What Is The Connection Between 2 Mountains The Ark Of The Covenant And Messiah Being Thirsty? Part 2

In Part 1, we left off reminding ourselves that:

the location was so significant for the reason that it was where Joshua, a type of Mashiach/Messiah, had brought the children of Israel to reaffirm their covenant now they had entered into the promised land; the same covenant that Moses originally made with God for the Israelites on Sinai.

Joshua separated the tribes onto the mountains of blessing and curses.

These blessings and curses would follow their obedience or disobedience to the statutes and requirements of that covenant.

Mount Ebal and Mt. Gerizim looking west.

According to tradition the Mountains represented Good and Evil, Mount Gerizim was lush and fertile, while Mount Ebal was rocky and barren, clearly portraying the ramifications of our choices. We may choose the good path, cleaving to God and following in His ways, leading to a rich, fruitful life. Alternatively, we can embrace evil and negativity, which leads to an empty and barren life, devoid of all things good.

The higher portions of Mount Ebal are barren rock—the name means: bald stone, where only thistles and shrubs grow.

Gerizim’s lower slopes are abundant in fountains and are beautifully cultivated with much olive and fig trees. 

So here we step back in time…

to the days following the children of Israels arrival in the promised land – they had crossed over the Jordan River and had had their first victory at Ai. 

Then, Joshua took the people to Ebal and Gerizim.

He placed the Ark of the Covenant between Mount Ebal and Mount Gerizim. The people then divided themselves on the two mountains and listened to Joshua.

After Joshua gathered the people together he read the Book of the Law to them.

Now Joshua built an altar to the Lord God of Israel in Mount Ebal, as Moses the servant of the Lord had commanded the children of Israel, as it is written in the Book of the Law of Moses: “an altar of whole stones over which no man has wielded an iron tool.” And they offered on it burnt offerings to the Lord, and sacrificed peace offerings. And there, in the presence of the children of Israel, he wrote on the stones a copy of the law of Moses, which he had written. Then all Israel, with their elders and officers and judges, stood on either side of the ark before the priests, the Levites, who bore the ark of the covenant of the Lord, the stranger as well as he who was born among them. Half of them were in front of Mount Gerizim and half of them in front of Mount Ebal, as Moses the servant of the Lord had commanded before, that they should bless the people of Israel. And afterward he read all the words of the law, the blessings and the cursings, according to all that is written in the Book of the Law. There was not a word of all that Moses had commanded which Joshua did not read before all the assembly of Israel, with the women, the little ones, and the strangers who were living among them. – Joshua 8:30-35

Mt. Ebal

It is often easy for us as believers to get proud at what marvelous people we have become. Joshua gives us all a good reminder: Remember where you’ve come from. God would later tell King David:

“I took you from the pasture, from following the sheep, that you should be ruler over My people Israel” (2 Sam. 7:8).

In the New Testament Paul writes:

“Brothers, think of what you were when you were called. Not many of you were wise by human standards; not many were influential; not many were of noble birth” (1 Cor. 1:26).

What made the difference?

God’s grace.

Joshua goes on to say, whatever good there is in us now, remember who is doing it. It is not ours, but God working in and through us. Joshua does not just remind them of Israel’s history but also of God’s grace in Israel’s history.

As the 6 tribes were on Mt. Gerazim and the other 6 tribes were on Mt. Ebal – standing in the valley between the 2 mountains were the elders, the kohanites/priests, the priests assistants.

He placed the Ark of the Covenant between Mount Ebal and Mount Gerizim.

The people then divided themselves on the two mountains and listened to Joshua.

Hebrew: אָרוֹן הַבְּרִית ‎, Modern: Arōn Ha’brēt, 

Joshua stood beside the ark.

The 12 tribes were present and also the High Priest and the priesthood, who stood in the valley with the container of that marriage agreement – ark of the covenant.

Located between Mt. Gerizim (left) and Mt. Ebal (right), Shechem

Given the history that the Israelites had with this area, as well as the geographical features that allowed for a large group of people to be gathered… 

with this in mind..it is no wonder that Joshua chose this location to remind the people of the Law with God had given to them.

The 6 tribes on Mount Ebal 

listened to God’s curses for disobedience;

the remaining 6 tribes on Mount Gerizim 

listened to God’s blessings for obedience.

In the hearing of all the people, together with all sojourners, Joshua and the Levites read the whole Book of the Covenant “with a loud voice” (Deut 27:14), and the people responded with their vows.

Mt. Gerizim, the modern Jebel et-Tur, stands on the South, Mt. Ebal on the North, of the narrow pass which cuts through the mountain range, opening a way from the sea to the Jordan.  In the throat of this pass to the West, on the South of the vale, and close to the foot of Gerizim, lies the town of Nablus, the ancient Shechem.

Mt. Gerizim was the other mountain on the south and its top was 1 2/3 miles distant from that of Ebal. Ebal is 3077 ft. and Gerizim 2849 ft. above the sea. The valley between them is about 1900 ft. above the sea and in this valley is the town of Shechem which is 5/8 of a mile in length.

Mt. Gerizim – Jebel et-Tur. Deut. 11. 29; 27. 12; Josh. 8. 33; Judg. 9. 7. See also Ebal, Mt. Gerizim was later the holy mountain of the Samaritans, John 4. 20)

Deuteronomy 11:29 – And it shall come to pass, when the LORD thy God hath brought thee in unto the land whither thou goest to possess it, that thou shalt put the blessing upon mount Gerizim, and the curse upon mount Ebal.
Deuteronomy 27:12 – These shall stand upon mount Gerizim to bless the people, when ye are come over Jordan; Simeon, and Levi, and Judah, and Issachar, and Joseph, and Benjamin:

Joshua 8:33 – And all Israel, and their elders, and officers, and their judges, stood on this side the ark and on that side before the priests the Levites, which bare the ark of the covenant of the LORD, as well the stranger, as he that was born among them; half of them over against mount Gerizim, and half of them over against mount Ebal;

This ceremony was like a second Mattan Torah ( a second giving and acceptance of Torah). Before these two mountains, they are to renew their vows to God, because now they were physically in the promised land and because they, as a generation, had not known anything but the wilderness and had not experienced Sinai as had the previous generation.

Now they had become IVRI the ones who had crossed over the Jordan, recall this as the meaning of Hebrew and according to:

Deut. 27:12. These will stand upon Mt Gerazim to bless the people when YOU CROSS OVER THE JORDAN. Simeon, Levi, Judah, Issachar, Joseph=(Ephraim + Manasseh) and Benjamin

Mt. Ebal to speak out the curses Reuben, Gad, Asher, Zebukun, Dan, Naphtali and the Levites will speak and say to all Israel.

The list of tribes is in Deuteronomy 27:12-13 

Those on Mount Ebal, the mount of cursing, are the tribes of Reuben, Gad, Asher, Zebulun, Dan, and Naphtali, sons of Bilhah and Zilpah, slave women of Jacob’s two lawful wives.

Those on Mount Gerizim are Simeon, Levi, Judah, Issachar, Joseph, and Benjamin.

Those on Gerizim, the mount of blessing, are children of Jacob’s lawful wives, Leah and Rachel (Gen 35:23-26). Reuben is the exception—though he was one of Leah’s legitimate sons, he was cursed because he had forbidden relations with Bilhah, his father’s concubine 
(Gen 35:22; 1 Chron 5:1).

In Deuteronomy 11, God gives His people the choice to obey or disobey his commands. To obey brings about the blessing while disobedience brings on the curse.

The two mountain peaks of Gerizim and Ebal represent the fundamental consequence of fallen human nature; the struggle between what we should do and what we should not do.

Nablus, which is the site of ancient Shechem, lies in the valley between Mt. Gerizim and Mt. Ebal. These two peaks represent our moral dilemmas. God commanded Joshua upon taking possession of the Promised Land to set the blessing on Mt. Gerizim and the curse on Mt. Ebal  (Deut. 11:29). After conquering Ai, Joshua built an altar on Mt. Ebal; the mountain of the curse (Josh. 8:30).

Located in the Hill Country of Ephraim, the city of Shechem played a vital role in the history of Israel. This location, in the middle of the nation, provided the most important crossroads in central Israel. The city lay along the northern end of “The Way of the Patriarchs.” This road, also called the “Ridge Route” (because it followed a key mountain ridge stretching 50 miles south), traveled from Shechem through Shiloh, Bethel/Ai, Ramah, Gibeah, Jerusalem, Bethlehem, and Hebron. This route appears continuously in the Biblical text.

After they arrive at Mount Ebal, Joshua was to build an altar for burnt and peace offerings to the Lord to atone for their sins and to thank God for his blessings. But God added a command about the building of the altar,

“You shall wield no iron tool on them; you shall build an altar to the Lord your God of uncut stones” (Deut 27:5-6).

Why uncut stones?

God is saying that the Israelites should not think that they could make the worship of God better by making an elaborate altar and even one mark of a cutting tool would corrupt the worship of God. Further meaning to the stone the builders would reject would become the cornerstone and that His promise that His gospel shall be as the stone cut out of the mountains without hands; the Rock of our salvation.

In the history and drama of redemption, these places and the ceremony itself are significant in their symbolism. Shechem is the place where God first repeated His promises to Abraham when he arrived in Canaan (Gen 12:6-7). Under the leadership of Moses and Joshua, God again makes His promises of blessing to Israel, Abraham’s descendants.

Gerizim is also the site of the temple that the Samaritans built as their counterpart to the Jerusalem temple. They believed that Joshua built the altar on Gerizim and not on Ebal.

When the Samaritan woman mentioned that her people worshiped on this mountain, she was probably including Abraham and Jacob who built altars in the same region.

But Jesus/Yeshua countered by declaring that:

the hour is coming when neither on this mountain nor in Jerusalem will you worship the Father, when the true worshipers will worship the Father in spirit and truth. (John 4:21-24).

But what does Mt. Ebal represent?

It represents our disobedience.

Obedience to the commands of the Lord, then, is to give up our disobedience; for it is the disobedient heart that brings on the curse.  

But the terror and misery of the curses on Israel as a result of God’s wrath for their disobedience was just a foretaste of the terror and anguish of hell that our Lord Jesus Christ/Adonai Yeshua HaMashiach suffered in His life and death on the cross.

