Gal. 2:21 I do not set aside the grace of God; for if righteousness comes through the law, then Christ died in vain.
Genesis 4:40 only in regard to the throne will I be greater than you.
The ‘throne of God’ is His presence.
Once His presence was confined
to the mishkan in the wilderness;
and then transferred to the Temple within the Holy of Holies.
The Temple had a large courtyard where everyone was allowed; here they came to bring, or purchase the birds or animals for the sacrifice required for their sins. The altar of sacrifice was open to, and available for sinners to atone for their sins. The presence, or shekinah of the Lord was not manifested there.
Next was the Inner Court or Holy Place, where the priests could go but not the general public. Here stood the table of showbread containing the bread of the presence, the menorah and the altar of incense. Here when they were cleansed and prepared, the priests were one step closer to the Holy of Holies, where the presence of the Lord resided in the Ark of the Covenant. Only the High Priest could go into the Holy of Holies and he had to be as pure and sinless as possible. Sacrifice had to be made for him and on behalf of the people. He wore special white clothes, no shoes. The only thing he took with Him was the blood of the sacrifice for those sins to be sprinkled on the ark itself; on the mercy seat /the kapporet. This blood paid the price for sin as an atonement by ‘covering’ them..
The container of His glory /presence/ indwelling, was covered in sacrificial blood. After Messiah Jesus died, He became our sacrifice for our sin; His blood paid the price for our sin by not only covering but removing them forever. Gods glory/ shekinah /His Spirit, was no longer confined in the Holy of Holies where only one man could go once a year. The temple curtain separating the place where the ark resided was torn, and the way to the Father was opened for all to come; without a priest performing the sacrifice for us, because Messiah Jesus/Yeshua has done that. He is our High Priest and we can go to His Father through Him. Now His Spirit of Holiness is in the earth and when we accept Jesus/Yeshua as Savior and Messiah, His Spirit /presence/ shekinah, comes to abide/ dwell/ stay/ live and manifest in and through us. We have become not the courtyard in the ‘temple’ where sin is allowed, but the equal of the naos (Greek), the Holy of Holies, the inner sanctuary, the Holy place where His presence can come. A Holy God cannot come where there is sin and it may be why there is so little manifestation of His Holy Spirit in individuals lives today?
Because we are the representation of the Ark of His Covenant, the container of His glory, we have a duty, a calling, an accountability to the Father for the way we control our bodies under His authority. Gal 2:21
This is our part.
We would not put poison into something holy, or abuse that container would we?
Our part is having the power working in us. We must have the power in order for God to work. The cleaner we are, the more the power of His Holy Spirit can flow through us to others.
Paul said he didn’t set aside the grace of God and make it ineffective. God’s grace is absolute and limitless, and the work of salvation through Jesus/Yeshua is complete- finished forever. Salvation is as eternal as Gods’ throne, however we must put to work, or use what God has placed within us.
To work out our own salvation.
Phil. 2:12 means that we are responsible for using what He has given us. We are responsible for using what He has imparted to us. It also means that we must exhibit, show in our own bodies, the life of the Lord Jesus; not mysteriously or secretly but openly and boldly. We are to discipline our bodies. 1 Cor. 9:27 and bring them into subjection. Every disciple/believer in Jesus/Yeshua can have their bodies under absolute control for the Lord. Our Father has given us the responsibility to rule over all of the temple including the naos/sanctuary, place where His spirit resides. We are the ark today, carriers of His glory, we are the Holy of Holies. 1 Cor 6:19
If we are, then this includes our thoughts and desires; we are responsible for these and we must never give way to improper ones. However, most of us are much more severe in our criticism of others than we are of ourselves. We make excuses for things in ourselves and in our own life while condemning things in the life of others, simply because we are not naturally inclined to do them.
In Rom. 12:1 Paul implored his listeners, and that includes us, to present your bodies a living sacrifice! What we must decide is whether or not we will agree with our Heavenly Father, Lord and King that our bodies will indeed be His sanctuary, His holy of holies, His naos, His ark on the earth. Once we agree with all the rules, regulations and requirements of His commandments; and with the directives for being His disciple, His child, concerning our physical bodies. They are summed up for us in this revealed truth: our body is the Sanctuary – not just the Temple of His Holy Spirit.
This is our part.
We are covered in the blood of Messiah, who died for us; we have become the ark of His covenant, sprinkled with the sacrificial blood of His merciful forgiveness. We are no longer sinners in the sense that now we are saved by His grace. Redeemed and sanctified, set apart to good works, no longer ruled by the flesh life.
A life lived in, and ruled by the flesh is no different to the way of the world.
The life we now live by the Son of God is ruled by His Sprit within us. We should show forth this Holy life in our physical bodies, because we are His representatives on earth and it should be one where the life of Christ shines through us representing all the promises of a redeemed life. Gal. 2:20 I have been crucified with Christ and I no longer live, but Christ lives in me. The lifeI nowlive in the body, I live by faith in the Sonof God, who loved me and gave Himself for me.
This is HIs part and our part together.
Examining further the sacrificial work that was accomplished by Messiah, we need to look at the levitical sacrifice in a deeper way to see the fullness of what our Heavenly Father intends for each of us. Sometimes we just read the new testament without the foundation of the old and miss that deeper truth. The one day of the year the High Priest went into the Holy of Holies was on the day of atonement/ Yom Kippur.
When he offered the sacrifice of the bull for his own sins and then took 2 goats to the door of the temple to deal with the sins of the nation. There is no atonement for sin without a blood sacrifice. A life for a a life, Ex. 21:23; and the life is in the blood.
Hence Jesus/Yeshuas sacrificial death and blood was for our redemption. This is how He fulfilled all things of the law and it is important for us to know.
Regarding the 2 goats: there was a lottery, a casting of lots where one of the goats was chosen and was called the Lords goat, and offered as a sacrifice and its blood was sprinkled on the mercy seat in the holy of holies.
… He is to castlotsforthe two goats- one lot…the LORD and the other forthe scapegoat. He is to … sacred lots to determine which goat will be reserved as an offering .
This was a type and shadow of Yeshua HaMashiach, Messiah Jesus.
This was His work.
This goats blood was to deal with the forgiveness of sins, the atonement for sins. The other goat was set free to wander off into the wilderness as an outcast. The Jewish records show that the goat was thrown off a cliff. This was the scapegoat, a familiar phrase called in Hebrew: the Azezel, or azazel, who was to deal with the guilt we feel for our sins. Being thrown off a cliff would fit the metaphor, because guilt will lead us to destruction. In other words even when God forgives our sins we could still live with regret. That was the purpose of the azazel or scapegoat.
We see that Jesus/Yehsua not only was the Lord’s goat who was sacrificed for our sins, but He was also our scapegoat who took the burden of our sins, our feelings of guilt, remorse and shame; and sent them into the wilderness to be an outcast to never be seen again, or thrown off a cliff, to bring this guilt to an end. No wonder He cried it is finished/completed!
Our Father knows us and that we are prone to not forgive ourselves; that we often harbor deep grief and sorrow; and listen to the lies of the enemy that what we have done is too bad to be forgiven and forgotten, that we are beyond redemption. This is a trap and a lie of the enemy/ adversary, because Jesus/Yeshua has done it all. We are to take all of our wicked ways and place them on the Redeemer, Who will not only make atonement for our wickedness; but will also remove the guilt that comes with it.
