Thursday, October 29, 2020

The fruit, the woman, and us

Shalom to all, here is our study for Beresheit chapters 3 and 4. 

You may eat fruit from all of the other trees in the garden, just not this one.




Now the serpent was more subtle than any beast of the field which Yehovah Elohim had made. And he said to the woman, has Elohim said, Do not eat of every tree of the garden?(Gen 3:1)

 Tactics of the adversary

 The adversary then, and now, comes to us and often exaggerates what Elohim has instructed us to do and not do. He also makes it sound oppressive. The serpent didn’t say, “Did Elohim say you could eat of all of the trees, except one?” He didn’t put his question in terms of the bounty Chava was allowed to partake of. No, he made it sound as though being prohibited from eating from that one tree, out of all the other trees, was such a burden.

 He still uses the same tactic today.

 Consider the Shabbat. He instructs us to work for six days and do all our labors, and then the seventh we are to rest from our labors and work, and not cause others to work. What does the adversary say? “What a burden it is to not be able to work on Saturdays! How can Elohim expect you to not work, go shopping, or cause others to work one whole day of the week? There is no way anybody could do that.”

 Or consider the clean food instructions. Father says we can eat meat from any clean animal, and all fruits and vegetables. But how does the adversary present the issue to us? “How can Elohim put such a burden on you that you can’t eat pork, or shellfish, or snakes, rats, and bats? You are so deprived! Why should Elohim have the nerve to tell you not to eat such delicacies?”

 Elohim can make the rules

 When we think about it simply, Elohim created all things, He has the right and responsibility to instruct us how we should live, He loves us, and wants what is best for us. If we love Him, we accept His instructions and do our best to live by them from our hearts out of love for Him and love for our neighbor, with all our heart, all our soul, and all our strength.

 The adversary doesn’t stop once he has our attention and has lied to us.

 His next step is to get us to see his temptation, really see it in a manner that entices us.

 And when the woman saw that the tree was good for food, and that it was a delight to the eyes, and that the tree was to be desired to make one wise, (sakal - prudent, circumspect, insight, comprehend, notice wisdom is not among the meanings of this Hebrew word) she took of the fruit thereof, and did eat; and she gave also unto her husband with her, and he did eat.(Gen 3:6)

   “Seeing” the adversary’s way

 Chava had probably seen the fruit on the tree many times, but Elohim said don’t eat it, and she saw it as you or I might see a tree at the side of the road as we drive by. After we have driven by the same tree a few times, we no longer even consciously notice it. But the adversary put a big orange sign on the tree. He made Chava see it as food, even though it was not, he made her see it as delightful instead of just like all the other trees, and he made her see it as desirable rather than detestable.

 To guard and cherish

How many things today have taken on the façade of good, delightful, and desirable? Not to you perhaps, but to the indoctrinated masses who flock into the streets leaving destruction in their wake out of a sense of “good” or “justice"? Part of Adam’s charge was to guard the garden. Our charge is to guard the words of Yehovah. Another sense of guard is to cherish because of their value and because it is our Father in Heaven who has given them to us. It goes back to love. Do we love our Father enough to cherish and obey His instructions?

 May we always love Elohim enough to keep His commandments, not out of duty, but out of returning His love that was so great He sent His only begotten Son. Shalom and blessings.

 October 31 we will study Beresheit Ch. 5-6, Jeremiah Ch. 2,  Matthew 5-7 I pray you will join us.

Wednesday, October 21, 2020

Torah Insights Genesis 1 &2

 Compulsion or Love?

Torah insights

Genesis 1:1 – 2:25

During our study last week, Susan said something that resonated deeply with me. She said that she keeps Yehovah’s commandments because she loves Him so much and He has done so many wonderful things for her that she didn’t want to ever hurt Him by disobeying Him.

 Many people grow up without a good father in the home. As a result, they sometimes can’t fathom the goodness, mercy, and beauty of Elohim. But He is not a man that He should lie, or change, or abuse His children. He is good, and He loves us so much He sent His only begotten Son.

 As we read the Torah, we learn about Elohim, and as we learn about Him, we have the opportunity to draw closer to Him. After all, the way we become friends is by spending time with each other and sharing our lives, hopes, fears, joy, and pain with each other.

 In the first two chapters of Genesis, we learn that He made all of the creation in such a way it is a balanced system and put humans in charge of the whole creation. We are not to abuse creation, but guard it, and work it, and care for it. We also learn that humans are different, more special to Elohim than any of the rest of creation.

 In Genesis, Elohim provides food for us, in parallel, Yeshua told us to feed the hungry. When Adam and Chava discovered they were naked, Elohim clothed them, so Yeshua told us to clothe the poor. Many of Yeshua’s teachings can be traced back to the book of Genesis.

 We learn that Elohim instituted the Sabbath at the creation, blessed it, and made it holy. Later in the Torah, Elohim expands on the requirements of the Sabbath commandment,

 

Remember the Sabbath day, to keep it holy. Six days shall you labor, and do all your work: But the seventh day is the Sabbath of Yehovah your Elohim: in it you shall not do any work, you, nor your son, nor your daughter, your manservant, nor your maidservant, nor your cattle, nor your stranger that is within your gates: For in six days Yehovah made heaven and earth, the sea, and all that in them is, and rested the seventh day: wherefore Yehovah blessed the Sabbath day, and hallowed it.(Exo 20:8-11)

 We don’t use the word hallowed much today, according to the 1828 Webster dictionary, it means, “To make holy; to consecrate; to set apart for holy or religious use.” So Elohim tells us that He made the Sabbath holy, and tells us that we are to keep it holy. If you recall, holy means set apart. What do we set the Sabbath apart from? The other six days that we are commanded to labor and do all our work.

 The Sabbath commandment in Exodus mirrors what we were told in Genesis, where we are provided the very definition of shabbat, rest.

 And on the seventh (sheve’e) day Elohim ended his work which he had made; and he rested (shabbat) on the seventh day from all his work which he had made. And God blessed (baruch) the seventh (sheve’e) day, and sanctified (kodesh) it: because that in it he had rested (shabbat) from all his work which God created and made."
(Gen 2:2-3)

 Elohim wants us to obey Him, not out of rote, or compulsion, but because we love Him and love our neighbors. Susan has it right in acknowledging that she obeys His instructions because she doesn’t want to ever hurt Him by disobeying Him

 It is my prayer that this finds you safe, healthy, blessed by Elohim, and with shalom beyond measure.