On Mount Ebal, Israel sacrificed burnt offerings for their sins, a foreshadow of the final sacrifice that God Himself in Messiah has offered for our sins: Christ/Mashiachs’ death on the cross.

We are an accursed people because of our disobedience. Like the tribes on Mount Ebal, we are children of slaves, and we ourselves are slaves of sin. The altar of good works that we build is not a sacrifice that rises as a pleasing aroma to God, because without faith in God’s final sacrifice of His only-begotten Son, our good works are filthy rags, a bad taste, and a repulsive stench before God.

BUT

Yeshua HaMashiach/Jesus Christ’s

sacrifice removes the curse from us:

Christ redeemed us from the curse of the law by becoming a curse for us (Gal 3:13), a fragrant offering and sacrifice to God (Eph 5:2).

Our own Mount Ebal is the hill of Calvary in Jerusalem where our sacrifice was offered once for all, hanged on the cross for our disobedience.

So how shall we escape from these curses and receive God’s blessings when we can never perfectly obey God’s law?

We are to -(spiritually)- walk the narrow WAY

through the valley from Ebal, the Mount of Cursing

to Gerizim, the Mount of Blessing,

through the perfect obedience of another Man-

through Jesus/Yeshua – the Dalet/the door –

the mediator of the renewed covenant and our ark of salvation;

paid for in His Blood.

We pass through the valley

Shechem

-(Ps. 23 of the shadow of death-the wages of sin) –

through His Blood on the Mercy seat of the ark/Messiah –

and to the Mount of Blessing

where the children become His stewards/servants/priests –

now a royal nation – 1Pet.2:9 – called out of darkness into His marvelous Light. 

At Mount Gerizim, the blessings are introduced in Deuteronomy 28:1-2:

And if you faithfully obey the voice of the Lord your God, being careful to do all his commandments that I command you today, the Lord your God will set you high above all the nations of the earth. And all these blessings shall come upon you and overtake you, if you obey the voice of the Lord your God.

Obedience is really the nature with which God has created us. This is our true state and thus what we truly desire. True spiritual healing is not so much to cultivate a life of striving to follow God’s commands, but to put to death our disobedient nature.

Jesus/Yeshua preached repentance not morality:

From that time Jesus began to preach, saying, “Repent, for the kingdom of heaven is at hand. Matt 4:17”

Thus to repent –

to turn from disobedience –

is to come naturally into obedience.

It is in a WAY, to build an altar of sacrifice on Mt. Ebal.

Ariel view of Joshuas Altar.

In the new Mount Gerizim where Jesus/Yeshua preached a long sermon on another Mount – in Matthew 5-7, Jesus/Yeshua pronounced His blessings on kingdom citizens as long as they were:

poor in spirit,

mourn over sins,

meek, righteous,

merciful, pure in heart,

had peace with God, and

persevere in persecution for righteousness’ sake.

Our reward is not earthly, but heavenly (Matt 5:2-12).

These are commands that even the holiest of believers can only begin to obey as they are very difficult words.

But in the Sermon on the Mount, Jesus/Yeshua challenges us with practical ethics to live by in our life in this imperfect world; while we await the perfect one that He will give us when He returns.

Without the Law, they will not comprehend their sin and misery and their absolute need for a Savior.

And without Christ/Mashiach being sacrificed on the Mount of Calvary to remove the curse from us, we can never receive any blessing from God…

Why?

Because in ourselves, we can never obey God’s law perfectly and be righteous before God, our only hope for blessing is through Jesus Christ/Yeshua HaMashiach, who gives His perfect obedience to us- obedience all the way to an accursed death.

Only by trusting Christ/Messiah can we be redeemed from the curse of the Law and then receive blessings from God.

At Shechem in the valley between the two mountains,

Joshua brought the Ark of the Covenant,

which represented the Presence of the Lord Himself.

Here also after the conquest of Canaan Joshua took a great stone, and set it up there under the oak in the sanctuary of the Lord (Josh. 24:24).

While the altar on Mt. Ebal represented a sacrifice – a relinquishing – of their disobedience,

the altar at Shechem was a witness to their obedience to the commands of the Lord.

Shechem means shoulder probably because the city was built mainly on the slope or shoulder, of Mt. Ebal. Some scholars say it means saddleback.

A saddleback is curved in 2 directions – indicating a place of decision.

(Think multitudes in the valley of decision עֵ֖מֶק הֶֽחָר֑וּץ, valley of strict decision or judgment, in Joel 3:14 )

Understanding Hebrew Language:

OBEY OR DISOBEY

The words KEEP and BREAK are usually interpreted as:

OBEDIENCE and DISOBEDIENCE

The Hebrew word for KEEP is: SHAMAR

רמש

ש מ ר

RESH MEM SHEEN

R – MA – SHA

Literally means: GUARD, PROTECT/PRESERVE and CHERISH

Strong’s Hebrew: 8104. שָׁמַר (shamar) — to keep, watch .

 It’s the same verb that described Adam in Eden: to cultivate it and keep it.

KJV: of Eden to dress it and to keep it. 

Genesis 3:24

Malachi 2:7 Guard – The Hebrew verb šāmar means to watch over, to guard, to keep, to preserve and to care for.

It is from the word SHEMA

שְׁמַע

A Hebrew word meaning:

To listen intently with willing anticipation and readiness to DO what is heard.

It is used in the most important statement of the Hebraic faith…

Shema Inscription on the Knesset Menorah Jerusalem, Israel.

SHEMA YISRAEL

שְׁמַע יִשְׂרָאֵל

Strongs #8086 shema: to hear

Original Word: שְׁמַע
Part of Speech: Verb
Transliteration: shema
Phonetic Spelling: (shem-ah’)
Definition: to hear

Here in Deut. 27:9 is the one line prayer called:

the SHEMA – Listen/Hear O Israel and obey!

It is the directive for them to Keep the words of the covenant and do them.

Shema Israel or Sh’ma Yisrael

Hebrew: שְׁמַע יִשְׂרָאֵל ‎;

Hear, O Israel

 Shema (hear/listen) is the Hebrew word that begins the most important prayer in Judaism.

It is found in Deuteronomy 6:4, which begins with the command to Hear.

The whole Shema prayer, which includes verses 4-9, is spoken daily in the Jewish tradition: Hear, O Israel: The LORD our God, the LORD is one.

The Complete Shema – Hear O Israel, the LORD our God is One LORD.

Shema: the First Passage.

In the recitation of Deuteronomy 6:4-9, special emphasis is given to the first six Hebrew words of this passage:

Shema Yisrael, Adonai eloheinu, Adonai echad

and a six-word response is said in an undertone

barukh shem kevod malkhuto le’olam va’ed.

and focus is on the meaning:

HEAR – LISTEN and DO

It was the answer Jesus /Yeshua gave in Mark 12:29-30 to the question as to which of the commandments is the most important of all….

“The most important one,”

answered Jesus, “is this:

‘Hear, O Israel:

The Lord our God, the Lord is one. 

30 Love the Lord your God with all your heart and with all your soul and with all your mind and with all your strength.’ 

Further reiterated by Jesus/Yeshua many times, when He spoke with the Hebrew understanding of 

HEAR – LISTEN also means to DO

James 1:22 reminds us to:

פָּרַר PARAR

 

The Hebrew verb here is פררparar,

Strong’s #6565 and means:

to trample underfoot.

Literally means: TO TRAMPLE UNDERFOOT

Hence the meaning behind Hebrews 10:29 trample underfoot is break and disobedience

Of how much sorer punishment, suppose ye, shall he be thought worthy, who hath

trodden underfoot 

the Son of God, and hath counted the blood of the covenant, wherewith he was sanctified, an unholy thing

κοινὸν, a word commonly denoting things unclean; Mark 7:2; Acts 10:14, 28; Acts 11:8; Romans 14:14; and Hebrews 9:13

 

How much worse (sterner and heavier) punishment do you suppose he will be judged to deserve who has spurned and [thus] trampled underfoot the Son of God, and who has considered the covenant blood by which he was consecrated common and unhallowed, thus profaning it and insulting and outraging the [Holy] Spirit [Who imparts] grace (the unmerited favor and blessing of God)?

verse 29: they have trampled under foot the Son of God. The Son of God laid his life down for them to receive as their substitute, and instead of receiving him as their life and hope, they paused, got some religion, and then stepped on him and went on to other things. Verse 29b: they regarded as unclean the blood of the covenant.

The ancient Hebrew understanding of these words:

The keeping or breaking of the commandments of God…

is not about mechanical obedience and disobedience of His commands

but rather

our attitude towards them.

Will we cherish His commands or will we throw them on the ground and walk on them?

Heavenly Father/Avinu in Jesus/Yeshuas’ Name may we have a heart to know, eyes to see, and ears to hear.

Conclusion coming in part 3..

Shalom shalom mishpachah/family and cheverim/friends!

Time is running out please don’t leave this page…until you

Know for certain you are His…

You are loved and appreciated and prayed for daily.

Thank you so much for taking the time to read the posts. If they have been a blessing and if you haven’t already, please sign up for free email notification, like, share and subscribe, it all helps to freely spread the Gospel to the uttermost parts of the earth and reaches others with His Truths.

Meanwhile let’s remember to stay alert and ready, be in prayer and in His Word for in an hour we think not He is coming… and…

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

What Is The Connection Between 2 Mountains, The Ark Of The Covenant and Messiah Being Thirsty?

This question takes us back to a location we visited in a previous post:

https://www.minimannamoments.com/well-well-now-eye-see/

When Jesus/Yeshua was tired and thirsty and asked for a drink from a specific well.

John 4:5-6 tells us this well was named after

Jacob

יַעֲקֹב

Ya‘aqōv 

(aka bir/beer Ya’qub),

and located in a city in Samaria called:

Shechem – שכם – shekem, or Sychar.

Suchar soo-khar’ of Hebrew origin (7941); Sychar

 In Israeli, the name Sychar means -. End

Strong’s Hebrew: 7927. שְׁכֶם (Shekem) — “ridge,” a district …

Strong’s Greek: 4965. Συχάρ (Suchar) — Sychar, a city in Samaria

Sychar. (ssi’ kahr) Place name intended to note drunkard or falsehood, though perhaps originally derived from Shechem.

