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Posts Tagged ‘Shof’tim’

My 2009 Shoftim Commentary

Monday, August 24th, 2009

Here it is, my Shoftim commentary. Or listen to it!

Shabbat Shalom.

Our parashah for today is Shoftim or “judges” and covers Deuteronomy chapter 16, verse 18 through chapter 21, verse 9. While there are many potential topics one could discuss out of this week’s parashah, the one that I found most compelling are the requirements the L-RD establishes here for an earthly king ruling these people once they enter the Promised Land.

I find it compelling because it represents a tragic moment in the history of Israel, because it demonstrates how the L-RD desired for His people something far better, and how far they have fallen from that ideal. The L-RD’s ideal relationship to the people of Israel is actually set down in:

Leviticus 26:9-12
“‘I will look on you with favor and make you fruitful and increase your numbers, and I will keep my covenant with you. You will still be eating last year’s harvest when you will have to move it out to make room for the new. I will put my dwelling place among you, and I will not abhor you. I will walk among you and be your God, and you will be my people.

This is exactly the sort of relationship one would expect believers to desire with their creator. To have the L-RD dwelling among them and to be rightly related to Him is what we all want, what we anticipate will be the nature of the World to Come. And yet, that ideal relationship is not what came about; not because the L-RD failed to live up to His promise, but because the people – all of us – failed to live up to ours.

You see, the L-RD did not originally desire Israel to be like the nations that surrounded it. He wanted it to be a kingdom of priests and a holy nation so that Israel would be an example to all the other nations of the Earth, and that all people would come to know the L-RD through them. In the L-RD’s original plan, there would be no earthly king or ruler in Israel; there would only be the L-RD in control, and all who lived in Israel would serve him faithfully. There should never have been a need to appoint an earthly king over Israel.

But things went astray almost from the start. The L-RD speaks to the children of Israel, giving them His Ten Commands by speaking to each of them directly at Horeb. And it was apparently a terrifying experience for most of the people gathered there, because, as we read in this week’s parashah, in:

Deuteronomy 18:16-19
For this is what you asked of the L-RD your God at Horeb on the day of the assembly when you said, “Let us not hear the voice of the L-RD our God nor see this great fire anymore, or we will die.” The L-RD said to me: “What they say is good. I will raise up for them a prophet like you from among their brothers; I will put my words in his mouth, and he will tell them everything I command him. If anyone does not listen to my words that the prophet speaks in my name, I myself will call him to account.

So, the covenant between the L-RD and his people, in which the L-RD would dwell among them and they would be His people and He would be their God didn’t exactly work out as planned, did it? In a very brief amount of time, the people ask for a change to the terms of the covenant and the L-RD’s response is recorded here in this week’s parashah. He accepts their change; He shall no longer speak to them directly.

But now, instead of dwelling with them, instead of being their sole ruler, the L-RD begins to indicate here that their special status as a kingdom of priests and a holy nation has changed, also. Those terms won’t even be mentioned again in Scripture until the letter of first Peter.

Yet we also can observe in the text that another change has taken place; instead of not having an earthly king, as originally planned, the L-RD anticipates that they will indeed desire one. You see, not only have they replaced the voice of the L-RD speaking to them directly with Moses as the human mediator between God and man, but they also have displaced Him as their ruler.

In the passage I’m about to share from this week’s reading, we see the L-RD establish rules for how the people are to select an earthly king to rule them, and in much of the Jewish commentary on this passage I have studied, it is taken for granted by most of the rabbis that the L-RD desired and even commanded Israel to have a human king. And yet that assumption, I believe, is somewhat mistaken.

To really get a good handle on this, I’ll share the first verse as it is rendered in the Complete Jewish Bible by David Stern, because I believe it captures a level of meaning missed by the NIV rendering. We read this in:

Deuteronomy 17:14 (CJB)
“When you have entered the land the L-RD your God is giving you, have taken possession of it and are living there, you may say, ‘I want to have a king over me, like all the other nations around me.’

Pay close attention to how that last sentence is phrased. The Torah here does not say, “When you have entered the land, I, the L-RD, want you to set up a king over you, like all the other nations around you.” No. It is not the L-RD’s desire that is being communicated here. Instead, it is the desire of the people to be like the other nations, rather than set apart and unique, as the L-RD originally desired them to be! So the L-RD here is anticipating this further distancing that’s coming between the L-RD and his chosen people.

