Many phrases from The Song of Songs written by King Solomon, have been used in weddings for centuries.
What does it truly mean and why is this particular verse so popular when it comes to weddings?
While reading this think in terms not of an earthly wedding and marriage covenant but of the marriage covenant of the Lamb and wedding feast of the Coming King of Kings.
Solomons Song is a type and shadow of our future when we are finally together with the one whom our soul loves. He gave His life for His bride – US.
It’s a song of redemption, of selfless love that we are learning from Him as we walk along the WAY and we are no longer our own, we are His forever.
Ani Lo & Dodi Li
I am His & My Beloved is mine
Dodi Li V’Ani Lo – My beloved is mine and I am His
Ani Lo – I am His – it is the summary of all that is required of us.
1Cor.6:19-20 You are not your own; you were bought at a price.
No human being can stand that unless he is identified with Jesus Christ. We are not sanctified for ourselves. We are called into intimacy with the gospel, and things happen that appear to have nothing to do with us. But God is getting us into fellowship with Himself. Let Him have His way. If you refuse, you will be of no value to God in His redemptive work in the world, but will be a hindrance and a stumbling block.
The first thing God does is get us grounded on strong reality and truth. He does this until our cares for ourselves individually have been brought into submission to His way for the purpose of His redemption. O. Chambers.
I have been crucified with Christ and I no longer live, but Christ lives in me. The life I now live in the body, I live by faith in the Son of God, who loved me and gave himself for me. Galatians 2:20
However the secret to fulfilling that, is, Dodi Li – that our beloved is truly ours.
In the Hebrew tradition of Israel during the wedding ceremony, the Bride must say Dodi Lo, prior to saying, Ani Lo.
This is because she must first have the apocalypse/revelation that her beloved belongs to her, then the easier it will be and the more she will be able to and want to give herself to her beloved and visa versa.
Here-in is the secret to living our life in Yeshua Messiah, our bridegroom. If we receive His love for us we will easily give our love to Him. The more understanding we gain of Dodi Lo, that He is ours, the more our lives will become, Ani Lo/His. The deeper the personal apocalypse/revealing, the easier it will be for us to yield our lives to Him completely. This in turn will bring spiritual intimacy to our relationship, changing our perspective and causing the desire to surrender to His Will, Plan and Purpose for our lives and not live for ourselves and our own future goals.
If he is hers, she will be his and if she is his, he will be hers. It’s reciprocal and complimentary at the same time.
Likewise, if He is ours we will be His and if we are His then He will be ours.
Many have pointed out that the initials of the words in this phrase spell out “Elul”…
Any new Jewish month (a lunar month) has special prayers such as Hallel, especially for weddings. Traditionally a bride and groom are to fast on their wedding day. However, there is an exception: Rosh Chodesh.
And this month’s new month of Elul, has a lot of meaningful significance in Judaism.
If it’s on Rosh Chodesh Elul, it means the bride and groom wouldn’t have to fast, as some couples customarily do.
So as already mentioned, many say that Elul אלול stands for “Ani L’Dodi V’Dodi Li” ״אני לדודי ודודי לי״ which means “I am my beloved’s and my beloved is mine.
This phrase is very popular within both Jewish and non-Jewish weddings.
When reading the entire poem, it is a beautiful love story between a man and a woman. Relationships are always based on give and take, and one of equality between both partners – a balance. So too, a husband and wife should always give and receive love and support.
Often this is read as a metaphor of the love between the Jewish people/grafted in believers and God.
There’s a Hebrew word that means soul mate.
also meaning – Meant to be.
Natural soul mates are only temporary on earth, God is our basheret, our true soul mate, He is the real lover of our souls.
In Messiah, our Dodi Li will manifest our Ani Lo. He belongs to us and the more we receive His love for us the more we will give of ourselves to Him.
As we open our hearts to fully understand Dodi Lo, our lives will become the reflection of Ani Lo, belonging completely to Him. Then, how we live and what we do, will no longer be a fleshly struggle of the soul; it will be easy, for it will flow out from His love.
An Ani Lo life, is the result of a Dodi Li heart, for the knowledge that He is ours creates that life of divine love.
As the bride of Yeshua we are to say and know, that as we fill our hearts with this Dodi Li understanding – our lives will soon become Ani Lo.
My beloved is to me and I am to Him –
My Beloved is Mine and I am His –
Simply Dodi Li V’Ani Lo
This is in a nutshell everything required of us in God.
It’s the foundation of everything we are to be and do in Him.
It encompasses our calling, consecration, dedication, works, sacrifices, ministry. As we are in covenant with Him we have to honor that covenant form our side too.
Just as when God called to Moses,
Moses reply was the correct covenant response. It was immediate and he did not hesitate. We are to be as quick to respond when He speaks to us – no hesitation – just simple obedience. He will never ask us to do anything that He has not equipped us to do.
May the God of peace, who through the blood of the eternal covenant brought back from the dead our Lord Jesus, that great Shepherd of the sheep, equip you with everything good for doing his will, and may he work in us what is pleasing to him, through Jesus Christ, to whom be glory for ever and ever. Amen. Heb.13:21 & Eph.4:22
Hineni expresses readiness to give ourselves in total availability. This answer will mark a turning point in the lives of those of us who respond to The Father with this word.
Moses wasn’t the only one to say Hineni:
Samuel said Hineni – I’m listening.
Isaiah said Hineni – Send me.
Hineni is the right WAY to respond to our Heavenly Father whenever He calls, it should always be our desire to fulfill His Commands in directing the path for our lives.
All that remains is for us to surrender all to our beloved and cry…
It is Complete Surrender – The Covenant Call to Action.
Here Am I
Your will be done in our lives.
I will go where you go lead me because
And I have Found The Secret Hidden in a Kings Song /Shir HaMelech it’s…
Ani L’Dodi V’Dodi Li.
Please don’t leave this page without knowing Messiah is not only your Savior, Lord and soon returning King but He is also your beloved and His desire is for us to be His Beloved.. to have a personal relationship with Him.
Maybe it’s time to re-dedicate and re-ignite passion for our Bridegroom.
It’s all about Life and Relationship, NOT Religion.
You are greatly loved and precious in His sight.
NOT SURE? YOU CAN BE..
SAY THE FOLLOWING FROM YOUR HEART 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. Amen.
Chest, Box, Ark In the Scriptures, the ark was originally a golden chest designed to reside in the innermost chamber of the mishkan (tabernacle) and then later in the bet hamikdash (temple).
Another word for ark is tebah/tevah תֵּבָה pronounced (tey-vaht); a noun, feminine word and is the “her” of this word. מִבַּיִת ( mee-bah-yit )
The base word is בית (bah-yit) meaning a house but in the context of this verse about Noah it means ‘inside’.
The literal meaning of the Hebrew word teivah is container or boxand it is used for two objects Tevat Noa’h – Noah’s Ark.. (Noah’s Ark is tevat gofer; literally a box of gopher wood) ..and Moses Papyrus basket.
The meaning – literally – the container/the box of life!
Teivah also means word. Words are containers: they package ideas, feelings, sentiments and convictions.
Thus a student of the Torah is prompted to’ go into the word,’ the sacred task of discovering hidden meanings enfolded into each tevah!
This is about 2 boxes – 2 arks – one arc was in Bethany,
(Greek name Βηθανια, Bethania, which in turn comes from the Hebrew name Beth-aniah;)
the town near Jerusalem at the foot of the Mount of Olives where Yeshua/Jesus stayed.
Derived from the Hebrew Bet t’eina (possibly meaning: house of affliction/misery, or house of figs/dates)–
but what is the nerd in it?
Was it Martha’s sister Mary/Miriam/Miryam in Hebrew
or
Mary Magdalene/Miriam/Miryam of Magdala –
(מרים המגדלית)
who washed Yeshua/Jesus’ feet with her tears and dried them with her hair?
What about the Anointing of Yeshua/Jesus by Miriam and an unnamed woman?
מָשַׁח – anoint
The episode is particularly confusing because there are four different accounts with varied details in each of the four gospels. So It takes some detective work to analyze the information about the various Miriams/Marys mentioned in the gospels.
In the events of what we call ‘Holy Week’, there are two different recorded occasions when a woman anoints either the feet or the head of Yeshua/Jesus.
Many scholars combine both events because of their similarities; however, by studying them as two separate events, we can learn of some notable symbolism.
The amazing thing about this account presented during Yeshua/Jesus’ final week, was that Mary was symbolically doing the same thing that Yeshua/Jesus would later do for all of mankind on the cross.
Mark and
And while he was at Bethany in the house of Simon the leper, as he was reclining at table, a woman came with an alabaster flask of ointment of pure nard, very costly, and she broke the flask and poured it over his head. There were some who said to themselves indignantly, “Why was the ointment wasted like that? For this ointment could have been sold for more than three hundred denarii and given to the poor.” And they scolded her. But Jesus said, “Leave her alone. Why do you trouble her? She has done a beautiful thing to me. For you always have the poor with you, and whenever you want, you can do good for them. But you will not always have me. … Mark 14:3-9
Matthew both mention an unnamed woman who anoints Yeshua/Jesus’ head with either nard or ointment.
Matt 26:6-13
Now when Jesus was at Bethany in the house of Simon the leper, a woman came up to him with an alabaster flask of very expensive ointment, and she poured it on his head as he reclined at table. And when the disciples saw it, they were indignant, saying, “Why this waste? For this could have been sold for a large sum and given to the poor.” But Jesus, aware of this, said to them, “Why do you trouble the woman? For she has done a beautiful thing to me. …
Luke tells us of an unnamed woman
“who was a sinner”
who bathed Yeshua/Jesus’ feet with her tears,
anointed them with ointment,
and dried them with her hair.
One of the Pharisees asked him to eat with him, and he went into the Pharisee’s house and took his place at the table. And behold, a woman of the city, who was a sinner, when she learned that he was reclining at table in the Pharisee’s house, brought an alabaster flask of ointment, and standing behind him at his feet, weeping, she began to wet his feet with her tears and wiped them with the hair of her head and kissed his feet and anointed them with the ointment. Now when the Pharisee who had invited him saw this, he said to himself, “If this man were a prophet, he would have known who and what sort of woman this is who is touching him, for she is a sinner.” And Jesus answering said to him, “Simon, I have something to say to you.” And he answered, “Say it, Teacher.” …
Luke 7:36-50
Then, to add even more confusion,
John describes Mary of Bethany,
aka Martha’s sister, anointing his feet with nard and wiping them with her hair. Only in John’s gospel is the woman named as Mary of Bethany.
Chart comparing both anointings.
To understand the significance of these anointings, we first must understand that the word
Messiah in Hebrew, and
Christ in Greek both mean
‘the anointed one.’
In other words, Jesus Christ would actually mean Jesus the anointed. Yeshua Ha Mashiach.
In the Old Testament, there were three groups of people referred to as being anointed, that of prophets, priests, and kings.
The first anointing, as recorded by John…
Six days before the Passover, Jesus therefore came to Bethany, where Lazarus was, whom Jesus had raised from the dead. So they gave a dinner for him there. Martha served, and Lazarus was one of those reclining with him at table. Mary therefore took a pound of expensive ointment made from pure nard, and anointed the feet of Jesus and wiped his feet with her hair. The house was filled with the fragrance of the perfume. But Judas Iscariot, one of his disciples (he who was about to betray him), said, “Why was this ointment not sold for three hundred denarii and given to the poor?”
John 12:1-8
…took place on Saturday, six days before the Passover, in an unnamed home in Bethany by Mary, the sister to Martha and Lazarus wherein she anointed only the feet of Jesus.