So he cometh to a city of Samaria, called Sychar, near to the parcel of ground that Jacob gave to his son Joseph. 6. and Jacob’s well was there. 

Sychar liar or drunkard (see Isaiah 28:1 Isaiah 28:7 ), has been from the time of the Crusaders usually identified with Sychem or Shechem ( John 4:5 ). It has now, however, as the result of recent explorations, been identified with ‘Askar, a small Samaritan town on the southern base of Ebal, about a mile to the north of Jacob’s well.

Jacob’s well at the foot of Mt. Ebal and it is Samaria. John 4:20

The name Shechem is identical to the noun שכם ( shekem ), meaning back or shoulder: Excerpted from: Abarim Publications’ Biblical Dictionary. שכם. The important noun שכם ( shekem) means shoulder, and a person’s shoulder was considered:

the seat of their burdens,

whether physical or metaphorical.

(This is probably the root of our idiom of: shouldering the burden or, the burden is on our shoulders?)

Shechem /ˈʃɛkəm/, also spelled Sichem, was a Canaanite city mentioned in the Amarna letters, and is mentioned in the Hebrew Bible as the first capital of the Kingdom of Israel!

According to Joshua 21:20-21 it was located in the tribal territory given to the tribe of Ephraim.

Traditionally associated with Nablus, it is now identified with the nearby site of Tell Balata in Balata al-Balad in the West Bank.

The Significance of Shechem.

As just mentioned, in Hebrew shechem means shoulder, an apt description of the town’s location in the narrow valley between Mt. Gerizim and Mt. Ebal, approximately 40 miles (65 km.) north of Jerusalem.

Today it is known as Nablus.

This location is significant because Shechem’s first steps on the pages of Scripture was when Abram enters the land of Canaan from Ur, across the Fertile Crescent; Shechem was the first city to which Abram came. Genesis 12:6–8, says that Abram reached the great tree of Moreh, at Shechem and offered sacrifice nearby. Genesis, Deuteronomy, Joshua and Judges hallow Shechem over all other cities of the land of Israel.

The historical background is key to answering our initial question because Shekem /Shechem/ Sychar was the very same location that other notable events took place:

In Genesis 12, Abraham offered a sacrifice to God in this area. Later, Jacob built a well nearby that is mentioned a number of times in the Bible.

Shortly after the nation divided, 1 Kings 12:1 tells us that capital city of the northern nation was briefly set up at Shechem. 

And Rehoboam went to Shechem, for all Israel had gone to Shechem to make him king. – 1 Kings 12:1

Joshua 24:32: And the bones of Joseph, which the children of Israel brought up out of Egypt, buried they in Shechem, in a parcel of ground which Jacob bought of the sons of Hamor the father of Shechem for an hundred pieces of silver: and it became the inheritance of the children of Joseph.

Shechem was:

Dwelt in by Abraham and Jacob.

Abraham was promised the land.

 Jacob buys a plot of land and settles here with his family.

Jacob’s sons are tending the sheep here before Joseph finds them in Dothan.

Genesis 37:12 – And his brethren went to feed their father’s flock in Shechem.

The covenant is confirmed during the Conquest.

The city is set aside as a levitical city and a city of refuge.

Joseph is buried here.

The ten tribes reject Rehoboam.

Genesis 12:6 – And Abram passed through the land unto the place of Sichem, unto the plain of Moreh. And the Canaanite [was] then in the land.
Genesis 33:18 – And Jacob came to Shalem, a city of Shechem, which [is] in the land of Canaan, when he came from Padanaram; and pitched his tent before the city.

Here also Jacob dug a well for his many herds. This well is still there today. 

While Jacob’s family lived in Shechem, Jacob’s daughter, Dinah, was raped by a man named Shechem, the son of the ruler, Hamor. Jacob’s two sons, Levi and Simeon, made a deceptive pact with the males of the city and slaughtered them all in revenge of Dinah.

Years later, Jacob sent his 17 year-old son, Joseph, from Hebron to check on his brothers as they kept the flocks in Shechem. (Gen 37:12-14).

After Joseph arrived, having undoubtedly traveled up the Ridge Route, he discovered his brothers had moved on to the lush area of Dothan; so he went to find them (Gen 37:15-17). His brothers, filled with hatred, sold Joseph to some Ishmaelite traders who, coming through the Dothan pass, were headed for Egypt along the Via Maris. God used this sad turn of events to eventually take the entire family of Israel to Egypt, protecting and multiplying them.

Joseph’s last memories of Israel, before his brothers sold him, was of Shechem and Dothan.

He believed that God would one day return the nation to Canaan, and so he gave the command for his bones to be carried back with them and buried there (Gen 50:25).

It was a city of refuge:
Joshua 20:7 – And they appointed Kedesh in Galilee in mount Naphtali, and Shechem in mount Ephraim, and Kirjatharba, which [is] Hebron, in the mountain of Judah.

A Levitical city
Joshua 21:21 – For they gave them Shechem with her suburbs in mount Ephraim, [to be] a city of refuge for the slayer; and Gezer with her suburbs, And there on Mount Ebal, Joshua built an altar to God, and on a pillar of stones he wrote a copy of the law (Josh. 8:30-35).

Middle Bronze Gate

Part of the city’s fortifications throughout the second millennium, this gate is typical for the Middle Bronze period with three piers and two chambers.  Only the stone foundations remain.

This gate most likely was in use in the time of Jacob and certainly was the main gate of the city in the days of Abimelech (Judg 9).

Middle Bronze Wall

Vulnerable by location, Shechem was strongly fortified from its earliest history.  This wall was built of Cyclopean stones and continued in use through the Late Bronze Age without significant changes.

In the background, Mount Gerizim was the location of the Samaritan temple in the 4th–2nd centuries BC.

For a moment lets focus on Samaria which is where the Samaritans lived,

Shomronim/səˈmærɪtənz  – שַמֶרִים‎, in Hebrew.

It is a region north of Jerusalem. In Jesus’ day, the Jewish people of Galilee and Judea shunned the Samaritans, viewing them as a mixed race who practiced an impure, half-pagan religion. Samaritans, as a people distinct from the Jews, are first mentioned in the Bible during the time of Nehemiah and the rebuilding of Jerusalem after the Babylonian captivity ( Ezra 4:17; Nehemiah 2:10 ).

Shamerim: 

שַמֶרִים‎,

Guardians/Keepers/Watchers (of the Torah)

Ancestrally, Samaritans claim descent from the tribe of Ephraim and tribe of Manasseh (two sons of Joseph) as well as from the Levites who have links to ancient Samaria (now constituting the majority of the territory known as the West Bank) from the period of their entry into Canaan.

The Samaritans believe that Mount Gerizim was the original Holy Place of Israel from the time that Joshua conquered Canaan. The major issue between Jews and Samaritans has always been the location of the Chosen Place to worship God: The Temple Mount of Moriah in Jerusalem according to Judaism or Mount Gerizim according to Samaritanism.

According to Josephus and 2 Kings 17 Samaritans are descendants of the Israelites who mixed with people deported to their country by Assyria. This fits with the Assyrian pattern of conquest. The Samaritans also claim to be descendants of Israelites who remained in the Northern Kingdom, that is Israel, during the Babylonian Captivity. Their exact history is still disputed, but modern DNA testing in 2004 does support they are descended from Israelites with Assyrians and other nationalities as well.

They survived through the time of Jesus/Yeshua, and even, in limited numbers, to the present day. The Bible mentions plenty of stories about Samaritans, and the hatred between Jews and Samaritans features prominently in the Gospels. By the time Jesus spoke to the Samaritan woman at Jacob’s well, near Shechem, the racial hatred between Jews and Samaritans was paramount. . And the ensuing argument about the true place of worship—Gerizim or Jerusalem—was in full force (John 4:20).

Here it is pertinent to remind ourselves that in John 8:48 it is recorded that they call Yeshua/Jesus a Samaritan, and say He has a demon. He has been accused of having a demon before, but being called a Samaritan is a new charge…

Calling a Jew, Samaritan, was a racist insult ( 2 Kings 17).

However the more serious sin the Jews committed against Jesus/Yeshua was blasphemously telling the Holy God that He has a demon. (John 8:48).

Jesus/Yeshua has made clear He is the Son of God – that He is God. Jesus/Yeshua has so thoroughly answered their arguments the only tools left to them are name calling and violence.

The Jews of Yeshua/Jesus’ day were well crafted to attack Him with malicious hypocrisy to justify their envy of His popularity and to answer the undeniable proof of His miracles.

The Jews replied to Yeshua/Jesus, “Aren’t we right when we say that you’re a Samaritan and that you’re possessed by a demon?” New American Standard 1977

The Jews answered and said to Him, “Do we not say rightly that You are a Samaritan and have a demon?” KJV. 

It was an expression of insolence, contempt and scorn, a critical accusation, showing their disapproval of Him.

He denies the latter accusation, but does not deny the former that seems to be meant to accuse him of not having Jewish beliefs.

Although Yeshua/Jesus forbade the Twelve to go into any city of the Samaritans ( Matthew 10:5 ), the parable of the Good Samaritan shows that His love overleaped the boundaries of national hatred ( Luke 10:30 ; compare Luke 17:16 ; John 4:9 )

Jesus/Yeshua had a different attitude toward Samaritans than most Jews. He didn’t hold them in contempt; instead, he reached out to them.

Recall the account when Jesus/Yeshua healed ten lepers, of whom only ONE returned to praise God, and he was a SAMARITAN. 

When a Samaritan village refused to welcome Him, He didn’t allow His disciples to order its destruction. Messiah also told His apostles that they would receive power when the Ruach HaKodesh/Holy Spirit would come upon them and that they would be His witnesses in Jerusalem, and in all Judaea, and in Samaria, and unto the uttermost part of the earth.