It’s another step away from how God wanted things to be. So while some scholars and rabbis will argue that the L-RD commanded Israel to select a king over them when they entered the Promised Land, that’s not exactly correct. Instead, it is as though the L-RD is saying to them, “Well, this is what you want to do… so if you’re going to insist on doing things this way and being like other nations around you and having an earthly ruler over you… then fine, here’s how I want you to do it.”

Let’s take that mindest into consideration as we study the rest of the passage. We continue on, going back to the NIV, in:

Deuteronomy 17:15-20
be sure to appoint over you the king the L-RD your God chooses. He must be from among your own brothers. Do not place a foreigner over you, one who is not a brother Israelite. The king, moreover, must not acquire great numbers of horses for himself or make the people return to Egypt to get more of them, for the L-RD has told you, “You are not to go back that way again.” He must not take many wives, or his heart will be led astray. He must not accumulate large amounts of silver and gold. When he takes the throne of his kingdom, he is to write for himself on a scroll a copy of this law, taken from that of the priests, who are Levites. It is to be with him, and he is to read it all the days of his life so that he may learn to revere the L-RD his God and follow carefully all the words of this law and these decrees and not consider himself better than his brothers and turn from the law to the right or to the left. Then he and his descendants will reign a long time over his kingdom in Israel.

What I find interesting about this passage is how the L-RD continues to find a way to work with the Israelites and keep His promises to them, even as they fail over and over again to keep up their end of the agreement. Here he warns them of the dangers to having an earthly king, the ways in which one can go astray, and we know from our knowledge of Israel’s history that everything the L-RD warns about here is fulfilled in those who sit on the earthly throne of Israel. Solomon, for example, is the most notable fulfillment of what can happen if a king ignores the commands the L-RD gives here and takes many wives. Indeed, Solomon’s heart was led astray by his many wives, just as the L-RD predicts. And that’s just one example.

But the thing that really captures my attention here, because I think it really presents a picture of the promise rather than the curse, a picture of the Messiah rather than a picture of the ruler of this evil age, is where it talks about the scroll requirement for each king of Israel.

The command here says that he who is an earthly king over Israel must write out a copy of the Torah on his own, carry it with him always and read it daily. Can you imagine what that must have been like?

We at Beth Yeshua go through the Torah once a year, using the reading schedule developed by the rabbis called parashahs. It’s what we base our Torah commentaries on each week. When one first comes into the Messianic movement, it can seem like a daunting task! I mean, getting through those five books the first time – it took me two or three years to do it successfully, so that I didn’t get off track, fall behind, or give up part way through the year.

But when you really think about it… even the longest parashahs are maybe four or five pages in length. That’s not even one page of text per day! And all we’re doing when we do this is, we read it. And once we finally accomplish this, it becomes second nature and we feel closer to the text each time we go through it again.

Some of you may not yet have reached this point, but trust me, persevere and you’ll get there.

But this was not the case for the human kings of Israel. Not only were they expected to read the Torah daily, but they had to write out their own copy of it in their own hand! And this was not an era of copying and pasting off the Internet into a Microsoft Word document. There were no typewriters or even ball-point pens!

No, a Torah scroll is made from the skin of an animal, and carefully written out by hand. Furthermore, it must be copied precisely; if an error was discovered by a soferim, and it was a minor error, it had to be repaired; if it was an error to the name of the L-RD, that entire section of parchment would be discarded and redone. So it was very exacting.

Now ask yourself: how well would I know the Torah if I had to make my own copy and write it out by hand, like the kings of Israel were supposed to do? I suspect one would grow even closer to the Torah than they do by reading it; they would gain a closer appreciation for it simply by writing it out.

You know, I went to college for creative writing and one time I decided to type out the first chapter of a published novel, just to see what it felt like to craft words that were deemed good enough to be published. In doing so, I began to notice things my eyes skipped over when merely reading the chapter; I observed the author’s economy of language more than ever before, and gained an appreciation for how he built suspense in the scene with each word.