Many times we forget there is the
Lords goat and the scapegoat,
and sometimes we do not completely azazel/forsake our wicked ways. Is. 55:7 Let the wicked forsake his way, And the unrighteous man his thoughts; Let him return to the LORD, And He will have mercy on him; And to our God, For He will abundantly pardon.
In Strongs H5800 The word Forsake in Hebrew is
azab/ aw-zab
עָזַב
and comes from the root word azov.
Meaning: to depart, leave behind, neglect, to loosen
and one Hebrew school of thought suggests the root could be
azoll – אזול
which is the same root word that the Hebrew word azazel for the scapegoat comes from:
We may accept the sacrifice of the Lords goat, but if we spend our lives living in the guilt of our sins, we have not accepted the azazel or the work that Messiah did as a scapegoat..
This is His work and we need to realize once and for all that He also took the guilt and shame of our sins and sending them away into the wilderness or over a cliff.
Sometimes we will not accept the azazel reality of others, who truly repent and receive the truth of the Lords goat. We keep searching for the azazel, and keep hanging the past sins of that person over their head.
Sometimes we have to allow our Heavenly Father to send that scapegoat into the wilderness or over a cliff, never to return and also forgive them and ourselves.
Our part is to yield to His creative work in us, not resisting, nor trying to speed it up. We are being transformed from the inside out. Allow Him to set the pace and the timing. Our part is to decide to build a relationship with Him through prayer, worship, spending time in His presence, reading, studying His Word and being obedient to what He has asked us to do in order to become His disciple.
In John 6:28-35 His disciples/talmidim ask Yeshua/Jesus
28 Then said they unto him, What shall we do, that we might work the works of God? 29 Jesus answered and said unto them, This is the work of God, that ye believe on him whom he hath sent. 30 They said therefore unto him, What sign shewest thou then, that we may see, and believe thee? what dost thou work? 31 Our fathers did eat manna in the desert 32 Jesus said to them, “Very truly I tell you, it is not Moses who has given you the bread from heaven, but it is my Father who gives you the true bread from heaven.33For the bread of God is the bread that comes down from heaven and gives life to the world.”34 “Sir,” they said, “always give us this bread.” 35 Then Jesus declared, “I am the bread of life. Whoever comes to me will never go hungry, and whoever believes in me will never be thirsty.
We know that Messiah has done it all however, He wants us to do our part and apply His Truth and His Ways to our lives by eating/word and drinking/spirit of Him. This is working out our salvation and displaying His Work in and through us to the lost who are seeking answers, because He is the Way the Truth and the Life. His work is feeding us manna, Himself the bread from heaven, the bread of life/chaim.
Then our work is His work, our part is His part and we become the fulfillment of Messiahs prayer in John 17:20-23.20
Neither pray I for these alone, but for them also which shall believe on me through their word; 21 That they all may be one; as thou, Father, art in me, and I in thee, that they also may be one in us: that the world may believe that thou hast sent me. 22 And the glory which thou gavest me I have given them; that they may be one, even as we are one- 23 I in them and you in me-so that they may be brought to complete unity. Then the world will know that you sent me and have loved them even as you have loved me.
Shalom aleikhem
chaverim and mishpachah!
Peace to friends and family.
Shavua Tov, Have a blessed week.
Make certain Messiah Jesus/Yeshua is your Redeemer, Savior, Lord and soon returning King and that you have a personal relationship with Him.
It’s all about Life and Relationship, NOT Religion.
You are very precious in His sight.
Not sure ..you can be…
SIMPLY SAY THE FOLLOWING MEANING IT FROM YOUR HEART..don’t delay one more minute,
SAY IT RIGHT NOW…
Heavenly Father I come to you in the Name of Jesus/Yeshua asking for forgiveness of my sins for which I am truly sorry. I repent of them all and turn away from my past.
I believe with my heart and confess with my mouth that Jesus/Yeshua is your Son and that He died on the cross at calvary to pay the price for my sin, so that I might be forgiven and have eternal life in the kingdom of Heaven. Father I believe that Jesus/Yeshua rose from the dead and I ask you to come into my life right now and be my personal Savior and Lord and I will worship you all the days of my life. Because your word is truth I say that I am now forgiven and born again and by faith I am washed clean with the blood of Jesus/Yeshua. Thank you that you have accepted me into your family in Jesus’/Yeshua’s name.
and there are deep meanings in every event that has been precisely orchestrated throughout the millennia.
As the year dated 2024 reflects the 2 millennia since Messiahs birth. In Hebrew, the year is 5784 from creation in Genesis.
A typicaltimelineis shown from Creation through the assassination of Yitzchak Rabin in 5756 (1995).
The next Jewish New Year – Rosh Hashana, for the Hebrew Year 5785 begins at sundown on Wednesday, 2 October 2024.
Many people make resolutions and promises at New Year they all mean well but many times will never keep them. One thing we can take on our journey through 2024/5784, is that our Heavenly Father, Messiah Yeshua and His Spirit of Holiness never break their covenant promises.
Here are some of the things we have been promised and particularly those from the victory Messiah won at the cross.
Martin Luther called it the Great Exchange, noting the benefits and blessings Messiah won for us and gave to us and what we have received.
We have exchanged …
Our lostness for His salvation
Our sin for His forgiveness
Our uncleanness for His purity
Our filth for His holiness
Our wickedness for His goodness
Our foolishness for His wisdom
Our weakness for His strength
Our inadequacy for His ability
Our problems for His solutions
Our poverty for His abundance
Our defeat for His victory
Our mind for His mind
Our sickness for His healing
Our anxiety for His peace
Our captivity for His deliverance
Our brokenness for His wholeness
Our lies for His truth
Our way for His Way
Our old life for His new Life
Our fear for His faith
Our bondage for His freedom
Our emptiness for His fullness
Our despair for His hope
Our death for His life
Our curse for His blessing
Our misery for His joy
Our rejection for His acceptance
Our shame for His glory
Our sin for His holiness
Our wrongs for His rights
Our darkness for His eternal light
Our slavery for His sonship
Our condemnation for His justification
Our laws for His grace
Our anger for His mercy
Our pride for His humility
Our failures for His new beginnings
Our sadness for His joy
Our broken hearts for His comfort
Our disappointments for His love
Our mistakes for His forgiveness
Our cruelty for His compassion
Our jealousy for His equality
Our unrighteousness for His righteousness
Our rudeness for His tenderness
Our drunkenness for His sobriety
Our duplicity for His honesty
Our guile for His integrity
Our arrogance for His meekness.
Our covetousness for His justification
Our betrayal for His faithfulness
Our rebellion for His obedience
The list is without end there is so much
we have to be thankful and grateful for.
There are countless sermons on the
Great Exchange,
however there may be one aspect we have overlooked?
Just before our Lord and Savior took our place on the cursed tree, there was a significant event where a decision was made between two sons who did not have the same father,
yet both were called son of the father.
One was Jesus/Yeshua, the Son of His and our Heavenly Father
and the other
Barabbas,
Bar meaning; son of and
Abbas meaning: Father.