He left Judea and departed again to Galilee. But He needed to go through Samaria. So He came to a city of Samaria which is called Sychar, near the plot of ground that Jacob gave to his son Joseph. Now Jacob’s well was there. Jesus therefore, being wearied from His journey, sat thus by the well. – John 4:5-6

In the Gospel of John, Jesus asks a Samaritan woman of Sychar for water from Jacob’s Well, and after spending two days telling her townsfolk/Samaritans all things as the woman expected the Messiah to do, and presumably repeating the Good News that He was the Messiah, many Samaritans became followers of Yeshua/Jesus.

He accepts without comment the woman’s assertion that she and her people are Israelites, descendants of Jacob. During this encounter she says that the mountain was the center of their worship. This is why the woman says our fathers worshipped in this mountain, and you say Jerusalem is where men should worship. 

John 4:20 – Our fathers worshipped in this mountain; and ye say, that in Jerusalem is the place where men ought to worship.

She poses the question to Yeshua/Jesus when she realizes that He is the Messiah and He affirms the Jewish position, saying “You (that is, the Samaritans) worship what you do not know” Jesus/Yeshua then tells her a time is coming when people will worship in spirit and truth rather in some particular place and this is the manner people should worship God. He also said, “You worship you know not what; we know what we worship for salvation is of the Jews.”

Highlighting the physical location (see various photos and maps included), the city lay between 2 mountains and Jacobs well was at the base of one of them.

The 2 mountains named Gerizim and Ebal and Sychar/Shechem lay between them in the valley below:

גְּרִזִים

Mt. Gerizim Hebrew Har Gerizim,

Heb. הַר גְּרִזִּים), 

Strong’s Hebrew: 1630. גְּרִזִים (Gerizim) 

Plural of an unused noun from garaz(compare Gizriy), cut up (i.e. Rocky); Gerizim, a mountain of Palestine 

Arabic Jabal Al-Ṭūr,

Mt. Gerizim, the modern Jebel et-Tur,

עֵיבָל

Mt. Ebal har `ebhal;

Hebrew: הר עיבל ‎ Har ‘Eival)

Strong’s Hebrew: 5858. עֵיבָל (Eybal) — Ebal

Perhaps from an unused root probably meaning to be bald; bare; Ebal, a mountain of Palestine — Ebal.

Arabic el-Iclamiyeh

modern Jebel Eslamiyeh

These 2 mountains, located about 60 kilometers (40 miles) north of Jerusalem, face each other with the modern city of Nablus on a very narrow piece of land between them.

Shechem is the ancient name with which we are familiar in the Bible. Nablus is approximately 550 meters (~1800 feet) above sea level and the mountains each rise over 300 meters (1000 feet) on either side. As the Israelites sat on these mountains to listen to Joshua, it would have been very easy for them to look across the valley at their fellow family members on the other side. 

This same area is the same location as the Biblical city of Shechem. Jewish tradition holds that the original meaning of the word is saddle, which gives an indication of what it looks like.

Between Gerazim and Ebal are streams of living water which flowed out of Jacobs well located at the foot of Mt Ebal.

Here we need to remember the underlying significance of this conversation because there is an act of intolerance here, which may not be immediately obvious.

It is not altogether in the question, “How can you a Jew ask me a Samaritan for a drink”, even though we are informed that Jews do not associate with Samaritans.

It is in the statement, “Sir, you have nothing to draw with and the well is deep. Where can you get living water?”

It helps to picture the scene because she must have been eyeing this strange man carefully.

First, she probably hadn’t expected or wanted to meet anybody when she came to the well; and certainly didn’t expect to find a Jewish man – nor did she expect him to speak to her.

Generally Jews would not enter Samaria and even if a Jew did, he would avoid as much contact with the people there as possible. Speaking to a lone woman would be suspect and might even be dangerous, yet this Jewish man not only has the audacity to speak to this woman, he asks her for a drink when he has no vessel to get the water or to drink from.

It may seem a simple request and a simple act of kindness to hand a thirsty person your vessel, but it would NOT have been for this woman. It would actually have been intolerable to consider it.

Why?

Because if a Jew touched her vessel, it would have been considered unclean and she would have to destroy it. (Probably if a Samaritan touched anything belonging to a Jew it would have suffered the same fate.)

This Jewish man had to know that, and certainly if the roles had been reversed would have viewed it the same way. She must have been surprised he would not only ask her for a drink, but also then offer one to her.

What was she thinking?

If He could give her a drink, why was He asking her for one? And where would He get it, did He know of another well nearby. Perhaps He thought He could draw it somehow from Jacob’s Well?

The well is about 130 feet deep: 

The woman said to him, “Sir, you have nothing to draw with, and the well is deep; where do you get that living water? John 4:11-12

His term

living water

would NOT have seemed unusual to her.

Why?

Wells had two water supply sources. (Collecting rainwater would have been done with a cistern.) Well water would come from an underground spring or an underground stream.

A stream fed Jacob’s Well.

Wells of this nature,

because the stream is moving,

were referred to as

living water.

Because of this, the woman did not see anything unusual in the use of this term, so she asks Him to give her this water not just because she won’t get physically thirsty again, but so she doesn’t have to trudge to the well and carry the water home again. She doesn’t understand He is talking about something beyond physical water until later in the conversation.

She asks for this living water and He tells her to go get her husband, imagine the shock she must have felt when He answered that she was living with a man who she wasn’t married to and had had 5 husbands. Little wonder she thought He was a prophet.

Her responses were perhaps rather defensive, yet she knows a Messiah is to come and He will explain all things.

We should take note of Jesus/Yeshua’s whole approach to this woman. He asked her for something yet when she declined, He did not get angry or upset with her, but in such a way to raise her curiosity He offered her something in its place.

Instead of addressing her question about His offer directly He asked her to do something, which caused her to face her own sin. However in this conversation He did not accuse or berate her about what she had done. He didn’t engage in attacking her religious belief or get into any argument, but gave her new information further raising her curiosity which led her to continue the conversation. Then after she admits to believing in a coming Messiah, she says this ONE will tell us all things.

Jesus/Yeshua says, I am He, and it probably hit her at that moment that He had indeed told her things He could not have known about her. Jesus/Yeshua had found this woman and having drawn her to Himself, finally revealed who He was and she believed.

Just after the disciples arrive at the Well, the woman quickly leaves. She had come to get water, but she forgets her water jar. Now she isn’t concerned with physical water because she has found  THE Living Water and can’t wait to tell others.

The disciples never ask what this was all about. They had gone to fetch food and now their only concern is eating. They urge Jesus/Yeshua to join them and eat.

He gives them another one of those strange answers:

I have meat to eat that you know not of.

What did He mean? In the following verse John 4:34 He qualifies His statement..

This is our meat also… to do the will of our Heavenly Father, so as we follow Yeshua/Jesus pattern, this is the meat and drink that means we will never again be hungry or thirsty – (spiritually). As food is pleasant, and delightful, and refreshing to our bodies, so doing the will of God was as delightful and refreshing to the soul of Messiah: He took as much pleasure in it, as someone hungry does in eating and drinking.

Was He also saying.. do you see? Are you looking for the harvest somewhere else in familiar fields which is not yet ready?

Or do you see the harvest is ready and ripe, right in front of you?

Do you see this woman, who you looked right past with contempt, she had been sown with seeds of hope and was ready for the reaping? Someone had sowed HOPE/TIKVEH, in these people, but it wasn’t you, however, here is the opportunity to reap what has been sowed and you should rejoice in it.

Open your eyes and see what is before you, not what is far away.

Now is the time to gather fruit to salvation. 

click link below for more on Tikveh/Hope:

https://www.minimannamoments.com/the-secret-of-the-ogehn-of-tiqvah/

The woman had believed and ran back to town to tell everyone. She urged them to come to Messiah and to see and experience what she had seen and experienced.

The people listened to her and they went out to the well to see Yeshua/Jesus. This is the first act of witnessing by a new believer recorded in the gospels.

The local people knew this woman and they knew her past. They sensed something had changed about her and as a result many came to believe in Yeshua/Jesus as the Messiah even asking Him to remain with them. Recall, these are Samaritans and Yeshua/Jesus and His Disciples are Jewish men so in a sense they are enemies. 

He stayed 2 days talking with them and they accepted Him as the Messiah they were looking for. Notice what they said:

Now we believe, not because of your saying for we have heard him ourselves and know that this is indeed the Christ, the Savior of the world. 

The woman did not save these Samaritans, she simply brought them the message; she became the sower and Yeshua/Jesus reaped the harvest. Again He was setting His Disciples an example, to make haste and sow the word. Do not concern yourself with the reaping, Holy Spirit will take care of that. We are to remember what is in John 4 and said in Romans 10:11-15. because as His Disciples this example is for us also.

In reality, springs of spiritual truth lie deep within us, not on the high grounds of morality.

The kingdom of The Heavens is within you.

Truth lies not so much in our many doctrines but rather in the

Living Waters

of Messiah.

Jesus said to her, “Woman, believe me, the hour is coming when neither on this mountain nor in Jerusalem will you worship the Father (John 4:21-22).

“God is spirit, and those who worship him must worship in spirit and truth (John 4:24-25).”  

Our walk towards Yeshua/Jesus, takes us to the well…the ONE springing up to eternal life. 

One must enter in to Messiah to reach the well ….but it is in the depths of the well itself where the actual Living Water is found… for Messiah is the deep which calls unto deep.

“Deep calls unto deep at the noise of Your waterfalls; All Your waves and billows have gone over me”  Psalm 42:7,

believers often use this phrase most often to refer to a deep, personal experience of the Lord ministering to them — from the depths of God’s heart to the depths of their own.

and Psalm 130:1 Out of the depths have I cried unto thee, O Lord. This phrase “deep calls unto deep”

consists of communication through prayer, from deep within the heart/mind of a man appealing to the deep recesses (a secluded or secret place) of the heart/mind of his God in a time of dire need and possibly suffering at the hands of enemies. 

We looked at this in the post 

and this is the very same location where John 4 took place and brings into perspective verses 7 and 10. The well of Jacob that gave life giving water to all the inhabitants of the land and it was why she referred to it in v 20 as being the place where our fathers worshipped on this mountain.

This is Mt Ebal – the place they understood where it was necessary to worship v.20 and then Yeshua/Jesus says

the time is coming verse 23 AND NOW IS when neither Mt. Ebal nor Jerusalem would be the location to worship the father.

