of our Master as salvation, just as also our dear brother Paul wrote to you, according to the wisdom given to him, (16) speaking of these things (what things? All things concerning the return of Yeshua Messiah) in all his letters. Some things in these letters are hard to understand, things the ignorant and unstable twist to their own destruction, as they also do to the rest of the scriptures. (NET)

 

Sadly, as you likely can already see or have previously heard, the denominationalists use our focus verse as one of many proof-positive anti-Torah Pauline passages. And so, with this verse we see yet another example of the Apostle to the Gentiles being wrongly accused of teaching and preaching a lawless grace Gospel by the traditionalists, fundamentalists, and evangelicals.

 

Our goal in this discussion is to accurately and contextually interpret Romans 5:20 and in the process challenge or oppose the denominationalists’ understanding of this verse.

 

 

 Attention:

 

But I must say from the git-go that this verse, as it is written in most English translations of the Bible, does, on the surface, seem to support these Torah-deniers.

 

 

 Need:

 

But beloved of Yah, today we intend to break this verse down to its component parts, and using the umbrella of context as it relates to the whole of the apostle’s writings, show or even prove that Rav Shaul (aka the Apostle Paul) was NOT trashing Torah, nor was he suggesting that Torah was an instrument that Yah used to cause His people to sin so that His grace would completely replace Torah in His people’s lives.

 

And so, what I need from you going forward in this discussion, is for you to recall all of the Paul and Hebrew Roots discussions we’ve posted over the course of the last couple years or so, and have them at the forefront of your minds as sort of a filter by which we may extract the true meaning of our focus verse and not be bulldozed by the false interpretation of it by our denominationalists cousins.

 

And I also need you to remember why we’re doing this when we could be spending our time reading and studying Torah. Well, unless we fully understand the role—the efficacy—the relevance of Torah in a Netzer’s (aka Messianic’s) life, no amount of Torah-studying is going to prove truly beneficial for us. And the best source for understanding the role, efficacy, and relevance of Torah in the life of Yah’s called-out-ones, I believe, is to be found in those challenging writings of Shaul.

 

Thus, it behooves us, if we are going to be true to our calling to “go and make disciples of all nations” (Matthew 28:19), to fully understand the role Torah plays in a would-be disciple’s covenant relationship with Father Yah.

 

Furthermore, we must be equipped to “give an answer to anyone who asks about the hope that we possess” (1 Peter/Kefa 3:15; NET).

 

Yes, beloved, we will be challenged or questioned as it relates to our Torah-honoring lifestyle. Challenged or questioned by family members; friends; neighbors; employers and employees; denominationalists; truth-seekers who Abba places in our path. And it’s a fair chance that when the subject of our living a Torah-lifestyle comes up, passages such as our focus verse may be used by those outside our Faith to possibly further their anti-Torah agenda and to discredit our walk in Torah.

 

But, depending on the challenge posed (ie., is the challenger truly interested in understanding why we believe what we believe and live how we live, or is the challenger simply looking for a fight)—for that one who sincerely seeks to understand what we’re all about, for those individuals, by virtue of our Great Commission Mandate, we should be equipped and knowledgeable to explain such challenging passages, and to do so, as Kefa continues: explain what we’re all about in light of such hard to understand passages of Holy Writ “with courtesy and respect, keeping a good conscience, so that those who slander [our] good conduct in Messiah may be put to shame when they accuse you” (1 Peter 3:16; NET modified).

 

III. Satisfaction of the need:

 

So then, by the time we end our discussion here today, we will:

 

  1. Have gained an understanding as to how the Denominationalists understand and explain our focus verse.
  2. Have broken-down and examined our focus passage within context of what we’ve discussed so far regarding the Book of Romans.
  3. Have looked at the reality of sin as it relates to Torah.
  4. Looked at how sin does increase in the life of a would-be child of Yah.
  5. Have arrived at an as accurate as possible interpretation of our focus passage.

 

 

 Visualization:

 

How Denominationalists Understand and Explain our Focus Passage

 

 

So then, allow me to formerly ask you: Is this Pauline passage an indictment or negative slant against Torah?

 

Well, mainstream, denominationalists seem to think so. And to a greater or lesser extent, I can understand why they may think this passage supports their anti-Torah worldview.

 

Once again, Shaul’s disjointed wording carries part of the blame here. It sort of just comes out of nowhere and hits you right upside your head. Unfortunately, the one who fails to examine this verse in its proper context with the previous parts of Shaul’s letter is almost forced to interpret it as it is written: That Yah introduced Torah so that sin may increase, requiring His grace to override that increased incidence of sin in a would-be believer’s life.

 

In other words, it’s like a local fire department going out and setting fires so that they will have the opportunity to put out those set fires. It’s like a local tire store that throws nails out on a nearby roadway so that those who run over the nails and puncture their tires are forced to purchase replacement tires from them.

 

It’s this idea that Yah had in mind a solution to humanity’s sin problem. But before He would enact that solution, He chose to first show Humanity just how bad they really were through His introducing of Torah to the world. And so, once humanity got a whiff of just how bad it was because Torah somehow incited them to sin more than they ever had before, then Yah would swoop in with a replacement for Torah. That replacement being His grace. And it would Yah’s grace that would bring humanity to a right standing before the Creator of the Universe. And despite Yeshua’s insistence to the contrary (that being He did not come to destroy Torah, but rather take Torah to its greatest level and potential—Matthew 5:17), Torah would have served its purpose and been tossed into the trash heap of ecclesiastical history.

 

And, when you really look at the under-belly of what I just described, there is a great amount of truth connected to it. But it’s an incomplete truth lacking the rest of the story. And the problem with this simplistic understanding of verse 20 that the Church Triumphant has so stubbornly embraced is that it contradicts the teaching of our Master Yahoshua Messiah in Matthew 5:17, as well as it feeds into the insidious anti-Torah mindset that overtook the Body of Messiah almost immediately after the last inner-circle apostle, Yochanan, John the Just, died. This incomplete story and truth—this twisting of the apostle’s teachings—is one of the things that will lead many down the road to destruction as the apostle Kefa/Peter described. These run the risk of hearing Master Yeshua say to them on that epic day: I never knew you…depart from Me, you workers of iniquity or lawlessness (Matthew 7:23).

 

But getting back to the text: Without exception, the mainstream Bible translations do indeed render the verse in an anti-Torah, manner so to speak:

 

  • And the law came in…The anti-Torah crowd sees this as if the Law was somehow hidden out there, just waiting for the opportunity to create problems for humanity. It was as if Torah was something that Father intended to use to “trip up” the very ones He claimed to have loved so much. His betrothed. His bride to be. But we have to ask ourselves, is this the type of God we serve and worship and love? I don’t think so. He loved Yisra’el. He intended nothing but good things for Yisrael. As He stated through the Prophet Yermi’Yahu (aka Jeremiah): “For I know the thoughts that I think toward you…thoughts of peace, and not of evil, to give you an expected end” (29:11; KJV). You see, the God we serve is not that mean, vengeful God of the Old Testament that many in denominationalism love to hate. He is, in fact, all about grace, mercy, forgiveness, and love. And the very Torah that our wayward cousins in Churchianity say is a curse and that causes nothing but trouble for humanity is actually Father Yah’s grace in action.

 

  • …that the offense might abound/increase/multiply/proliferate…The Church Triumphant believes and teaches that somehow Torah serves to cause people to sin more than they would without it. Which presents for me a dilemma. Having been in this Faith of ours for going on two-decades now, I can tell you that in all the times I’ve endeavored to be Torah observant, I was never enticed, encouraged, motivated,lured, driven to transgress any Torah mitzvah. Sure, there were numerous times that I faltered in my keeping of Torah. But my failures in keeping Torah at any of those given times had nothing to do with Torah somehow causing or motivating me to transgress it. Rather, I always stood convicted because of Torah, which when one thinks about it, is the most likely point to Shaul’s statement here. It’s not that Torah somehow prompts people to transgress it, but more so, it causes one to be aware of their sins—that is, become sin-sensitive. The combination of Torah and Yah’s Holy Spirit induces conviction within the soul that has sinned. Thus, the Spirit and the Torah work hand-in-hand to shine a spotlight on sin in a would-be believer’s life. So, as it is with many of the apostle’s hard to understand passages, it requires the truth-seeker to filter those troublesome passages through the filters of context as well as perspective. Perspective from the standpoint of how we should approach each of those difficult passages. Are we best served to approach those passages from an anti-Torah perspective, knowing from the start that Shaul was in no stretch of the imagination against Torah (Romans 3:31)? Or rather, are we best served to approach such passages from a pro-Torah perspective? Clearly, the answer is the latter: Approach such passages from a pro-Torah perspective. I know this will wrangle some folk’s feathers. But we must always bear in mind that the whole of scripture was written from a pro-Torah standpoint and basis. So then, as it relates to our study of scripture, it’s always best to examine these difficult passages within the pro-Torah context and perspective of the whole of the apostle’s body of writings and the teachings of our Master Yahoshua Messiah.

 

Now, the wording here can also mislead those who are less savvy in terms of their abilities to rightly divide the Word of Truth. For those who are not scripturally savvy—that is, they are novice to the study of scripture—they could very easily draw from our focus verse the false impression that Torah was something Yah used to trip up His Chosen People. Let us not forget that according to denominationalists in general, it is impossible for anyone to keep Torah. And with that mindset as a primary driver for them, passages such as our focus verse support the false and hasatan inspired doctrine that the God of the Old Testament (ie., YHVH) was harsh and uncaring and mean, but the God of the New Testament (Jesus Christ) was all about love and grace. And so, to these folks, Torah was just another means by which God oppressed His people and the Torah was never truly of any benefit or relevance in the lives of Yah’s people. But as we’ve shown throughout our Paul and Hebrew Roots Series, such thinking is far far from the truth.

 

A Messianic Sides with the Denominationalists’ Understanding

 

I was surprised to read in Messianic author J.K. McKee’s Commentary on the Book of Romans, that although he does recognize the explanation for the increase of sin brought on by Torah that I am putting forth here in this discussion, he leans towards the denominationalists’ rote understanding of our focus passage. That somehow Torah inherently causes people to sin or it increases the incidents of sin in the life of the one in possession of Torah.

 

He writes that “It is appropriate to conclude that with the formal giving of the Torah on the scene of history, that as a consequence of it, human sin was stirred up” (pg. 128).

 

But again, speaking from personal experience, having been Torah-honoring and observant for the better part of two-decades, that not once did Torah entice or cause me to sin or transgress its commandments.

 

If there was any sinning or violations on my part upon my learning about certain Torah mitzvot/commandments, it was me being rebellious. It was me refusing to obey Yah’s instructions. And in that sense, yes, sin awareness, coupled with my inherent rebelliousness towards Yah and His ways, is emblematic or suggestive of an increase in sin in my life secondary to my receiving Torah. But at the end of the day, it’s not Torah that causes the rebellion, because that stiffneck nature was there before I took possession of Torah. Torah simply gave me the opportunity to officially say no to Yah and His Ways.

 

As it relates to our sinful and stubborn ways before receiving Torah, Shaul wrote:

 

Because the law worketh wrath: for where no law is, there is no transgression” (Romans 4:15; KJV).

 

I pray that you’re getting what I’m saying here beloved.

 

But if not, here’s a case in point. 

 

The problem we all should have with such erroneous thinking of course, whether it’s coming from brethren within our faith community or those outside our faith community, is that they foster or promote anti-Torah sentiment to a world that is desperately in need of Torah. For to say that Torah increases the likelihood for or incidents of sin in the one who possesses Torah, serves only to promote a lawless, grace perverted way of life, as well as give Torah a nefarious and distrusting reputation. Think about it.

 

If the anti-Torah crowd’s understanding of our focus verse is correct, why would any well-meaning truth-seeker want to take on something that inherently causes them to sin and or fall out of favor with the Creator of the Universe? And the answer is, they wouldn’t want to take on Torah as a way of life. Which seems to be well in alignment with the ploy of the enemy, right? To deceive. To rob. To kill. Right.

 

I was reminded this morning by a dear brother of a well-known and cited verse in scripture, where Shaul reveals to his mentee, the evangelist Timothy, that “in the later times, some will desert the faith and occupy themselves with deceiving spirits and demonic teachings, which are influenced by the hypocrisy of liars whose consciences are seared” (1 Timothy 4:1-2; NET)

 

My friends, this anti-Torah sentiment that is born out of a misinterpretation and misrepresentation of Shaul’s teachings is one of the things that caused a falling away or a departing from the Faith just after the apostle John’s death towards the end of the first-century C.E. And that erosion of the faith that began 2,000-years ago, continues even today through the Church Triumphant’s promotion of the grace-perversion. And so, it is uber important that we “earnestly contend for the true Faith once delivered” (Jude 1:3) by always speaking truth and not giving an inch to such anti-Torah false teachings.