Following the chronology of John and placing the anointing on Saturday, it may be that John was trying to foreshadow how Yeshua/Jesus, being anointed the day before the triumphal entry, was symbolically being anointed as the king of Israel. We should remember that one of the reasons it was so significant that Yeshua/Jesus rode in to Jerusalem on a donkey was because when Solomon was recognized as the king of Israel, he likewise rode into Jerusalem on a donkey (see 1 Kings 1:32-34.)
The second anointing, as recorded by Matthew 26:6-13
6 Now when Jesus was at Bethany in the house of Simon the leper,7 a woman came up to him with an alabaster flask of very expensive ointment, and she poured it on his head as he reclined at table. 8 And when the disciples saw it, they were indignant, saying, “Why this waste? 9 For this could have been sold for a large sum and given to the poor.” 10 But Jesus, aware of this, said to them, “Why do you trouble the woman? For she has done a beautiful thing to me. 11 For you always have the poor with you, but you will not always have me. 12 In pouring this ointment on my body, she has done it to prepare me for burial. 13 Truly, I say to you, wherever this gospel is proclaimed in the whole world, what she has done will also be told in memory of her.”
and also by Mark 14:3-9
And while he was at Bethany in the house of Simon the leper, as he was reclining at table, a woman came with an alabaster flask of ointment of pure nard, very costly, and she broke the flask and poured it over his head.
There were some who said to themselves indignantly, “Why was the ointment wasted like that? For this ointment could have been sold for more than three hundred denarii and given to the poor.” And they scolded her. But Jesus said, “Leave her alone. Why do you trouble her? She has done a beautiful thing to me. For you always have the poor with you, and whenever you want, you can do good for them. But you will not always have me. …
This instance apparently took place on Wednesday of that Week, two days before Passover,
in the home of Simon the leper in Bethany, (2 miles east of Jerusalem),
by an unnamed woman who anointed only the head of Yeshua/Jesus.
Simon the Leper in Bethany: We know almost nothing about this man, but evidently he had suffered from leprosy, and Yeshua/Jesus had healed him or no one -would have been permitted in his house. Some scholars say the word meant pot-maker rather than leprosy.
Mark doesn’t mention the name of the woman, but John identifies her as Mary of Bethany, the sister of Martha and Lazarus, whom Jesus had raised from the dead. John says that Martha was serving at this gathering and that Lazarus was sitting with Yeshua/Jesus.
If we follow the chronology of Mark and Matthew and place the anointing by the unnamed woman on Wednesday, the day before his Last Supper, it may be that Mark and Matthew were trying to show that Yeshua/Jesus was being anointed as the great High Priest, who would intercede on our behalf as He entered the garden of Gethsemane?
The high priest wore a breastplate with 12 stones, and two shoulder stones engraved with the names of the 12 tribes of Israel representing that Israel was always to be near his heart, and that he was to carry the burdens of Israel upon his shoulders at all times (see Ex.28:29 & 28:12).
What a perfect description of Messiah because in Gethsemane He took our sins and sorrows upon Himself.
Some believe in this one of the 2 incidents, that this perfume which Mary of Bethany, brought in her alabaster box may have been her dowry.
If that is true, it was probably all that she really possessed.
אָלָבַּסְטֶר, בַּהַט alabaster noun
דומה או עשוי מאלבסטר, מבהט alabaster adj.
The Greek word translated “alabaster box” in the KJV, as well as “flask,” “jar” and “vial” in other translations, is alabastron,
The Bible speaks of an alabaster box in the two incidents involving women, one of whom was Mary of Bethany, who brought ointment in the box to anoint Jesus. The Greek word translated “alabaster box” in the KJV, as well as “flask,” “jar” and “vial” in other translations, is alabastron, which can also mean “perfume vase.”
Alabaster historically was a symbol of
purity and great honor.
It is also thought to have been associated with the Egyptian Goddess Bast (hence alaBASTer).
Alabaster boxes were originally Egyptian vessels made of a peculiar stone, a kind of soft white marble, it is a translucent carbonate of lime formed on the floors of limestone caves by the percolation of water. It is of the same material as our marbles, but differently formed.
It is usually clouded or banded like agate, hence sometimes called onyx marble which was supposed to be specially adapted to preserve the odor of perfumed ointments. The Greeks named the vessels from the town of Alabastron the place in Egypt where it is found. It occurs only in (Matt. 26:7; Mark 14:3; Luke 7:37).
The ancients considered alabaster to be the best material in which to preserve their ointments.
This white mineral was easy to carve and polish, so Israelites used it to make beautiful jars, vases and very easily wrought into boxes.
The alabastra were of various shapes and sizes bored with a drill by the Egyptians and hollowed out with a chisel by the Palestinians. Ancient traders often sealed costly perfume in an alabaster jar, allowing the scent to escape only gradually through the jar’s porous shell over many years.
The fragrance of some ointments is said to have remained in the alabastra for hundreds of years.
At the time Yeshua/Jesus was on earth there was a custom among the Israelite women.
When a woman reached the age of availability for marriage the family would purchase an alabaster box for her and fill it with precious ointment. The size of the box and the value of the ointment would parallel her families wealth.
This alabaster box would be part of her dowry.
When a suitor came to ask for her in marriage she would respond by taking the alabaster box and break it at his feet.
This gesture of anointing his feet showed him honor.
We must take our alabaster box to Jesus/Yeshuas feet
and
break it in His presence
for He is worthy of such honor
and as our bridegroom
we show Him we are indeed the bride
for whom He paid the ultimate price.
The woman had an alabaster jar filled with very expensive perfume, made of pure nard.
Mark 14:5 says that this box of ointment contained a pound/ = approx. 0.45 Kg. /or 12 ounces of pure nard, was worth more than 300 denarii, equal to a year’s salary (300 pence, in Mark 14:5). A pence is considered to have been a day’s wages. It would be around 40.000 U.S.Dollars/30,500 GBP of today’s money. No wonder the disciples (Mt. 26:8), Judas in particular was the most vocal, responded with dismay at what they deemed such a waste.
They claim that Mary has wasted this precious perfume, and that she should have sold it and given the money to the poor instead.
Imagine how Mary must have felt, after pouring out everything she had as an act of worship, she gets criticized and ridiculed by the disciples of Yeshua/Jesus. Surely her heart must have been broken just like the alabaster box that had contained her perfume.
Nard (Spikenard) was most likely the content of the jar because alabaster itself was such a pricey item, not like a clay jar that stored more common items like olive oil.
Ointment, oils and perfumes used to be put in vessels made of alabaster, which kept them pure and unspoiled. Alabaster was a strong enough substance to keep the oil or perfume completely contained until the time of its use.allowing the scent to escape only gradually through the jar’s porous shell over many years.
The boxes were often sealed or made fast with wax, to prevent the perfume from escaping.
The woman “broke” the vessel; i.e.,
she broke off, as was usually done,
the long and narrow neck so as to reach the contents.
When Mary broke open her alabaster box,
“the house was filled with the fragrance of the perfume” John 12:3
Quite suddenly, Mary moved towards the Lord. She was holding in her hands a beautiful alabaster box which contained very precious delicately perfumed ointment, and to the surprise of everyone there, she broke the box and poured its contents over the head (Mark 14:3) and the feet (John 12:3) of our Lord and anointed Him.
When Mary of Bethany broke her alabaster box/jar of spikenard John 12:3 and bathed the feet of Jesus with the oil, she, too, wanted only the best to define her love for Him.
It has been speculated that this jar may have been Mary’s dowry or her inheritance. In other words, this jar of spikenard ointment may have been all she had of value, and she poured it out on Him.
Her extravagant gift is a picture of the kind of offering expected of each of us. Only the best was worthy of her Lord, and she was willing to give everything as an act of worship.
The same should be true of us (Num.18:29).
The fact that both women carried an alabaster box of ointment with which to anoint Jesus as He was eating a meal has given rise to a certain amount of confusion about these two separate incidents involving two different women. Matthew 26:6-13, Mark 14:3-9, and John 12:1-8 all speak of the same event involving Mary of Bethany, sister of Martha and Lazarus, at the home of Simon the leper, probably a leper who had been healed by Jesus and had become one of His followers.
This event occurred in Bethany just days before the crucifixion, which is why Mary came to anoint Jesus for the event to come. “She poured perfume on my body beforehand to prepare for my burial” Mark 14:8. Mary is never referred to as a sinner in any of the accounts of her. Nor does it say she was weeping.
On the other hand, Luke 7:36-50 speaks of the house of Simon the Pharisee rather than the house of Simon the leper. This event occurred about a year before the crucifixion in the area around Galilee Luke 7:1,11.
Is this a third event?
Luke 7:37 When a sinful woman from that town learned that Jesus was dining there, she brought an alabaster jar of perfume.
Luke 7:39 When the Pharisee who had invited Jesus saw this, he said to himself, “If this man were a prophet, He would know who this is and what kind of woman is touching Him–for she is a sinner!”
Luke 7:38 And stood at his feet behind him weeping, and began to wash his feet with tears, and did wipe them with the hairs of her head, and kissed his feet, and anointed them with the ointment.
The woman here was forgiven of many sins, but her name is not given.
While Mary of Bethany may have possessed insight as to the upcoming death of Christ, the woman of Luke had no such insight; she exhibited just loving worship of the One who forgave her of her sins and her many tears were witness to her repentant heart knowing from what she had been forgiven and redeemed.
Standing behind at His feet weeping.
She came to our Lord, as He reclined at table; standing by Him, leaning over His feet, her tears of penitence began to flow, and thus she began to wet His feet with her tears.
And stood at His feet behind Him
…Messiah lay upon a bed, or couch, as was the custom of the ancients, both Jews and others, at meals, with His feet extended out behind; and between the couches and the walls of the room, there was a space for servants to wait and serve, and such are therefore said to
“stand at the feet”;
and the phrase is used, as descriptive of servants in waiting;
in such a situation this woman put herself, as being also ashamed and afraid to come before Him, and look Him in the face; and here she stood weeping for her sins, and melted down with the love of Yeshua/Jesus to her soul, and at His discourse:
and began to wash his feet with tears: which fell from her eyes in such abundance upon his feet, as she stood by Him that they were like a shower of rain, as the word signifies, with which His feet were as it were bathed and washed; His shoes or sandals being off, as was the custom at eating so to do, lest they should daub the couch or bed, on which they lay.
Her tears she used instead of water; for it was the custom first to wash the feet before they were anointed with oil, which she intended to do; and for which purpose she had brought with her an alabaster box of ointment:
it is said of one, and did wipe them with the hairs of her head; which were long, and hung loose about her shoulders, (here it says), it being usual and comely for women to wear long hair? (1Cor. 11:15). That which was her adornment and beauty, and which she took great care of to nourish and put in proper form, to, render her desirable, she uses instead of a towel to wipe her tears off her Lord’s feet.
“and kissed his feet”, ywlgr qvnw.
This was not an unusual practice with the Jews;
and anointed them with the ointment; which she brought with her.
This same custom was also used by the Greeks and Romans among their civilities, and in their salutations.
THE PRECIOUS OINTMENT
The ointment mentioned in the text by Mark is called
ointment of spikenard,
probably because that costly aromatic plant was one of the principal ingredients.
Spikenard is one of the most precious spices of the Bible.
It grew extensively in northern India, and has been found high in the Himalaya Mountains.
It grows small with many, spikes on one root, bearing pink blossoms; thus it is sometimes called the Indian spike. Perfumed oil is extracted from these spikes..
Taken from the root of the Species Nardostachys jatamansi From the botanical family Valerianaceae. The plant grows to about 1 meter (3 ft) in height and has pink, bell-shaped flowers.
The word spikenard is found in the King James Version; other translations simply say “pure nard.”
Spikenard had a strong, distinctive aroma, similar to an essential oil, that clings to skin and hair and continues to give off its heady perfume.