He revealed Himself plainly to her and she knew Mashiach was to come then from her sharing her good news – many believed 4:39

Jesus/Yeshua used the parable of the good Samaritan and we may now have a little more insight and understanding of who the Samaritan was and what he believed.

Jesus/Yeshua was offering Himself as the living water and revealing His connection to the well. – This was why it was so significant to her and why she abandoned her container and ran to the town.  Shechem had a rich history with the Father, the scriptures say that many believed after her testimony because they were also looking for Messiah.

The location was so significant for the reason that it was where Joshua, a type of Mashiach, had brought the children of Israel to reaffirm their covenant in the promised land that Moses made with God for the Israelites on Sinai…….

Continued in part 2… meanwhile..

The story of The Samaritan woman should serve to remind us of one of the most important truths that even though the Lord can reach us in the most ordinary places – there is nothing ordinary about a life changing encounter with Jesus/Yeshua. We seldom see the kind of response shown by the Samaritan woman when finally she realized she had met the Messiah, the One who was to come.

Sadly many fail to be amazed by Him anymore and Messiah’s miraculous ways have become just every day events.. Is that because we’re still questioning whether this is the Messiah when we hear of miracle testimonies? Maybe it is because we’re not asking with the same convincing hope/tikvah that she had.

Perhaps in some way we have a doubting heart. Is it because we have not yet had that life changing experience ourselves?

This woman of Samaria was transformed because she met the man who told her everything she did.

Jesus/Yeshua was able to reach her in a way no one else could. Seeing in her, things no one else could see.

The message for us today as His disciples is that we need to eagerly get hold of our water jars and head for the well.

That well of living water springing up to eternal life, which can only be found in Messiah.

As we do,

we need to be expectant

that our containers will be too small to hold what will be waiting for us when we get there…

we must run to the well but not with the hope that we will drink… but that we will be filled and will never be thirsty again..

Mishpachah, if this bears witness with our hearts pray this prayer today:

Father I am running to the well today.. I have been waiting for you to come and I’m thirsty. Heavenly father remove all doubt and fear from my heart that I may know the one who knows me and all I have done. I praise you Father for from you alone flow those wellsprings of eternal life.. please fill me once and for all, that I maybe return from the well of Your presence with so much more than my jar could ever hold… in Jesus/Yeshuas Name..

Shalom, Shalom to all Mishpachah – family.

Please don’t leave this page until you have the assurance that you are filled with His Living Water and are sealed to the day of redemption by the Blood of Messiah Jesus/Yeshua.
Not sure ..you can be…
Make certain Messiah Jesus/Yeshua is your Redeemer, Savior, Lord and soon returning King and that you have a personal relationship with Him.
It’s all about Life and Relationship, NOT Religion.
You are very precious in His sight.
SIMPLY SAY THE FOLLOWING MEANING IT FROM YOUR HEART..don’t delay one more minute, SAY IT RIGHT NOW…
Heavenly Father I come to you in the Name of Jesus/Yeshua asking for forgiveness of my sins for which I am truly sorry. I repent of them all and turn away from my past.
I believe with my heart and confess with my mouth that Jesus/Yeshua is your Son and that He died on the cross at calvary to pay the price for my sin, so that I might be forgiven and have eternal life in the kingdom of Heaven. Father I believe that Jesus/Yeshua rose from the dead and I ask you to come into my life right now and be my personal Savior and Lord and I will worship you all the days of my life. Because your word is truth I say that I am now forgiven and born again and by faith I am washed clean with the blood of Jesus/Yeshua. Thank you that you have accepted me into your family in Jesus’/Yeshua’s name.

 

 

 

Yashab Marta!

Sit Down Marta!

מַרְתָּא לשבת

Luke 10:38-42

 Sit down: לשבת 

לשבת – to sit, to settle 

 verb: לְהַשְׁבִּית. sit down

Definition: to sit, remain, dwell

3427 yashab: to sit, remain, dwell

Original Word: יָשַׁב
Part of Speech: Verb
Transliteration: yashab
Phonetic Spelling: (yaw-shab’)
Definition: to sit, remain, dwell

Aramaic: מַרְתָּא – Martâ – Martha of Bethany.

In the Gospels of Luke and John, Martha,

(Aramaic: מַרְתָּא Martâ),

is described as living together with her siblings Lazarus and Mary in the village of Bethany near Jerusalem; in Iudaea Province (modern-day Israel or West Bank).

Jesus/Yeshua answered her, “Martha, Martha, you are anxious and troubled about many things, 

Vayaan Yeshua vayomer eleha Marta Marta ayefa vigeah at me eenyanim rabim.

42 but ONE THING is needed/necessary.

and Mary has chosen that good part, which will not be taken away from her.”

The name Martha comes from the verb: מרר ( marar ), meaning to be bitter.

Excerpted from: Abarim Publications’ Biblical Dictionary. מרר.

The verb מרר ( marar) means to be strong or bitter and can be used to describe tastes and smells, and hard or difficult situations.

Adjectives מר ( mar) and מרירי ( meriri) mean bitter.

The name Martha is also translated, in Hebrew, as mistress or myrrh, again coming from the verb מרר (marar), to be bitter or strong.

Martha also means “Lady Boss”, “Mistress”, or “Land Lady”.

From Aramaic מַרְתָּא (marta’) meaning “the lady, the mistress”, being a transliteration of the feminine form of מַר (mar) meaning master or Lord.

A royal lady; mistress; a name from the Bible Hebrew meaning: Bitter disappointment

Arabic meaning: Lady

American meaning: Sorrow

From the fact that the house into which Yeshua/Jesus was received belonged to Martha, and that she generally took the lead in action, it is inferred that she was older sibling.

There is a tendency to be a Marta in each of us….

When Jesus/Yeshua, repeated her name in this instance, in Hebrew/Aramaic it is a stern rebuke! Because she was anxious and troubled concerning many things…

Greek: Marian – translated Mary, also Miriam. Hebrew Marta, is translated into English as Martha.

מִרְיָם Miriam/Mary seated herself

at the feet of the Lord

she was listening to His teaching.

Mary is the English form of the name Maria, which was in turn a Latin form of the Greek name Μαρία ( María ), found in the New Testament. Both variants reflect Syro-Aramaic Maryam, itself a variant of the Hebrew name מִרְיָם or Miryam.

Marta was overburdened about so much serving, clearly at that moment, the Lord was more concerned about teaching than eating or drinking and it reminds us of His words in

John 4:32 But he said unto them, I have meat to eat that ye know not of. 33 Therefore said the disciples one to another, Hath any man brought him ought to eat? 34 Jesus saith unto them, My meat is to do the will of him that sent me, and to finish his work.

AND in

Matt 6:25 Therefore I say unto you, Take no thought for your life, what ye shall eat, or what ye shall drink; nor yet for your body, what ye shall put on. Is not the life more than meat, and the body than raiment? 26 Behold the fowls of the air: for they sow not, neither do they reap, nor gather into barns; yet your heavenly Father feedeth them.

We are to be meat and drink to (someone)… meaning to be appealing and/or enjoyable to someone, meeting both spiritual and physical needs.

He was not against food or eating, He got hungry too and was concerned for the multitudes who followed Him being hungry. We read on several occasions He fed them by means of supernatural provision.

We are not just physical bodies, we are spirit beings. Spirit beings have life and that life needs to be sustained. It needs to grow and the Word of God is our food.

In those verses, Yeshua/Jesus uses a metaphor, or an analogy. He says in so many words: I’ve got something else here to eat, I don’t need that physical food at the moment.

The disciples don’t understand. Yeshua/Jesus continues, and now He says unto them in verse 35, talking about this work:

I’ve got to finish this work. Say not ye there are yet four months and then cometh harvest…?”

Again another analogy, He is not talking about harvesting wheat or grain,

you say there’s four months and then comes harvest.…behold I say unto you, Lift up your eyes, and look on the fields; for they are white already to harvest.

These are those for whom He was going to die and He says the same to us today:

Look all around you, where ever the Lord brings and leads us. The fields are white to harvest.

There are people that the Spirit of God/Ruach Hakodesh has been working on and God will bring them across our path so that we can share the gospel with them.

Look on the fields, they are white already to harvest.

There are a lot of people out there that are hungering and thirsting

and we remember in chapter 7 that Yeshua/Jesus said:

“If any man thirst let him come unto me and drink.”

Once more, He’s not talking about water. He said,

“And he that reapeth receiveth wages, and gathereth fruit unto life eternal: that both he that soweth and he that reapeth may rejoice together” John:3:36
We recall that Paul said, “I have planted, Apollos watered, but God gave the increase” (I Corinthians 3:6).

This is what Messiah is talking about. Galatians:5:22-23 reminds us that there is fruit in our own lives which needs to grow.

The fruit of the Spirit: love, joy, peace, long-suffering, gentleness, goodness, faith, temperance, meekness.

It is so that our joy may be full: could this be the joy we will experience in heaven when someone approaches us and says:

I’m here because you gave me the gospel? You went out of your way, or you did this or you did that which brought me to salvation in Jesus/Yeshua. What you said and did opened my heart and my eyes; your example showed me the reality of Messiah living in you and that caused me to want what you had, it was a seed that was planted and later someone explained it further.

This is more likely what Messiah meant.

Returning to Marta:

Martha was distracted by all the preparations that had to be made. She came to him and asked,

“Lord, don’t you care that my sister has left me to do the work by myself? Tell her to help me!”

In life indeed, we are so much preoccupied with a lot of activities that could sustain our lives and improve our living standards. We are so much concerned about what to eat, what to wear, what to buy what to own and the means to satisfy all these unlimited human wants.

Sitting at Jesus/Yeshua’s feet, signifies a readiness to receive His word, and our submission to the guidance and direction of that Word.

 It was the hearing of the word,

the Gospel of Jesus Christ/Yeshua HaMashiach,

which Mary was occupied with; and which, ordinarily speaking, is necessary to knowing Jesus/Yeshua, and according to Rom. 10:14,17, salvation by Him, and to having faith in Him.

This is not the only needful thing;

nor does He say there is but one thing needful,

instead He says that there is one thing needful;

for there are other things that are also needful, and useful, such as meditation and prayer, and the Lord’s supper, and keeping all the Mitzvot/Commandments.