 

 

A Contextual Breakdown of Romans 5:20

 

 

Yeshua’s blood reconciles us to Father Yah. Through Yahoshua’s sacrifice many have the promise of life. In contrast, Adam brought death to many. One man’s transgression resulted in condemnation for all people. But through the righteous act of one man, eternal life is available to all people.

 

Contrasting themes speckle the apostle’s writing in this chapter:

 

  • Obedience versus disobedience
  • Being made sinners versus being made righteous
  • Death versus life
  • Transgression versus grace
  • Transgressions that lead to judgment versus the gracious gift leading to justification and eternal life
  • Condemnation versus righteousness

 

Enter the Law.

 

Torah is described by the apostle in verse 20 as “pareiserchomai” {par-ice-er’khom-ahee}. This Greek term is found in only one other place in scripture, as well as in a handful of non-biblical ancient Greek literature. And from those non-biblical Greek occurrences, the word in English means “to insert,” and “to occur” such as that which “creeps into” or “comes to one’s mind.” Or rather, that of an afterthought.

 

Contextually, the term “pareiserchomai” simply means that Torah was given to humanity after Adam’s fall. That’s all. Nothing more to see here as it relates to intentions. In other words, Yah wasn’t trying to “pull one-over” on his chosen people. But rather, Yah’s giving of Torah would serve a gracious and righteous purpose in the lives of His set-apart people.

 

Shaul goes on to state one of the purposes of Torah, which was “that the transgression might increase.” Now, in order for us to understand this critical relationship that exists between Torah and an increase in transgressions, we will first have to define the term “increase” or “abound” as it is used here in our focus verse.

 

Our English term “increase” in the Greek is “pleonazo.”

 

Defining the term “Pleonazo”

 

Increase” or “abound” in the Greek is “pleonazo” which can have meanings to include:

 

(1) to exist in abundance;

 

(2) to increase;

 

(3) to be augmented;

 

(4) to increase a thing beyond its original state.

 

Now, if we are inclined to simply go with a rote, mechanical translation or interpretation of “pleonazo” in our text outside the framework of Pauline context (ie., those things we already know about Shaul’s beliefs and teachings), we will be forced to interpret this passage accordingly:

 

  1. By Father Yah, out of the blue, introducing Torah to humanity through our ancient Hebrew cousins, it caused them to sin in ways that they would not have otherwise done. In other words, Torah served as a “sin” promoter or instigator or inciter. But we must stop and ask ourselves, if we are foolish enough to accept such an understanding, why in the universe would Father Yah give the very ones He claimed to love (His bride to be Yisra’el), something that would incite them to do things (ie., sin) that would in turn result in them breaking covenant with Him and their relationship with Him ended or terminated? Doesn’t make sense, does it?

 

Yet clearly, the way that the apostle wrote this verse, using the verbiage that he did, seems to say that this is the case.

 

We find a related verse just a couple chapters over, in this same book of Romans:

 

“But sin, taking occasion by the commandment, wrought in me all manner of concupiscence (or wrong or evil desires; all manner of coveting; all kinds of covetousness). For without the law sin was dead” (Romans 7:8; KJV).

 

And so, when we bring these two verses together and examine them side-by-side, we find that they certainly do suggests that Torah somehow incites or entices the one keeping it to transgress or violate its commandments.

 

But once again, such an interpretation still does not make sense on so many levels. For example, did we see an increase in sins by our ancient Hebrew cousins after Torah was passed down to them from Father Yah? Certainly, one could argue that we did see ancient Yisra’el overtly violate Torah when she worshiped the “golden calf” and so forth.

 

But was that “golden calf” incident, and the other transgressions committed by our Hebrew cousins, brought on by Torah? Or was it brought on because of something else? Say, their stiffnecked nature (Exodus/Shemot 32:9; 33:3, 5; 34:9; Deuteronomy/Devarim 9:6, 13; 10:16; 2 Chronicles 30:8; Acts 7:51)? Say, their rebelliousness (Deuteronomy/Devarim 9:7, 24; 31:27)? Say their uncircumcised hearts (ie., wills that refused to bow to Father Yah’s Will; Leviticus/Vayiqra 26:41; Jeremiah/Yermi’Yahu 4:4; 9:26; Ezekiel 44:7; Acts 7:51)? So, it seems to me that Torah did not cause our ancient Hebrew cousins to worship the Golden Calf while Moshe was atop the Mountain Communing with Yah.

 

Well, it is my hope, trust, and prayer that before we end our time together here today, that we come to understand that this is exactly what the apostle is referring to in our focus verse of Romans 5:20 and in 7:8.

 

Continuing with our forced interpretation discussion:

 

  1. That Torah instead of inciting, promoting, causing the one who possesses it to sin, it classified certain human behavior as sin whereas before, those same human behaviors were not considered sin by either humanity or Yah Himself such as idolatry and other sins. And so, this would explain the “increase” or “abounding” of sin when Torah was given.

 

Well, that’s kind of a stretch to me. But it is something that we must systematically consider and either accept or reject, depending on our contextual findings.

 

 

The Reality of Sin as it Relates to Torah

 

As I mentioned previously, a rote reading and understanding of our focus verse, outside of its proper context, could certainly lead us to think that the apostle is badmouthing Torah along either or both of these stated perspectives: (1) Torah causes or incites us to sin more than we would without it; and (2) Torah added sins that, before it was given, were not officially viewed as sins.

 

If, as I mentioned earlier in this discussion, we can look beyond the obvious wonkiness of the apostle’s wording in our focus verse, keeping in mind that Shaul affirmed in Romans 3:31 (as in other similar passages) that he and his evangelistic team affirmed the applicability and efficacy of Torah for Yah’s people, that the apostle is saying something altogether different than that which a mechanical reading of the verse would suggest.

 

So, working through this thing systematically, there are a few central truths as it relates to Torah and sin that we must bring to our discussion before we are able to arrive at a more accurate interpretation of our focus verse:

 

  1. We know that Torah primarily serves as a revelatory instrument as it relates to sin. In other words, Torah informs, or reveals to the one who receives it, what sin is and the penalties that are connected to/associated with the commission of those sins.

 

Yochanan (aka John) wrote:

 

“Whosoever committeth sin transgresseth also the law: For sin is the transgression (ie., the violation) of the law” (1 John 3:4; KJV).

 

Shaul, using himself as a rhetorical example to the “revelatory nature of Torah” wrote:

 

“What shall we say then? Is the law sin? Absolutely not! Certainly, I would not have known sin except through the law. For indeed I would not have known what it means to desire something belonging to someone else if the law had not said, “Do not covet” (Romans 7:7; NET).

 

So then, we have before us here at least two witnesses to the revelatory nature of Torah. And we find in Matthew an example of how our Master Yahoshua Messiah came to clarify the revelatory nature of Torah:

 

“But I say to you that whoever looks at a woman to desire her has already committed adultery with her in his heart” (Matthew 5:28; NET).

 

  1. Sin is a reality of all humanity:

 

“For all have sinned, and come short of the glory of Yah…” (Romans 3:23; KJV).

 

“So then, just as sin entered the world through one man and death through sin, and so death spread to all people because all [have] sinned…” (Romans 5:12; NET).

 

And so, Torah underscores this universal constant of sin in all humanity and the death penalty that sin carries with it, that forces the one to come to terms with their dire situation and their need of a savior. That savior of course is none other than Yeshua Messiah. Torah does not remedy or fix the sin problem. But rather, as the apostle described it, Torah in great part served a “schoolmaster role”. That is, it informed us what sin is; the penalties associated with sin; how we as Yah’s children are expected to behave if we are to escape Yah’s wrathful judgment and remain in covenant with Him. And most importantly, the schoolmaster role of Torah served to show us the dire nature of our human situation and that the only permanent remedy or solution for sin and its associated penalties was none other than Yahoshua Messiah. That is, “the salvation procured by the Messiah” (Tim Hegg; “Paul’s Epistle to the Romans; pg. 129).

 

And beloved, all things considered here, this is the ultimate purpose and role of Torah in the world: Yahoshua our Savior and our Messiah, being the “telos” or main point or purpose of Torah (Romans 10:4). For as Torah shows humanity the futility of its existence outside of Yah and His Ways, it serves as a wake-up call to sinful humanity, which is in essence to say:

 

Wake-up people. The only way to escape Yah’s holy and righteous wrathful judgment is to believe in the atoning sacrifice of Master Yahoshua (Romans 2:5). Believe that the blood that He shed on Calvary’s execution stake covers one’s sins once and for all, making a way for him or her to enter into a true, substantive, faithful, obedient covenant relationship with the Creator of the Universe.

 

So then, as it relates to Torah supposedly causing sin to “increase” or “abound” in the lives of those who possess it, we must consider the reality that comes when one recognizes their “sons of wrath” and “sons of disobedience” status before a holy and righteous Elohim. Such that Torah causes the one who possesses it to recognize how sinful they are and how badly they are in need of Yeshua Messiah’s atoning sacrifice and a covenant relationship with Father Yah in order to escape Yah’s coming wrathful judgment on the world (Romans 1:18).

 

  1. A bi-product of Torah, as we’ve discussed numerous times in various postings of TMTO, is the responsibility it places on those who have possession of Torah. In other words, those who possess Torah (ie., those who have knowledge of Torah) bear the greater responsibility of keeping its commandments and living in its ways.

 

That old adage of “those who know better are expected to do better” certainly comes to mind here.

 

For certainly, those who possess Torah are supposed to do what it says to do. But then, those who possess Torah but refuse to follow its instructions in righteousness, disobey it out of a rebellious, stiffneck, uncircumcised heart.

 

And this in a broad sense points us to the likely meaning of our focus verse. The “increase” (ie., pleonazo) in sin in one’s life once he or she receives Torah has nothing to do with a numerical increase in the incidents of sin in a believer’s life. The “increase” or “pleonazo” is highlighted in bringing to the surface one’s rebelliousness and refusal to obey Yah’s instructions in righteousness and conform to the Creator’s Way of Life for His human creation. So then, as one learns of Yah’s Ways and what human behavior Yah considers to be sin, any refusal or rebellion on his or her part only adds to their guilt before the court of heaven. For willful, conscious disobedience leads to death and curses (Deuteronomy 28-29).

 

Another way of seeing how Torah increases transgressions in the life of a Torah-keeper is best expressed by J.K. McKee, who, if you recall, sides with a rote, mechanical interpretation of our focus verse—such that Torah actually encourages one to sin– he does concede that the purpose of Torah was not to solve the problem of sin but to highlight-underscore-stipulate the “seriousness of sin” (pg. 128). For we learned from one of the apostle’s previous passages that the whole of humanity sins, whether the one in possession of Torah is aware of it or not. What Torah does do for the one who possesses it is that it reveals or informs him or her as to that which the Creator identifies as sin and what the appropriate punishment is for committing sin. Thus, what Yah is saying through His giving of Torah to his human creation is that it has been told and warned. The onus then falls upon the one in possession of Torah to seek Yah’s solution and remedy for their dire situation.

 

McKee also states that “the Law could count sin but could not counter it…but however much sin as a result of the Mosaic Law coming into the historical process, grace abounded even more with the inbreaking of the “Christ-event into the historical process” (pg. 128).

 

So then, transgressions increased, not in number, but in awareness when Torah was given to our ancient Hebrew cousins. The possessor of Torah becomes officially sin-aware and sin-sensitive. Couple that sin-awareness with a rebellious nature, it is easy to understand why Shaul would say that Torah or the Law came in so that transgressions may increase. 

 

 

 Action:

 

I see this increase or abounding in sin that Shaul is writing about from the perspective of the Torah-honoring child of Yah having an increased sensitivity and awareness of sin in their lives. What I mean by that is that as the child of Yah grows in their understanding of Torah and they begin plugging in those Torah-principles and mitzvot into their respective walk with Mashiyach, they start to see just how pervasive sin is in their life.

 

Case in point: Adultery and fornication. So, the would be believer has come to terms that they must not physically commit fornication or adultery. But later as they walk out this Truth and the Holy Spirit starts the justification process in their lives, they start to realize that they have other issues related to the mitzvot of fornication or adultery. Maybe they having wandering eyes and lustful desires towards members of the opposite sex that are not their spouse. Maybe they consume some form of pornography or literature or programing that feeds their sinful thoughts and desires in a manner that causes them to violate these mitzvot in ways that may go beyond the physical.