It was also thought to have medicinal properties.
Spikenard had a unique fragrance, and
the presence of its aroma was an indication that
the very best had been offered.
One of the early aromatics mentioned in the bible In the Song of Solomon 1:12, 4:13-14, spikenard is mentioned in reference to the love between bride and groom. In song of sol 1:12 the bride says, “While the king was at his table, my perfume spread its fragrance.”
Those words imply that, despite all other fragrances in the room, only his bride’s would matter to the groom.
The presence of spikenard represented their passion for each other and their desire to have only the best define their love.
THIS IS
THE NERD IN THE ARK
and it was very precious!
The receptacles for this expensive perfume have been found by archaeologists under the debris of walls, among the ruins of patrician houses, and in royal palaces.
Both women used ointments valuing 300 or more pence, both took place during a dinner; and both women were criticized by a disciple for their acts of service towards Yeshua/Jesus.
If a person bought an alabaster box, it was only used for very important purposes. So the Pharisees considered it a waste when a woman poured perfume from an alabaster box on Messiah’s head in Matthew 26:7-9.
Now when Jesus was at Bethany in the house of Simon the leper, a woman came up to him with an alabaster flask of very expensive ointment, and she poured it on his head as he reclined at table. And when the disciples saw it, they were indignant, saying, “Why this waste? For this could have been sold for a large sum and given to the poor.” But Jesus, aware of this, said to them, “Why do you trouble the woman? For she has done a beautiful thing to me. …
Just imagine the look on the disciples’ faces? Their mouths open in shock as they watched a crazy scene unfold. A woman, unreservedly, empty over a years wages, (tens of thousands of dollars today,) all over Him for apparently no reason.
In their minds she should have given that to the poor and they complained that she was wasting a precious scent which could have been enjoyed for years.
No doubt they were waiting to take delight in Him rebuking the woman, which did not happen.
Yeshua/Jesus puts a stop to their criticism. He tells the disciples to leave her alone, because she has done a good work for Him. He says that they can help the poor anytime they want, but that they will not have very many more opportunities to show their love for Him in person.
He had told His disciples on several occasions that He was going to Jerusalem to be put to death, and now He claims that Mary’s act of devotion will serve as the anointing for His death. Although Mary probably didn’t intend for her actions to be interpreted this way, the custom was to first bathe and then anoint the body of a dead person.
After the body was anointed, the flask that contained the ointment was to be broken and laid with the body in the tomb.
Yeshua/Jesus knew that He would be put to death as a criminal, and that He would be buried without the proper anointing.
When Judas rebuked Mary for wasting such a precious ointment John 12:4-5, Jesus silenced him: “Leave her alone. . . . It was intended that she should save this perfume for the day of my burial”John 12:7.
Only He truly understood what He was saying; knowing that in a few days He would be arrested, tried, and crucified.
Could it have been that, as He felt the whip lacerate His flesh, as He felt the nails pierce His hands and feet, He could also inhale the fragrance of that gift of spikenard and remember why He was doing this?
Mary’s gift may have strengthened and encouraged Him, even throughout His horrific ordeal, as its strong scent still clung to His skin.
Mary had not known it at the time she offered her valuable gift, but she was the first to anoint the Son of God as He became no longer simply their teacher but the ultimate sacrifice for the sins of the world. (John 1:29; 2 Cor. 5:12).
Yeshua/Jesus rebuked the disciples, praised the woman, and the house where they were was filled with the fragrance of the precious ointment (John 12.3)
We are the vessels now sealed by Holy Spirit/Ruach HaKodesh. and in our brokenness we release a sweet smelling fragrance to those being saved and the fragrance is also filling our house, our bodies/being.
Each of us is specially made to be a vessel of honor. We are all different shapes and sizes, all precious in His sight, we are to give forth the fragrance of Messiah from our lives.
Sometimes that fragrance just escapes gradually; other times, it comes gushing forth!
The woman who brought her alabaster jar of perfume had to crack it as an act of worship in order to spill out its contents.
The only way the perfume can been released to anoint Messiah is if the jar is broken.
FRAGRANCE COMES THROUGH BROKENNESS
The perfume is a symbol of the spirit or the inner man.
The alabaster jar is a symbol of the outer man or the soul.
As David The Psalmist says, The Lord is near unto them that are of a broken heart; and saves those of a contrite spirit (Psa. 34:18).
How vitally necessary it is that we are truly sorry for our sin, a sorrow that works repentance and turns us totally around.
It causes us to stop doing the things that grieve Jesus and begin to live in a way that pleases Him.
Such was the contrite spirit of the woman–
John calls her Mary–
who broke the alabaster box of precious ointment on Yeshua/Jesus.
When she was broken because of her sin;
Yeshua/ Jesus forgave her,
and she experienced a gratitude
deeper than words could express.
Being a young woman in the presence of so many men, she was not allowed to vocally express herself. Such a privilege was not permitted women of that day, so she did all that she could.
She acted by arising and going after the most precious gift she could think of–a very costly bottle of perfume.
She wanted to show Him her love, but how?
By giving.
She gave it to Him in a way that He would know that at least one person truly loved Him and believed Him to be the Messiah.
When Mary (Magdalene)? washed the feet of Jesus with her tears and dried them with her hair, she also anointed them with expensive ointment. For this token of devotion, Christ forgave her sins then proceeded to remind his host that he had not been extended the same courtesy as would be appropriate to a welcome guest.
Foot bathing signified the status of an honored guest and put them at ease and comfort.
Foot washing, when undertaken by anyone other than the lowest servant in the household, took on significant symbolic importance.
Most authorities recognize this humble action as deliberate act of humility, a mark of respect or deliberate self-humiliation.
FRAGRANCE COMES THROUGH SACRIFICE
Mary worshipped the one who had set her free by giving herself and all that she had. The Apostle Paul wrote: I beg you … by the mercies of God, that you present your bodies a living sacrifice, holy, acceptable unto God …(Rom.12:1).
A sacrifice is a gift of something precious, meaningful, and the best. In the Old Testament, God’s people gave the first and the best from among their flock as an offering to God. When the Lord smelled Noah’s offerings, they were a scent of satisfaction to His heart, and caused Him to have mercy on His people (Gen. 8:21).
The same thing happened when Yeshua/Jesus smelled the sacrifice that Mary gave Him that memorable day.
His heart was turned toward her.
He not only accepted her sacrifice, but her act of giving became a learning point to all those who looked on.
After Mary broke the box of precious ointment, she poured the perfume over Jesus’ head (say Matthew, Mark, and Luke) and feet (says John), and the house was filled with the odor of the ointment.
“The anointing which you have received of Him abides (lives) in you” (I John 2:17). Therefore, “out of your innermost being springs and rivers of living water shall flow continuously”(John 7:38).
We are His vessels and contain His fragrance which will bubble up like fresh spring water and overflow into the lives of others.
This pouring forth brings the anointed message of Yeshua/Jesus to all those it touches. It is His fragrance, His anointing, His oil, His precious ointment that will fill the place. He said,
The spirit of the Lord is now upon me because He has anointed me to preach the gospel to the poor; He has sent me to heal the brokenhearted, to preach deliverance to the captives, and recovering of sight to the blind, to set at liberty them that are bruised, to preach the acceptable year of the Lord (Luke 4:18-19).
Now if the same Spirit that raised Jesus from the dead dwells in you, what do you do? Jesus answers this question:
“Verily, I say unto you … the works that I do shall you do also, and greater works than these shall you do…” (John 14:12).
Of Mary who poured the precious ointment on Him, He said,
“Wherever this gospel shall be preached in the whole world, there shall also this, that this woman has done, be told for a memorial of her” (Matt.26.13).
FRAGRANCE COMES THROUGH LOVING
Mary knew that the anointing came from being
at His’ feet–in His Presence.
She wasn’t moved by the critics around her but continued to pour the precious ointment on Him. Yeshua/Jesus rebuked her critics and made her famous throughout the centuries right into our lives today.
Our love for Messiah, like Mary’s, is a commitment that is not swayed by what other people say or think.
It is the deep expression of gratitude that comes from a heart that has experienced His forgiveness. The fragrance of such gratitude is a sweet smelling savor in the nostrils of our Lord.
Imagine the scene:
The words from the song by CeCe Winans helps to paint the picture…
The room grew still As she made her way to Jesus She stumbled through the tears That make her blind She felt such pain Some spoke in anger Heard folks whisper There’s no place here for her kind
Still on she came Through the shame that flushed her face Until at last she knelt before his feet And though she spoke no words Everything she said was heard As she poured her love for the master From her box of Alabaster
[Chorus] And I’ve come to pour My praise on Him like oil From Mary’s Alabaster Box Don’t be angry if I wash His feet with my tears And I dry them with my hair You weren’t there the night He found me You did not feel what I felt When He wrapped His loving arms around me And you don’t know the cost Of the oil in my Alabaster box
I can’t forget the way life used to be I was a prisoner to the sin that had me bound And I spent my days Poured my life without measure Into a little treasure box I thought I found Until the day when Jesus came to me And healed my soul with the wonder of His touch
So now I’m giving back to Him All the praise He’s worthy of I’ve been forgiven and that’s why I love Him so much
WHAT FRAGRANCE COMES THROUGH US?
Everyone gives off some kind of smell through our actions, our attitudes, and our words. Like it or not, we smell like the people in whose company we are. If they are smokers, then we and our clothes will smell like smoke. If we hug those who wear strong perfume or aftershave, the fragrance stays with us.
Whether we like it or not, we smell like the foods we eat. Eating garlic, we will smell like garlic, likewise peanuts, we’ll smell like them. Attempting to cover up the odors usually makes it worse.
Whether we believe it or not, we will begin to speak like the people with whom we spend our time. Should they use slang words, we soon hear ourselves repeating them yet in a positive way, if they use praise words and scripture, we respond and echo them. It is important to know just what do others smell when they are near us?
We are not to hide behind a false aroma or use something to mask who we really are
we must be genuine,
be real with the Lord, with others and with ourselves. Nothing is hidden from Him anyway!
14 But thanks be to God, who always leads us triumphantly as captives in Christ and through us spreads everywhere the fragrance of the knowledge of Him. 15 Forwe areto Godthe sweet aromaof Christamongthose who arebeing saved andthose who areperishing.16 To the one, we are an odor of death and demise; to the other, a fragrance that brings life. And who is qualified for such a task?…2Cor.2:14-16
We are a sweet smelling fragrance – when we are broken alabaster boxes.
Mary set aside pride and embarrassment in order to demonstrate her love and faith in Messiah. How far are we willing to go in order to show our love for Him?
When we fellowship with Yeshua/Jesus in worship, in prayer, and by reading His Word. Then in our brokenness, in our sacrifices, in our pouring out into the lives of others, and in our expression of love for Him, we’ll smell like Him, talk like Him, and spread His fragrance wherever we go.
There certainly are many similarities in these incidents that have caused some confusion, one of which is the presence of the nerd in an ark, an alabaster box, in both accounts.
When the Pharisee expresses disgust that such a woman, who, it is inferred, is a prostitute, or certainly a sinner, should be allowed to do such a thing, Messiah rebukes him and points out that since the woman has entered, he has done nothing but minister to him while the Pharisee, whose name is Simon, has done nothing.
“foot” (Hebrew רֶגֶל regel)
Since the Israelites, like all other Oriental peoples, wore sandals instead of shoes, and as they usually went barefoot in the house, frequent washing of the feet was a necessity. Hence among the Israelites it was the first duty of the host to give his guest water for the washing of his feet (Gen. 18:4, 24:32; Judges 19:21);
to omit this was a sign of marked unfriendliness. It was also customary to wash the feet before meals and before going to bed; to abstain for a long time from washing them was a sign of deep mourning (2 Sam. 19:24).