Barabbas: a thief, a murderer, a rebel. Son of father: in this case the father was the adversary; as Jesus said he was a murderer. John 8:44 Ye are of your father the devil, and the lusts of your father ye will do. He was a murderer from the beginning, and abode not in the truth, because there is no truth in him.
Messiah Jesus and Barabbas – The Great Exchange?
Mark 15:6-15
Only in Messiah’s perfect sacrifice was the Great Exchange accomplished, and our Heavenly Father wants us to see this great exchange as a beautiful picture of His grace and mercy in Christ.
What would we think, if a criminal, one guilty of murder and robbery was released from prison and in his place an innocent man was sentenced to die? Our answer might be that it is unfair, outrageous, ridiculous and just who would come up with a suggestion like that?
The truth is that this is our Heavenly Father’s plan, the good news, the gospel. It’s the story of the
great exchange
shown in
Jesus/Yeshua and Barabbas.
The guilty man went free and the innocent man was condemned.
Righteousness was exchanged for unrighteousness;
holiness was substituted for unholiness;
the sinless took the place of the sinner and
the King of kings was replaced for a murderer and a robber.
Mark 15:6- 15.
There are two important points in this message that we need to make note of.
Firstly, only the perfect sacrifice of Messiah Jesus/Yeshua can accomplish the great exchange where the sinner goes free and the Messiah is punished in his place.
Secondly in the great exchange, our Heavenly Father wants us to
see ourselves as Barabbas…
because the fact is that none of us have any hope, except for freedom in Messiah alone.
See ourselves as Barabbas?
A murderer, a criminal, a rebel!
Yes a sinner and all have sinned –
For all have sinned, and come short of the glory of God. Romans 3:23
Sin is sin and if we have ever been stubborn or rebellious, then we have sinned; hating someone in our hearts is equal to murder in the Fathers eyes. And what about our thought life?
You have heard that it was said, ‘you shall not commit adultery’; 28 but I say to you that everyone who looks at a woman with lust for her has already committed adultery with her in his heart. 29 “If your right eye makes you stumble, tear it out and throw it from you; for it is better for you to lose one of the parts of your body … Matthew 5: 27-28 is a part of Yeshua/Jesus’ Sermon on the Mount, and one in a series of examples He uses to emphasize the new dimension of spiritual awareness. The phrase “you have heard” does not refer to the scripture, it refers to oral teachings of the Pharisees who violated scripture with their own tradition.
It was the Passover/Pesach, and as was the custom at the Passover/Pesach, the governor would release a prisoner of the crowd’s choosing. In this case, the chief priests and elders persuaded the crowd to ask for Barabbas’ release and Yeshua/Jesus’ execution.
Barabbas was a notorious criminal.
Notorious means: widely known and regarded unfavorably.
He had been thrown into prison for his part in a rebellion in Jerusalem and for murder. He was guilty of these crimes, while Messiah Jesus was innocent of the crimes He had been accused of, namely blasphemy of God.
Pilate even told the crowd that he could find no wrong in Jesus/Yeshua and washed his hands to say that he did not agree with putting Jesus/Yeshua to death. However the crowd of about 300 who were stirred up by the chief priest and elders, demanded that Barabbas be released and Jesus/Yeshua be executed by crucifixion.
Only in Messiah/Christ’s perfect sacrifice was the
Great Exchange
accomplished.
God wants us to see this great exchange as a beautiful picture of His grace and mercy in Messiah. The story of Jesus/Yeshua and Barabbas is found in every gospel. It is so important for us to see that only in Messiah’s perfect sacrifice can the just be exchanged for the unjust, the righteous for the unrighteous, the sinless for the sinner, the King of kings for a criminal.
The great exchange of Jesus/Yeshua for Barabbas, which is an often neglected and forgotten part of the story, is proof of God’s great love for the unlovable. We need to realize that an enormous price was paid for this great exchange. That God, not sparing His own Son, would purpose Jesus/Yeshua’s death on the cross in order that people like you and me would be rescued from sin and returned to a right relationship with our Heavenly Father.
The following two verses of scripture explain it well:Isaiah 53:10a
Yet it was the will of the LORD to crush him; he has put him to grief; Isaiah 53:10 (ESV) and
2 Corinthians 5:21.
For our sake he made him to be sin who knew no sin, so that in him we might become the righteousness of God.
Have we ever seen ourselves as Barabbas?
It is a position with absolutely no hope for freedom except in Messiah Jesus Christ /Yeshua HaMashiach
As we see ourselves as Barabbas, we see an individual so rebellious, so prone to do wrong, so undeserving of freedom and so deserving of punishment for the sin in our lives.
Our Heavenly Father by His grace, rescued us from sin and set us free in Messiah.
That is our Barabbas moment.
But have we really seen ourselves as Barabbas?
Yeshua/Jesus took our place as the criminal.
He received punishment for our crimes, past, present and future.
Crimes such as adultery, pride, gossip, as well as a critical, unforgiving and resentful spirit. Messiah Jesus/Yeshua, the righteous, was condemned; you and I, we, the unrighteous, went free.
Scripture states that none is righteous, no, not one.
Scripture also states that we all fall short of God’s glory. Then how can it be that God Himself in the flesh, the Lord Jesus Christ, would die for such sin laden people like us living in a world filled with evil and darkness?
The answer is in Romans 8
…but God shows his love for us in that while we were still sinners, Christ died for us.
In what was the most unjust great exchange in all of history, the justice of Our Heavenly Father was served. God exchanged perfect love, grace and mercy while we were still sinners…
How?
through the perfect sacrifice of Jesus/Yeshua’s death on the cross.
While we were prisoners to sin, we were set free from the penalty of sin and death, even though we didn’t deserve it. That is the grace of a Heavenly Father with unconditional love.
We are deserving of a certain death, yet He has prevented us from receiving it.
That is mercy… but how can that be?
Our freedom isn’t achieved by anything we do; it is only by a sinless, innocent Messiah dying in our place.
As we read about this great exchange, Our Heavenly Father’s perfect love, amazing grace and rich mercy in Messiah, exchanged for the deplorable, detestable and horrific sin of people like Barabbas and people like you and me.
How do we respond to this unfair, outrageous, ridiculous story of the unjust exchange of a guilty man for an innocent man? How should we respond?
The only response is to receive the message of the great exchange by believing it and trusting Jesus/Yeshua. He is the only One who would and has willingly exchanged…
His perfection for our shame,
His glory for our rebellion and
His sinlessness for our sinfulness.
He is the only way to freedom.
Freedom from sin.
Freedom from shame.
Freedom from worrying about whether or not others approve of us.
We need to be constantly reminded that Father God’s approval of us is all that matters; and it’s found only in Messiah, whose perfection was exchanged for our imperfection.
If we haven’t trusted Him, we’re still in prison with the door locked. Jesus/Yeshua is our only hope of freedom and He holds the key to our freedom.. When the guards came for Barabbas, did he say, No I will stay in prison? Of course not, why would anyone stay as a slave in bondage when they could be set free?
Right now, as you read this, you can receive our Father God’s gift of love, grace and mercy through simply trusting Jesus/Yeshua as you turn to Him and ask forgiveness for the sin in your life.
Messiah has overcome the world and promised to take the heavy burdens from us and give us rest. Trust Him have faith and take Him at His Word.