 

You know, we can transgress just about every mitzvot in Torah without our ever physically committing the prohibitive acts. If we are harboring a mindset or incorporating into our lives activities and content that foster the spirit of that thing that Torah prohibits, we are effectively sinning. Oh, we might not engage in outright idolatrous worship practices, but what about the various pagan symbols and objects that we keep in our homes (e.g., Christmas paraphernalia; Buddhas; gnomes in our yards; crosses that we wear around our necks; and so much more?

 

And that’s why it’s so important that we petition Father Yah that His Holy Spirit search our hearts and our minds to expose or shine a light on those things that beset us and cause sin to increase or abound in our lives (Hebrews 12:1).

 

Father Yah requires us to maintain an immaculate, pure, physically and spiritually clean environment in which He may dwell and commune with us. He will not dwell in an environment that is not clean and that is compromised.

 

Throughout Torah, Yah declared to our ancient Hebrew cousins that they were expected to maintain a clean and pure environment because He dwelt among them (Numbers/Bemidbar 5:2; Deuteronomy/Devarim 23:12-14). And the practical halachah that we must draw from these instructions not only applies to the physical, but also applies to the emotional, thoughts, feelings, and the spiritual. And in that sense, Torah forces the child of Yah to see the pervasiveness of sin in their lives and the necessity of somehow getting all that cleaned up. And that’s where Yah’s grace enters and overshadows that overwhelming presence of sin in our lives (5:20b). For the blood of our Master cleanses us from all sin/unrighteousness (1 John/Yochanan 1:7).

 

And as we previously mentioned, when we add to this increased awareness and sensitivity to sin in our lives, our rebellious and resistant nature, we can clearly see how sin or transgressions increase or abound in the life of the one who possesses Torah. For when we know that which we’re supposed to do as told to us by Yah through His Word, but we choose instead to not do that which He instructed, we effectively become “children of disobedience” (Ephesians 2:2; 5:6; Colossians 3:6) and subject to Yah’s wrath and the curses that come as a result of disobedience (Romans 1:18; 2:5; Deuteronomy 28-29).

 

And so, we see that Torah in and of itself does not cause one to sin more, as the denominationalists have chosen to erroneously interpret and teach as the meaning to Romans 5:20. If there is any adding to the level or number of sins in a believer’s life, Torah is not to be blamed. Torah only illuminates and reveals sin. We, the recipients of that knowledge—of the knowledge of the reality of sin in our lives, instead become all the more sin-sensitive or sin-aware, and are forced to deal with or overcome our rebellious or resistant nature and not allow sin to continue to operate in our lives. And again, this is where Yah’s grace overrides this dire situation. Yahoshua’s sacrifice not only atoned or covered over our sins, He also mediated and ushered in the renewed covenant which makes for the provision of the Ruach HaKodesh—the Holy Spirit—to inscribe Yah’s Words on our hearts so that we no longer resist His instructions. But rather, we desire to walk in Yah’s ways and obey His voice. To effectively fulfill that whole duty of humanity, which is to “fear Yah, and keep His commandments…” (Ecclesiastes 12:13). And this is one of the ways that Yah’s grace abounds or increases over that of sin’s increase in the life of the believer.

 

______________________________________________________________

 

Why did Shaul write our focus verse in the first place? Well, if taken in context with what we’ve discussed thus far, Paul’s central theme of salvation coming to the one who trusts in the Person and Ministry of Yahoshua Messiah and that one’s works—be it their Torah-keeping or their Jewishness was incapable of saving them, is being brought to an inevitable head here. Shaul is once again defining and bringing to the attention of his Roman Messianic readers, another purpose of Torah in a believer’s life.  And that added purpose of Torah is that it reveals and spotlights sin in his or her life. And that despite the severity and reality of sin in a believer’s life, Yah’s grace through Yeshua Messiah overshadows and overtakes that pervasive sin reality.

 

And so again, Shaul is in a sense reminding us that Torah does not save us from sin but rather it informs us of sin and informs us of Yah and His Ways. 

 

But praise be to Yah from whom all blessings flow! Yah has a fix for this dire situation…

 

For in the second half of our focus verse, the apostle writes that as sin abounded/increased/pleonazo, Yah’s grace exceeded that increase in sin that Torah highlighted or brought to light. It was in fact Yahoshua who purchased the grace that the would be child of Yah enjoys through a faithful, obedient covenant relationship with Him. And that grace, among a great many things, consists of the Netzer:

 

  • Having their sins permanently atoned for.
  • Receiving total access to Yehovah through a faithful, obedient, covenant relationship Him.
  • Being in a state of peace with Yah.
  • Receiving the gift of the Ruach HaKodesh (aka the Holy Spirit) to inscribe Yah’s Torah upon the fleshy tables of our hearts and in our minds, so that we no longer resist keeping Yah’s Torah, but instead, desire with every fiber of our being to obey Yah and walk in His Ways.

 

So then, it is this exceeding grace that overrides the so-called increase in sin that Torah supposedly incites. And we’ve learned that this Torah-induced increase in sin has to do with one’s rebellious and stiffneck nature reacting to Yah’s instructions in righteousness, as well as Torah showing us the pervasiveness of sin in the life of the one who possesses Torah and his or her dire need for a savior. As well as there being an increased responsibility on the part of the one who possesses Torah to actually keep and obey it; supporting that adage of “those who know better are expected to do better.”

 

But Yah’s grace deals with all these issues and so much more. And all that the would be child of Yah need do is to trust in the Person and Ministry of Yahoshua, which actually requires him or her to die to self—to let go and let Yah take over their entire lives.

 

And I absolutely love this statement by Messianic Commentator and Torah Teacher Tim Hegg:

 

“This is, once again, the kal v’chomer argument where the lesser being true guarantees the greater. If the Torah causes sin to abound (as noted above), and if the goal to which the Torah proceeds is the Messiah, then surely the Torah anticipates the grace of Yah which abounds” (Tim Hegg, Commentary on the Romans; pg. 129).

 

 

So then beloved, let us rejoice in the grace that Abba Father has lavished—poured out upon us. For we are no longer slaves to sin nor children of wrath. But rather, we are sin-sensitive, and thus we are acutely aware of the deleterious effects of sin that, as the writer of Hebrews describes, “so easily besets us” (12:1). Furthermore, we need not view Torah as the denominationalists do: As something terrible—bad—not good for God’s people. That Torah somehow causes us to sin and fall from His grace. To the contrary. We know that, as Shaul wrote, the Torah is holy, righteous, and good (7:12; 1 Timothy 1:8). Furthermore, we know that the Torah was not some insufficient, irrelevant relic that was forced upon our ancient Hebrew cousins. But rather, as the Psalmist wrote, the Torah is “perfect, converting the soul: The testimony of Yehovah is sure, making wise the simple” (19:7). Which also goes without saying that the Torah was a gift for all humanity from its Creator:

 

“One Torah shall be to him that is homeborn (that is homeborn Yisra’elite), and unto the stranger that sojourneth among Yisra’el (that is, we who are grafted into the commonwealth of Yisra’el) (Exodus/Shemot 12:49; Leviticus/Vayiqra 15:16, 29).

 

Therefore beloved, we need not be ashamed of Yah’s house rules which is Torah. We instead just need to abide by those house rules as we walk in Faith. For abiding with those house rules, through our trusting Faith in Yahoshua Messiah, keeps us in a substantive covenant relationship with Yah. And in so doing, we glorify Abba and image Him in all the earth.

 

Torah doesn’t incite nor cause us to sin beloved. But rather, it shows us how to properly relate to and love Father Yah—the Creator of the Universe, as well as how to relate to and love one another. Faith-induced Torah-living is the only way to live.

 Musical Intro and Outro by DanOSongs–“Cadmium”

 

 

The Niddah Laws–Still in Effect Today ?

The Question of Niddah  One question that seems to pop-up a lot from members of our Faith Community has to do with the Laws related to Niddah. Are the laws of Niddah still valid for today’s Torah Observant Disciples of Yeshua Messiah? And in case you aren’t familiar...

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Experiencing the Wisdom of God Persists Even in the Midst of Despair–STAR-37

This week’s portion is the 37th-Reading of the 3-year Torah Reading Cycle (STAR-37). And it is a familiar passage. For it is the story of Yosef interpreting the dreams of the cupbearer and baker in the Egyptian prison.

If we recall STAR-36, Yosef was cast into prison on trumped-up charges because he stood firm and remained true to Yah’s moral standards of righteousness. As the story in our reading unfolds before us, we have no clue as to how much time has passed since Yosef was first cast in the “pit.” But it is a fair bet that we’re talking about a significant amount of time.

But I brought up the issue of the unknown amount of time that had passed since last reading and today’s reading only to set the stage for the theme that I have selected for this post. And that has to do with Yah’s people experiencing Yah’s wisdom even in the midst of despair. For Yah’s wisdom has no shelf-life. It has no prescribed period of time in which it will operate in one’s time of despair. Yah’s wisdom works according to His perfect timing. And it works in the manner that Yah prescribes it to work so as to fulfill His perfect will and plan.

So, let’s look at some of the highlights of this reading and see where it takes us from a practical, Messianic halachic perspective:

40.1-3. The cupbearer (aka butler) and baker were both noted officials in ancient courts. The cupbearer/butler was tasked with seeing that the king/pharaoh received drink whenever called for by him. Consequently, the butler/cupbearer wielded a great amount of political influence in the court, having in many cases, the ear of the king. Thus, this official would be viewed as a confidant of the king. Nehemiah held this position during his enslavement in Persia.


The baker on the other hand prepared meals for the king. These two positions were positions of trust in the king’s court; similar to the trust Yosef enjoyed with Potiphar prior to his imprisonment. This trust extended to each in their respective roles protecting the king from any enemy efforts to poison him.


Some scholars have surmised that the offense–with some translation translating the Hebrew verb as “sin”–that landed the cupbearer and the baker in prison was their roles in plotting to kill or poison the king. Both officials had access to the king. And both would have had adequate means by which to carry out such a plot.  But whatever these two officials did, according to the text, outraged the king (vs. 2).
Now, there is indeed a notable contrast, whether intentional or not, between the “sin” of Yosef and these court officials. The court officials’ sin–whatever it truly was–was truly an offense worthy of imprisonment and even death. While Yosef’s alleged sin was in every sense of the word, undeserved. Yosef vehemently sought to avoid “sinning” against his Elohim. His refusal to sin against his Elohim landed him in prison alongside those who were guilty of various offenses against the state and the king. Criminals. And thus, the righteous one of Yah, is named among criminals and workers of evil.


What does this say about us today? As obedient, covenant-keeping people of Father Yah, just as common as it is to find favor with folks of the world by walking in covenant with Yah, it is equally common to fall out of favor with these same folks, and even face some form of punishment from them, simply by remaining obedient to Yah and His righteous ways.


Simply look at how many brethren, just recently, have had to endure tremendous trials and tribulations because Yah’s elect refused to bow their knees to the Ba’al’s of this world. Brethren’s livelihoods and freedoms forever ruined because they stood firm and refused to have poison injected into their “temples” (i.e., their bodies), or because they stood firm against the hellish efforts of the LGBTQ crowd and woke America. Unfortunately, this is the dichotomous life consequences that we as Yah’s set-apart people are forced to contend with. So, Yosef’s story should hold tremendous meaning for us all who are the redeemed of the Most High. For it was our Master Yeshua HaMashiyach who encouraged us accordingly:


“(11) Blessed are ye, when men shall revile you, and persecute you, and shall say all manner of evil against you falsely, for My sake. (12) Rejoice and be exceeding glad: For great is your reward in heaven: For so persecuted they the prophets which were before you” (Matthew 5:11-12; KJV).


Of this, Kefa (aka Peter) wrote:


“If ye be reproached for the Name of Messiah, happy are ye; for the spirit of glory and of Yah resteth upon you: On their part He is evil spoken of, but on your part He is glorified” (1 Peter 4:14).

40:3-4. The high chamberlain assigns Yosef to attend to the imprisoned cupbearer and baker. This suggests that by this time in the Yosef chronology, Yosef had been imprisoned long enough to earn or warrant him being given such a trust position and assignment (39:21-23).