The other part of her action that may have raised eyebrows, was the wiping of his feet with her hair. Apparently, Jewish women did not let down their hair in public. This expression of devotion may have come across as quite improper and even too intimate an act in public, just as it would in most other cultures.
He then turns to the woman and pardons her of all her sins for her great devotion.
A final thought…
Many think Mary Magdalene was a prostitute who came to the Lord.
Mary means ‘wise woman/lady’. It is a Greek form of the Hebrew Miriam or Mariamme, and was the most popular woman’s name at the time
Mary Magdalene (/ˈmæɡdələn/Hebrew: מרים המגדליתoriginal Biblical Greek: Μαρία ἡ Μαγδαληνή),
Literally translated as Mary the Magdalene or Mary of Magdala. Mary came from a now-vanished town called Magdala, on the western side of the Sea of Galilee.
Pope Gregory the Great was the first to link her to the prostitute who wept at his feet. All we really know is that the scripture records that Mary Magdalene had demons and was delivered by Messiah. We don’t know whether she was a prostitute or sexually immoral.
But no one questions it. She’s become the world’s most famous prostitute.
Imagine that you come to the Lord and for generations you’re known as the world’s most famous prostitute which may not even be true!
However it doesn’t matter what people think of you. (Most of the time they’re wrong anyway.) It only matters what Messiah thinks of you and that you’re with Him now.
Since Pope Gregory the Great, this woman has been identified with Mary Magdelene and so she is often portrayed as carrying an alabaster jar. In fact she is referred to as Mary of Bethany in another Gospel. But then Gregory also identified Mary of Bethany with Mary Magdelene! More confusion!
Throughout the centuries, Mary Magdalene has been erroneously portrayed as a reformed prostitute: was she confused with the woman with the alabaster jar who was nameless described in Luke 7:36-50?
The woman with the alabaster jar is called a ‘sinner’, but she was not called a prostitute either; Luke uses a different word when he describes an actual prostitute in 15:30 .
Mary Magdalene had a serious illness, but the nature of the illness is unspecified; later celibate male writers linked Mary’s illness, her ‘demons’, with her sexuality. The seven demons were more likely to have been connected to her physical ailments.
What we are seeing is how, in fact, the Woman with the Jar is much closer in her spiritual attitude to Jesus… Further, the Alabaster Jar is linked to the image of the Ark.
It is the receiving vessel, into which the Holy Spirit pours and the individual can be transformed.
Here it is filled with ointment. The woman is not just washing Messiah but ANOINTING Him. And remember that the word Christ means ‘Anointed One’. So the Jar and the woman who carries it are VERY significant in terms of understanding the inner meaning of Messiah.
Mary Magdelene was a disciple of Jesus of Nazareth, and probably one who shared her substance financially! It is unlikely, that she was a reformed prostitute, but medieval painters seemed to like to to show her as such.
She was the first witness to the Resurrection, and is called ‘Apostle to the Apostles’, since the risen Messiah told her to ‘go and tell’, apostellein in Greek.
The idea of women as primary witnesses does not seem unusual to people in the 21st century, but it was a revolutionary concept at the time. The testimony of women was not given the same weight as men’s, either personally or in a court of law. Mary’s witness to the Resurrection reversed this idea. When the Christian stories described Mary Magdalene and the other women as the first witnesses of the Resurrection, they were saying something important about the nature of women: that they were capable of being as fully Christian as men.
That said, none of the accounts suggest specifically by name any involvement by Mary Magdalene.
So, was there only one woman that anointed Jesus during Holy Week?
The gospels record there was an event of a woman anointing Messiah in a particularly extravagant way, it seems we will simply never know for sure who it was that enacted such a loving gesture for Jesus. Perhaps it was Mary, Martha’s sister, or perhaps it was done by another woman whose name has been lost to us forever.
What we do know is that Mary, and perhaps this unnamed woman, will always be remembered for the incredible service they gave to their Lord and Master. A service, that perhaps, pointed to the Savior’s most often used title, that of Christ/Messiah, the anointed one.
“I tell the truth, wherever the gospel is preached throughout the world, what she had done will also be told, in memory of her.” Matt. 26:8-13.
We are part of fulfilling that prophecy as we read these scriptures.
The scripture doesn’t tell us how long she had been holding on to her jar. We are not told what she was saving it for.
She could have hoarded it or saved it for a rainy day. She could have been selfish and kept it to herself.
None of her family objected when she gave everything she had quietly away to the one that she adored.
Mary loved Jesus so much that she wanted to give all that she had to Him.
Forgetting what people thought, how she would look or the practical needs she would forgo. Her sole desire was to give everything she had to Him and she did it cheerfully not knowing what her future would be. Her love and dedication to Messiah made her life truly fragrant.
How do we become “fragrant for the Lord?”
When we do all that we do with the idea of presenting our very best to the Lord, we become fragrant.
What is Yeshua/Jesus worth to us? For Mary, He was worth everything that she possessed. For Judas He was worth 30 pieces of silver.
Mark includes this story here to contrast it with the story of Judas. Judas was so incensed after witnessing this act of incredible waste was it then that he conspired to betray Jesus for thirty pieces of silver? The tipping point?
Verses 1 and 2 tell us that the religious leaders were plotting to execute Jesus and were looking for a way to do it that wouldn’t cause the crowds to riot. Some believe that Mary’s act of devotion was the thing that caused Judas to decide to switch teams. John says that Judas was the most vocal of the disciples in criticizing Mary for what she had done, but it wasn’t because he was concerned for the poor, it was because he was the treasurer of the group and had taken some of their money for himself. Judas wanted to get his hands on that money. So when Jesus condemns the disciples for criticizing Mary, Judas decides to get his money another way…by betraying him. Verse 10 says that Judas went to the religious leaders and promised to hand over Jesus for a price.
As we read we can learn several things.
First of all, the alabaster box of ointment contained something that was very precious, it represented the life of the owner, TEVAH it was like a small house with the sum total of her future hopes inside it;
but as long as it stayed in the container, it didn’t benefit anyone.
When she released it did all the unspoken Teivah, words, ideas, feelings, sentiments and convictions, pour out also?
Yeshua/Jesus called the act a good work, and the original Greek actually means “a beautiful thing.”
God has given each one of us a spiritual gift. It may be great faith, acts of service, hospitality, teaching, or some other gift.
But if we keep that gift to ourself, it benefits no one.
It is our responsibility as a Christian to identify what our gift is, and then to use it for the glory of God and the benefit of those around us.
When Mary wiped Jesus’ feet with her hair, she walked away smelling like Jesus did!! When we have been close to Him we will smell like Him too!
When we use what we have for Jesus, others can sense that we have been with Him. If your gift is compassion or mercy, you display the same that Jesus showed to us when He died in our place. If our gift is evangelism, then we display the love that Jesus has for sinners.
The use of our spiritual gifts causes others to sense Yeshua/Jesus’ presence in our lives.
Mary couldn’t keep the Jewish leaders from falsely accusing Him. She couldn’t keep the soldiers from crucifying Him, or the crowds from mocking Him.
But she could show her love and devotion by sacrificing the most precious thing that she possessed.
When Messiah is the object of our affections, those who have received His pardoning love
will not stop to calculate the value
of the alabaster box of precious ointment.
and the remaining ?’s are…
what’s in your alabaster box?
and
What’s the cost of the nerd in your ark?
It can only be used once!
We only have one life, so lets make them ones that are poured out for His glory; we are broken only to be made whole again, just as Messiah Yeshua was broken for us.
Restored – a new creation – far better and stronger than before!
Shalom!
Don’t leave this page before breaking your ark and releasing the nerd within…
SAY THE FOLLOWING FROM YOUR HEART 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. Amen.
which will give some extra information as Israel celebrates the Feast of Tabernacles or Booths which prophetically represents His presence dwelling with His people for ever when Messiah comes and He tabernacles with men.
Last week wasand central to the Yom Kippur observance in scripture is the Ark of the Covenant/Ark of the Testimony that was placed within the Holy of Holies, both in the wilderness Tabernacle and in the Temple in Jerusalem.
Everything begins with the altar of sacrifice and prophetically foretells the offering of the final sacrifice of Messiah on the altar of the cross.
The day of Yom Kippur/Day of Atonement, was the one day of the year the high priest/Kohen Gadol would enter through those 2 golden doors going beyond the veil into the smaller area (15 x 15 feet/ 4.57×4.57 meters.) called ‘the Holy of Holies’/Kodesh haKodashim and contained ‘the ark of the covenant’.
When the doors were closed they were covered by a linen curtain embroidered with cherubim and palm trees. Picture showing size of cherubim in Solomons Temple.
He took with him the blood of the sacrifice for the sins of the children of Israel.
He would sprinkle it on the ark of the covenant between the wings of the golden cherubim right on the part called the mercy seat.
The mercy seat is described as the footstool of God’s Throne in 1Chronicles 28:2. Then King David rose to his feet and said: ‘Hear me, my brethren and you my people. I had it in my heart to build a house of rest for the ark of the covenant of the LORD, and for the footstool of our God; and I made preparations for the building.’ (RSV)
The footstool of the throne was the place where the Lord met with the High Priest. This covering of the Ark shows us the relationship between God and Messiah Yeshua/Jesus .
He was clothed only in a simple white linen robe made specially made for the day and wore no shoes on his feet; which were none of the usual items required for him to wear.
A white linen robe was what Yeshua/Jesus was wearing when Mary saw Him in the garden and as He is now our High Priest having placed His Blood on the Mercy Seat that begins to make more sense!
It is important to remember that there was no light source in the Holy of Holies and the High Priest had to wait for God’s presence to illuminate the room.
God’s presence in the form of His Shekinah Glory manifested between the cherubs wings, just above the top of the Mercy Seat. The etymology of the dwelling or presence of God is the Hebrew word Sh’cheenah or as we pronounce it Shekinah. Shkn .
In Rev. 22:5. They will not need the light of a lamp or the light of the sun, for the Lord God will give them light.
The Glory of the Lord or Chabod is also known as the Shekhinah.
There is a Hebrew term of relatively clear meaning for the Glory of the Lord, that being Chabod. Chabod has variants such as Ichabod meaning that the glory is departed, sometimes written I-chabod or I-kabod. Therefore, Chabod actually occurs in scripture and has relatively clear meaning for the Glory of the Lord.
Some scholars allege that the word ‘Shekhinah’ is actually a Chaldean or Babylonian term meaning ‘resting-place.’
Paleo Hebrew
Some perceive that the term Shekhinah refers to the Holy Spirit, a feminine aspect of God or even a separate female deity.
The Glory of the Lord is not the Holy Spirit and some might wish to consider that the most conspicuous mention of any form or visual manifestation of the Holy Spirit consists of its appearance as a dove.
Luke 3:21 And it came to pass, all the people having been baptized, and Jesus having been baptized and praying, that the heaven was opened,22and the Holy Spirit descended in a bodily form as a dove upon him; and a voice came out of heaven, *Thou* art my beloved Son, in thee I have found my delight
It is important to be aware that the term ‘glory‘, necessarily means light – that is to say – something that is luminous. This is a key and crucial point, that the Chabod or Glory of the Lord is light.
The Glory of the Lord frequently accompanies God’s presence and is something very similar to – but not exactly like plasma. Plasma could be described as a cloud of luminosity. Apparently, God can appear without the Chabod. While Plasma visually has cloud-like characteristics, the clouds frequently noted as being clouds and the Glory of the Lord are very separate things although at times the Plasma-like material is noted as being a cloud.