Here His meaning seems to be, that Mary

hearing the Word from His mouth,

and at His feet,

was the one necessary thing,

compared and in opposition to Martha’s many unnecessary things, about which she was cumbered:

and Mary hath chosen that good part;
or the good part, or portion;

Messiah who was, and is, the sum and substance of the Word

the good part, or portion;

She heard, and eternal life and salvation by Him,

His Way, Truth and LIfe.

In the Septuagint the same word used as here Ps.73:26 and Lam.3:24 where God Himself is said to be the portion of His people, and this is the portion that lasts for ever; and so also Jesus/Yeshua is our heavenly inheritance, eternal glory and true happiness, it is the saints’ portion so called in Col 1:12 the part, or portion of the inheritance with the saints in light.

The word answers to the Hebrew word, ; as it is said by the Rabbis,

“all Israel have, , “a part“, or “portion” in the world to come.”

In this scripture about Mary, all the middle eastern versions add the words,

for herself.

This choice she made, was not from the natural power of her own freewill, but as directed, influenced, and assisted by the Spirit and grace of God, and in consequence of God’s eternal choice of her unto salvation by Jesus Christ/Yeshua HaMashiach.

The part she chose is, that

which shall not be taken away from her;
This means it cannot be taken from her by men or any demonic means: faith which comes by hearing of the Word, and so with every other grace of the Spirit, is what can never be lost.

It is to be of great encouragement to us that as we continue steadfastly along the Way, our covenant with God, our belief in Yeshua/Jesus as our Savior, our readiness for eternal life through a repentant attitude of heart, cannot be taken away, nor can the believer ever be deprived of what was won at Calvary for us.

As we sit at His feet, we are to emulate the first half of

Psalms 46:10,

Be still and know that I am God!

It is a well known and often quoted verse used to encourage believers to be still and silent before the Lord.

While this interpretation promotes a healthy rest in His presence, it should also be understood as a command to wake up, and to stop striving, for we are to acknowledge our Heavenly Father 

for who He is,

and allow Him to do what only He can do, in and through our lives.

As God was addressing Israel in this Psalm, most likely during a time of war, He was not just telling them to be still or rest He was commanding them to stop fighting and open their eyes to who He is.

It is translated as, cease striving, in some translations.

Here we are reminded of Matthew 11:28

(click link below for more on the yoke)

https://www.minimannamoments.com/the-answer-is-in-the-yoke/

It’s easy to be fearful when things aren’t going well or when we are faced with challenges and conflict in our lives. In the midst of their struggle, however, God tells His people to wake up and recognize who’s on their side. 

In that light, the tone of this verse can be read:

stop striving, stop fighting,

and stop trying to do things on your own.

Stop stressing about the battle ahead and trust me.

Wake up! I am the Lord.

I AM

I AM

your refuge and your strength.

You have nothing to fear or worry about when

I AM

with you.

I will fight your battles and deal with your enemies.

So get out of my way.

Step back,

open your eyes,

and acknowledge who

I AM

and what I can do.

Let me be God.

Don’t try and do My job for Me.

Be patient, be still, and let Me go to work.

In the midst of conflict and lifes turmoil, sometimes we just need to open our eyes, step back, stop what we’re doing, and acknowledge who God is and what He can do. Doing so provides comfort in the chaos; and peace in the midst of struggle.

This is where we need to be like Mary and tell the Martha in us to

SIT DOWN and BE STILL!

Yashab Marta!

מַרְתָּא לשבת

We all have opportunities daily to be anxious and worried especially these days, we can feel overburdened, overwhelmed by situations and circumstances that cause stress and try to rob us of our faith and in so doing, steal our joy and in that, weaken us by wearing away at our strength.

Neh. 8:10

the enemy who is also …

He desires that our joy may be full that our strength may be full…

that is the enemy’s goal:

to wear out the saints. Daniel 7:25

From minor irritations, to full blown crises…things will constantly pull on our emotions, our flesh life, and try to steal our shalom, that peace that passes all understanding!

Sometimes, it’s hard to grab hold of the reality that all we see is temporary and will pass away.

Especially when there’s a situation that requires not only our full undivided attention but has to be fixed and solved immediately.

Yes we are to be doers of the Word, of course, however, there is also a time to come ye apart and rest awhile.

“And he said unto them, Come ye yourselves apart into a desert place, and rest a while: for there were many coming and going, and they had no leisure so much as to eat.” – Mark 6:31 

Ecc. 3:1-11 tells us there’s a time for all things –

the wisdom is discerning the when and how of a matter.

Putting His Word 1st place..

sitting at the feet of Jesus/Yeshua.

Listening, learning, becoming His disciple

is not only paramount, it is critical to being His child, and becoming all that He has called us to be.

Let us not be so busy that we too get a stern rebuke like Martha! because she was not only anxious and overburdened but maybe seemingly a little resentful?

Choosing the better part so it would not be taken away from us is exactly what we need to do…

and this is how we are blessed..we saw last post, Luke 11:28 blessed are they who hear and observe to do the word of God.

The Greek word Fulasso means:

to guard, protect, and take care not violate.

A similar instruction was given in Gan Eden!

It is indicative of how we should treat His Word and Jesus/Yeshua is the Word made flesh, so we must listen to His words and keep His commands that’s how we show that we love Him.

Verse 42 ONE is a necessity – meaning:

one thing that has NO option.

Choice.

Although we have a choice its not really a choice at all.

Just as choose this day and choose life –

we have free will and must make that choice and He tells us which good part will not be taken from us.

Deuteronomy 30:9

This day I call the heavens and the earth as witnesses against you that I have set before you life and death, blessings and curses. Now choose life, so that you and your children may live

SIT DOWN –

take the time to sit at His feet..

if we don’t have time

…then we are too busy.

And we are actually choosing to be overburdened with the cares of this life. (Mark 4)

BE STILL and know that I AM

Be still my soul

Be calm

Be at peace

Let His Shalom rule and reign in our hearts.

These storms that are raging, those waves that are washing over us – looking like we are about to be swamped and drown like the disciples felt in the boat… are not too big for Him to calm.

When Yeshua/Jesus speaks to calm the storm, in 4:39 Mark indicates that In response to the cry of his disciples, He addresses more than a meteorological force but a being/a spiritual entity behind it.

From phimos (a muzzle)

Definition: to muzzle, to put to silence. 

Strongs #5392 phimoó: to muzzle, to put to silence

Original Word: φιμόω
Part of Speech: Verb
Transliteration: phimoó
Phonetic Spelling: (fee-mo’-o)
Definition: to muzzle, to put to silence
Usage: I muzzle, silence.

When He commands the sea,

Peace, be still!

the Greek phrase means:

be muzzled or gagged,

as though the storm were a maniac that had to be bound and restrained!?

We read that instantly:

“the wind died down and it was completely calm.”!!

Be muzzled!

He said

Be still!

We must invite Messiah into the midst of our storm,

into our boat, and see Him muzzle the root of that tempest and He may have us speak to it in His Name.

…in the scripture it is recorded that instantly they were at the other side, arriving supernaturally at their destination.

Safe on the shore of the lake.

He will take us to the other side of the storm

if

we will simply sit at His feet –

if

we will just invite Him into the situation –

It is all conditional according to His Word!

Be not faithless but believing…

All things are possible to those who believe..

why ?

because we are blessed.

Blessed is the one who has not seen yet believes…

that IS faith!

Be still and know that He is God..

and having filled up with His word,

be led forth with His peace.

Decide today – right now that..

 

Shalom shalom mishpachah/family and cheverim/friends!

Don’t leave this page…until you

Are sitting down

You are loved and appreciated and prayed for daily.

Thank you so much for taking the time to read the posts. If they have been a blessing and if you haven’t already, please sign up for free email notification, like, share and subscribe, it all helps to freely spread the Gospel to the uttermost parts of the earth and reaches others with His Truths.

Meanwhile let’s remember to stay alert and ready, be in prayer and in His Word for in an hour we think not He is coming… and…

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

Heaping Coals of Fire – How is that a Blessing? – Part 2

Concluding from previous post:

What is blessing and who is blessed?

Again we need to remember that the New Testament, as we know it, has been translated from Hebrew/Aramaic/Latin/Greek and finally into the English language; and not discounting all the additional translations into every known language of the nations.

For the purpose of this post, we are looking at the most ancient meanings, not what we think or perceive it to mean.

In the New Testament, there are two primary Greek words translated as blessing and they shed some light on the Scriptural meaning.

The first is Makarios, which carries the same meaning as the Hebrew word esher.

The other is Eulogeo, which is used:

to give a good report or

say a good word;

it is more similar to the meaning of barak.

We bless God for all the blessings He gives us in Christ (Ephesians 1:3), and we are to bless those who mistreat us, because we were called to receive a blessing from God (1 Peter 3:9).

In the Greek translation where the word is

Makarios

Strong’s Greek: 3107:

μακάριος (makarios) — blessed, happy

According to the Key-Word Study Bible:

The Greek word translated blessed in these passages is makarioi

which means: to be fully satisfied.

It refers to those receiving God’s favor, regardless of the circumstances.

makarios: blessed, happy

3107 Strongs – Greek

Original Word: μακάριος, α, ον
Part of Speech: Adjective
Transliteration: makarios
Phonetic Spelling: (mak-ar’-ee-os)
Definition: blessed, happy
Usage: happy, blessed, to be envied.

3107 makários 

(from mak-, become long, large) –

properly, when God extends His benefits 

(the advantages He confers); blessed.

3107 /makários blessed:

describes a believer in: enviable fortunate position from receiving God’s provisions (favor) – which (literally) extend (make long, large) His grace (benefits).

This happens with receiving (obeying) the Lord’s directions and commandments in birthings of faith.

Hence, faith (4102 /pístis)

and 3107 (makários)

are closely associated.

(Rom. 4:5-7,14:22,23; Rev. 14:12,13).

The Greek word for blessed used in the Beatitudes

is makarios (plural: makaroioi).

This word has been used, mostly taken from the Theological Dictionary of the New Testament.

In ancient Greek times, makarios referred to the gods. The blessed ones were the gods.

Makarios carries the meaning of happiness that we just looked at.