John 8:36. So if the Son sets you free, you will be free indeed.
The Lord Jesus/Yeshua came to die for us so we could live abundantly spiritually and eternally. He came to set us free from sin, from God’s wrath and from ourselves. For those trusting Him, there’s an assurance that we are former criminals, but no longer imprisoned to sin, we have been set free in Messiah. Set free because of the great exchange.
We are to be reconciled to Him ….what does that mean?
God reconciled sinful man to Himself by making His sinless Son the sin bearer and dying in the sinner’s place. Jesus Christ/Yeshua HaMashiach paid the death penalty for the sinner so that God could set the sinner free and declare him righteous in His holy presence. He did more than just forgive us our sins; He imputed the perfect righteousness of His Son to us. A great exchange took place. Messiah/Christ got all our sin and guilt; we got His perfect righteousness standing before God. His righteousness was exchanged for our sin.
The apostle Paul wrote:
Now all these things are from God, who reconciled us to Himself through Christ and gave us the ministry of reconciliation. 2 Corinthians 5:18.
The word “reconcile” in the original Greek is
katallasso,
it is an old word for
exchanging coins.
It means “to change, exchange” especially money, then of individuals “to change from enmity to friendship, to reconcile.”
“For if while we were enemies we were reconciled to God through the death of His Son, much more, having been reconciled, we shall be saved by His life” Romans 5:10.
God’s love provided the means and foundation for man’s reconciliation to God against whom he had sinned. God’s own sense of justice had to be satisfied’
By means of His own sacrifice of His Son He turns away His own wrath toward the believer. The Lord God needs no reconciliation; we are the ones who need to be reconciled to Him, because we are the sinning rebels. This has to be done on His terms and is made possible through the death of Messiah/Christ.
The great exchange took place. Messiah/Christ took all our sin and guilt; we received His perfect righteousness standing before God. His righteousness was exchanged for our sin.
2 Cor. 5:21
Because of God’s holiness and righteousness, sin must be punished., unfortunately as humans, we tend to take a lenient view of sin, but God can’t do that because; He has set His laws in place and revealed them to us. When they are broken, the transgressor/sinner must be punished. Christians know Messiah/Christ paid their debt on the cross, but He did even more than that for every believer.
In His humanity, Yeshua/Jesus is the “last Adam.” He was born under the law, kept it perfectly, and was qualified as the perfect Adam (man) to save God’s people Rom. 5:15-19. The apostle Paul makes it abundantly clear in Romans 5, that Jesus/Yeshua succeeded where Adam failed, and as death came to all through Adam, righteousness and life come to ALL those who are in Messiah Jesus by faith.
And it’s not just the forgiveness of sins that came through the cross.
Because Messiah Jesus lived a perfectly obedient life, God the Father imputes (that is, credits) Jesus’s perfect righteousness to His people by faith in Messiah alone. This the great exchange, where our sin is credited to Him and the earned righteousness of Messiah is credited to ALL who call upon the name of the Lord.
Where Adam brought death through his rebellion, Messiah earned eternal life for all believers.
In the great exchange Christ’s righteousness is credited to us, and our sin is credited to Christ.
It was God the Father who put all the sins of believers, past, present, and future, on Yeshua/Jesus, Who had no sin. The Son took those sins freely and died to redeem all who would believe; that is, all whom the Father had eternally given to Him as His “bride”.
The agony of the Father turning from His Son Who was made sin, then turned to joy as the Father raised Him from the grave and seated Him at His right hand. And the joy continues as the Spirit gives life through the Son as the Father determined before time began. His joy in bringing many sons to glory.
The redeeming plan of God which was set in place before the creation, is an act of love and grace that is beyond human imagining. When we allow these truths to settle in our hearts, we find the necessary gratitude for continuing to live a life pleasing to our heavenly Father God; with the help of His indwelling Spirit until the day our Savior returns. Then we will each hear, Well done, good and faithful servant.
There is no place for self-righteousness at the foot of the cross. There are no self-made Christians. All true Christians are Christ-made. We are made “the righteousness of God in Him.” Sinners must glory in Messiah/Christ alone because our trespasses were reckoned to Him and the absolute, spotless, perfect, righteousness of Messiah is reckoned to us.
“For by grace you have been saved through faith; and that not of yourselves, it is the gift of God; not as a result of works, so that no one may boast. For we are His workmanship, created in Christ Jesus for good works, which God prepared beforehand so that we would walk in them” Ephesians 2:8-10.
Messiah made the perfect atonement for our sins.
He has provided a perfect righteousness, for our justification.
God was in Messiah obtaining our reconciliation to a holy God.
Barabbas is the one person in history who could say that Yeshau/Jesus literally carried his cross.
Messiah Jesus took his death, and Barabbas was given the freedom that Jesus/Yeshua deserved.
Messiah bore the guilt, shame, curse, disgrace and death that Barabbas deserved.
Barabbas received the release, the freedom, and the life that Messiah Jesus deserved.
So yes a murderer did have a part in the great exchange and so do each of us.
Shalom aleikhem
chaverim and mishpachah!
Peace to friends and family.
Shavua Tov, Have a blessed week.
Make certain Messiah Jesus/Yeshua is your Redeemer, Savior, Lord and soon returning King and that you have a personal relationship with Him.
It’s all about Life and Relationship, NOT Religion.
You are very precious in His sight.
Not sure ..you can be…
SIMPLY SAY THE FOLLOWING MEANING IT FROM YOUR HEART..don’t delay one more minute,
SAY IT RIGHT NOW…
Heavenly Father I come to you in the Name of Jesus/Yeshua asking for forgiveness of my sins for which I am truly sorry. I repent of them all and turn away from my past.
I believe with my heart and confess with my mouth that Jesus/Yeshua is your Son and that He died on the cross at calvary to pay the price for my sin, so that I might be forgiven and have eternal life in the kingdom of Heaven. Father I believe that Jesus/Yeshua rose from the dead and I ask you to come into my life right now and be my personal Savior and Lord and I will worship you all the days of my life. Because your word is truth I say that I am now forgiven and born again and by faith I am washed clean with the blood of Jesus/Yeshua. Thank you that you have accepted me into your family in Jesus’/Yeshua’s name.
And it shall be in thay day saith the Lord that you shall call me ISHI my husband and shall call me no more BAALI my master.
Hosea 2:16
The name Hosea/Hoshea like Joshua/Y’hoshua
and Yeshua means
Salvation.
Hebrew: הוֹשֵׁעַ – Hōšēaʿ, ‘Salvation’;
If you have never read the book of Hosea, the content in a nutshell is a love story with a thorn in it. It’s the story of a faithful husband and an adulterous, unfaithful wife. The descriptions of the two main characters Hosea /Hoshea and Gomer, also describe the relationship between Yhvh/God and the children of Israel.
InChapter 1:2,Hosea is given the most unlikely instructions one could ever imagine; he was told to go and marry a whore/prostitute and have children with her. Hoseas marriage becomes a symbol of God’s love for His adulterous children who were prostituting themselves with idols and foreign gods; worshipping them and committing spiritual adultery against the Living God Who had made covenant with them equal to sacred marriage vows. God commands Hoshea to take a wife who the Lord knows will prove to be unfaithful and adulterous.