Deuteronomy 4:24 For the Lord thy God is a devouring fire, a jealous God. (JPS)
The Chabod is also similar to but not exactly the same as the aurorae that sometimes appear at the polar regions of the Earth. While these luminous phenomena do have some cloud-like characteristics, they are obviously not the same as actual clouds of moisture that did frequently, but not always, accompany the presence of the Chabod.
The Hebrew word rendered into English as ‘cloud‘, actually means ‘a covering’ derived from the aspect of clouds of water vapor covering the sky. In fact, most specific mentions of the Glory of the Lord pertain to the appearances of fire. Flames do occupy a physical space and are visually similar to luminous clouds.
Scripture records there is a Green rainbow around throne it may resemble an aurorae which is as close as we can imagine.
God’s presence in the form of His Shekinah glory manifested between the cherubs wings just above the top of the Mercy seat. The etymology of the dwelling or presence of God is the Hebrew word Sh’cheenah or as we pronounce it Shekinah.
שכינה
The term Shekinah was many times used interchangeably with the word God. In the Jewish mind it always spoke of the fact that He dwelt in or rested upon those who merited His favor, whether an individual, a community, or the entire Jewish people.
Scholars also see the similarities between Shekinah (God’s Presence), The Holy Spirit of God (Heb. Ruach Elohim; Gr. Pneuma Hagion), and the Hebrew Bat Kol (The Daughter of the Voice, or God’s Voice).
It is interesting to examine the tradition of the Bat Kol which was the voice of God that proclaimed His will and intention, His judgments and His promises, His warnings and His commands to various people, communities, and sometimes to all of Israel. Jewish tradition always spoke of the Bat Kol. When the Torah was given at Sinai the Bible says,
Deut 4:12 “And the LORD spoke to you out of the midst of the fire. You heard the sound of the words, but saw no form; you only heard a voice.”
The Bat Kal mysteriously sounded at extraordinary times and this was mentioned in Jewish tradition. For example, there is one account that indicates that at the very instant when God took away the soul of Moses with a kiss, the bat Kal rang out over the Israelite camp with the lament, “Moses is dead! Moses is dead!” It also is recognized to have given warnings or passed judgement upon evildoers as recorded in the book of Daniel: 4:28-32″ While the word was still in the king’s mouth, a voice fell from heaven:’
The Bat Kol is represented in Jewish tradition by the symbol of the dove.
There is a saying among the teachers and Torah scholars that when God was not pleased with Israel’s behavior, the cherubs Wings pointed away from each other and the high priest would let the people know that God was displeased with the behavior.
The high priest placed the blood on to the Mercy seat directly under the presence of God and Israel’s sins were atoned for for another year.
The High Priest had to be pure and sin free or he would not survive the encounter with the glory of the Father’s presence.
The blood that he placed on the Mercy seat had come from the sacrifice however this sacrifice is no longer required as Yeshua/Jesus is the better sacrifice once and for all time. Hebrews 9:23
In the same way the rebuilding of the temple is also unnecessary, as those who believe in Yeshua/Jesus understand that He was and is the fulfillment of the promised Messiah. However, it will be built in fulfillment of the prophecies in both Daniel and Revelation.
This is an extensive subject and this post barely scratches the surface but it is timely with the autumn appointed festivals of the Lord.
Taking a look at the Ark will hopefully give a greater understanding of its meaning and prophetic significance
The Ark was made following instructions given to Moses. Ex. 26 and 37.
Then the LORD said to Moses, “See, I have chosen Bezalel son of Uri, the son of Hur, of the tribe of Judah,
In Exodus 31:1-6 and chapters 36 to 39, Bezalel (Hebrew: בְּצַלְאֵל, Bəṣalʼēl, also transcribed as Betzalel), was the chief artisan of the Tabernacle and was in charge of building the Ark of the Covenant, assisted by Aholiab.
Ark in Hebrew also means box. This was not the first box that God had instructed a man to make.
Noah’s Ark was a box made of wood and covered in pitch.
The Ark of the covenant given to Moses was a box of wood covered in gold.
In Genesis 7:1 God says ‘come into the box/ark’, giving the understanding that He is already in the box and simultaneously He is with Noah. And He/God shut the door; (not Noah)! Gen 7:16.
There was only one door through which to escape the coming judgment! and as Yeshua said, ‘I am the Door‘!
The Lord shut them in.
He is still calling us to come to where He is and be in His presence and also to allow His presence to be within us.
Both boxes had to have a specific covering within and without. There is an interesting inference concerning the description of the pitch in Genesis 6:14. He said make a box of Gopher wood for yourself (not for everyone)! You will make compartments for family and animals. And will cover it within and without with pitch.
While the word is generally translated pitch, the word atonement is more appropriate although both are correct and obviously the translators used Pitch.
There are two words in Hebrew that are often translated ark.
Aron is used for the ark of the covenant means chest as in a treasure chest.
Aron is made from wood from the Acacia\ gopher\Shittim tree.
Ark of the covenant is an acacia wood chest since it was also used for storage for the golden pot of manna, Aaron’s rod that budded and the tablets of the 10 Commandments. Note the similarity between Aaron and ARON of which Aaron became High Priest.
Another word for Ark is TEVAH and it is used for two objects:
Noah’s Ark and Moses Papyrus basket.
Noah’s Ark is tevat gofer literally a box of gopher wood.
Which was 450’ x 75’ x 45’ and took approximately 75 years to build.
Moses basket / a papyrus box, and while tevah means box, that was a huge difference in the size of the two; but it was still a box. Both Noah (& family) and Moses were boxed in.
Notice the coat of Tar or PITCH so it stayed waterproof until Pharoah’s daughter found it!
The Greek word kibotos means box but it is usually translated ark in English coming from the first translations from Latin. The Latin word is arca for both boxes.
Here is a thought provoking proposition concerning the covering of Noah’s box in Genesis/Beresheet. Always keeping in mind that there are no vowels a E I O U in the Torah scrolls only consonants.
Apparently the Hebrew does not actually say the exact words, ‘Cover it inside and out with pitch‘ but uses the K F R of the root of the word for pitch. So it reads KFR it within and without in KFR. Kefir/ kopher
גובה הצליל .
The point is, if it is referring to pitch, the substance, then all the interior it would be sticky! The reason to cover the outside with pitch is so it will stay dry and to keep the water out of the ark’s interior. How would having a coat of pitch inside prevent the water from flooding in, the full force of the water from the outside would push and separate the wood from the pitch. So there had to be an alternative reason/meaning behind this directive.
Another look at the root KFR shows that it is also a bush called camphor or henna that bears bunches of fragrant sweet smelling fruit and flowers. Maybe it was used for keeping the box/arks interior smelling fresh? Remember there were no windows, so no fresh air/ ventilation – but to be put on the outside too is not very likely.
There are however two more meanings for KFR, kafar means deny and kipper means made atonement. (As in Yom Kippur!) The two seem opposed in meaning, yet they would both make sense if applied to the understanding that the ark was constructed with God’s direction as a container for the survival of life on earth during the flood.
If we think about it, Noah is told by God that he is going to wipe out all life on the earth, with this understanding of KFR he could have been inferring ‘I want you to put your self outside of all that is around you, Deny KFR that they exist. So he is denying all those on the outside (KFR without,) for the people were denying Noah and were dismissive, derisive, with their unbelieving actions. On the inside (KFR within), to make the ark /box worthy of salvation. How? By dedicating it through an act of atonement, Kipper on the outside, coating of pitch. So all within are an atonement to the Lord = A KFR on the inside?
One final meaning of KFR is KOFER = ransom. Is it possible to think of the entering into the ark/box as a ransom for the saving/ salvation of the lives for those who made it through the flood? There was no covenant prior to the flood. Jesus /Yeshua was a ransom for many.
Ezekiel 37:1
The box of covenant and that He did indeed promise Noah and I shall establish my covenant with you; and the box was directed by God to hold the physical tablets of the covenant given to Moses.
It was made of planks of acacia wood, not plywood so it would have been very heavy. The size was 5 feet long 3 feet high and 3 feet wide.
The stone tablets were heavy as they had the whole Torah written on them.
It was covered in gold leaf, had a solid gold lid and solid gold cherubim on that lid. Then when it traveled it was covered with badgers skins; it would have waited over 1500 pounds.
It had two wood poles and was carried by four men? This would have been almost impossible. It makes one lean towards the Hebrew thought from the rabbis that the weight of the Ark was borne by God Himself; for it is said that the ark carried them NOT the other way around.
Noah was destined to bring deliverance and freedom going through God’s judgment by employing a box/ark of salvation; where His presence protected them to keep them secure and safe.
Moses was destined to bring deliverance and freedom to the children of Israel pronouncing judgment on Egypt and fulfilling the promised covenant added to Noah’s covenant and He instructed Moses to construct the Ark in which His presence could be with them.
After the children of Israel had journeyed to Mount Sinai God told Moses on the mountain that He would pitch His tent among them on their journeys:
Exod. 25:8-9 “And let them make Me a sanctuary, that I may dwell among them. According to all that I show you, that is, the pattern of the tabernacle and the pattern of all its furnishings, just so you shall make it.” When God revealed the pattern of the tabernacle and the WAY to approach Him He also declared exactly where He would meet Moses: Exod 25:22
Moses started life in a box/ark, to keep him secure and safe, which saved his life out of the waters of the Nile and pharaohs judgment against the Hebrews male babies.
A closer look at the ark of the covenant a box of gold.
The Ark was a 2 ½ x 1½ cubit, (3 3/4 feet x 2 1/4 feet or 1.14 x 0.68 metres), a rectangular wooden chest of acacia wood, overlaid with pure gold, inside and out. Its’ lid being the Mercy Seat, with the Cherubim of glory facing one another; their wings outstretched. It had a gold molding or crown around the top; (a different word in Hebrew than the rim of the table and incense altar).
There are so many images that have differing shapes those included are to highlight certain aspects., e.g. above showing detail of crown.
Ps 99:1 The LORD reigns; let the peoples tremble! He dwells between the cherubim; let the earth be moved!
Exod. 25:17-22 “You shall make a mercy seat of pure gold; two and a half cubits shall be its length and a cubit and a half its width. And you shall make two Cherubim of gold; of hammered work you shall make them at the two ends of the mercy seat. Make one cherub at one end, and the other cherub at the other end; you shall make the Cherubim at the two ends of it of one piece with the mercy seat. And the cherubim shall stretch out their wings above, covering the mercy seat with their wings, and they shall face one another; the faces of the cherubim shall be toward the mercy seat.’
The cover or lid for the Ark of the Covenant was made of solid gold and it was called the mercy-seat, atonement cover, ark-cover. Kapparah is the Hebrew word for this. This word is from the same root as the word for atonement; at this point, the parallel between atonement and this kapparah, as well as the generic concept of covering, is exceedingly important. In fact, in Hebrew the word Kapparah or covering and the idea of atonement are more-or-less synonymous.
The way that the kapparah works is that it literally coversThe Law to avert judgment for those whose sins are to be forgiven. Through the mercy-seat some obtain mercy. The kapparah is the provision for mercy. The propitiation afforded through the kapparah relied in part upon sacrifice. In other words, the kapparah shields the transgressor from The Law housed inside the Ark. The penalty for transgressing any part of The Decalogue was death. Nearly everyone that ever lived was guilty of transgressing The Decalogue so it is highly probable that simply viewing the stone tables without proper remediation would automatically result in instant death. The mechanics of the kapparah appear many times in passages such as Psalm 32:1-2.
The mercy seat or covering pointed us towards the sacrifice of Messiah Yeshua/Jesus, and the covering of our sins with His blood.
Acacia wood is a beautiful, dense wood that comes from very fragrant and drought-resistant acacia trees that are indigenous to Africa and Arabia. In Israel, the range of the specie diminishes beyond the Negev. It is known in Hebrew as the shittah or shittum tree. Its wood is a finely grained orange wood that darkens with age and it is unaffected by insects. It is the source of natural-gum Arabic and also provides tannin.