The Beatitudes of Matthew 5 and Luke 6 describe: the happy state of those who find their purpose and fulfillment in God.

In the Psalms, the best life is available for those who love and fear God and order their lives according to His Word. 

Romans 4:6-8 ties this happy blessing to those whose sins are forgiven, for they know the relationship to God has been restored. 

Strictly speaking, there is no Greek meaning of the word blessed.

The word blessed comes from a German word ‘bletsian’ meaning ‘blood’! –

the reference being back to Old Testament sacrifices….

The English-speaking church chose to use the word bless as a translation for the Greek eulogeitos; this Greek word actually gives us the English word ‘eulogy‘. ‘eu‘ means ‘good‘ and ‘logy‘ means word – hence the meaning of eulogy is literally ‘a good word‘.

This Greek word eulogeitos was chosen by the New Testament writers as the nearest equivalent word they had for the contextual meaning for the Old Testament Hebrew word barak, which as already mentioned in Part 1/last post; literally means to kneel.

eujlogevw – Eulogeo – (yoo-log-eh’-o);

Word Origin: Greek, Verb, Strongs #: 2127

to praise,

celebrate with praises

to invoke blessings

to consecrate a thing with solemn prayers

to ask God’s blessing on a thing

pray God to bless it to one’s use

pronounce a consecratory blessing on

of God to cause to prosper,

to make happy,

to bestow blessings on,

favored of God, blessed.

KJV Word Usage and Count bless 43x

praise

makavrioß

Makarios – (mak-ar’-ee-os);

Adjective, Strong #: 3107

blessed, happy

KJV Word Usage and Count:

blessed 44x – happy 5 happier

makavrioß – Makarios – (mak-ar’-ee-os);

Adjective, Strongs #: 3107

Eulogeo focuses more on good words or the good report that others give of someone and also describes the blessing that we say over our food.

(Matthew 26:26).

This word is where we get our English word eulogy, in which we speak well of one who has passed away.

Having looked it up in Strongs and Lexicon this is what they all said:

ευλογημένος – Evlogimenos means blessed. Makarios does too. 

The correct translation is ευλογημένος (evlogimenos).

Makarios is sometimes used but it means more that that…as in

happy, having a peaceful soul

rather than simply blessed.

In the Vulgate, each of these blessings begins with the word beati, which translates to happy, rich, or blessed (plural adjective).

The corresponding word in the original Greek is μακάριοι (makarioi), with the same meanings.

Thus Blessed are the poor in spirit

appears in Latin as:

beati pauperes spiritu.

The word blessed that was used by Jesus/Yeshua in the Sermon on the Mount also called, the Beatitudes, with which we are probably most familiar.

Here the word is derived from the Greek word makarios which translates into happy or blissful. There are around 5 Hebrew and 2 Greek words that are interpreted as happy in the Bible.

The word happy in the English language is often thought of as Fortunate or lucky, cheerful, contented, characterized by or indicative of pleasure. (Random House College Dictionary). 

The way happy is portrayed in the Bible is much more meaningful.

As an example, the Bible doesn’t just present happiness to be an event or occurrence that results from luck or a brief feeling of elation. (There is no such thing as luck, coincidence or chance, in Hebrew thought, as everything is planned by God’s providence.)

The Bible states that happiness can be there, despite experiencing a correction from God or enduring hardships while on the path to virtue. (Job 5:17; I Pet. 3:14, 4:14)

We should think more in terms of JOY as in the Joy of the Lord.

The joy of the Lord is your strength

 (Nehemiah 8:10)

The first Lord means my lord of men or of God; a title spoken in place of Yahweh in Jewish display of reverence. LORD, in all caps later in the verse, refers to the root of our joy, which strengthens us. It is the Hebrew word Yehovah (YHWH).

This Joy, is a spiritual force because, God’s Strength and Joy are in Heaven.

David writes,

Strength and joy are in his place (1Chr. 16:27)

When David said that, he was probably thinking about the tabernacle – due to the fact that the ark of the covenant had been stolen, and David brought it back to Jerusalem.

The joy of the Lord is our strength, and is brought to fullness when we accept His provision of righteousness by grace that reunites us so we can enjoy His presence.

For the kingdom of God is not a matter of eating and drinking but of righteousness and peace and joy in the Holy Spirit. Rom. 14:17).

One Hebrew phrase is: to be at rest, safe.

(Matt 11:28-30). 28 Come unto me, all ye that labour and are heavy laden, and I will give you rest. 29 Take my yoke upon you, and learn of me; for I am meek and lowly in heart: and ye shall find rest unto your souls. 30 For my yoke is easy, and my burden is light.

If we read carefully Jesus/Yeshua was

only talking with His disciples,

NOT

the multitudes or the huge crowds following Him.

We may not have realized that He was quoting the Bible/Old Testament scriptures (Tenach/Torah/Prophets etc.) These verses read like a spiritual checklist…. References added..

See verse 1: His DISCIPLES came to Him

2. and He opened his mouth and taught THEM saying

BLESSED

are the poor in spirit for theirs is the kingdom of heaven

(Here poor in spirit is a Hebrew idiom for Repentant) Is.61:1

BLESSED

are they that mourn for they shall be comforted

(mourn can be interpreted as prayer/intercession)

Is.61:2,3

BLESSED

are the meek for they shall inherit the earth

(meek, also translated humble. Heb:ANAV.) Ps.37:11; when used collectively, it refers to a faithful minority/ a group remaining godly through all their trials, not giving in to the temptations of the world. 1Kings19:18 remnant referred to by God.

Around 24 verses refer to the remnant but are not so obvious because the Hebrew word ANAV has been translated into different words such as POOR/MEEK & LOWLY as well as HUMBLE. e.g.’s. Is 29:19, 61:1; Zeph. 2:3; Ps. 25:9, 37:11, 76:10; Prov. 3:34. 

Humble and Meek used to mean the same but todays modern understanding of humble denotes a lack of pride but not a lack of confidence; while meek means low self esteem and lacking confidence.

BLESSED

are they which do hunger and thirst after righteousness

 Righteousness is ACTION it’s DOING!

Hosea 10:12; Matt.6:33; John 6:53.

Being not just a hearer but a doer –  the perfect will of God – This is hungering to DO His perfect will. We are made righteous by faith and grace but as righteousness is action, we don’t just sit by and wait for our redemption, we work out our salvation by following Jesus/Yeshua and doing what He did and what He told us to do.

Hebrew root is Ts D K – Tsadik; and the Gk. verb is Dikaio: both mean to do right, to be just. They are verbs that require action by the subject of the verb. When we are made righteous by our faith, our behavior and lifestyle has to change. If it doesn’t 1John 2:3 applies. Righteousness and holiness are the foundation of relationships for all of humanity. Each of us has a relationship with God, with other people, even with animals who have souls. We are to do right, to be just in every endeavor, and we are to keep ourselves pure; this is our minimum standard! To go beyond that is Ts dakah – Hebrew translates as acts of loving kindness and doing unto others as we would have them do unto us – often called the golden rule.

No one can be perfect while in this earthly body but we can daily work towards being more like Jesus/Yeshua wants us to be. God knows our hearts and sees our faith and the Blood of the Lamb. 

BLESSED

are the merciful for they shall obtain mercy.

Also meaning those who forgive – literally this says to be merciful – which is a Hebrew idiom meaning to be forgiving – 2Sam.22:26; Matt.6:12-15; Mark 11:25. Also to be forgiving of self and walking in repentance – having all sins forgiven.

Those who are forgiving will be forgiven – this action is repeated in the ‘Lords Prayer’.

BLESSED

are the pure in heart

for they shall see God.

2 Sam.22:27; Ps.24:3,4

BLESSED

are the peacemakers

for they shall be called the children of God

Ps.37:37; Is 32:17

BLESSED

are they which are persecuted for righteousness sake for theirs is the kingdom of God.

Blessed are those who press on for the sake of righteousness – this means to walk in all the promises of God.

Prov. 21:21; Matt 11:12.

BLESSED

are you when men revile you and persecute you and shall say all manner of things against you falsely for my sake

Rather than a fleeting happiness dependent on current circumstances, the blessedness that Yeshua/Jesus spoke of is: deep, abiding, unshakable joy –

rooted in the assurance of God’s blessing,

both in the present and in the future.

The book of Matthew was written in Hebrew, so we can refer to the places where Blessing – Blessed – Bless is recorded.

Matt. 5:3-11

In the Beatitudes in Matthew 5:1-12,

is where Jesus/Yeshua lists

what it means to be blessed..

However this list is certainly not the first thing that comes to mind when we think of being blessed, or when we pray for others to be blessed.

Remember all those childhood prayers, God Bless Mother, Dad, Grandma and Grandpa, etc., we had no idea what we were saying!

Because we were actually saying,

Let them be

poor in spirit,

mourning,

meek,

hungering and thirsting for righteousness,

merciful,

pure,

peacemakers,

and persecuted! etc …

So how could such things lead to happiness?

It seems like they lead more to the opposite of happiness??

However, the Beatitudes tell us one thing clearly… and that is, we can never be happy when we live self-centered lives. We may be fooled into thinking we’re happy for a while, but eventually it will fold in on us because true happiness can be found only in a relationship with our Creator.

Only the One who made us, knows what will truly make us happy and give us satisfaction in life.

We have to get to the end of ourselves and to the beginning of God, if we are to gain any lasting contentment in life, and that can happen only through divine revelation and transformation through God’s Word and His Holy Spirit dwelling in us.

This is the

pearl of great value

(Matthew 13:46),

worth selling everything to gain it,

and ultimately, it’s the secret to true satisfaction.

What was Yeshua/Jesus’ purpose in saying such things?

Did He want to make sure we were miserable while here on Earth so we would long for heaven, or was it because He knew what would really make us happy?

This of course is in spiritual terms and not just for here and now but for our eternal home.

While trials are not blessings in themselves, they are channels for them and what if the trials of this life, the rain, the storms, the hardest times the loneliest nights, are our mercies in disguise? What if our blessings come through rain drops?

There shall be showers of blessing, this is the promise of love sent from the Savior above and this idea of blessing is also firmly established in Scripture.