Anyone reading this story, may feel this is unfair to Hosea, punishing him with a promiscuous marriage to the unfaithful Gomer. However, here Hosea is speaking on behalf of God and portrays God Himself in acting out this story of the continual/ongoing unfaithfulness and spiritual adultery by Israel. Gomer represents the Isrealites/Jewish people, who are so many times portrayed as God’s beloved wife. Jeremiah 2:3. We should think, if Gomers unfaithfulness is unfair, how much more is Israel’s and His childrens’ unfaithfulness unfair to God?
Gomer the wife of Hosea.
Gomer – Hebrew: גומר,
Original Word: גֹּמֶר.
Strongs 1586
Gomer means: complete
In Hosea 1:3 Gomer is called the Daughter of Diblaim. Diblaim is derived from the word develah meaning: fig-cake; since she was as sweet in everyone’s mouth as a fig-cake; or because everyone would tread on her as on a fig-cake.Gomer’s mother was also in the same profession and both were commonly the subject of slander and gossip. This led to another reference by the Rabbis, that the name Diblaim is a plural form of the word dibah which means: slander, ill repute: [a woman of] ill repute and the daughter of [a woman of] ill repute.
God commanded Hosea to marry Gomer, the daughter of Diblaim, as this was in order to teach him correct behavior for one who was to prophesy to Israel. Despite Gomer’s harlotry, the Rabbis interpret her story as proof that, even when God is angry with Israel, He still loves them.
After two sons, Jezreel and
Lo-ammi
and a daughter,
Lo-ruhamah
were born to Hosea and Gomer,
God ordered Hosea: “You must part from Gomer. You should have learned from your teacher Moses, who parted from his wife because I revealed Myself to him. You, too, separate yourself from her.” Hosea began to weep and said to God: “Master of the Universe! I have children by her. I can neither send her away nor divorce her!” Since he answered Him thus, God said: “Hosea, why do you weep?” He replied: “I take pity on my wife and my children.” God said: “Your wife is a harlot, and your children are children begotten of harlotry, and you do not know if they are yours or from others; nevertheless, you took pity on them. And as for Me—Israel are My children, my beloved children, the seed of Abraham, Isaac and Jacob. Should I not have pity on them? Israel is one of the four possessions that I have acquired in this world [i.e., the Torah, heaven and earth, the Temple, and Israel], and you tell me to replace them with another nation?!”
Hearing this, Hosea realized that he had sinned and was about to ask for Divine mercy for himself. God told him:
“Hosea, Hosea, three [heavenly] decrees were issued against Israel because of you. Instead of asking for mercy for yourself, ask for mercy for Israel.”
Hosea stood and prayed on behalf of Israel, God then annulled the three decrees and Hosea gave them three blessings:
“The number of the people of Israel shall be like that of the sand of the sea” Hos. 2:1;
“instead of being told, ‘You are Not-My-People,’ they shall be called ‘Children-of-the-Living-God’” Hos. 1:10
“I will sow her in the land as My own; and I will have compassion on her who has not received compassion; and I will say to those who are not My people, ‘You are My people’” Hos. 2:23
Another tradition relates that for every affliction that Hosea prophesied for Israel, he gave them a remedy.
After telling Israel “I will no longer pardon the House of Israel” (Hos. 1:6),
the prophet promises “I will have compassion on her who has not received compassion.”
After having told the Israelites “For you are not My people” (Hos. 1:9),
the prophet assures them “I will say to those who are not My people, ‘You are My people’” (Hos. 2:25). The mouth that uttered “For she is not my wife” (Hos. 2:4) recanted and amended “You will call [Me] Ishi [husband]” (Hos. 2:18).
Even when God is provoked by Israel, He still loves them. Hosea learns this himself when he realizes that Gomer’s harlotry does not prevent him from being attached to her.
This shows us that Hosea was emotionally attached to Gomer and felt obligated to her. God tested and tried him when He told him to part from her and her children, but He did not intend this to be fulfilled. Rather, Hosea was to learn from the husband and wife relationship the emotions of love, compassion, and commitment that a prophet must feel for his people.
We sometimes overlook the significance of the given names in scripture and on occasion the children of prophets give a prophetic indication of God’s plans. For example: the names given by God to Hosea/Hoshea. He had 2 sons and 1 daughter with Gomer
1:4 call himYizre’el/Jezreel
which means:
scattering, especially about seeds and is the same name as the valley near Megiddo that has been a famous battleground all through history and is the site of the final battle, we are familiar with as Armageddon. This is also pointing strongly to the future of the Northern kingdom and meaning that they will literally be scattered.
The 2 other children, one called
Lo Ruchamah/Lo Ruhama,
meaning: not loved, not received compassion or unpitied.
The other was named
Lo Ammi
meaning: not my people,
which in Hosea’s lifetime is the status of the Northern Kingdom.
Back to meaning of Baali or Ishi?
Baali – Bet Ayin Lamed Yod – my master
From the verb בעל ba’al, to be master, owner or lord.
בעלי
means: to exercise dominion over.
The name Baali isn’t really a name and very few of the original readers and hearers of the Book of Hosea would have thought it was. It is more commonly understood to be a reference to idols or false gods of demonic origin.
Baʻal in Hebrew: בַּעַל baʿal, was as already noted, a title meaning owner, lord in the Northwest Semitic languages spoken in the Levant in those days. The word baal means lord; the plural is baalim. In general, Baal was a fertility god who was believed to enable the earth to produce crops and people to produce children.
Baal or Baali also means the Bull, the Golden Calf and was the god worshipped in many ancient Middle Eastern communities, especially among the Canaanites and Phoenicians they believed it was a deity and the son of the chief god El. In artistic depictions and archeological finds, Baal took the shape of a bull or ram. This was the same golden calf at Sinai incident.
Also in 1Kings 18:29 Elijah said to the prophets of Baal,
“Choose one of the bulls and prepare it first, since there are so many of you. Call on the name of your god.
Jeremiah 14:5 The people of Judah stopped worshiping me and made this valley into a place of worship for Baal and other gods that have never helped them or their ancestors or their kings.
They built high places for Baal in the Valley of Ben Hinnom to sacrifice their sons and daughters to Molek,
Jeremiah 32:35
BAALI. ba’-a-li ba`ali, my master
Baal, a common name for all heathen gods, had in common practice been used also of Yahweh.
The name Baali occurs in Hosea 2:16, where the Lord promises that when Israel is restored, that is, when every person’s knowledge of nature is complete, correct and understood; and the people will no longer call the
Creator My Master/ Baali,
but rather
My Husband -Ishi.
The word comes from
איש ‘ish, man or husband.
There’s only a small difference between the words אישי ishi and בעלי ba’ali as both are used to mean my husband.
Ishi is an expression of marital relationship and young love.The word ishi can simply mean my man, which may denote one’s equal, a husband or a man one has employed.
The word baali is more an authoritative title; is an expression of lordship and fear.
it may also mean: my master or my lord.
