Friday, June 22, 2012

The Perfection of Timelessness



Can you imagine not thinking in terms of time? Well, God is timeless and so, it appears, is Hebrew. What you are about to read will give you a whole new confidence in the Lord. This may challenge your brain a little but it'll be worth it, I promise.


As Rabbi Jonathan Cahn[1] explains it, in English we have verbs, action words, that are time oriented in the past, present or future: He was, he is, he will be.  She did, she does, she will do. They ate, they are eating, they will eat. In Hebrew not so. It does not have these time tenses. There is actually no past, present or future in the verbs in Hebrew. All actions are timeless, that is to say, not bound by time - like God. Sounds like He may be behind the development of the language itself, doesn't it?

 
     Hebrew is not concerned with whether something happened and is finished. It could happen in the past and yet still not be finished.   All our actions as believers have effect beyond life in this world. What you do actually counts in eternity. Yeshua said that we will all be rewarded for our deeds. There are rewards in heaven for the generous or helpful things you do for someone else, or choices you make to honor Him. Didn't the Lord say we would be rewarded for even giving someone a cold drink of water in His name. He means what He says. There are rewards to be received in heaven, so then we can say that our actions have an eternal quality to them. And what is eternal is timeless.  


     Hebrew does not see verbs, that is to say actions, as being in time but rather actions are viewed as being in either of a perfect or imperfect tense.  Perfect means it's complete. Imperfect means its unfinished, and therefore, goes on and on. Being unfinished, it continues.  An action is either completed and therefore perfect and completed, or it's not yet finished or resolved and so it is still imperfect.


     In this earthly life we can only act in the present. We live in the now. But in Hebrew whatever you're doing in the present is always unfinished or you wouldn't still be doing it. But even so, it cannot be completely finished because it's never perfect. There's always something left to do to make it perfect. Whatever we do is imperfect because we're imperfect. No matter how we try to get to perfection in this life, it remains imperfect. Since only God is perfect, anything we do apart from our dependence upon God is basically imperfect and, therefore, incomplete. Most of us would agree that if we are acting out of our own efforts, it just never gets to that place of true perfection or complete fulfillment, where it lasts forever.



     We pretty much live by the imperfect, what is really never finished, and is based on being incomplete. Let's take our highest goal: To become holy. The fact that I'm wanting or trying to be holy means I'm not holy, and being unholy is certainly not living from perfection. If I'm trying to get God to love me I'm doing it out of a sense of a lack of His love. It just doesn't work. I can't get to perfection through my imperfect attempts, try as I might.



     If you're doing something to become perfect, say, to get to heaven, you're doing it from a place of being unheavenly, which is a state of imperfection. How could we possibly arrive at a place of perfection when we try and use imperfect ways to get there? This is the ultimate "You can't get there from here" dilemma.  We can only get to a place of perfection if we're operating out of a place of perfection. What about our efforts at re-dedication. How often have we gone to the altar or told God we were rededicating or giving ourselves anew to Him? The trouble is we're doing it out of self and self is always incomplete.  We can't really rededicate ourselves because we can't use what is imperfect to try and become perfect. How about our desire to serve God? We really have nothing within our imperfect selves to do anything for Him except what is imperfect. Being imperfect, even our motives aren't perfect.   So we see that in our own imperfect selves, we cannot arrive at the perfection which we desire. What to do?



    I know i promised you that this would give you new confidence with the Lord and I admit that so far it doesn't sound like it, but we're getting there. I have good news for you. My good news is The Good News. You can in fact truly dedicate yourself to God or serve God or for that matter you can truly love God because God has made you perfect in His sight. The miracle of miracles is that through what Yeshua did by dying on the cross, He didn't just forgive your sins, no, your sin nature was entirely eradicated!  No matter how high the mountain of your sins or transgressions, forgiveness is yours (hence the photo at the top). Not only your sin but your sin nature was completely taken away. Your old imperfect life wasn't changed to now try and be more like Yeshua. When you were born again, you were given an entirely new and perfect life. (See Gal 2:20. Romans 6:6, 6;3. Cal. 3:3.)  