Recall Yosef had gained favor in the eyes of the prison warden–house warden (Robert Alter’s interpretative terminology, Hebrew of “sar beyt hasohar as written in chapter 39, compared to high chamberlain or “sar hatobahim” as mentioned in chapter 40), as he experienced with Potiphar, his former master. Why? Because Yah was with him. And this is an important Netzari-Messianic principle to be drawn from these grand stories of the patriarchs: The relevance of Yah’s presence and wisdom operating in a Netzer’s/Messianic’s life, even in times of despair.

Interestingly, this high chamberlain would most likely have been his former house Master, Potiphar (chapter 39). So then, is there a discrepancy between the two titles or persons? No. Because it is likely that Potiphar, the “high chamberlain,” held administrative oversight of the prison along with his other honored positions in the Egyptian high court, while the warden, a separate, lower official held operational oversight of the prison. And this seems to jive with 39:22-23, where Moshe informs us that the warden did not have to see to any operational matters in his prison because Yosef saw to its smooth operation.

But it is also interesting that it was the high chamberlain, presumably Potiphar, who placed the former court officials, i.e., the cupbearer and his sidekick the baker, under Yosef direct care. These two would have been “high profile prisoners” requiring special oversight. And seeing that it was likely Potiphar directing Yosef be assigned to these two former courts officials, one has to wonder why Potiphar didn’t either have Yosef executed for the alleged, trumped-up crime he was accused of committing against his wife. Or at the very least, throw Yosef entirely “under the prison” so to speak so that he would never be heard from again. But rather, Potiphar signs off on Yosef’s privileged position and responsibilities in the prison. Hmm. Makes me wonder if maybe Potiphar suspected Yosef’s innocence all along, as well as suspected that his wife orchestrated the events that forced Potiphar to throw Yosef in prison.

Did Potiphar know that his wife was a flaming adulterer? Did she possibly have a rabid history of flirting and possible sexual misconduct with the other male servants of Potiphar’s house? Because she says to Yosef that none of his fellow servants were as physically put together as he was. So, it stands to reason that Potiphar’s hand was forced, such that he had to act in his wife’s favor, despite knowing the type of woman she was, in order to maintain some integrity and peace in his home. But then, seeming to be a reasonable, albeit pagan man, he made the best of an impossible situation and saw to it that Yosef was taken care of even in an Egyptian prison.

But we can give too much credit to Potiphar or even the prison warden. For what we obviously see happening here is Yah’s divine wisdom at work. Orchestrating events in real time that would ultimately lead to Yosef’s exaltation and Yisra’el’s salvation.

40:5. Both the baker and butler/cupbearer dream dreams in the same night. Each one’s dream was unique and had distinct meanings that would ultimately lead to Yosef’s exaltation and Yisra’el’s salvation.

Clearly the dream that each one had troubled them as evinced by their facial expressions and downcast demeanors that Yosef quickly picked up on (40:6).

40:8. When Yosef queries the pair about their downcast dispositions, the two explain that they’d each had a perplexing dream that they could not make heads nor tails of (i.e., neither of them could not get an interpretation of their dream). Seems that Egyptian officials had the luxury of having their dreams interpreted or deciphered by professional dream interpreters or soothsaying. But being in prison and having lost their social status meant such benefits were no longer accessible to them.

Most translations use the term “interpret”/ “interpretations” as it relates to the pair seeking to understand the meaning of their respective dream. Robert Alter, author of the “Five Books of Moses,” chose to settle on the term “solution” or “solutions” instead of interpretation or interpretations. And he uses solution instead of interpretation back in verse five as well.

At question here, at least in Alter’s mind, is the Hebrew term or verb “patar” and its cognate noun that he believes means to “decipher.” And thus, Alter conjures up this sense of the mysterious and a “cloak and dagger” paradigm to address the issue of dream interpretations. Such that dreams required “decoding” as opposed to simple “interpretation.” For every dream, according to Alter, has a specific code that has to be unlocked if it is to be truly, and accurately understood. And Father yah has in place in this world whom He has “granted insight to break those codes” (pg. 227).

Thus, Yah is the ultimate holder of the meaning of dreams that He keeps locked up unto Himself. And He employs certain of His people to decode or unlock the meaning of certain dreams in accordance with His Will and Plan.

Therefore, we who are Yah’s people, should never discount dreams as being a facet or form of Yah’s wisdom at work. Whether those dreams be dreams that we dream, or dreams that brethren dream and share with the Body. And we should seek to understand the meaning of those dreams as Yah provides so that we may seek Yah’s Will. For Yah will provide the meaning to those dreams in accordance with His perfect will and plan, if we are diligent to seek His help in having those dreams decoded.

Yosef, likely through Holy Spirit (aka Ruach HaKodesh) wisdom, knew that he was a chosen vessel of Yah that possessed the spiritual “chops” to decipher dreams as Yah permitted.

Let us not forget beloved of Yah, that Yosef himself was an avid dreamer of dreams. And it was his dreams and his explanation or revealed meaning of those dreams that got him into the hot mess he found himself in at this time of his young life.

As it relates to the importance of dreams in the life of Yah’s chosen ones, we find that the Prophet Joel wrote of a coming time in human ecclesiastical history when the dreams of Yah’s set-apart people will bear great importance and influence over and within the Congregation of Yisra’el (2:28). It was Yah who revealed to us that the prophetic comes to the one He has chosen to give it to by way of dreams (Numbers/Bemidbar 12:6).

Regarding dreams and the prophetic, Maimonides (Guide of the Perplexed, 3.36-38), dreams allow one’s imagination to be awakened so that Yah may speak of glorious things to the would-be prophet.

The rabbis, however, were not all that united on the relevance or applicability of the dreams of Yah’s people. Many of them discounted dreams as nothing more than a reenactment of that which a person thinks throughout their day. But our Torah reading suggests otherwise.

Other rabbinic sources such as the “Resposa of Solomon Ibn Adret” go so far as to provide procedures for the Jew to follow in order for him to interpret both their good and bad dreams.

Our modern, progressive mindset and worldview has all be relegated the decoding or interpretation and significance of dreams to the realm of “fortune telling.” But as evinced by what we see in Torah and in the Book of Joel, dreams and the decoding of them remains an important element of the true Body of Mashiyach that should not be overlooked or marginalized.

40:8. When the butler and baker tell Yosef their dilemma, such that they had no one to interpret, or as Alter writes it, solve or decode or decipher their dreams, Yosef, without missing a beat, and seemingly having a matter-of-fact attitude attached to his reply, sort of re-orients the two’s pagan understanding of dreams and their interpretations by stating to them that “solutions come from Yah.” For these two no longer had privileged access to the court’s professional interpreters or soothsayers. So, it’s quite conceivable that they believed any interpretation or solving of their dreams was impossible.

In other words, this idea that humans solve or decipher dreams is inaccurate. Yah is the only solver or decoder or interpreter of dreams.

And so, by Yosef reaching out to the butler and baker and urging them to tell him their dreams, Yosef naturally concluded that the one Elohim who is the source of many dreams would possibly solve or decipher their dreams through him. For Yosef knew, however, that on his own, he did not possess the Godly wisdom to solve these men’s dreams. So, he put that job of solving in Yah’s hands.

The Chizkuni reads: “Pray, tell me the dream, perhaps He (Yah) will favor me with wisdom to explain its import.”

Yosef indeed knew which side his spiritual bread was buttered.

40:9-15. The butler of course tells Yosef his dream. Yosef’s decipherment of it was that the cupbearer would be restored to his former office three-days hence. and all Yosef asked in return or in compensation for rendering unto him the positive meaning or solution to the butler’s dream was that he remember him once he was reinstated to his former office. That he put in a good word for him with the king.

As an aside, Yosef made it a point to let the two know that he did not belong there in prison and that he was a victim of terrible mistreatment by others.

40:16-19. Jazzed by his partner’s positive resolution to his dream, the baker wasted no time putting forth his dream to Yosef. Unfortunately, Yosef’s solution was a negative one, such that the baker, three-days hence, would be executed and his body impaled on a stake for the birds to consume.

40:20-23. And true to Yosef’s solutions or interpretations, three days later the butler was restored to his former office while the baker was executed. Unfortunately, the butler for an unstated reason did not remember Yosef. Many have speculated as to why the butler did not throw Yosef a bone. But the reason why really doesn’t matter in the long run. Because, whether intentional or unintentional, Yah’s wisdom was at work and was the reason behind the butler not remembering Yosef.

And thus, Yosef would continue to be worked on Yah’s pottery-wheel for another two-years (41:1).

Practical Halachic Nuggets

Our covenant relationship with Yah does not in an any way guarantee that we will enjoy a life of comfort and pleasure. In fact, Yah takes some of us through trials and tribulation to equip us for the work that He has planned for us to do, as well as to fashion us into the image of His Son and our Master Yahoshua Messiah. Thus, Yah’s wisdom at work.

So, regardless how gloomy our situation may appear at times, Abba intends only good towards us as revealed to us in the Book of Jeremiah/Yermi’Yahu:

“For I know the thoughts that I think toward you…thoughts of peace, and not of evil, to give you an expected end” (29:11; KJV).

You see beloved, we are as clay in the hands of a skilled potter molding us on his pottery wheel. As clay, we have no clue of the potential we have or what will be achieved through and in us by the wisdom and working hands of our glorious and sovereign Potter.

As we the case with the patriarchs, we are subject to the Eternal’s providence–His sovereignty. Yah orders our steps, and He controls the affairs of His human creation. So, even in the darkest of situations (e.g., Yosef’s enslavement and imprisonment), Yah is orchestrating circumstances and situations in and around us in order to ultimately bring about our salvation, conform us to the image of our Master Yahoshua Messiah, and glorify and image Him in the earth.

We may not realize it during those darkened, gloomy, trying hours, but we can rest assured that Yah is about a good work in our lives. And the length of time we are going to have to endure Yah’s molding and refining is uncertain. Could be just a day or two. Could be a few days even. Maybe some weeks. Even years of fashioning as was the case with Yosef.

Yosef describes his situation to the butler/cupbearer as that of being in a pit. Recall back in chapter 37, Yosef was cast into a cistern, which is a pit in the desert, its purpose to capture water for the landowner. Well, Yosef was cast into one of those cisterns just prior to him being sold into slavery. And now, in our reading here, Yosef describes his prison surroundings as that of a “pit” in the house of the Egyptian chamberlain. Two pits used to work out Yah’s wisdom and plan.

Yosef is a type of Mashiyach/Messiah on so many levels. His brothers–his kinsmen–sorely mistreated him and they cast him into sort of a grave. Our Master, Yeshua, was sorely mistreated by His earthly brethren/kinsmen and ultimately His body was put into a grave. Yosef before he would be exalted to the number two-position of leadership over Egypt would have to endure a season of hardships and fashioning by the Eternal. Likewise, our Master Yahoshua, before He would be exalted to the number two position in heaven, would endure much sorrow and grief and troubles:

4 Surely he hath borne our griefs, and carried our sorrows: yet we did esteem him stricken, smitten of God, and afflicted. 5 But he was wounded for our transgressions, he was bruised for our iniquities: the chastisement of our peace was upon him; and with his stripes we are healed. (Isa 53:4-5 KJV)

Despite the pressures each experienced during their lives, both held their peace and endure their trials and sorrows. Indeed, during the greatest times of their respective testings, these two were the loneliest men in all the earth. But we know that Yah was with them both throughout their times of testings, just as Yah promises to be with each of us as we endure His molding and refining fire. For Father Yah’s wisdom will not only rule the day ultimately, but it will also carry us through.

Shabbat Shalom.

Faithfully.

Amazing Things Happen When God is with Us–Torah Reading 36–The Story of Joseph and Potiphar’s Wife

Our Torah Reading for this Shabbat of 6/11/2022 is found in Genesis 39:1-23. It is The Story of Yosef and Potiphar’s Wife.

We find in this reading, themes of righteousness; trust; loyalty; prosperity; sexual immorality; favor-favor with man and favor with God; and God’s presence in the life of His covenant people.

Let’s look at key highlights of this reading along with its practical halachah applicability’s.

39: 1.  As the story goes, Potiphar was a high-official of Pharaoh’s court. He purchased Yosef from Ishmaelite merchants (Gen. 37:25-28). Interestingly, the LXX describes Potiphar as a “eunuch of Pharoa”. Often when a high official of a southern nation is mentioned in scripture, they are referred to as eunuchs. Chances are that these individuals were not eunuchs in the sense that we recognize the term eunuch to mean–one who has been castrated. The likelihood he was a eunuch as we know the term eunuch today is because he was married, and eunuch tended to not have wives for obvious reasons.