Hosea 2:16 reveals that at this point in their relationship, Gomer is calling him Baali /my master because whatever she is doing for him is out of obligation, duty and fear. It seems that Baali is the most common word used in Hebrew and Aramaic for husband. This is because in those times most cultures considered that a husband was a master to whom women were forced to be totally submissive, or would face physical punishment or even death for disobedience to their baali/abusive husband. Sadly this is still the case in some Middle Eastern and Asian countries and no doubt has had an influence on the western cultures; who still exert dominance and suppress womens freedoms. Before being influenced by pagan cultures however, the Hebrew children of Israel were known for their fair and equal treatment of women. It is because of this there are the 2 words for husband. As noted, the one is baali that is referring to the husband who is an abusive master figure and the other, Ishi.. The word Ishi can be applied to many relationship types, for example, like a friend, a helper or a companion. Whereas a baali, and uses of the word, all indicate very negative meanings.
Ishi is used in a very positive way because an
Ishi husband is one who loves his wife,
cares for and cherishes her.
On the other hand,
a baali husband
only sees his wife as someone or something, more as a possession; an object who is there to serve him like a slave and meet his needs in every way he wants.
Hosea was speaking God’s words to His people. The prophets’ ministry is just that, hearing from God, taking the message of God to His people, not the prophet’s own message. The priest on the other hand, heard from the people and took the peoples words and offerings and ministered them to the Lord.
The children of Israel saw God as a baali, a master who had to be served in case they suffered severe consequences. It may help us to read this passage of scripture and to see that like Hosea, our Heavenly Father Creator God is pleading for His bride to allow Him to be an Ishi, to be able to show His affection, His love and His caring protection. Gomer could not see the love Hosea had for he because she was so wrapped up in her own guilt, her adultery and promiscuity to believe that Hosea could forgive her and overlook all that she had done.
This raises the questions:
What is God to us?
How do we see him and how do we relate to Him?
Is He a Baali or an Ishi to us?
Do we think of Him as an unfair, abusive, baali husband, demanding that we follow every letter of his laws and rules; living in fear that he will punish us severely and even send us to hell without any mercy grace or loving-kindness?
Are we so deeply wrapped up in guilt over our past sins, our failures and even fear of sinning/falling into sin and being punished; that we don’t see His forgiveness and the power of His unconditional love and tender mercies that are new every morning? Lamentations 22:23
He is the Ishi, the One Who wants to love us, to forgive us and pour out His care, provision and protection.
In Hosea 2:18 Adonai will not continue to discipline Israel forever but he will renew His vows to her and in verse 20, there is a future of promise for the people once again. Hosea is told in chapter 3:1show love to this wife of yours. Hosea’s relationship with Gomer is once again compared to God’s relationship with the northern kingdom. In speaking of Gomers unfaithfulness, it’s noted by the Rabbis that Hosea cherished Gomer, yet she broke covenant with him by committing adultery under his domain. In this passage the love that the Lord God has for the nation of Israel is given freely but she too strayed from under the Lord’s domain, prostituting themselves with foreign gods whom they did not know.
Chapter 6:2 is seen as predicting Messiahs death and resurrection and verse 6 is an echo of Ps 51:16 which was quoted by Messiah in Matthew 9:13, 12:7.
Our God desires that the relationship between a husband and wife to be that of a partnership, not one of dominance and mastery. And in the Tanach/old testament, the relationship between God and the Jewish people is often compared, to the relationship between a husband and wife.
In Hoshea 2:18-19 We read: “It shall be on that day — the word of God — you will say ‘ishi’ (my Husband) and you will no longer say ‘baali’ (my Master).
An interesting fact is that in 1953, David Ben Gurion wrote a letter stating that on government documents and forms the word “ishi” should be used, as opposed to the word “baali,” since “baali” conjures up images of the husband being the master as well as a god of idol worship and does not show respect for women. Ben Gurion then quoted that verse from Hoshea to prove his point.
David Ben Gurion took the Tanach and Biblical Hebrew seriously. Today, unfortunately, many Israelis are not as well educated in Biblical Hebrew and are only familiar with Modern and Spoken Hebrew.
If more women used the word “ishi” to describe their husbands, the word might eventually become standard. From looking at scripture it seems is clear that “ishi” is the word that God prefers.
Some things that we can learn from this story:
Sin leads to confusion, forgetfulness, and destruction.
Personal and private sin does not stay personal or private for very long.
God is faithful even when we are not.
Only God can redeem and restore; and like Hosea, God was willing to go to extreme lengths to do just that. He used his own marriage to an adulterous wife, to symbolize God’s love for his people
It shows God’s love and mercy for Israel and Judah, who have strayed from Him, and the unlimited forgiveness and redemption available to those who will return to Him.
Gomer was not a born-and-raised, dedicated follower of God: she was a prostitute. This fact speaks volumes about the people God chooses and the enormous depth of His love for us! God commanded Hosea to ‘Go, marry a promiscuous woman and have children with her.’ In a culture which shunned such women, and valued a respectable marriage as a measure of a man’s success. This must have made Hosea wonder, but he trusted in God, and because of his faith, Gomer was given the one thing she never thought she deserved: a loving, holy husband and a new start in life.
However, she messed up and in Hosea 3:1 we are told that she ‘is loved by another man and is an adulteress’ She couldn’t completely give up her old life, and maybe the sense of being unworthy of her new life pulled her back into old habits.
Regardless of this weakness to fall into sin, God commanded Hosea to ‘love her as the Lord loves the Israelites, though they turn to another god.’ Hosea 3:1. In other words, Hosea forgave her sin against him and accepted her just as she was.
The three very encouraging things we can take from this are:
First, that God will NEVER give up on us!
According to Matthew 18:22; He will forgive us more than ‘70×7’ times for our shortfalls and His love will remain unfailing throughout. There’s nothing we have done or will ever do that will shock our ishi, because as creator of the universe there is nothing that He has not seen or does not know. No matter how far we stray from the path He set out for us, there is always a way back; and when we do return, just like the prodigal son, He will be there waiting for us as if we never left.
Secondly as Gomer found out, even the best man in the world, one who could bring happiness and give meaning and satisfaction to our lives, should not take the place of Messiah. These days, so much emphasis is placed on the search for the perfect husband and/or wife, and it can be become more important than our desire for a deeper relationship with Messiah. The truth is, that true satisfaction cannot be found anywhere else but in the Blood of Jesus/Yeshua; because that alone leads us to eternal life with our Father in Heaven. A man or woman who is sent by God will enhance the life you already have, but no one can give what Messiah Jesus can. He must be first in our lives, then we can know the fulfillment and worth that our hearts long for.
Lastly in the story of Gomer we see revealed the deep emotional healing and total redemption that only a loving ishi can provide. Falling into sin does not mean that a person is tainted forever, because by turning to Jesus/Yeshua as with any sin repented of, His Blood cleanses us. Ephesians 1:7 In him we have redemption through his blood, the forgiveness of sins, in accordance with the riches of God’s grace that he lavished on us.
As with any sin, if we turn to Jesus/Yeshua and repent, He will remove it completely and it will be as if it had never happened.
This is how much our Ishi loves us and is always calling us back to Him, and He wants us to live the abundant life He has provided free from guilt and shame. Just as Gomer returned to Hosea, we can return to Messiah, our Ishi.
The essential aspect of this story is for us to realize that God loves us so very much and longs for us to turn to Him and want to be with Him, just as the loving relationship between a husband and wife. No matter what we have done there is forgiveness. There is no guilt, grief, or shame that cannot be removed by the love God showed in sending His Son who shed His Blood so that all sin can be wiped away completely and forever. If we say that God cannot forgive us, we are denying His Almightiness and if we say we cannot forgive ourselves; or the shame is too deep, we are denying the power in the sacrificial Blood of Messiah.