 

One translation of the New Testament (ESV) has 112 references with the words bless, blessing, or blessednone of which connects blessing to material prosperity.

 

Sometimes saying we’re blessed can be a subtle way of boasting while trying to sound humble. We sometimes attribute it to such circumstances as e.g:

College scholarship? Blessed.

Unexpected raise? Blessed.

Wonderful family? Blessed.

As Christians/Believers in Jesus/Yeshua, we use that term too, of course. We pray God will bless our family. We attribute our undeserved gifts to God’s blessings. We talk about ministries being blessed, etc., etc.

For believers, is the blessed life synonymous with the successful life? Is it really the Christian version of the good life? A loving marriage, obedient children, a vibrant ministry, a healthy body, a successful career, trusted friends, financial abundance — if these are the characteristics of a blessed life, then having all of them should translate into an extraordinarily blessed life.

But does it? If someone had all those things, would they be extraordinarily blessed? Maybe by the worlds standards.

Rather than turning to God, they might feel self-sufficient and proud, perhaps a bit smug and self-righteous. After all, their hard work would be yielding good fruit.

Moreover, they wouldn’t need to cry out to God for deliverance; everything would already be perfect. They wouldn’t need to trust God; they could trust in themselves. They wouldn’t need God to fill them; they would already be satisfied?

What is blessing, then?

Scripture shows that blessing is:

anything God gives that makes us fully satisfied in Him.

Blessing is:

anything that draws us closer to Jesus/Yeshua.

Blessing is:

anything that helps us relinquish the temporal and hold on more tightly to the eternal; and often it is the struggles and trials, the aching disappointments and the unfulfilled longings that best enable us to do that.

Pain and loss transform us.

While they sometimes unravel us, they can also push us to a deeper life with God than we ever thought possible and they make us rest in Him alone.

It is Not what we can do or achieve for Him, nor is it what He can do or achieve for us. 

During times of pain and loss, we long for His Presence; they are the important and often critical times when we long to know that God is for us, and with us, and in us. Good health, great families, financial wealth, are all wonderful gifts we can thank God for, however, they are not His greatest blessings.

Why?

because they may make us delight in His gifts

but not

in Him for Himself.

God’s greatest blessing always rests in God Himself.

When we have that, we are truly blessed.

He, Himself, IS the blessing.

As noted earlier there are other Hebrew words for blessing are: ashrei/asre and esher, which is also translated as happiness.

Here we see the Hebrew word translated as ASHREY

ASHREY is a Sanskrit word which means:

a shelter.

In Hebrew it’s a prayer which translates into ~ 

Happy are they who dwell in Your house, they will praise You always..

and so we make a shelter out of love for everyone who believes in consciously living the WAY Father intended us to.

Some commentators note that ashrei/ashrey is a pun on ashur, meaning to strive forward… Ha’ish (the man) represents the ideal man of God who is not ensnared by the ways of the wickedness that surrounds him. The WAY forward is the Torah-perspective.

ba’atzat resha’im – is the counsel of the wicked.

In modern Hebrew אשרי

means: happy or praiseworthy

Ashrei ha’am shekakhah lo, ashrei ha’am she’Adonai elohav

Happy is the people for whom it is so, happy is the people for whom Adonai is their God תְּהִלָּה לְדָוִד

Strong’s Hebrew: 835.

אַשְׁרֵי (esher) — 

happiness, blessedness.

Original Word: אֶשֶׁר.

Transliteration: esher.

Ashrei (Hebrew : אַשְׁרֵי)

is a prayer that is recited at least three times daily in Jewish prayers, twice during Shacharit (morning service) and once during Mincha (afternoon service).

Ashrei yoshvei veitekha, ode yehalelukha selah.

Happy are those who dwell in Your house, may they always praise You, selah!

אַשְׁרֵי הָעָם שֶׁכָּכָה לּוֹ, אַשְׁרֵי הָעָם שֶׁיהוה אֱלֹהָיו. 

Ashrei ha’am shekakhah lo, ashrei ha’am she’Adonai elohav

 It is composed of different passages from the Book of Psalms, primarily psalm 145.

The prayer, praises God for being both mighty and a protector who takes care of the righteous.

Strong’s Hebrew: 833.

אָשַׁר (ashar) —

to go straight, go on. 

Ashar meaning: to go straight on, advance. to lead on (causative) to set right, righten, to pronounce happy, call blessed. (Pual) to be advanced, be led on. to be made happy, be blessed.

In the paleo pictographs the letters can also mean:

fire on the head or the chief fire:

Alefshin = fire

Alef – an ox, strength, leader, first.

Shin/sheen – a tooth, to consume, to destroy.

Resh/Reysh – the head person, the highest.

alef sheen resh

alef shin = fire ish

Reysh = head highest chief

This may seem confusing however in light of

Proverbs 25:21-22 (NKJV)
If your enemy is hungry, give him bread to eat;
And if he is thirsty, give him water to drink;
22 For so you will heap coals of fire on his head,
And the Lord will reward you.

Romans 12:20-21 (NKJV)
Therefore
“If your enemy is hungry, feed him;
If he is thirsty, give him a drink;
For in so doing you will heap coals of fire on his head.”
21 Do not be overcome by evil, but overcome evil with good.

To us, this doesn’t sound like forgiveness, but like taking vengeance and we have interpreted it as heaping fires of justice or judgment or condemnation or vengeance on the heads of our enemies.

This is primarily because our generations are so far removed from the lives and the lifestyle of those generations these words were speaking to. In the Bible lands almost everything is carried on the head—water jugs, baskets of fruit, vegetables, fish or any other article. Those carrying the burden rarely touch it with the hands, and they walk through crowded streets and lanes with perfect ease.

In many homes the only fire they have is kept in a brazier which they use for simple cooking as well as for warmth.

They plan to always keep it burning. If it should go out, some member of the family will take the brazier to a neighbor’s house to borrow fire. Then she will lift that brazier to her head and start for home. If her neighbor is a generous woman, she will heap the brazier full of coals.

To feed an enemy and give him drink was like heaping the empty brazier with live coals, — which meant food, warmth, and almost life itself to the person or home needing it and was a symbol of finest generosity.

Giving a person coals in a pan to carry home on his head was a neighborly, kind act; it made friends, not enemies. Proverbs 25:22 instructs us to give our enemy so many burning coals they have to carry them the way burdens are carried in the Middle East: in a container on the head.

If he is thirsty, give him a drink; for by doing this you will heap coals of fire on his head.” Aramaic Bible in Plain English “And if your enemy hungers, feed him, and if he thirsts, give him a drink, and if you do these things to him you will heap coals of fire on his skull.”

So the act of heaping coals of fire to an enemy was to show a love that is usually reserved to those who are our neighbors or kindred. It is a way to show a kindness reserved for those you love and trust, even when not deserving of it.

Blessed, happy, content, full of His joy.

Here are some of those who are blessed:

Matt 5 & 6, 13:16, 20:29, 24:46

Matt. 11:6 Blessed is whoever would not be caused to fall away because of Me.

Luke 11:28, Blessed rather are those who hear the word of God and keep it!” 14:14, 42:43 Gk. Fulasso: means to guard, protect and to take care not to violate!

Luke 12:37, 38, 43 Blessed are those servants the Lord finds ALERT!

John 13:17

Blessed are those whose lawless deeds are forgiven Rom.4:7

Blessed is the man who remains steadfast under trial Jam.1:12

1Pet 4:14

Rev. 14:13, 16:15,19;9, Blessed are the dead who die in the Lord from now on. . . . Blessed are those who are invited to the marriage supper of the Lamb also 20:6, 22:6-7, 22:14

Blessed are…

Those who watch!

There is no hint of material prosperity or perfect circumstances in any New Testament reference.

On the contrary, blessing is typically connected with either those who are dead, in poverty and trial or the spiritual benefits of being joined by faith to Jesus/Yeshua. 

 Ephesians 1:3 blesses God for all the blessings that He gives us in Christ, and 1 Peter 3:9 instructs us to bless those who mistreat us, because we were called to receive a blessing from God.

Bringing these threads together, we see that:

a blessing is a statement of good will and happiness that is said about another, as well as the condition that fulfills those good words.

God’s original design in creation was for His creatures, including mankind, to experience spiritual prosperity, peace, and fulfillment, but that design was destroyed when sin entered the world.

Statements of blessing are a wish for God to restore His favor on others or a declaration of His inherent goodness.

The ultimate blessing that God has given is the new life and forgiveness that comes through faith in His Son, Jesus Christ/Yeshua HaMashiach.

The material blessings we enjoy from day to day are temporary, but the spiritual blessings available to us in Messiah transcend both here in time and eternity, as well as both material and immaterial things.

As the Psalmist said, “Blessed is he whose help is the God of Jacob, whose hope is in the LORD his God” (Psalm 146:5).

A final thought

Those who receive a

blesSING – SING

of them in praise to the Lord who gave them!

We are blessed, We are blessed, every day of our lives we are blessed. When we wake up in the morning, when we lay our heads to rest; we are blessed, we are blessed!

Let us rejoice and be glad and declare… 

Blessed be the God and Father of our Lord Jesus Christ, who has blessed us in Christ with every spiritual blessing in the heavenly places… (Ephesians 1:3)

No matter what we do or don’t receive in this temporal form, we have been given every blessing through the complete work of Jesus Christ/Yeshua HaMashiach – His righteousness, resources and privilege.

In ourselves we are too small to bless the Lord!

However, we can think of how great He is;

and how wonderful the God of the universe is;

and tell Him while

humbling ourselves in a kneeling position of surrender!!

Baruk atta adonai eloheinu melehck haolam..

Blessed are You, Lord our God, King of the universe!

 

Shalom shalom mishpachah/family and cheverim/friends!

Don’t leave this page…until you are BLESSED!

You are loved and appreciated and prayed for daily and

that coals of fire are heaped on your heads!!!

 

Thank you so much for taking the time to read the posts. If they have been a blessing and if you haven’t already, please sign up for free email notification, like, share and subscribe, it all helps to freely spread the Gospel to the uttermost parts of the earth and reaches others with His Truths.

Meanwhile let’s remember to stay alert and ready, be in prayer and in His Word for in an hour we think not He is coming… and…

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