39:2. Moshe tells us that “YHVH was with Yosef” (cf. Act. 7:9). Interestingly, the Onkelos (a 2nd century C.E. Greek and Ancient translation of Torah produced by Roman convert to Judaism) describes “The Word of YHVH being the helper of Joseph”.

At least one commentary I consulted noted the phrase “YHVH was with Yosef” described Yah’s presence with Yosef, which in a sense agrees with the LXX translation of the “Word of YHVH being the helper of Yosef.” And we will find in 50:20 that Yosef was aware of Yah’s presence in his life during his time in Mitsraim (aka Egypt).

So, why would Yah’s presence be with Yosef? Was he anyone special? We don’t read of Yosef being particularly close to Yah as Yosef having a personal relationship with Yah as did his forefathers. So, why would Yah’s Word-His Spirit abide with Yosef during this tense time in Yosef’s life?

I guess it would be safe to conclude that Yah had a distinct purpose and calling over Yosef’s life. For we will find as the story continues, that Yosef would be Yah’s instrument to bring the nation Yisra’el out of devastating global (what would be known as global in that day) famine and keep them (although during most of the nation’s stay, in bondage) safe and together until Yah’s perfect timing. For Yah always knows what He’s doing, and He will protect and guide those whom He chooses as instruments of His Will and Plan. In this case, Yosef was the man of the hour. But Yosef, despite being in Yah’s providence and keeping power, would have to go through some stuff in order to bring Yah’s plan and will to its fullest fruition.

When Yah’s presence is with His chosen ones, as we see here with Yosef in our Reading, things take place that may not be explainable to human reasoning such as Yosef going into slavery in Potiphar’s house and he being successful. Not in the sense of becoming wealthy because slaves had no means of obtaining and retaining wealth during their time of enslavement. Success, as we will see, came to Yosef in the form of favor and privilege in whatever place or station he found himself. Favor not just with Yah or in the sight of Yah, but also favor and privilege with his captors.

One cannot be effective in the work of the Kingdom unless they are given some modicum of favor with those who are not of like-mind and station in life. Finding favor and privilege with others is essential for success in the calling Yah places over our live.

So many of us who are in this Faith go to great lengths to separate ourselves from the rest of the world, which is something we’re called to do in terms of conforming to the ways of this world:

“Wherefore come out from among them, and be ye separate, saith Yah (ref. Isaiah 52:11), and touch not the unclean thing; and I will receive you, and will be a Father unto you, and ye shall be My sons and daughters, saith Yah Almighty” (2 Corinthians 6:17).

But for the time being, we are forced to exist among the heathen and unconverted. And although the heathen and unconverted may not agree with our way of life, Yah’s presence in our lives will often lead to us currying favor with them: Opportunities; peace; privilege; protection; promotion; etc. Such unlikely favor and privilege do not come about as a result of anything we’ve done, but rather because of Yah’s presence and providence in our lives. That which we involve ourselves prospers and others recognize our successes, and they will in response bless us with opportunities and privilege and materials and goods.

Potiphar recognized that something was different with Yosef. the text describes Potiphar as “observing that Yah was with him and that everything Yosef engaged in was successful” (39:3). And recognizing that Yah was indeed with Yosef, Potiphar promoted him in his house, making him his personal attendant (depending on which translation you’re using (39:4); overseer of this powerful official’s household. In essence, Potiphar placed Yosef into a position of utmost trust. He had control over everything in the man’s house. (I’m reminded of Avraham’s trust attendant, Eliezer, who at one point the Avraham thought would be his heir. That’s how trusted and close such individuals become in a household.)

This is all due to Yah’s presence in his life. It certainly had nothing to do with his annoying personality: That personality that got him into this position. Somehow, some way, Yah was in complete control here. And may, just may (we don’t have any proof), Yosef may have been brought down a few pegs after being sold to the Ishma’elites. And so now, the favor and promotion and prestige Yosef is enjoying is coming solely as a result of Yah’s presence over His life.

The Psalmist wrote:

“Blessed is the man that walketh not in the counsel of the ungodly, nor standeth in the way of sinners, nor sitteth in the seat of the scornful. (2) But his delight is in the law (i.e., the Torah) of YHVH; and in His Torah doth he meditate day and night. (3) And he shall be like a tree planted by the rivers of water, that bringeth forth his fruit in his season; his leaf also shall not wither; and whatsoever he doeth shall prosper” (1:1-3; KJV modified).

When Yah’s presence (or His Word) is with us, as hinted in this Psalm passage, Yah’s presence is as rivers of water. And we as if a tree planted near that water, draw nutrients from that water source (i.e., the source being Yah). And so, that which we do (i.e., our fruit) will prosper. And so, it behooves us to remain close to our “source” which is YHVH.  Another Psalm notes:

…but Yah is the strength of my heart, and my portion (“cheleq”-award from Yah) for ever” (Psalm 73:26; KJV modified). 

May Yah’s presence be firmly established with us as we walk out our faith with fear and trembling.

39:5-6. We see something quite interesting here in this verse whereby Potiphar (henceforth referred to as the Egyptian) realizes prosperity and good fortune because Yah blessed him on account of Yosef. It can truly be said in this case that Yah’s blessings certainly rub-off on those with whom His people find favor. Which clearly says to us that when Yah’s presence is over our lives and He chooses to prosper us by our currying favor with those outside of covenant, those individuals may just as well realize blessings over their lives.

And this is truly an amazing reality.

Why would Yah do such a thing for a heathen as this Egyptian no doubt was?

It’s impossible to be sure. But we do know that Yah is sovereign. He will do what He chooses to do. Secondly, our Elohim desires to show the world that when one has a relationship with Him or when Yah is present in one’s life, He will bless him or her. Yah is not hesitant to promote Himself to humanity when it is beneficial to His divine will and plan.

In every sense, the “Yah Culture” is hands down the only culture worth being part of. It brings joy, life, trust, hope, peace, prosperity and so many other things to a person’s existence. And here, in the midst of a heathenistic culture, this heathen experienced the benefits and beauty of the Yah Culture. I’m certain he didn’t plan for this experience, nor did he expect it. We don’t know how much time had transpired up to this point in the storyline. But time concerns aside, we know that Yah’s presence moved positively in that Egyptian’s house.

In this verse we also get a sense that Yosef had received his mother Rachel’s good looks (29:17). And this is a fact which Moshe inserts here into the narrative to prepare the reader for the life-altering events to follow.

39:7-9. The Egyptian’s wife (unnamed) finds Yosef attractive–no doubt in his comely form, but maybe also in his confident and extremely intelligent manner–those things that brought him favor in his master’s house. She makes an overt pass at him, which is shocking in and of itself. For it would seem that if found out by her husband, she would stand to lose all of the niceties and privilege she enjoyed as the wife of this high-Egyptian official. One has to wonder what was going on in her mind and life that would lead her to do such a thing. What family dynamics were in operation? Had she made a past practice of making passes at the other servants of her house? Apart from the obvious, what did think would ultimately come out of such a relationship if by chance Yosef consented to her indecent proposals?

Whatever the reason, Yosef resisted the woman’s passes and informed her that he abided quite favorably in the Egyptian’s house in a place of complete and utter trust. And he sums up for her the elements associated with his trusted position in the house.

The apocryphal book of Jubilees, interestingly enough, inserts into the story line that Yosef remembered his father’s teachings against fornication. And that to commit such a transgression would place him at odds before His Elohim (Jubilees 39).

The apocryphal book of Jasher actually gives the Egyptian’s wife a name: Zelicah (Jasher 44: 16). Anyway, the Jasher text goes so far as to explain this woman’s motivations towards Yosef. For the writer notes that she was enamored by his beauty, stating to him:

“How goodly are thy appearance and form. Truly I have looked at all the slaves and have not seen so beautiful a slave as thou art” (vs. 17). (Obviously, the veracity of this information is certainly up for debate. But it does, at the very least, give us some insight into what the ancient Jews thought and understood about this story.)

I do appreciate Robert Alter’s Commentary of this passage of the reading that he describes as “contrastive dialogue” that, in certain ancient literature, was designed to show contrasts and distinctions between characters (The Five Books of Moses; pg. 222). I appreciate the concept that he introduces here. I do take exception to how he treats patriarchs and their various situations as though the story being told of them is fictitious. Yosef, as annoying an individual as he may have been, was indeed a real Hebrew who Yah used to save His chosen people. The dialogue that he engaged in with the Egyptian’s wife, as contrastive as it certainly was, goes beyond the concerns of it being an ancient literary style of writing. What we witness in our reading is Yah putting forth to His chosen ones, what Godly behavior looks like in contrast to what UnGodly behavior looks like.

And so, Yosef defends why he refuses her advancements, which again, had more to do with trust; the trust that his Egyptian master placed in him to oversee all his affairs. To give into her overt advances would be a blatant betrayal of that extraordinary trust. And in Yosef’s eyes, to betray his master in such a way would be to “sin against Yah.” What the Egyptian’s wife was proposing was indeed wrong. And it plays into that moral constitution that is embedded in all rational peoples of the earth. Yosef did not need to be told that what the woman was proposal was sinful, although he no doubt had been taught in the ways of Elohim by his father Ya’achov.

If Yosef were to have given into the Egyptian wife’s advances, would he have gotten away with it? Possibly yes, as far as his master’s wife was concerned. Absolutely no, as far as Yah was concerned.

Godliness is doing the right thing every time, even when no one is watching. For even though people might not notice the wrong we do, Yah certainly does. And we are thus held accountable for that wrong that we do, whether we are Yah’s chosen or not.

On the subject of this type of thing, Yah stated:

“And you knew in your heart that as a man chastises his son YHVH your Elohim chastises you” (Deuteronomy 8:5; Alter).

The writer of Hebrews echoes this same sentiment:

“If ye endure chastening, Yah dealeth with you as with sons; for what son is he whom the father chasteneth not” (Hebrews 12:7; KJV).

39:10. And so, the Egyptian master’s wife’s advancements continued for some time afterwards, but Yosef would not give in. Indeed, Yosef remained faithful and steadfast in his convictions and in his duties and loyalties to his master. It’s conceivable that her strategy was to wear Yosef’s resolve down. Clearly, her lust for Yosef overrode her sense of loyalty to her husband and any and all sense of morality she would have. She knew what she was doing was wrong, but she did not relent. Such people override or ignore that embedded moral constitution that resides in them because to them, their loyalties are focused on what they desire. And this is the contrast that exists in humanity. Yah’s people remain loyal to Him and His ways, while the world remain loyal to themselves. There’s is an inward focus as opposed to the outward focus of Yah’s elect.

The Book of Yasher takes this story in a dark and strange direction that I won’t repeat here. But suffice to say, the Egyptian’s wife went to great lengths to sway and force Yosef compliance to her advances. Yasher treats Yosef’s attractiveness as though it was something that caused women to swoon and be captivated, such that this woman, Zelicah, became so consumed by Yosef ‘s person that she fell into a malaise/illness that persisted for many days.

39:11-23. Well, as the story goes, the Egyptian’s woman’s advances finally came to a terrible head whereby she forces herself on Yosef. Yosef in response was spry and strong enough to fend off her advance and fled the scene. The Egyptian’s wife, in the process of her struggles with Yosef, tore off a portion of Yosef’s garments, which she ultimately used to get Yosef thrown in prison by the hand of her husband.

Many have sought to interpret which article of clothes the woman tore from Yosef’s person. But the scriptures do not provide that detail. But what the scriptures do reveal is the level of Godly steadfastness our Patriarch possessed and exercised. For Yosef was in a seemingly impossible situation. At issue here was not so much that Yosef would have given in to the woman’s advances. But rather, at issue here, was that he was dealing with crazy and evil. And crazy and evil have the tendency of causing much trouble, even when the other side is being Godly. In other words, Yosef was destined for problems with this woman. And Yosef, being a slave, had no viable options to escape the situation.

So, Yosef did the only thing he could do. Stay the course of righteousness. And despite the fact that 39:19-20 tells us that the Egyptian’s wife used Yosef’s left-behind article of clothing to indict Yosef, resulting in Yosef being imprisoned, Yosef maintained his covenant relationship with the Almighty. Yosef did not break covenant with Yah. He stayed true to His Elohim, despite facing possible death, which is a lesson in and of itself for any Netzari with eyes to see and ears to hear.

Yosef could have taken the path of least resistance and likely have gone along in the life he had in the Egyptian’s home for the rest of His natural life. But Yosef chose to take the path of non-compromise, knowing that his wellbeing rested not with his Egyptian master, but with Yah, his Elohim.