Don’t allow the enemy to make you believe you are beyond redemption because when we turn to the Lord in humility and trust, He will not turn us away.
We do not comprehend nor understand the depth of the love of the Creator of the Universe but that is no reason to reject His merciful grace. You can be free today right now all guilt and shame removed forever. Your worth in God’s eyes has never decreased, and will remain the same as it ever was. Like Gomer returned to Hosea, you can return to God.
Shalom aleikhem
chaverim and mishpachah!
Peace to friends and family.
Shavua Tov, Have a blessed week.
Make certain Messiah Jesus/Yeshua is your Redeemer, Savior, Lord and soon returning King and that you have a personal relationship with Him.
It’s all about Life and Relationship, NOT Religion.
You are very precious in His sight.
Not sure ..you can be…
SIMPLY SAY THE FOLLOWING MEANING IT FROM YOUR HEART..don’t delay one more minute,
SAY IT RIGHT NOW…
Heavenly Father I come to you in the Name of Jesus/Yeshua asking for forgiveness of my sins for which I am truly sorry. I repent of them all and turn away from my past.
I believe with my heart and confess with my mouth that Jesus/Yeshua is your Son and that He died on the cross at calvary to pay the price for my sin, so that I might be forgiven and have eternal life in the kingdom of Heaven. Father I believe that Jesus/Yeshua rose from the dead and I ask you to come into my life right now and be my personal Savior and Lord and I will worship you all the days of my life. Because your word is truth I say that I am now forgiven and born again and by faith I am washed clean with the blood of Jesus/Yeshua. Thank you that you have accepted me into your family in Jesus’/Yeshua’s name.
Exodus 23:26 HEB: מִסְפַּ֥ר יָמֶ֖יךָ אֲמַלֵּֽא׃ NAS: in your land;I will fulfill the number KJV: the number of thy days I will fulfil. INT:the number of your days will fulfill
And in Genesis 25:8 we are told :Abraham died “in a good old age, old and full of days”;
dies full of days; satisfied with living here, and longing to live in a better world.
And decaying he died in a good old age, and having lived a long time, and being full of days: and was gathered to his people.
This term does not mean what we think in terms of our western understanding and terminology that he lived to a ripe old age although by our standards he lived 175 years. which is very old.
He was about his Heavenly Fathers business, something Messiah was also:
9 And He said to them, “Why did you seek Me? Did you not know that I mustbe about My Father’sbusiness?”. Luke 2:49
Full of years—the words Of years,is not in the Hebrew, it is only,an old man, and full, or satisfied.
He had fulfilled the divine will, and served his generation, and was fully satisfied with life
Is there some other significance to the phrase:
full of days,
than merely to point to length of days?
It may be well to note some other instances.
In addition to this scripture, we find it used first, in reference to Isaac, inGenesis 35:29, where the words are repeated almost exactly.
Even though his life was calmer and very different to the active and eventful one of his father, Isaac also received this blessing at the end of his life.
Next is King David, in the turbulent and notable course of a life filled with temptations and challenges, both of moral character and of fortune; he is represented as having
died in a good old age,
full of days,
riches, and honour.’’
Then we read in 2 Chronicles 24:15,
of the great high priest Jehoiada,
whose history had been filled with danger, change, courageous resistance, and brave, strenuous effort; that with all the storms behind him he died at last,
‘full of days.’
The only other instance of the occurrence of the phrase is
Job 42:17
at the end of the book. The story of a good man going through suffering, and of the overwhelming restorations given by a loving God.
The picture of returning prosperity and family joy, ends with this statement no doubt with the intention to deepen the image of peace: ‘So Job died, being old and
full of days.’
In all the instances of the occurrence of this phrase, it’s meant to suggest not simply the physical length of days of a life, but some specific characteristic of the long life over and above its mere length. We may understand its meaning a little better if we make a very slight change in how we read the words, and instead of reading ‘full of years,’ read ‘satisfied with years.’ These men were satisfied with life; having completed all that they were purposed to accomplish.
The words point to a calm end, with a sense of fulfillment with no desperate clinging to life, but a willingness to let it go, because all they were called to be and do had been attained.
it is possible at the end of life to feel that it is complete, because the days have accomplished for us the highest purpose of life.
What is the end for which days and years are given?
Isn’t it that they may give us what eternity cannot take away; a character built upon the love of God in Christ, and moulded into His likeness?
‘Man’s chief end is to glorify God, and to enjoy Him for ever.’
Has our life helped us to do that?
If it has, we maybe only a child, and yet we are
full of days/years.
On the other hand, if it has not, and Messiah is not formed in us, our hair be white and we may be in our nineties, yet we will remain incomplete and immature.
The successful and victorious end of life is to make us like Messiah Jesus/Yeshua, and so be pleasing to both Him and our Heavenly Father. If life has done that for us, we have got the best from it, and our life is completed, whatever may be the number of the days. It is always the quality, not quantity, that is the element that determines the perfectness/maturity of a life. A life full of days/years.
A life’s whole harvest may be gathered into a very little space of earth time, and all may be done in mere hours, days or few short years, whichever is needed to make the life complete in our Fathers eyes. Has your life this completeness?
Abraham was a sojourner in a strange country and we must remember so are we.
Whether our stay in this life be long or short, is not important, provided what we leave behind us a testimony to the faithfulness and goodness of the Lord; and have set a good example to our families and friends of an life obedient to our Fathers will.
– having attained to the standard length of life in his days, and being satisfied with this life, so that he was ready and willing to depart.
… being found in the way of righteousness;
Full of years; in the Hebrew it is only full, or satisfied; but you must understand, with days or years, as the phrase is fully expressed, Genesis 35:291 Chronicles 23:1 29:28 Job 42:17Jeremiah 6:11. full of all good, as the Chaldee renders it; satisfied, and full of years; in the original it is only, “and full”;
“of all good”; temporal and spiritual, with which he was filled and satisfied;
We have studied a little about the end days…
acharit ha-yamim
אַחֲרִית הַיָּמִים in Hebrew.
…and we are certain of Messiahs return.
This next 12 months or 9 if you follow the Hebrew calendar; we should determine to be about our Fathers business more than our own or someone else’s.
Time is short, very short and individually, our days may very well be shorter.
What are we doing?
Where are we headed?
Who are we following?
Why are we choosing the above answers we have just thought or spoken out?
In Exodus the translations read:
God will fulfill the number of your days
and we read it as:
I will give you a long life
and some say
God will give you a normal life.
The ISV International Standard Version renders this verse as :
I will make every day of your life complete.
This makes more sense as in Hebrew the word
fulfill
is the word
MALA.
Which means:
to be full, abundant accomplished and satisfied.
And inGenesis 25:8we are told :Abraham died “in a good old age, old and full of days”; that is, he died full of faith and blessing from God.