It’s the same with the Torah. Writing it out – each and every word, without error – would have made the person who did it come to a very deep and personal appreciation of Torah. So you may think, “Wow! The kings of Israel really must have known Torah well to have written out their own copy by hand and then read it daily.”

And they did. We know David, at least, followed this command of the L-RD from hints in his instructions to Solomon while David is on his death bed, urging his son to follow the L-RD in all his ways.

And yet, we know that even this closeness with the Torah did not prevent men from falling into sin, did it? Even David was led astray by the temptation of Bat’Sheva. Solomon ended up even worse. And then we read this tragic turning point in:

II Kings 10:31
Yet Jehu was not careful to keep the law of the L-RD, the God of Israel, with all his heart. He did not turn away from the sins of Jeroboam, which he had caused Israel to commit.

This was written of Jehu even after he cleverly destroyed many of the priests of Ba’al. By his actions, Jehu appeared to be a king faithful to the L-RD and familiar with his Torah, and yet this is his epitaph. The path of appointing earthly kings only gets worse for Israel as time goes on, as we read in:

Hosea 8:2-4
Israel cries out to me, ‘O our God, we acknowledge you!’ But Israel has rejected what is good; an enemy will pursue him. They set up kings without my consent; they choose princes without my approval.

You see, they continued to drift further and further, failing to obey even the command to consult the L-RD and set up as king whomever He appoints. So none of Israel’s kings ever really fully live up to the L-RD’s ideal. But this picture of a king who is so close to the Torah is indeed a picture of the Messiah Yeshua. He is the perfect fulfillment of this command, because he is the living Torah. This is why we should seek to observe the Torah and not rely on grace in a way that cheapens it. As Solomon wrote in:

Proverbs 28:4, 9
Those who forsake the law praise the wicked, but those who keep the law resist them. If anyone turns a deaf ear to the law, even his prayers are detestable.

This week’s reading is a reminder never to turn a deaf ear to the Torah of God, for when we do, we also turn a deaf ear to Messiah Yeshua, who is the living Torah.

Shabbat Shalom.

Shof’tim commentary, part six

Monday, September 8th, 2008

When my mother came up sick and we knew her time was short, my wife and I were glad we’d set some emergency funds aside in our savings accounts.

Here’s the rest of my Shof’tim commentary. Or listen to it!

When you think about it, why would the L-RD need to declare something as simple and obvious as, “You are not to distort justice or show favoritism, and you are not to accept a bribe?”

Easy! Because it is not in our nature to be selfless and pursue justice at ADONAI’s perfect standard, or even at the Torah’s minimum standard. As any parent knows, you teach your children what they do not already know, not what they already know. You teach what they are supposed to do, not what they are already doing.

So the answer to my question of how we got stuck dealing with all this mess of determining truth and justice may have begun in Genesis, but it is also explained in this week’s parashah.

Deuteronomy 18:15-19
“ADONAI will raise up for you a prophet like me from among yourselves, from your own kinsmen. You are to pay attention to him, just as when you were assembled at Horev and requested ADONAI your God, ‘Don’t let me hear the voice of ADONAI my God any more, or let me see this great fire ever again; if I do, I will die!’ On that occasion ADONAI said to me, ‘They are right in what they are saying. I will raise up for them a prophet like you from among their kinsmen. I will put my words in his mouth, and he will tell them everything I order him. Whoever doesn’t listen to my words, which he will speak in my name, will have to account for himself to me.”

This passage is one of the key messianic promises ADONAI makes to us, and he makes it precisely because he knows that no matter how many regulations he lays down for priests and judges and kings, none of them can ever live up to it completely, not to a standard that meets not just the compromise of Torah, but the perfect standard of ADONAI.

That could be accomplished only by the promised messiah, Yeshua. He is the one who me must, at last, allow to rule us, as only He is able to do so perfectly and free from selfish interests. We pushed God out of His role as justice-giver in the Garden, and rejected the restoration of ADONAI to that role by asking at Horeb not to hear His voice directly. Therefore, we must struggle to achieve justice and mercy, and to keep our land and our lives and our households and our families free from wickedness, free from injustice, free from the shedding of innocent blood. Yet ultimately we are not the solution to the problem, because ultimately we all fail. There is one solution, and it is found in the person of Yeshua the Messiah.