Yosef did not allow His situations–both his servant life, and the troubles he had with the Egyptian’s wife–rule him. He knew which side his spiritual bread was buttered, and he remained true to His Elohim and His Elohim’s ways. Which is a tremendous example for us to keep in mind today. We cannot allow any of life’s situations to rule over us. And we must not take the path of least resistance–which often is a pathway to spiritual destruction–in order to make our life a little easier. For the path that Yah has laid out for us is often very narrow and difficult to navigate. And we must decide who will serve and remain loyal to. In this case, Yosef chose not the path of least resistance, which would have likely earned him worldly–carnal–benefits. But instead, Yosef chose the path that would lead to the fulfillment of Yah’s covenant promises for His chosen ones. And today, the world lays out before us a similar pathway that may bring us worldly pleasures and benefits and comforts. But those paths are not sanctioned of Yah and often defy Yah’s ways. Instead, Yah’s path is exclusive and is narrow, which our Master describes as less traveled and few ever finding it (Matthew 7:13-14). And the righteous remnant that ends up taking that path, and sticking to it, regardless the pressures from the world to abandon that narrow path, may have a challenging time navigating that arduous, narrow pathway in this life. But the rewards to be received in the world tomorrow for the one who stays the course of righteous–the one who stays true to that exclusive, holy, righteous path–makes the temporal rewards that this life has to offer those who follow their pathway and way of life (i.e., the world’s way of life), ridiculously insignificant in comparison.

Despite Yosef’s subsequent sufferings in prison for the false allegations leveled against him by the Egyptian’s wife, Yah still remained mightily with Yosef (39:21). And it was that same favor of Yah that followed him in Potiphars house. For the text tells us that even in the midst of certain doom, being stuck in an Egyptian jail, Yosef’s favor with Yah extended over into Yosef finding favor with the keepers of the prison. Yosef, similar to that which happened to him in Potiphar’s home, was given extraordinary responsibilities in prison. The unnamed “keeper of the prison” entrusted Yosef with the affairs of the prison. Again, Yosef’s trust in Yah is translated in a pagan man trusting Yosef. And that’s how the Kingdom economy works. When we least expect it, Yah’s favor results in His elect finding favor among unredeemed men and His people prospering in ways that the world cannot understand.

Faithfully submitted for your edification.

Finding Peace with God-Eternal Life and a Blessed Assurance

This is “Finding Peace with God—Eternal Life and a Blessed Assurance.”

 

This is a continuation of our Paul and Hebrew Roots mega-series where we’ve been discussing some of the more challenging—hard to understand Pauline writings. And we’ve been spending most of our time over the last year or more in the Book of Romans.

 

Our focus passage for this discussion is found in Romans 5:1-5 and it reads as follows:

 

(1) Therefore being justified by faith, we have peace with Yah through our Master Yahoshua Messiah. (2) By whom also we have access by faith into this grace wherein we stand, and rejoice in hope of the glory of Yah. (3) And not only so, but we glory in tribulations also: knowing that tribulation worketh patience; (4) and patience experience; and experience, hope; (5) and hope maketh not ashamed; because the love of Yah is shed abroad in hearts by the Ruach HaKodesh which is given unto us (Romans 5:1-5; KJV; modified).

 

Now, you might be thinking to yourself after reading (or hearing, for that matter) these five verses that there’s really nothing too difficult or challenging here. And to a greater or lesser extent, I would certainly agree with you. But in my studies of this section of the apostle’s letter to the Roman Messianics, I found Shaul’s perspective on the topic or issue of “peace” or “shalom” with Yah to be quite unique and interesting, and I wanted to share those thoughts with you before moving on to other bonafide hard to understand Pauline passages. Not to mention, there are varying opinions and perspectives on what the peace of Yah means and looks like, and how one is supposed to receive it. And so, we need to discuss and attempt to understand these critical spiritual things which powerfully impacts each of our respective walks in and with Messiah.

 

So, let’s proceed by breaking down and discussing each verse of our focus passage, and then explore the prospects of peace or shalom with Yah from a practical, halachic standpoint.

 

 

 

Let us Continue to have Peace-Romans 5:1

 

 

In verse one, the apostle writes: “Let us continue to have shalom (peace, integrity, wholeness, health) with Yah” (CJB translation).

 

While other manuscripts read: “We have shalom/peace with Yah

 

The rendering of “let us continue,” according to Messianic author and commentator J.K. McKee, seems to flow better with verses two and three, whereby, as a byproduct of the peace we enjoy with Yah, our peace places us in a position where we may (vs. 2) rejoice in the hope of Yah’s glory; and (vs. 3) rejoice in our sufferings.

 

Why would anyone rejoice in their sufferings. Isn’t that counterintuitive?

 

Well, when we realize and understand the full extent of the peace we have in Yah, we know that our redemption and restoration is ahead of us. And the sufferings that we must endure in this life, instead of destroying and damaging us, when taken within glorious context of our peace with Yah, will produce in us “endurance” or “patience.” And despite the fact that this  life is temporal, we know that, like our Master Yahoshua, we will be raised to a life that is eternal with Yah:

 

For if we have become united with Him (that being Yahoshua) in the likeness of His death, we will certainly also be united in the likeness of His resurrection” (Romans 6:5; NET modified; cf. 8:23).

 

Praise Yah and Amein!

 

 

Being Reckoned Righteous by Yah Through a Trusting Faith

 

 

Now, those of you who’ve been with us for any appreciable length of time will know that we’ve gone over the role of “faith” as it relates to one’s salvation quite a bit over the last half-year or so. (And if by chance you are new to TMTO, we would humbly encourage you to go on over to the website “The Messianic Torah Observer” and simply go through the last half-dozen or more installments of this program where we go into detail about the roles faith and obedience must play in the life of the Netzarim/Messianic.)

 

And so, the apostle begins this portion of his letter to the Roman Messianic Assembly by reiterating the central truth that one is justified or reckoned righteous by Yah through a trusting faith in the Person and Ministry of Yahoshua Messiah.

 

And he then proceeds to connect to this central truth of one’s trusting faith resulting in him or her being reckoned righteous by Yah, to him or her then having “peace with Yah” or “existing or being in a state of shalom or peace with Yah”.

 

 

Humanity’s Ongoing State of War Against and Hostility Towards Father Yah

 

 

Prior to one coming into a faithful-obedient-covenant relationship with Yah, he or she exists  in a perpetual state of hostility towards and war against Him.

 

Shaul describes this state of being at odds with Yah as being hostile to or in enmity against Him. Why? Because the unconverted mind–(Greek of “phronema” {fron’-ay-mah}, which means that which one has in their mind, or in their thoughts, or their intentions to do)—well that unconverted mind and heart is, on its own, incapable of “submitting to the law (or rule) of Yah” (Romans 8:7).

 

This inability to overcome that “enmity against” or “hostility toward” Yah and His ways comes only through the one repenting of his or her life of sin, asking Yah for His forgiveness, and then entering into a faithful-trusting relationship with Yah through Yeshua Messiah.

 

Yah does the heavy lifting here as it relates to the elimination of the state of hostility and war that exists between Yah and His human creation. And the heavy lifting He does is that of providing humanity the means by which it can be at peace with Him, since on its own, it is incapable of reconciling with and being at peace with Yah. Consequently, there must be an acceptable and effective intercessor to bring about that peace. And that acceptable and effective intercessor, of course, is none other than Yeshua our Master.

 

 

The Children of Wrath in Need of Reconciliation

 

 

Now, for the portion of humanity that is not reconciled or brought to peace with their Creator, they remain “sons/children of wrath” (I.e., subject to Yah’s wrathful judgment).

 

In order to have true communion and a relationship with the Almighty, there must be a reconciliation between Yah and the “son/child of wrath”.

 

Speaking to the Ephesian Messianic Assembly, Shaul wrote:

 

(1) And although you were dead in your transgressions and sins, (2) in which you formerly lived according to this world’s present path, according to the ruler of the kingdom of the air, the ruler of the spirit that is now energizing the sons of disobedience, (3) among whom all of us also formerly lived out our lives in the cravings of our flesh, indulging the desires of the flesh and the mind, and were by nature children of wrath even as the rest(2:1-3; NET).

 

“Children of wrath” are “children of disobedience”. Disobedience to what? Disobedience to Yah’s Way of life that He has ordained for His human creation; Yah’s instructions in righteousness; Yah’s Words of Life.

 

But wait a minute. I thought, according to the denominationalists, obedience to Yah’s ways-His instructions in righteousness—were not required for Yah’s people because Paul wrote that we are “saved by grace through faith and not of ourselves and that salvation is a gift of Yah” and that man’s works–works often erroneously interpreted as obedience to Yah’s Torah– has no part in a believer’s life (Ephesians 2:5-8).

 

But here, Shaul clearly refers to his Ephesian readers, before their coming to Faith, as being “sons of disobedience” (vs. 2; and later on in 5:6). The situation that the apostle is describing here is that of humanity falling into two distinct, exclusive classes: (1) Those who are obedient to this world and who are disobedient to the way of life that Yah ordained for His human creation to walk-out; and (2) Those who are obedient to Yah’s exclusive Way of Life. Thus, there are only two classes of souls in this world, without any crossover or middle-ground.

 

As Ya’achov (aka James) wrote:

 

Faith without works is dead” (James/Ya’achov 2:20, 26).

 

Unfortunately, we have a great many folks claiming Yeshua as their savior, but who refuse to be obedient to Yah’s instructions in righteousness. Well, according to these Pauline passages, these folks fall in the category of “sons/children of disobedience”. They have Yah’s instructions in righteousness and the teachings of Yahoshua Messiah accessible to them in the 66-special (aka the Bible), along with tons of resources and helps to facilitate their understanding and the applicability of those instructions in righteousness. However, as we saw manifested through the Hebrew ancients, there exists a “stiffneck” spirit that controls the minds and hearts of the modern Jew and the Denominationalist. Sadly, these simply do not want to conform to Yah’s righteous ways.

 

Consequently, children or sons of disobedience are subject to Yah’s wrath (Ephesians 5:6; Colossians 3:6 cf. Romans 1:18).

 

 

The Peace Offering—A Foreshadow of Yeshua’s Facilitated Peace Between Yah and Us

 

 

Back in the day, Yah instituted in His Torah the required ritual of the “peace offering” (Leviticus/Vayiqra 3:1-9).

 

Peace offerings/sacrifices (the Hebrew term for “offering” being “karbanot” and the “Peace Offering” in Hebrew is “zebach sh’lamin”)—Yah instructed His people to submit unto Him peace offerings/sacrifices to show their thanks and gratitude for the work He’d done in their lives. Such offerings consisted of a perfect yearly lamb, goat, or calf. These sacrifices were to be “volitional” (ie., voluntary or of one’s free will) and “vicarious” in nature (that is the animal’s death represented that of the offerer). And so, the blood that would be drawn from these sacrifices was to be splashed on the sides of the brazen altar. A portion of the sacrifice was to be burnt upon the brazen altar. Another portion was to be consumed by the servicing Cohenim/Levitical Priests. And the remaining portion was to be consumed by the offerer and his family.

 

This sacrifice/offering-the Peace Offering—clearly points to our Master Yahoshua HaMashiyach as the intercessor and facilitator of the peace we now enjoy with the Creator of the Universe.

 

The Prophet Yesha’Yahu foretold of the peace-inducing role our Master Yeshua would play in Yah’s Plan of Salvation-Redemption-Restoration:

 

For unto us a child is born, unto us a son is given: and the government shall be upon his shoulder: and his name shall be called Wonderful, Counsellor, The mighty God, The everlasting Father, The Prince of Peace. (Isaiah/Yesha’Yahu 9:6; KJV)

 

Here, Yesha’Yahu identifies the prophesied Mashiyach as “the Prince of Peace (Shalom)”, which certainly screams of Yahoshua being the facilitator and mediator of a permanent peace that He would usher in between His Father and those whom His Father chooses to be His sons and daughters.

 

 

Since the Fall Yah Has Sought to Have a Relationship with His Human Creation

 

From the very beginning Father Yah has desired to have a true and substantive relationship with His human creation; that is, for humanity to commune with Him. But that substantive relationship would not be possible unless the hostility and state of war that is brought about by sin—that impenetrable barrier that exists between Him and humanity–was somehow eliminated. And in the days when Torah was being communicated to our ancient cousins (Yisra’el), Yah had not enacted the final solution to eliminate that hostility and perpetual state of war that exists between Yah and humanity.