The Mercy Seat was the lid or cover of solid gold the same size as the top of the Ark (2 1/2 cubits long x 1 1/2 cubits wide). At each end of the Mercy Seat, and of one piece with it, were two hammered gold cherubim facing one another. Their outstretched wings overshadowed the gold lid and their faces constantly looked down upon it. They were symbols of the presence and holiness of the Lord and are His chosen instruments of judgment toward any sinful approach toward the presence of the Lord and as they look upon the blood the wrath of God is appeased and they are at peace.
They represent the judgment of God.
– Their position indicates that God’s judgment upon Israel was averted because of the blood-sprinkled mercy seat
Jewish Tradition
According to the writings of the ancient sages the words of Ezekiel, “The had the hands of a man under their wings” (Ezek 1:8), refer to the hand of God which is extended beneath the wings of the Chayyoth (Cherubim) to receive penitents from the power of judgement” [Pes. 119a]
– The Cherubim are revealed by Ezekiel in chapter 1:5-10 as 4 living creatures, each one having 4 different faces, the face of a man, lion, ox, and eagle.
Man- This face spoke of mind, reason, affections, and all the things that encompass a human being.
Lion- The lion was always recognized as strong, fierce, and majestic. It was the royalist of animals.
Pro 30:30 Pro 20:2.
Ox- The ox was recognized as the animal who patiently labored for his owner. He was strong, able to bear a burden, and knew its owner.
Pro 14:4 Ps 144:14 Is 1:3
Eagle- The divine bird that flew above the storms, while below there was only sorrows, dangers, and distress. A swift bird strong and powerful, never becoming weary.
Pro 30:18-19.
Is 40:31 Ps 103:5.
Ex 19:4 `
Ezek 17:3 Hos 8:1.
The Cherubim were also the same fierce creatures who guarded the entrance to the Garden of Eden after Adam and Eve had sinned. They wielded a flaming sword that turned in all four directions to protect the Tree of Life (Gen. 3:24).
So the outstretched wings of the cherubim were to provide a throne for the God where He would mediate His rule on the earth as a representation of the real throne in heaven:
1 Sam 4:4 So the people sent men to Shiloh, and they brought back the Ark of the Covenant of the LORD Almighty, who is enthroned between the cherubim. (NIV)
When God had spoken to Moses out of the midst of the cloud upon Sinai, He also told him that He would come down to speak with him in the midst of His people. It was from the area above the Mercy Seat that He did:
Num 7:89
The Mercy Seat was where the blood was sprinkled. between the judgment angels who were looking down and when they would see the blood the wrath of God was stayed. Lev 16:11-15
And Aaron shall bring the bull of the sin offering, which is for himself, and make atonement for himself and for his house, and shall kill the bull as the sin offering which is for himself. (Red Heifer) – He shall take some of the blood of the bull and sprinkle it with his finger on the mercy seat on the east side; and before the mercy seat he shall sprinkle some of the blood with his finger seven times. “Then he shall kill the (scape) goat of the sin offering, which is for the people, bring its blood inside the veil, do with that blood as he did with the blood of the bull, and sprinkle it on the mercy seat and before the mercy seat.
Because of the mercy seat the tabernacle was called “the tent of meeting”. Because here God met with man:
In the New Testament this Mercy Seat or atonement cover is spoken of twice. Heb 9:2-5 Rom 3:23-26
The Greek word for Mercy Seat is ‘hilasterion’. It is used here in Romans 3:25 where Paul says (literally) that God presented Christ as a propitiation or ‘mercy seat’. This means that Jesus Christ is the mercy seat.
The Mercy Seat did not derive its worth from the purity of its gold but from the fact that it was the place where the blood of sacrifice was sprinkled in the presence of Yahweh.
The word for “mercy seat” is the same root for the word “atonement”. It means to cover, cancel, appease, or cleanse.
The Greek equivalent is the word “propitiation”.
Lk 18:13 “And the tax collector, standing afar off, would not so much as raise his eyes to heaven, but beat his breast, saying, `God, be merciful to me a sinner!’
The word “seat” speaks of a resting place so the mercy seat was the “place of mercy or propitiation”.
The Ark was overlaid with pure gold and had a gold crown.
Because only once a year on Yom Kippur could man enter beyond the veil; there had to be a veil separating man from the holy of holies.
This was mentioned first before all the other furniture in the tabernacle. The ark was right in the center of the camp and the glory cloud was seen above the mercy seat and above the back portion of the tabernacle.
The ark rested on the dirt floor of the Holy of Holies with its four gold rings that the gold poles were inserted through and left permanently in position.
Exod 25:10-22
The Ark of the Covenant was where Gods justice and judgement toward sin was satisfied.
Ex 25:22
Josh 3:6,13
1 Sam 5:7
1 Chr 6:41
2 Chr 35:3
Ps 78:60-61
What was inside it?
The 2 unbroken tables of stone, (The 10 Commandments).
It is important to note that the ark contained the two tablets of the Decalogue (the Ten Commandments). Remember that God had made a covenant with Israel, but the people had broken it. In grace God renewed it and ordered that its enduring record, (the unbroken tablets) should be deposited in the holy ark. The Book of the Covenant, which dealt at length with other aspects of law and procedure, was deposited alongside the ark. But the 10 commandments were stored within the ark itself.
Exod 25:16 “And you shall put into the ark the Testimony which I will give you.”
It is highly probable that the stone tables were housed inside the Ark simply to protect people from the penalty of death that automatically occurs and results from viewing the Decalogue.
The Ten Commandments more correctly called The Decalogue or The Law that God gave to Moses.
It is extremely enlightening to examine the root of the word Decalogue, which are traced from Greek and the prefix deca means ten. The suffix logue is from the root word logos ,meaning word. Therefore, Decalogue means the Ten Words. The Ark was made at Horeb near Mount Horeb and the name Horeb means “the desert or mountain of the dried-up ground.”Generally, the region is called Horeb and the mountain is called Mount Horeb. The mountain was located in the land of Midian, a portion of present-day Arabia.
Consider the essence of the Decalogue, it is apparent that the Ten Words could be considered the face of the document of The Law. In fact, lawyers frequently refer to the substance or text of their documents by the term face. The Law or Decalogue inscribed into the face of the stone tables automatically brings death without atonement! It is maybe relevant, and certainly not a coincidence, that no one can look upon God’s face and live!
Ex. 33:17
Two other items were also contained within the ark. One was a golden pot/jar containing an omer (24 liters) of manna (Heb. 9:4) as a memorial of God’s provision:
Exod 16:32-33 “ThenMoses said, This is the thing which the LORD has commanded: ‘Fill an omer with it, to be kept for your generations, that they may see the bread with which I fed you in the wilderness, when I brought you out of the land of Egypt.’ And Moses said toAaron Take a pot and put an omer of manna in it, and lay it up before the LORD, to be kept for your generations.”
It was also a type Christ who was the living bread which came down from heaven:
John 6:50-51 “This is the bread which comes down from heaven, that one may eat of it and not die. I am the living bread which came down from heaven. If anyone eats of this bread, he will live forever; and the bread that I shall give is My flesh, which I shall give for the life of the world.”
The third item which would be added was Aaron’s rod that sprouted buds and blossoms and bore ripe almonds in a single night, authenticating God’s choice of Aaron for the priesthood. (Num 17; Heb. 9:4).
Num 17:7-8 “And Moses placed the rods before the LORD in the tabernacle of witness. Now it came to pass on the next day that Moses went into the tabernacle of witness, and behold, the rod of Aaron, of the house of Levi, had sprouted and put forth buds, had produced blossoms and yielded ripe almonds.”
Here is a A Type of Christ
The mercy seat protected man from the judgment of God represented by the judgment angels, the Cherubim. Because of the blood that was sprinkled on the mercy seat, man’s sin and guilt were washed away and the curse of the law has no effect. The mercy seat foreshadows the Messiah.
He is our mercy seat.
He forever stands between a holy God and sinful man. Just as the sins of the whole nation were atoned for by the sprinkling of the blood on the mercy seat, so also Messiah, by the shedding of His own blood atoned for the sins of the entire world.
1 Jn 2:2; Lk 22:20; Eph 2:13; 1 Pet 1:18-19; Heb 9:11-12, 28; Dan 7:9-10,13,14; Rev 5:1-13; Ps 99:1.
The ark of the Covenant was a picture of Messiah.
The Acacia wood speaks of the indestructible humanity of Jesus. He was 100% man. God Himself became flesh and suffered the agonies of the human experience. He was tempted, He was weary, He thirsted, He had to learn the Scriptures and learn obedience and to hear God’s voice and be led by the Spirit as a man. Not only does the Acacia wood tell us that He was 100% man but the pure gold that over-laid the wood teaches us that He was 100% God.
Jesus said “unless you believe that I AM you will die in your sins.” He used the same words (Heb. Eheyay asher aheyay) as when the Lord spoke to Moses at the burning bush. The Jewish Messiah was none other than Jehovah Himself visiting His people and becoming their savior by dying for the sins of the world and that is the etymology of the name Jesus (Heb. Y’shua ‘Yaweh has become salvation’). Jesus/Yeshua condemned the religious leaders for not recognizing “the day of their visitation.”
The crown of gold around the top of the ark speaks of the Lord Jesus Christ as King of kings and Lord of lords. Jesus overcame the onslaught of opposition that was set against Him His whole life by the religious leaders, the wealthy Jewish aristocracy, Rome itself, and even all the power of the enemy. He overcame even death itself and rose triumphantly and was given a crown, and glory, and honor, because He is the King. According to John it was Jesus/Yeshua who Isaiah saw seated on the throne of glory with the angels crying ‘holy, holy, holy.’
The unbroken tables of stone set forth Jesus/Yeshua, as the One who perfectly kept the Law and never broke God’s Commandments.
The Bible says that He “committed no sin, nor was deceit found in His mouth.” Jesus/Yeshua felt the pressure of temptation at its full intensity yet He never sinned. Even the look in His eye and the tone of His voice reflected the very perfections of the holiness of God Himself.
Aaron’s rod that budded also speaks of Jesus. Something that had died and supernaturally came to life again. Jesus said, “I am the resurrection and the life.”
The golden pot of manna speaks of Jesus as the bread of life who came down from heaven to bring food, the Word of God, to a world in darkness and dying of hunger.
It all points to Jesus.
Even the golden poles speak of the ever living and ever present Savior who is with us in all our journeying and will never leave us nor forsake us. If you were to examine the history of the ark there would be striking resemblances to the ministry of Messiah Jesus our Lord:
The ark went before the people – Yeshua/Jesus went before them:
John 10:4 “And when he brings out his own sheep, he goes before them; and the sheep follow him, for they know his voice.
The ark was in the middle of God’s people – Jesus is in His people:
John 14:20 “At that day you will know that I am in My Father, and you in Me, and I in you.”
The people were to follow the ark – We are to follow Jesus:
Luke 5:27-28 After these things He went out and saw a tax collector named Levi, sitting at the tax office. And He said to him, “Follow Me.” So he left all, rose up, and followed Him.
And to keep on following on, the ark was always first to lead them. It was death to those that were enemies of God. The ark brought blessings and curses.
Isa 53:2 For He shall grow up before Him as a tender plant, and as a root out of dry ground. He has no form or comeliness; and when we see Him, there is no beauty that we should desire Him.
Isa 9:6 For unto us a Child is born, unto us a Son is given; and the government will be upon His shoulder. And His name will be called wonderful, Counselor, Mighty God, everlasting Father, Prince of Peace.