Shof’tim commentary part 5

Monday, September 8th, 2008

While some people believe Ephedrasil Hardcore is one of the most effective fat-burners, I know the most effective burner of spiritual fat is time spent in prayer.

Here’s more of my Shof’tim commentary. Or listen to it!

I once had a social studies teacher who was of the opinion that the most perfect and efficient form of government was what he called a “benevolent dictatorship.” The “one person decides it all” aspect of the dictatorship, in his mind, delivered efficiency because there would be no time spent on debate; and the benevolence aspect would, in his mind, guarantee that no one was treated poorly or unjustly.

The flaw in his theory, however, is the assumption that any of us could be benevolent and unselfish enough to handle the responsibilities of such a dictatorship. History is full of examples of dictators and, ultimately, none of them proved to be benevolent, certainly not benevolent enough to meet ADONAI’s perfect standard of justice.

Matthew 12:34-35
You snakes! How can you who are evil say anything good? For the mouth speaks what overflows from the heart. The good person brings forth good things from his store of good, and the evil person brings forth evil things from his store of evil.

We must remember, too, that Yeshua’s definition of what is good and evil is not like the world’s definition of those words. This is why a king is required by ADONAI in this week’s reading to write and constantly study a scroll of the Torah, for the only path to “good,” is through the study of ADONAI and His word. Any other path leads to selfishness, not ADONAI’s brand of justice. Indeed, the Psalmist confirms that the opposite of obedience to God is selfishness.

Psalms 119:36
Bend my heart toward your instructions and not toward selfish gain.

So, I think it’s now clear that there is only one who is unselfish enough that He could be a truly benevolent dictator, and that is Yeshua the Messiah; and it is not in His nature to play the role of a dictator, since in this life we are created with the ability to either follow in obedience or rebel against his perfect will. A dictator allows no rebellion.

Shof’tim Commentary, part 4

Monday, September 8th, 2008

While I look at my waist and sometimes wonder if fat burners might help, one thing I know I need to eliminate is the spiritual flubber surrounding my life. Nothing’s better for that than prayer and digging into the Word of the L-RD.

Here’s more from my Shof’tim commentary. Or listen to it!

While I could go into detail on any of these teachings, as I studied and prayed through this passage, my overwhelming question to ADONAI was, “L-RD, how did we get into this mess? Why must we be so involved in the messiness of setting such high standards for leaders of various types and such harsh punishments for various crimes? Why must we deal with so much death and bloodshed?”

As I studied and prayed, however, I was reminded of where it all began. In fact, it goes all the way back to the Garden.

Genesis 3:4-5
The serpent said to the woman, “It is not true that you will surely die; because God knows that on the day you eat from it, your eyes will be opened, and you will be like God, knowing good and evil.”

This was the line that the serpent used to tempt Adam and Havah; the desire to know good and evil. Unfortunately, like all the lies of the Adversary, we did not receive what we thought we were getting. It is true that we became aware of knowing the difference between good and evil, but by doing so, we were actually replacing a role in creation that ADONAI had reserved for Himself.

We were not meant to decide right and wrong, and the testimony to the truth of that is all around us in the world. Because, unlike what the world would have us believe, we are not born as inherently good. We are born inherently selfish and self-serving, because since the fall, we are born not in the glorified and sin-free bodies Adam and Havah possessed at first in the Garden, but in finite, temporary bodies marred by sin and selfishness.

Shof’tim commentary, part 3

Monday, September 8th, 2008

One of the nice things about doing a Torah commentary is that you don’t have to be an expert in weight-loss or the benefits of Fenphedra; all you need to know about is the Bible. Which is a huge task in and of itself.

Here’s more from my Shof’tim commentary. Or listen to it!

The closing verses of chapter 17 contain instructions for how Isra’el is to appoint a king, if they decide they desire to have a king rule over them as their neighboring nations do, and basic principals for how that king is to conduct himself in office. The most important requirement is found at the end of the chapter.