 

But rather, in the interim, Yah enacted temporary fixes to the hostility. And those temporary fixes were in the form of “burnt and peace offerings”. Thus, when an offender sought to make amends with Yah, he/she would offer peace offerings/sacrifices. And if excepted by Yah, the offender would temporarily exist in a state of peace until the offender broke covenant—sinned—transgressed Torah—offended Yah. And when the offender broke covenant with Yah, he or she would have to repeat those sacrifices and burnt offerings: A perpetual, lifelong, repeated process of making amends with Yah through Father’s sanctioned offerings and sacrifices.

 

And just as it was with our ancient wandering cousins, it was impossible for humanity to be right before Yah without the appropriate offerings/sacrifices and a repentant and sorrowful heart (Psalm 34:18; 51:17; Isaiah/Yesha’Yahu 57:15; 66:2). Otherwise, our ancient cousins would remain in a state of hostility/enmity towards Yah. Similarly, we today, cannot be in a right, substantive, relationship with Yah without Yahoshua (our vicarious substitute—our intercessor—our mediator) and without a circumcised heart that seeks first the Kingdom of Yah and His righteousness.

 

 

What Does Peace With Yah Mean or Look Like?

 

 

In light of what we’ve been discussing thus far, what did the Apostle mean by the phrase “we have Peace with God”?

 

Well, according to Messianic Torah scholar and commentator Tim Hegg of Torah Resources, as far as Shaul (aka Paul) is concerned here in our focus passage, “being at peace with Yah” has less to do with the [subjective] feelings we might have about our relationship with the Almighty—that is our being in possession of a blessed assurance that we are in communion with Yah. But more so, it has to do with an [objective] “state of being at peace as opposed to being enemies” with Yah (T. Hegg; Romans Commentary)—that is, existing in a covenant relationship with the Creator of the Universe.

 

It is the Person and Ministry of Yahoshua Messiah Who enacts/facilitates/mediates this peace that comes to a would-be child of Yah. Thus, the one who enters a life of peace with Yah is no longer viewed by Yah as a “child of disobedience” or a “child of wrath”, but rather, a “reconciled child of Yah” or “child of obedience”:

 

For if while we were enemies, we were reconciled to Yah through the death of His Son” (Romans 5:10a; NET).

 

 

Humanity Inherently Knows Right From Wrong

 

 

Whether unredeemed humanity chooses to admit it or not, it inherently knows that a state of hostility exists between it and its Creator. This inherent knowledge of Yah and Yah’s embedded moral constitution is found in every rational human being.

 

Shaul wrote extensively about this in Romans 1:18-32 and we broke down this passage in our post entitled What Did Paul Mean by Being Under the Law”. (Please check it out if you are so led to so.)

 

 

The Realities of Peace Between Netzarim and Yah

 

The peace that exists between the covenant-keeping Netzari and Yah is not enacted or arrived at through obedience to Torah. It is enacted or arrived at strictly through faith in the Person and Ministries of Yeshua Messiah.

 

This new state of peace that Netzarim enjoy completely eliminates the animus or state of enmity that he/she once walked or lived in. This former “enemy” or “enmity” state of being was the thing that was, in essence, nailed to the execution stake along with our Master:

 

(13) And you, being dead in your trespasses and the uncircumcision of your flesh, He has made alive together with Him, having forgiven you all trespasses. (You see, it was our trespasses—our sins—our contrary way of life that brought about our enemy/enmity status.) Continuing…(14) blotting out the handwriting of ordinances (I.e., the bill of charges against us (CJB); a certificate of indebtedness (NET); record of charges) that was against us, which was contrary to us, and took it out of the way, nailing it to His cross” (Colossians 2:13-14; KJV).

 

 

Yah will not commune with those who are in a state of opposition and hostility towards Him. And this makes perfect sense in light of what the Prophet Amos wrote:

 

Can two walk together, except they be agreed? (3:3 KJV)

 

 

Shaul likened such a relational situation to that of two domesticated animals plowing a field:

 

Be ye not unequally yoked together with unbelievers: for what fellowship hath righteousness with unrighteousness? and what communion hath light with darkness? (2Co 6:14 KJV)

 

Although Shaul is contextually addressing discord between brethren and outsiders to the Faith, the same principle certainly applies to a potential relationship between Yah and humanity. For true peace and a personal relationship to exist between Yah and His would-be son or daughter, he or she must think and act like Yah. They must be in a state of righteousness that is acceptable to Yah. And that state comes only through faith in Yahoshua Messiah. The would-be child of Yah must be walking in the ways of life and of light, not in the ways of the world and in darkness. Otherwise, he or she will remain in a persistent state of enmity and hostility towards Yah. And that state of enmity and hostility makes one subject to Yah’s wrath and judgment.

 

 

The Wonderful Results of Being in Peace with Yah—Verse Two

 

Shaul continues in our focus passage:

 

Through Whom (the Whom being Yahoshua HaMashiyach) we have also obtain access by (our trusting) faith (faith being Yah’s loving kindness and favor) in which we presently stand, and we rejoice in the hope of Yah’s glory” (5:2; NET modified).

 

Yah’s “unmerited grace” or Yah’s “unmerited favor”, if you will, comes only through Yeshua:

 

I am the door: by Me if any man enter in (I.e., enter into Yah’s glory via His grace), he shall be saved, and shall go in and out, and find pasture (that is, in essence, find peace!)” (John/Yochanan 10:9; KJV).

 

…I (Yahoshua) am the way, and the truth, and the life. No one comes to the Father except through Me” (John/Yochanan 14:6; NET).

 

I trust you see the direct connection that exists here between Yah’s grace and Yah’s peace. The peace that we as a child of Yah enjoys is a direct result of Yah’s grace that He pours out upon us in response to our trusting faith in the Person and Ministry of Yeshua our Master. And thus, the one reckoned righteous before a Holy and righteous Elohim exists or stands in perfect peace with and before Him.

 

That faithful, peaceful existence we have with Yah through Yahoshua, provides us access to Yah. We no longer require “Cohenim” or Levitical Priests to intercede on our behalf in order for us to have access to the Creator of the Universe. For the veil in the Temple was indeed “rent from the top to the bottom” when Yahoshua died on the execution stake on our behalf (Matthew 27:51).

 

According to Messianic author and commentator J.K. McKee, our English term “access” as used in this verse is “prosagoge” {pros-ag-ogue-ay’}, which is used in the Tanach to describe one’s turning aside to gain access to something, such as found for instance in Exodus 3:4, where “Yah seeth that he (ie., Moshe) hath turned aside (ie., prosagoge) to see the miracle of the burning bush (YLT).

 

And so, this very exclusive access to Yah that we enjoy is a benefit that we absolutely should rejoice over.

 

But then, Shaul, in the same verse 2, declares unto his Roman Messianic Jewish audience that this peaceful, faithful covenant relationship is the very thing that they should rejoice about, as opposed to their rejoicing about their Jewishness.

 

Bear in mind, this is all connected, contextually, with the apostle’s overall message to the Roman Messianic Assembly members, most of whom were Messianic Jews, with a powerfully influential grouping of Judaizers.

 

C.E.B. Cranfield, a 30-year Theological Professor at the University of Durham, wrote:

 

Whereas between human judge and an accused person there may be no real deep personal relationship at all, the relationship between God and the sinner is altogether personal, both because God is the God He is and also because it is against God Himself that the sinner has sinned. So, God’s justification of sinners by necessity involves also their reconciliation, the removal of enmity, the establishment of peace” (Romans 1-8; pp. 256-7).

 

 

Therefore, the apostle asserts that the child of Yah not only has their peaceful standing with Yah to rejoice in, but also their eternal destination or salvation—Yah’s glory—Mashiyach’s return—the coming Kingdom of Yah to rejoice about.

 

We find this sentiment expressed in the writing of the Prophet Yermi’Yahu/Jeremiah:

 

(23) YHVH says, “Wise people should not boast that they are wise. Powerful people should not boast that they are powerful. Rich people should not boast that they are rich. (24) If people want to boast, they should boast about this: They should boast that they understand and know me. They should boast that they know and understand that I, YHVH, act out  of faithfulness, fairness, and justice in the earth and that I desire people to do these things,” say YHVH (9:23-24; NET modified).

 

The peace of Yah, in a sense, can also be viewed as a down payment or token of the future glory that we will possess when Master returns and we are instantly “changed” and “transformed” and “wrapped” in Father Yah’s dazzling glory:

 

(51) Behold, I shew you a mystery; we shall not all sleep, but we shall all be changed, (52) in a moment, in the twinkling of an eye, at the last trump: for the trumpet shall sound, and the dead shall be raised incorruptible, and we shall be changed. (53) For this corruptible must put on incorruption, and this mortal must put on immortality. (54) So when this corruptible shall have put on incorruption, and this mortal shall have put on immortality, then shall be brought to pass the saying that is written, ‘death is swallowed up in victory’ (1 Corinthians 15; KJV).

 

As it relates to the hope of Yah’s glory, many within and outside our faith community believe that before the fall, Adam and Eve radiated Yah’s glory. That Yah provided a source of light that clothed them and radiated from their bodies.

 

Could this glory that Shaul alludes to here in verse two, which is derived from the peace that Yah’s people are granted because of their faith in Yeshua, could it be a passing mention of Yah’s chosen ones receiving that dazzling radiance—Yah’s radiant glory, to be restored to them in the Kingdom?

 

And the answer is: Indeed, yes. For our Master makes mention of that lost radiance being restored to His bride when He returns and establishes His Kingdom:

 

 

Then the righteous (ie., those who possess Yah’s peace and who are in a right-relationship with Him) will shine like the sun in the Kingdom of their Father. The one who has ears had better listen” (Matthew 13:43; NET).

 

This is a reference from the Prophet Daniel who wrote:

 

And they that be wise shall shine as the brightness of the firmament; and they that turn many to righteousness as the stars for ever and ever” (12:3; KJV).

 

Beloved, what an amazing promise. This is indeed something to rejoice about, wouldn’t you agree?

 

 

Yah’s Peace Leading to a Rejoicing in Suffering

 

 

But then, in verse three of our focus passage, the apostle throws his readers somewhat of a curb-ball as it relates to the called-out ones’ peace with Yah:

 

(3) Not only this, but we also rejoice in sufferings, knowing that suffering produces endurance, (4) and endurance, character, and character, hope (5:3; NET).

 

 

Clearly, the called-out ones of Yah have a lot of positive things to rejoice about: (1) an abiding peace with Yah; (2) salvation; (3) a faithful covenant relationship with the Creator; and (4) access to Yah’s favor—His grace. But who would ever fathom the blessed called-out one rejoicing in troubles; tribulations; afflictions and such. For this reality is counterintuitive to that which we’ve all been raised to understand as it relates to when and why we rejoice.

 

The world has taught us that we are to celebrate the good things that happen to us during our lives; conversely, that we are to lament, or be saddened by the bad things that happen to us in life. But the Kingdom economy—or the way that the Kingdom operates–naturally runs contrary to that of the world’s economy—the world’s way of thinking: As we rejoice in the wonderfully good things that happen to us in this life, we as Yah’s set-apart people, must also rejoice at the bad or negative things that happen to us throughout our walk with Messiah.

 

Since we’re hardwired, almost from birth, to be sad and mournful about the negatives that overtake us in life, how do we overcome that natural negative reaction to adversity? How are we to rejoice in adversity/tribulation/troubles?

 

Simply this: We apply that same faith—that Avraham-level-faith—that is saving us and making us righteous before Yah—we apply that trusting faith to those sufferings/afflictions/troubles. We trust that Yah will take us through and deliver us from those problems. And because we believe this, we can rejoice in our adversities/troubles/sufferings.

 

 

Turn Our Focus to Yah During Times of Suffering and Troubles

 

 

Another way of looking at this is for us to stop focusing on or looking at that situation or thing that is causing us problems, but instead, turn our attention and focus entirely upon Yah and His keeping and saving power.

 

So then, as you can see, our faithful-peaceful-existence in Yah is tied directly to our being in a position to rejoice in whatever sufferings may come our way.

 

And oh by the way beloved, this concept of rejoicing in our sufferings, is not a Brit-HaDashah (aka New Testament) concept. For we find in Midrash Tanchuma, which is a collection of Torah midrashim or aggadot—non-legalistic rabbinic exegesis/study; a collection of rabbinic texts, folklore; historical anecdotes, moral exhortations, and practical advice), we find the following eye-opening text:

 

To him who gives thanks for his afflictions and rejoices over them, God grants life in this world and in the world to come, life without end, “for a lamp are the commandments and the Torah is light” (Proverbs 6:23). Why then, did Moses merit that his countenance should shine, even in this world, with a light destined for the righteous in the next world? Because he was ever striving, yearning, watching to establish peace between Israel and their Father in Heaven.