John 1:14 And the Word became flesh and dwelt among us, and we beheld His glory, the glory as of the only begotten of the Father, full of grace and truth.
Matt 5:17 “Do not think that I came to destroy the Law or the Prophets. I did not come to destroy but to fulfill.
1 Pet 2:22 “Who committed no sin, nor was deceit found in His mouth”;
Gal 4:4 But when the fullness of the time had come, God sent forth His Son, born of a woman, born under the law,
Jn 11:25 Jesus said to her, “I am the resurrection and the life. He who believes in Me, though he may die, he shall live.
Jn 6:32 Then Jesus said to them, “Most assuredly, I say to you, Moses did not give you the bread from heaven, but My Father gives you the true bread from heaven.
Jn 1:1 In the beginning was the Word, and the Word was with God, and the Word was God.
Jn 1:14 And the Word became flesh and dwelt among us, and we beheld His glory, the glory as of the only begotten of the Father, full of grace and truth.
The ark was representative of the real ark in heaven.
The cross is the ultimate and cosmic altar of the ultimate and cosmic sacrifice the Lamb of God however the altar of sacrifice was only one part of the Temple.
The cross, this altar of sacrifice is not the end of salvation but the beginning.
It’s the altar of sacrifice that gives access and the ability to enter through the temple doors, to walk beyond the veil and to stand in the holy of holy’s.
The journey begins up the altar and if this is a eternal/ cosmic altar then it gives us access to begin our eternal journey.
As our high priest, Messiah gives us access to go where we could not go before, and to enter into that which we could not enter previously, enabling us to walk along the WAY, a path that we could not walk before.
As this is a cosmic eternal altar, it gives us power to enter the realm of the holy and to be seated in the heavenly places where we are to dwell in His presence – the realms of glory.
Now today The Presence Within the Holy of Holies Dwells Within the Believer in Jesus:
Jesus said I am the temple (Mishkan) of God. When the glory (Heb. Sh’chinah) would come down like a tornado or funnel right through the roof of the holy of holies and the Presence would manifest on the mercy seat between the cherubim after the blood was sprinkled, (the mishkan).
That Presence was what Yeshua/Jesus said dwelt within Him.
And in fact Paul said about the church, “Know ye not that you are the temple (Mishkan) of God?” We, as the body of Messiah, have the same Presence dwelling within us. God doesn’t dwell in buildings now but within His people.
1 Cor 6:19 Or do you not know that your body is the temple of the Holy Spirit who is in you, whom you have from God, and you are not your own?
The kingdom of the heavens is within you and we are the sanctuary of God’s presence on earth – the holy of holies is within us and as we follow Yeshua/Jesus the Ark of our covenant He promises – I am in you and you are in Me -filled with the shekinah of His Ruach Hakodesh we are carriers of His presence – the lights of the world.
The Tablets of the law are written on our hearts. He is the Manna, the bread of life upon which we feed and live.
Aarons staff is The staff of life it’s the shepherds crook from Ps. 23.
The staff also makes the presence of the Shepherd real to the sheep. The staff, a long stick with a crook in one end (like a walking stick), was used by shepherds to protect and tend their flock. There was a crook at one end of the rod, and it was with this the shepherd took hold of one of the hind legs of the sheep to pull it back.
Bread is the staff of life means, food is necessary to survive.
That a staff signifies power, is because it is a support; for it supports the hand and arm, and through them the whole body; with which we are to reach the lost sheep looking for the ones to draw them into His fold.
So we are containers of all that is needed to be a disciple we are equipped as an ark of His covenant with us.
Finally, the Ark would serve as the observable sign of Yahweh’s (the Hebrew name of God) presence to the Israelites until it went missing after the Babylonian destruction of Jerusalem in 587 BCE. The Israelites believed Yahweh to be their king, and by building it, gave them the ability to transport their monarchy were ever they went.
If Yahweh was their king/god, then He was their commander, which also made the Ark a military weapon.
(What is interesting about this is that the manufacture of not just the Ark but weapons also, took place at Mt Sinai.)
Therefore, the Israelites needed a symbol that they could look to and it put fear into the minds of their enemies.
As to its whereabouts today…There are prophesies and much speculation to that question but one thing is for certain when Father is ready for it to be found there will be an apocalypse! For it will be revealed at the perfect time for now lets be the chosen carriers of His glory every day and allow His light to shine in and through us. His blood will for ever be on the mercy seat declaring covenant fulfilled.
Don’t leave this page without knowing for absolute certain you are an ark.
Make certain Jesus 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.
NOT SURE?
YOU CAN BE..
SAY THE FOLLOWING FROM YOUR HEART RIGHT NOW…
Heavenly Father I come to you in the Name of Jesus 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 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 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. Thank you that you have accepted me into your family in Jesus’ name. Amen.
Rosh Hashanah is the start of a New Year in Israel,
It actually means “Head of the Year.”
And it will be the Hebrew Year
since creation, which really gives a clearer understanding of where we actually are in Father’s timeline.
Rosh Hashanah is celebrated for two days. It is the start of the 3 Fall/ Autumn, Appointed Times of The Lord/Feasts /Festivals.
A look at some fascinating facts, mysteries and scriptures connected with Israel’s Fall/Autumn Appointed Times.
The day on which Rosh HaShanah is celebrated is Biblically known as Yom Teruah (Day of the Trumpet Blasts)
The traditional Rosh Hashanah greeting is
‘shanah tovah’
which means,
good year!
The word U’Metuka
(and sweet) is sometimes added.
When is Rosh HaShanah?
The Hebrew date is always the same — the 1st of the month of Tishrei.
The dates of Jewish holidays don’t change from year to year; however, a Jewish year can change in length from 353 to 354 or 355 days long. A Jewish leap year can be 383, 384 or 385 days long and because the Jewish year is not the same length as the year on the civil calendar, the dates of holidays seem to shift quite a bit; consequently that results in the Israels High Holidays falling anywhere from early September all the way into October.
So what date is the holiday on the Gregorian calendar? This year, Rosh HaShanah begins at sunset on Sunday, September 9.
September, 2018 calendar with Jewish High Holy Days circled
Brief history explaining the reason for the two calendars and why are they different in length?
The civil Gregorian calendar is based on the solar cycle of 365 days, five hours, 48 minutes and 46 seconds — the amount of time it takes the earth to make one complete rotation around the sun.
To correct the problem of those extra hours, an extra day is added to February every four years. This keeps the equinox (when the sun shines directly on the equator) occurring on generally the same date every year: March 19 or 20 and September 22 or 23.
The Jewish calendar is a luni-solar calendar. It considers three things: the yearly rotation of the earth around the sun, the daily rotation of the earth on its own axis, and the monthly cycle of the moon around the earth.
Each new moon cycle begins a new month or Rosh Chodesh.
However, there are approximately 12.4 lunar months in every solar year. In other words, a lunar year is about 11 days shorter than a solar year.
If the Jewish calendar were a strict lunar calendar that had 29.5 days in a month, every 16 years or so the Fall Feasts would be held in Spring, and Passover would be held in autumn.
To keep the Jewish holidays and appointed times in their correct seasons, every two or three years the month of Nissan begins earlier and an extra month is added. This 13-month year is called Shanah Me’uberet, literally, a pregnant year.
The additional month of Adar 1 (also called Adar Aleph) is added before Adar, which is designated Adar 2.
The addition of the extra month guarantees that Passover (Pesach) and the wheat harvest feast (Pentecost / Shavuot) occurs in the spring.
Between AD 320 and 385, Hillel II, the Nasi (Prince) of the ancient Jewish Sanhedrin, established the calendar that is used today which follows a 19-year cycle, realigning the lunar and solar calendars.
In this system the extra month is added on the 3rd, 6th, 8th, 11th, 14th, 17th and 19th years of the cycle. The current cycle began at the start of the Jewish year 5758, which occurred on October 2, 1997.
The Gregorian calendar, however, was created in 1582 by Pope Gregory XIII and proclaimed the official civil calendar of Britain and the British colonies of America in 1752.
Below is a chart correlating the 7 Appointed Times with Prophetic Fulfillment in Messiah.
The Feast of Trumpets is also the anniversary of the creation of man. Adam, the first human being, opened his eyes to a world that appeared to have always existed.
More Interesting information of HebraicThought and Concepts.
The ancient Hebrew text ‘Book of Formation’, teaches that there is more to the universe than time and space. There is a soul.
Whatever is found in the universe’s soul is found somewhere in its space. And whatever is found in space, is found in time.
In the soul of the universe there is a consciousness from which all consciousness extends.
In space, there is the Land of Israel, a space from where all space is nurtured.
In time, there is Rosh Hashanah, a time from which all time is renewed.
Rosh Hashanah means Head of the Year.
Not just a starting point, but a head, a new beginning of time in which a new consciousness enters our universe. It is said, that whatever transpires in the coming year is first conceived in these two days.
That is why Rosh Hashanah is called the first day of creation, for only then did the world know it had meaning.
For Israel, on each Rosh Hashanah that scene is replayed, and new meaning is discovered in our world, and the world is born again. (Interesting concept!)
All the cosmos came to be because Hashem, (The Name), chose to invest His very essence into a great drama: the drama of a lowly world becoming the home of an infinite God. A marriage of opposites, the fusion of finite and infinite, light and darkness, heaven and earth.
We would seem to be the players in that drama, the cosmic matchmakers. With our every action, we have the power to marry our mundane world to the infinite and unknowable.
Apocalypse of the Teruah’s cry? A horn that cries?
How can an animals horn cry out?
It’s the cry IN the sound of the shofar!
It is part of hebrew thought that the first time a shofar was heard in creation was when God created Adam. God blew Adam’s soul into him, and the sound it made was the sound of the shofar. Just like God created mankind on Rosh Hashanah, on the anniversary of that day, God is recreating us.
Could it be said that we are God’s shofar?..
The sound of the shofar being blown is the sound of creation.
The breath represents the soul, and the instrument represents our bodies.
The shofar reminds us that when our bodies do the will of our soul, there is song and harmony.
Spirituality is represented by music because music sounds even more beautiful the more notes that are being played, unlike too much speech.
Do each of our souls have a mission to add to the harmony of the world?
The shofar is supposed to change us. It’s sounds are intended to invoke that nagging feeling inside of us that asks us to live a deeper, fuller life in the year to come.
There is a difference between simply hearing it and then going about our lives, and really listening to it and having its wailing sound transform us.
Even though it is not the anniversary of the creation of the entire universe, but that of the human being, it’s the true beginning, as all of time, as we know it, begins on this day.
Why? Because on this day, more than any other, the Hebrew thought is we are empowered to change lanes, to switch direction, to alter and transform our destiny and thereby the destiny of all of creation if as we believe everything is connected!
Through us, truth and goodness can become a flaming torch of light, which was once obscured in darkness and ignorance.
All is defined by destiny. Even the past is redefined by the arrow of its future. The very existence of that time that held that past is re-created once it achieves its hidden destiny. A destiny that only each of us can reveal.
For those whose focus is on Rosh Hashanah, the here and now that is all that matters; for it represents the first day of all of time, future and past.
In biblical times, the shofar was used to tell the people that the King was coming.
What is the correct etiquette when a King comes?
Most likely, we want to impress the King so we make an effort to perfect ourselves and our surroundings.
It was also used as a signal that war was coming. What is the strategy we adopt when war comes? Probably we prepare our weapons, form an army and we prepare to fight.
The shofar was also a tool to help break down barriers. When the shofar was blown at Jericho, the walls came crumbling down. This is why it is also known as the
Even though sometimes we change from the inside out, it is more often influences from the outside that really have an impact on us. Is it possible that the shofar is necessary because it is a powerful tool outside ourselves and helps us to improve ourselves on the inside?