Deuteronomy 17:18-20
“When he has come to occupy the throne of his kingdom, he is to write a copy of this Torah for himself in a scroll, from the one the cohanim and L’vi’im use. It is to remain with him, and he is to read in it every day, as long as he lives; so that he will learn to fear ADONAI his God and keep all the words of this Torah and these laws and obey them; so that he will not think he is better than his kinsmen; and so that he will not turn aside either to the right or to the left from ADONAI’s mitzvah.

Chapter 18 concerns regulations for the priests and how they are to live. It also contains a very important passage that we’ll come back to shortly.

Chapter 19 covers how to deal with accidental deaths as opposed to murders, and the setting up of sanctuary cities, which we recently heard a very good commentary about. It also covers how to deal with witnesses who lie in their testimony to the judges of Isra’el. This is the passage that recommends such a liar should be punished in the same manner as the crime the accused was charged with, had he been found guilty. It is the passage Yeshua is referring to when He says, in Matthew 5:38-39:

Matthew 5:38-39
“You have heard that our fathers were told, ‘Eye for eye and tooth for tooth.’ But I tell you not to stand up against someone who does you wrong. On the contrary, if someone hits you on the right cheek, let him hit you on the left cheek too!

Chapter 20 instructs the people on how to conduct war against their neighbors, by always offering first terms of peace, in order to prevent the unnecessary shedding of innocent blood. And the first part of chapter 21 concludes Shof’tim with instructions on how to deal justice out in the case of a murder victim where there are no witnesses and the case is likely to remain unsolved.

More from my Shof’tim commentary

Monday, September 8th, 2008

While some people identify their profession through company logo shirts, for sometime who is pursuing ordination, it is the Word of God that is our identifier. Here is another passage from my commentary on Shof’tim. Or listen to it!

And what is justice in the eyes of ADONAI? First and foremost, it is a pursuit of discerning the truth, and then acting on it. There are several safeguards for discerning truth set up throughout the rest of the parashah.

For example, when speaking of crimes punishable by death, such as worshipping false Gods in the land of Isra’el, we read in Deuteronomy 17:6:

Deuteronomy 17:6
The death sentence is to be carried out only if there was testimony from two or three witnesses; he may not be sentenced to death on the testimony of only one witness.

The judges themselves are another safeguard established here, as are the Levitical priests. On controversial matters, we are told, the people are to bring their cases before an assembly of the priests and a judge, and they will render a verdict:

Deuteronomy 17:9b-11
Seek their opinion, and they will render a verdict for you. You will then act according to what they have told you there in that place which ADONAI will choose; you are to take care to act according to all their instructions. In accordance with the Torah they teach you, you are to carry out the judgment they render, not turning aside to the right or the left from the verdict they declare to you.

This pattern of establishing a system of human authority based on the Torah and ADONAI’s teaching is repeated throughout this week’s reading.

Some thoughts on Shof’tim

Monday, September 8th, 2008

The Torah portion I covered for my first commentary was Shof’tim, or “Judges.” It’s a portion that’s packed with some of my favorite passages from Deuteronomy, and although I was wearing shoes at the time, I appreciated the home theater carpet that spreads out over the floor of our sanctuary.

Here’s a portion from my commentary. Or listen to it!

Our parashah today is Shof’tim, or Judges, and begins with the rules and regulations for establishing a system of judges to help settle disputes among the people of Isra’el, when they enter the land. Shof’tim covers D’varim 16:18 through 21:9, and covers a wide variety of topics, but there is an overriding theme or two and that is the establishment of a system of authority in the land, and the purpose of that system of authority is to prevent the spread of wickedness, especially the shedding of innocent blood, in the land the L-RD God is giving to the people of Isra’el.

Now, it is important to remember that Moshe is giving the people a reminder of everything they have been through since leaving the land of Egypt, and summarizing all the teachings ADONAI has given them, so that when they enter the land, they will not forget how they are expected to live, if they want to continue to receive the blessings ADONAI has promised them.

The passage begins with instructions on how these judges are to rule in the land:

Deuteronomy 16:19-20 (CJB)
You are not to distort justice or show favoritism, and you are not to accept a bribe, for a gift blinds the eyes of the wise and twists the words of even the upright. Justice, only justice, you must pursue; so that you will live and inherit the land ADONAI your God is giving you.

Here, God is emphasizing the need to discern justice, rather than acting by other motives.