 

So, early rabbinic thinking as it relates to Yah’s people rejoicing in their afflictions, is a known commodity and reality of Yah’s chosen ones. The primary difference for those of us who are under the renewed covenant and our often wayward Jewish cousins is that the orthodox Jew feels that God’s people should rejoice in sufferings because God from time-to-time causes His people to suffer. We, on the other hand, place our trust in our faithful, obedient covenant relationship with Yah to take us through and deliver us from any and all afflictions that come our way. And so, we, in the process of our trusting in Yah’s delivering and saving power, rejoice. We rejoice in our sufferings.

 

It can be positively said of the rabbis’ view of rejoicing in one’s affliction that the suffering is meant to produce Godly qualities in the child of Yah: (1) endurance/patience/steadfastness/constancy—all of which is vital to the maintenance of one’s covenant relationship with Yah (vs. 3). (2) Character or experience—which not only helps us navigate through our redeemed life, but also means that we are to come alongside and help a brother or sister who is in need of sound, Godly counsel in their walk with Messiah (vs. 4). And (3) hope/expectation—which is that thing that gives us a sense of purpose each day in our walk. To expect not just the covenant promises of Yah to be fulfilled without exception, but that we make it into the coming Kingdom of Yah (vs. 4).

 

 

The Peace of Yah Breaks Down the Barrier that Existed Between Jew and Non-Jew

 

 

This shalom that Shaul writes of extends beyond the relationship that exists between Yah and humanity (be it a hostile or peaceful one). Yahoshua’s ministry not only made peace between Yah and His human creation possible, it also served to tear down the wall that existed between the Jew and the non-Jew:

 

(14) For He (Yahoshua HaMashiyach) is our peace, the One who made both groups into one (the true Jew and non-Jew) and who destroyed the middle wall of partition, the hostility (15) when He nullified in His flesh the law of commandments in decrees. He did this to create in Himself one new man out of two, thus making peace, (16) and to reconcile them both in one body to Yah through the cross, by which the hostility has been killed (Ephesians 2).

 

So then, Yah purposed to (1) bring peace between Himself and humanity, and (2) make one unified Body consisting of the remnant—the true believing Jew and the believing non-Jew, both miraculously accomplished tasks were accomplished through the Person and Ministry of Yahoshua HaMashiyach.

 

 

What Does Shalom With Yah Look Like—Practical Halachah?

 

 

Beyond the obvious, what does shalom with Yehovah look like?

 

Well, we are wise to look back to Torah as our guide. For we find in Yah’s instructions to Aharon as it relates to the blessing he was to put on the people, the following:

 

(24) YHVH bless you and protect you; (25) YHVH make His face to shine upon you, and be gracious to you; (26) YHVH lift up His countenance upon you and give you peace/shalom (Numbers/Bemidbar 6).

 

 

The Peace of Yah Linked to Salvation and Redemption and Deliverance

 

 

The rabbinic understanding of the peace/shalom of YHVH  or with YHVH is intricately linked to the “salvation or deliverance that Yah brings” to His chosen ones, especially in the latter days (Douglas Moo Commentary on the Book of Romans).

 

We see this relationship between Yah’s shalom/peace and the delivering/salvation of His people throughout scripture:

 

How beautiful upon the mountains are the feet of him that bringeth good tidings, that publisheth peace; that bringeth good tidings of good, that publisheth salvation; that saith unto Zion, Thy Elohim reigneth” (Isaiah/Yesha’Yahu 52:7; KJV modified).

 

Behold upon the mountains the feet of him that bringeth good tidings, that publisheth peace!O Judah, keep thy solemn feasts, perform thy vows: For the wicked shall no more pass through thee; he is utterly cut off” (ie., Judah is delivered from her enemies; Nahum 1:15; KJV).

 

The association that salvation has with Yah’s shalom/peace should handily serve as a greater understanding of the state of being that we enjoy as Yah’s chosen and beloved sons and daughters:

 

  • Peace of mind: “And the peace of Yah, which passeth all understanding, shall keep your hearts and minds through Messiah Yahoshua” (Philippians 4:6; KJV modified).
  • More so, the reality and state of being in a peaceful and substantive relationship with the Creator of the Universe.

 

Yah’s people have a blessed assurance (or simply, a peace of mind) that comes from their belief and faith that Yahoshua’s sacrifice has remitted—paid for–covered their sin debt. And that their trust in His atoning sacrifice, connected with their covenant relationship with Father Yah, guarantees them an eternal, peaceful existence or state of being.

 

Beloved, we’re talking about salvation; talking about the Child of Yah being saved, redeemed and delivered from Yah’s wrath; talking about his or her receiving and entering His coming Kingdom. Consequently, Yah’s true sons and daughters are afforded a foretaste of that future Kingdom in their day-to-day lives as they live by and walk in their faith (Habukkuk 2:4). Their faith and the resulting peace he or she enjoys from Yah protects them from the wiles of the enemy; provides for them; sustains them; keeps them; teaches them; and so forth.

 

When we parcel or tease out the term “peace from a Hebrew sense/perspective”, we are uniquely talking about the covenant-keeping son and daughter of Yah living in the very best life they could possibly be living in, which is made possible only through the Person and Ministry of Yeshua Messiah. And no, we’re not necessarily talking about the son or daughter of Yah living large in terms of the standards of this world. But rather, we’re talking about “living the life abundant” that Yahoshua promised His disciples in John/Yochanan 10:10. It’s about experiencing some of the highlights of that peace that Yah’s chosen ones will experience in the coming Kingdom. It’s about having unspeakable joy when the worldly circumstances surrounding Yah’s chosen ones would suggest otherwise (1 Peter/Kefa 1:8). It’s about overcoming the world in the midst of tribulation as Yahoshua said:

 

I have told you these things (ie., the events that were about to befall our Master) so that in Me you may have peace. In the world you have trouble and suffering, but take courage: I have conquered the world” (John/Yochanan 16:33; NET).

 

 

Peace and the Miraculous

 

 

It’s also about experiencing the miraculous in a world that does not believe in the miraculous, and neither the things of Yah:

 

I tell you the solemn truth, the person who believes in Me will perform the miraculous deeds that I am doing, and will perform greater deeds than these, because I am going to the Father” (John/Yochanan 14:12; NET).

 

You see, the unredeemed world is not entitled to such peace and the wonderful things that flow from a peaceful, faithful covenant relationship with Yah.

 

 

The Restorative Nature of Yah’s Peace

 

 

In a broader, yet Messianic sense, the peace of Yah or peace with Yah can also be understood from a restoration or restorative perspective.

 

Let’s once again look back to the Tanach and its Hebraic understanding of shalom or peace. And we find that in many instances where the term “shalom” is mentioned, it is intricately tied to a restoration of Yisra’el.

 

We know that Yisra’el throughout her history repeatedly broke covenant with Yah. Yet Yah, because of His love for Yisra’el, His covenant promises, and His grace, has promised to restore Yisra’el unto Himself. That same sentiment of restoration is easily applied to the Netzari—the Messianic of today, whereby he or she is being engrafted into the commonwealth of Yisra’el. And as a result of that engrafting, the Netzari-the Messianic-will enjoy the innumerable “told and untold” riches to be rendered unto believing Yisra’el when she is finally restored unto Yehovah in His glorious kingdom to come. We, under the auspices of the renewed covenant, are blessed to receive a foretaste of that coming restoration.

 

 

Hope Fuels the Peace We Have with Yah

 

 

Finally, Shaul wraps up this section on having the peace of Yah or finding peace with Yah by attaching that peace to the Hebrew concept of “hope”: Hope being the vehicle whereby the restored, redeemed, and delivered child of Yah may experience the love of Yah through the Ruach HaKodesh:

 

And hope does not disappoint, because the love of Yah has been poured out in our hearts through the Ruach HaKodesh who was given to us” (5:5; NET).

 

The hope-that expectation that we have embedded within us through Yah’s Ruach HaKodesh, is multifaceted and multi-layered in my opinion. For we know that Yah delivers us from our afflictions/tribulations/sufferings/troubles, as well as we expect Yah, without reservation or question, to complete and fulfill everyone of the wonderful covenant promises that He gave to Yisra’el. Those promises of course include the restoration of Yisra’el and the advent of His Kingdom here on earth, alongside the restoration of all things that were lost when Adam fell. For as Shaul mentioned previously in this same letter, regarding Yah’s promises:

 

…let Yah be true, but every man a liar…” (3:4; KJV modified).

 

So then, that which we expect from Yah is well founded. And our trusting faith—the very peace we have in Yah and with Yah certainly supports the understanding that Yah will do what He has promised He’ll do. Praise Yah!

 

Turns out that the phrase “love of Yah” that the apostle uses here and in other parts of his letters, can be taken from either an objective or subjective perspective. The objective perspective has our love going up to Yah: that is, we  have love for and we express our love to Yah. The subjective perspective has it where Yah loves us: that is, Yah expresses His love for us, and thus, His love comes down to us or is pour out upon us.

 

Given that Shaul adds to his explanation of our hope being something we can confidently take to the bank, so to speak, he seems to be expressing or conveying the subjective form this verse. For he says that Yah’s love comes to us—is poured out in our heart—the Ruach being that which Yah metaphorically pours out onto and into those He chooses like one pours water out onto that which requires cleansing and refreshing. And thus, Yah’s love is directly linked to His Holy Spirit, which He gives to His sons and daughters liberally. Yah’s  love is manifested in His giving of His Spirit to His beloved. That Spirit dwells with and in us. Thus, Yah effectively dwells within us, and in His dwelling within us, He communicates His love and His peace. The indwelling of Yah’s Spirit in the Temple of Yah’s elect—that is, their physical bodies (1 Corinthians 6:19)—serves as a token—a guarantee—a down payment—that He will complete the work that He has begun in His chosen ones; the culmination-the grand outcome-being that of reigning with Master Yahoshua in His Coming Kingdom.

 

And that is certainly something to write home about.

 

 

Let’s Us Pursue Yah’s Peace at all Costs

 

 

So then, let us pursue the peace of Yah as we seek His Kingdom and His Righteousness by living and walking firmly in our Avraham-level-faith as Yah has instructed us to do (Habukkuk 2:4). Let us develop the little faith we currently have into that Avraham-level faith such that Yah considers us His friend (James/Ya’achov 2:23). And we develop that faith simply by learning about and claiming (even out loud) Yah’s covenant promises. Listening to His still-small voice as He directs us through His Word and His Holy Spirit. Asking Abba what He wants us to do and how He wants us to do the things He instructs us to do. Then follow through with those instructions.

 

Let us trust Abba in every aspect of our day-to-day lives, including our finances, careers, and relationships. Which means that we have to learn to put Yah first in our lives and factor Him into everything we do.

 

Let us make it a habit to ask Him about everything we intend to do. I know that sounds outlandish, but that’s how we start trusting Him. Putting even the smallest things into His hands. Learning to say no on certain things until we  hear from Yah, and yes to those things that Yah requires of us to do.

 

As hard as it may be for some of us, let us push ourselves to only think of things from a Godly/Elohim and positive perspective. So then, we learn to become hopeless Pollyannas whereby we replace complaining with thanksgiving and praise (1 Thessalonians 5:18-19).

 

And let us joyfully and with unshakable hope look forward to the day when we see our Master face-to-face (1 Corinthians 13:12) and we reflect for all eternity the glory of our Creator. And let us proclaim to all the world, on whatever platforms we have access to and to whatever circles we have influence in, the coming Kingdom of Yah. Even in our prayers, let us repeat daily the affirmation: “Thy Kingdom come, thy will be done, one earth as it is in heaven.”

 

If we invest our time and efforts in these little things, our faith will grow exponentially over time and we will enjoy the fullness of Yah’s peace—Yah’s Shalom.

 

 

 

 

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This week’s Torah Reading touched upon the Firstfruits’ offering and the Tithe. The Firstfruit Offering or Tithe (Dt. 26:1-11) The issue and topic of giving offerings and tithing are always controversial, both within and without our Faith Community. As Torah Observant...

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Messianics Engaged in Political and Social Activism

    A speaker at a recent prophecy conference denounced apathy in the body of Christ and demanded Christians wake-up from their apathy and engage in political and social activism, so to speak. Given the mixed Faith Communities represented at this conference,...

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