Our actual bones are supposed to resonate with the sound of the shofar. Do we have the ability to not only hear what the sound is reflecting but to absorb its frequency and let it stir deep within our souls, so much so, that there is an effect on our physical bodies??
Throughout life, our soul is constantly being affected by outside influences: fashion dictates how we dress, advertisements tell us what we like, the media affects how we think, and the people that surround us dictate our reality. Yet, how often do we stop and really listen to the sounds that surround us? How often do we connect to what is inside of us and who is above us? How in tune are we with nature and the spiritual aspects of our lives? How much do the sounds of the outside world drown out the sounds of our soul?
With a new year comes a clean slate, the ability to correct our mistakes, with the power to transform into a newer and better self.
The shofar is our call to action – an alarm!
The power is within us. Once we hear the call, it is our job to make it real.
And so too, every morning, we are all reborn from a night-time taste of death.
Since Father created earth by His spoken word and creation is still in motion and at every moment—in the smallest increment of time—every particle of the universe is still being projected into being out of absolute nothingness, as it was at the very genesis of all things.
The feast of trumpets is the season of Teshuvah – the season of repentance/return.
Teshuvah is the Hebrew word from the root word SHUV meaning to return.
Hosea 3:4 -5 Jeremiah 3:22; Isaiah 30:15.
The great mystery is that in ancient times God has set up this entire age as a Hebrew year. The Feast of Tabernacles/Sukkot, starts the civil new year, however on the Sacred Calendar it represents the end of the year, not the beginning.
So the season of repentance comes at the end.
Teshuvah has a double meaning; as well as returning to God, it can also mean physical return. So the days of Teshuvah contain another secret, that of an apocalypse, a revealing, that Israel must return to the land of promise and to Jerusalem.
Teshuvah is not just for a week for a season, but a lifestyle.
We are to live our whole lives with Teshuvah hearts and the greater the Teshuvah, the greater will be our continual returning to Him.
Teshuvah signifies that the time of Israel’s repentance and their subsequent return to Messiah will happen at the end of the age. So in a way the Hebrew year waits for Israel to repent and turn, Teshuvah, in order for it to come to its conclusion. This is why we are to pray for Israel to return to Messiah and why the Appointed Time WILL surely come.
The Rabbis/Teachers compare the coming Messianic era to the full moon, the hope of redemption and His coming is compared to the new moon.
The Talmud, (compendium of rabbinical teachings and discussions), teaches that when the Messiah returns, the moon will cease to diminish and remain as large and bright as the sun.
So while the celebration of the new moon reminds us of His coming, it also reminds us to renew our awareness of His Presence in our lives, and to push forward into the growth and change that He has for us, becoming all He created us to be.
“When I look at your heavens, the work of your fingers, the moon and the stars, which you have set in place, what is man that you are mindful of him, and the son of man that you care for him?” (Psalm 8:3–4)
In truth, we need only awaken the spark of God within our own souls. That spark within us connects with the Infinite Light of God above. The circuit is complete and a new cycle begins. For this reason we are called His children, and we call Him our Father. We are created beings, yet there is something of us that lies beyond creation. It is the One who sustains the universe who breaths within us.
On Rosh Hashanah, God is addressed as both
Father/Avinu/Avinou
and
King/Malkeinu/Malkaynou
Father, because there is something of Him within each of us.
King, because He dictates what will be and what will not.
Indeed, as we choose, so He will dictate.
Choose life.
Words to Avinou Malkaynou
Our Father Our King Hear our voice
Our Father Our King We have no King but You
Our Father Our King Renew For us a good year
Send us complete healing to the sick of your people
Our Father Our King
Inscribe us in the book of life
fill our hands with your blessing
Our Father Our King
Fill our storehouses with plenty
Our Father Our King
Hear our voice have compassion upon us
Our Father Our King Hear our voice
Our Father Our King Hear our voice
_______________
Avinu malkeinu sh’ma kolenu
Avinu malkeinu chatanu l’faneycha
Avinu malkeinu alkenu chamol aleynu
V’al olaleynu v’tapenu
Avinu malkeinu
Kaleh dever v’cherev v’raav mealeynu
Avinu malkeinu kalehchol tsar
Umastin mealeynu
Avinu malkeinu Avinu malkeinu
Kotvenu b’sefer chayim tovim
Avinu malkeinu chadesh aleynu
Chadesh aleynu shanah tovah
Sh’ma kolenu Sh’ma kolenu Sh’ma kolenu
Avinu malkeinu Avinu malkeinu
Chadesh aleynu
Shanah tovah
Avinu malkeinu Sh’ma kolenu
Sh’ma kolenu Sh’ma kolenu Sh’ma kolenu
A King speaks and his word is fulfilled. God speaks and the world comes into being.
When we speak the words of Torah/Scripture, they resonate in the heavens and beyond. Spoken words have sound and frequency which is part of creations makeup. Why? Because they are His words, and they are on the rebound to Him. He spoke, He said and He watches over His Word to perform it and it will not return to Him void. Is.55:11
The central observance and widespread custom of Rosh Hashanah is sounding and listening to the blowing of the shofar on both mornings of Rosh Hashanah. The shofar is made from a hollowed-out ram’s horn. It produces three ‘voices’:
tekiah (a long blast),
shevarim (a series of three short blasts) and
teruah (a staccato burst of at least nine blasts).
Click http link below for more information and on the mp3 bar to hear the different shofar sounds.
The shofar is blown at various intervals during the Rosh Hashanah morning service. When all added up there are 100 ‘voices‘ in total.
On Rosh Hashanah, we cry out from our very essence, from our spirit man, with the call of the shofar; Father replies, sending His very essence towards His creation.
The shofar cries out from the raw essence of the soul, to its Beloved, the One who is the raw essence of all being. It’s not a human voice but rather the howl of an animal horn and when its sound is heard it is so primal that the mind ceases to think and the heart skips a beat, the throb of life suspended for a moment in time.
That is the moment that heaven and earth connect. The base nature of our souls here on earth reach up to touch the divine essence above as He reaches down and the RE-union is made. Our souls press upwards bursting through the veil into the heavenly dimension, escaping the constraints enforced upon it by our earthly bodies.
For there are many things that are important even essential for us and often words flow out in a burst of emotion, rich words, expressive and vibrantly imbued with life.
And then, there are things that shake us to the very core – challenging all that we have known and believed.
Things that do not wait for the right words or the mind’s permission, in this case, the mind cannot fathom them, the most expressive words could not contain them. These are the things that can only break out in a cry, in a scream, and then fall into silence.
This is something of the sound of the shofar: From the very core of our souls our hearts crying, ‘Father! please don’t leave – let your presence remain always!’
Another significance of the shofar is to recall the Binding of Isaac which also occurred on Rosh Hashanah, in which a ram took Isaac’s place as an offering to God;
as we remember Abraham’s readiness to sacrifice his son, and pray that He should stand by us as we pray for a year of life, health and prosperity.
Rosh Hashanah is the start of the Yamim Nora’im (High Holidays).
At the time of writing, the Holy Day, (Yom Kadosh), of Yom Kippur, is just a week away and the people will gather in synagogues for 25 hours of fasting, prayer and inspiration.
The days in between are known as the 10 Days of Repentance,
or the Ten Days of Return/Days of Awe
and they are an especially propitious time for teshuvah, for returning to the Father. Before the
Yom Kippur is followed by the joyous holidays of Sukkot and Simchat Torah.
Parallels of Khataah – The Day of Atonement – Yom Kippur
The sacrifice that took away guilt and which was also the guilt, called the Asham. On the day of atonement there was a sacrifice that took away the sins of all Israel. It was a sacrifice of a parallel nature and contains a parallel mystery. It was called the sin offering it was the offering that took away sin.
Messiah was the old covenant/testament mystery revealed in the renewed covenant/testament, it was a shadow of Him as He was and is THE sacrifice that takes away the sin of the world.
In Hebrew the sin offering is called the Khataah. It has a double meaning. One is, sin offering, and it also means the sin itself.
As Messiah is the mystery, He is the Khataah and the same as in the mystery of the Asham.
(Asham = the sacrifice becomes the very thing it removes, in this case sin, more explanation to follow).
Messiah had to become sin itself in order to fulfill scripture. 2Corinthians 5:21 He made Himself who knew no sin to be sin. Matthew 1:21.
Both the sacrifice and the sin are called Khataah meaning that, not only does the sacrifice have the name as the sin but the sin has the name of the sacrifice that removes the sin.
Every sin has or carries the name of the sin offering and if Messiah is the sin offering, the Khataah, then every sin has His name, for every sin has the name of the sacrifice.
So in the Hebrew language every sin we’ve committed, repented of, been forgiven for and is now under His Blood, bears His name, the name of the sacrifice. So therefore He owns our sin. They are no longer ours, they belong to Him now, so we cannot keep them for He is the owner of them His name is on our sin.
Isaiah 53:7 – 11; two Corinthians 5:21
One of the sacrifices offered in the temple was called the Asham.
It was for a specific purpose it removed the guilt of the one who offered it up.
Asham means guilt offering.
However it also means the guilt, which seems to be a paradox, yet they do in fact go together.
How can the guilt and the guilt offering connect in this way?
Because the criteria of the Asham, the guilt offering, was that it could only take away the guilt of the one offering it by first becoming the guilt. A full representation and identification of it. The priests action of laying hands on the Head of the sacrifice was a physical indication of this.
As in Isaiah, he prophesied that Messiah would be crushed, pierced and wounded for our transgressions and sins. However in the Hebrew original text it says more and declares that His life would become an Asham.
The same word Asham, used also in Leviticus. Here it is referring to the animal sacrifices offered up by the priests to redeem the guilty.
In Isaiah it is not referring to animal sacrifice but of a human life, that of the coming Messiah.
Here he tells us Messiah is the Asham and the Asham is the Messiah. This indicates that not only does He die to remove our guilt but He becomes the guilt itself. Looking at His death, we see both the sacrificial act and the guilt itself. The guilt of our guilt literally nailed to the cross\tree
The conclusion is therefore, if Messiah is the Asham and the Asham is the guilt, when the Asham dies so does all the guilt and shame.
All have died and been removed, gone forever and why He could say these words from the cross,
And very timely the old year is finished too and now on Rosh Hashanah, the traditional start to the holiday feasts, begins with two loaves of round challah, (bread). The round shape symbolizes the cycle of life and the crown with which God is coronated every year as King of the Universe.
To add sweetness to demonstrate the wish for a sweet new year, the challah is dipped in honey before taking the first bite.
Many people eat pomegranates on Rosh Hashanah, demonstrating their wish for as many merits as the pomegranate has seeds. It is commonly said that the pomegranate has 613 seeds, corresponding to the 613 mitzvahs in the Torah. However, this has yet to be empirically demonstrated by seed counters worldwide!
Rosh Hashanah emphasizes the special relationship between God and us: our dependence upon God as our creator and sustainer, and God’s dependance upon us as the ones who make His presence known and felt in His world.
Let’s Bless one another with the words
‘Leshanah tovah tikateiv veteichateim,’
‘May you be inscribed and sealed for a good year.’
You are loved! Abundant shalom and New Year blessings to every reader from your family and friends at MMM.
PLEASE Don’t leave this page without making that life-saving decision – time is running out. Don’t miss the day of your visitation!
The Shofars Voice is Calling for you today!
This life is NOT all there is!
You are not here by chance!
SAY THE FOLLOWING FROM YOUR HEART RIGHT NOW…Don’t put it off one more moment…
Heavenly Father I come to you in the Name of Jesus 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 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 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. Thank you that you have accepted me into your family in Jesus’ name. Amen.
You are now Born Again by the Holy Spirit of the Living God and you are part of the ever growing family of believers. You will never be the same again!
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