Original Word: מָלֵא Part of Speech: Verb Transliteration: male or mala Phonetic Spelling: (maw-lay’) Definition: to be full, to fill
NAS Exhaustive Concordance
Word Origin a prim. root Definition to be full, to fill NASB Translation accomplished (1), aloud (1), armed (1), become full (1), been completed (1), come (1), complete (3), completed (9), completion
This seems to say that God id not talking about a long or normal life but rather a life full and abundant. He came that we might have life and more abundantly. John 10:10 and this does not refer to worldly wealth, but to spiritual riches that will never fade.
ThisMala life is fulfilled in spiritual maturity and like Abraham, faith filled, the father of faith and the friend of God with an intimate relationship. He was obedient and therefore completed all that he was here to do. A life with accomplishments according to the will of the Father; and when the time comes for us to leave here, our lives will have been a complete life –Mala,according to our Fathers plan and timing. If we are still here today, then there is still work for us to accomplish in His strength.
Here the reference is to the days of our life and if we serve God, then every day we live will be a day of accomplishments, a day of fulfillment, of purpose in Him.
We may have never taken the time to think or or like Mary, seriously ponder in our hearts the intensity of this profound statement.
I will fulfill the number of your days.
At the end of each day when we lay down to rest and sleep, it is one day we will never live through again and it is another day less for us to be here on earth.
Psalm 139:16 Your eyes saw my unformed body; all the days ordained for me were written in your book before one of them came to be.
It is one day closer to our transition into our eternal home. There are only a specific number of days assigned to us, some have over 100 years and some only hours… It is not for us to choose and if we believe God is in control there are no accidents, nothing takes Him by surprise. everything is purposed under heaven. Ecc. 3
Everything is in His plan and it is why He says our ways are not His. Isaiah 55:9 This should remove all fear and anxiety from us, knowing that He has everything in the palm of His hands, whatever it looks like to the natural eye.
Every day we are counting down towards our departure, what are we doing with our days? Are we dropping them carelessly to the side of the road along which we are travelling? Or are we using it to bring someone closer to our Father and Yeshua/Jesus?
When we lay down and close our eyes at night are we Mala – satisfied that our day was spent in His will and service; or was it simply another day we wasted on trivial earthly pursuits and worldly pleasures. How many of our allotted days have we let slip away? When the day comes and He asks us what we have done with all the days He has given us, what shall we say?
Romans 14:12 11 It is written: “As surely as I live, says the Lord, every knee will bow before Me; every tongue will confess to God.” 12 So then, each of us will give an account of himself to God.
Will we complain with excuses that so many of them were filled with pain and suffering and too heavy a burden, filled with fear and sorrow and He will say He appointed each one and gave them to us. Yes some pain and sorrow and suffering and He was acquainted with it all; Isaiah 53:3; and made provision for us to trust in the abundant life He provided; and in each of those days there were opportunities we were to overcome through Him. We say so often where did the week go. Time is flying past so fast and we lose track of all the days we had left ….and one day there will be only one day left.
No matter how painful or filled with joy, in each day there is something that He gives us and we are required to search for it; and when we do, at the end of those days we will be mala.
Is 55:6 6 Seek ye the Lord while he may be found, call ye upon him while he is near: 7 Let the wicked forsake his way, and the unrighteous man his thoughts: and let him return unto the Lord, and he will have mercy upon him; and to our God, for he will abundantly pardon.
Jer 29:13 3 You will seek me and find me when you seek me with all your heart.
Matt 6:33 33 But seek first his kingdom and his righteousness, and all these things will be given to you as well.
In Acts 13:36 David served Now David, after he had served God’s purpose in his own generation, died and was buried with his ancestors, and so he experienced decay.
Like David who heart was after God, we are to serve God in our generation and we are to end up like Abraham, full of days, having completed all that God required of him and we too must complete that work that we have been given to do while we are here. If we aren’t yet sure what that is maybe this year it’s time to find out.
How ?
Ask Him..
Jeremiah 33:3 Call to me and I will answer you ‘Call to Me, and I will answer you, and show yougreat and [ a]mighty things, which you do not know.’
Don’t just make new years resolutions that so many times we will never keep… instead recommit to the One who is able toJude 24 24 Now unto him that is able to keep you from stumbling and falling, and to present you faultless before the presence of his glory with exceeding joy.
May he the God of all grace, who called us to His eternal glory by Christ Jesus, after you have suffered a while, perfect, establish, strengthen, and settle you. 1Peter 5:10
2 Thess 2:17 may he encourage and strengthen you to do and say everything that is good.
As we recommit ourselves to His service, to His plan, and one day at a time cherish the hours and opportunities within it… Seek His face, spend some of these precious hours in intimate communication in His presence. This may be our last day and are we truly ready to meet Him face to face?All of the first chapter of Proverbs is a support to these thoughts.
Amplified Bible Ecc 12:13 When all has been heard, the end of the matter is: fear God [worship Him with awe-filled reverence, knowing that He is almighty God] and keep His commandments, for this applies to every person.
1Pet 4:7-11
7 The end and culmination of all things is near. Therefore, be sound-minded and self-controlled for the purpose of prayer [staying balanced and focused on the things of God so that your communication will be clear, reasonable, specific and pleasing to Him.] 8 Above all, have [a]fervent and unfailing love for one another, because love covers a multitude of sins [it overlooks unkindness and unselfishly seeks the best for others]. 9 Be [b]hospitable to one another without complaint. 10 Just as each one of you has received a special gift [a spiritual talent, an ability graciously given by God], employ it in serving one another as [is appropriate for] good stewards of God’s multi-faceted grace [faithfully using the diverse, varied gifts and abilities granted to Christians by God’s unmerited favor]. 11 Whoever speaks [to the congregation], is to do so as one who speaks the oracles (utterances, the very words) of God. Whoever serves [the congregation] is to do so as one who serves by the strength which God [abundantly] supplies, so that in all things God may be glorified [honored and magnified] through Jesus Christ, to whom belongs the glory and dominion forever and ever. Amen.
Micah 6:8 sums it all up very simply He has shown you, O mortal, what is good. And what does the Lord require of you? To act justly and to love mercy. and to walk humbly[ a] with your God
Soon and very soon we are going to see the King… so lets’ be a doer of His Word not a hearer only.
Shalom aleikhem
chaverim and mishpachah!
Peace to friends and family.
Shavua Tov, Have a blessed week.
Make certain Messiah Jesus/Yeshua is your Redeemer, Savior, Lord and soon returning King and that you have a personal relationship with Him.
It’s all about Life and Relationship, NOT Religion.
You are very precious in His sight.
Not sure ..you can be…
SIMPLY SAY THE FOLLOWING MEANING IT FROM YOUR HEART..don’t delay one more minute,
SAY IT RIGHT NOW…
Heavenly Father I come to you in the Name of Jesus/Yeshua asking for forgiveness of my sins for which I am truly sorry. I repent of them all and turn away from my past.
I believe with my heart and confess with my mouth that Jesus/Yeshua is your Son and that He died on the cross at calvary to pay the price for my sin, so that I might be forgiven and have eternal life in the kingdom of Heaven. Father I believe that Jesus/Yeshua rose from the dead and I ask you to come into my life right now and be my personal Savior and Lord and I will worship you all the days of my life. Because your word is truth I say that I am now forgiven and born again and by faith I am washed clean with the blood of Jesus/Yeshua. Thank you that you have accepted me into your family in Jesus’/Yeshua’s name.
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