Your old imperfect life died at Calvary with Him when He "completed" the "perfect" work of dying as a holy sacrifice for sin.  And we've been made complete in the completeness of His "It-is-finished" work! When He said those words, they indicated a perfect and complete action, one that only God could do, like when He created the world, because only God is perfect and complete within Himself.



The Old Covenant is based on imperfect verbs. You should, you must, you have to, you can't.  When you're under legalism, it's always imperfect, and therefore you're always trying. It's always incomplete - you can never do  enough. But the New Covenant is based on that most perfect statement, "It is finished."   It's  perfectly perfect.  The action is complete and the tense is complete. Even the word itself says it's complete.  So everything that comes out of our reliance on His finished work is then complete because it comes from Him and He's perfect. It's a matter of where our faith is - in Him in what He did and His life within us, or from our own incomplete self efforts. 



The first verb in Genesis. is perfect - "God created" - it's a perfect verb: bara.  He created the world with perfection. Only He can do that. It's one of the few perfect verbs in the Bible. Creation begins with God's perfect action. Later, when we read, "God so loved the world..." we read it in the past in English. In Hebrew it's in the perfect tense, not in the past tense.  "He gave" is perfect and complete. There was no unfinished quality to His action. So if we are to act in any way that will be worthy of Him, it must be perfect. The way to  perfection is to find our perfection from God's doing, not our doing. We cannot start from our doing.  We do based on His doing. The only way to find perfection is to do what we do based on what He has already done and who we are in Him - having been made perfect and complete in God's sight.



Now if we have been made complete by His action, then He removed from us every need to try and become perfect in His sight!  That's why we were born again as a new creation. The old one wasn't refurbished to be better. Better isn't prefect. He has made us, by His actions, a "completely" new person - one that is complete and perfected in Him. So that nothing in our relationship with God need be about attempts to become perfect, but rather we live from a glorious place of oneness with God, of total acceptance in the Beloved, and of security in our eternal destiny because of Yeshua's perfect action on the cross. And we live "in Hin" because of the perfect action of the resurrection which God accomplished as complete and perfect.  We never need to worry about being accepted by God, now or eternally, because Yeshua has already qualified us by His doing. We can now rest in Him knowing because we are in Him, whatever we do for Him, we do with Him. That kind of life is reward-worthy. The Lord told Abraham, "I AM your...exceedingly great reward" (Genesis 15:1). The greatest reward is Yeshua Himself. How perfect is that?



[1]  The information regarding perfect and imperfect tenses in this article is largely taken from a teaching by Rabbi Jonathan Cahn. For more of his teachings go to: HopeOfTheWorld..com. 

Thursday, June 21, 2012

From Pain to Peace

     
     Editing is a big part of writing. It's the crafting of a piece that makes it more than just words strung together in a story. But I'm also aware that God edits our lives and rewrites our plans with His own. One of His edits began early today when a neighbor knocked on my door. She needed a ride to the hospital because her other half was taken to the hospital this morning. They had a car accident when someone hit them and totaled their car. The ambulance took him away and she had to walk home. I quickly got dressed and off we went to the hospital. 


      It took us a while to find him as he wasn't in the first hospital and we had to go across town to another one. This is a bad part of town and quite frankly I have been entirely out of touch for a long time with that level of poverty and what most of the people there have to deal with. Anyway, on the way, in the car, she was scared and shaken, I talked to her about trusting Jesus and our conversation resulted in her turning her life over to the Lord before we got out of the car. 



      When we got to the hospital where he was and they finally let us see him as several doctors were working on him, he was in deep pain. Not knowing what was wrong or where this was going I was able to lean down and speak with him and he followed me in a prayer to turn his life over to Jesus, whispering the words. I laid my hand over his where he was holding his ribs and I asked Jesus to touch Him through my hand and to bring life to him and release him from pain. When I prayed for peace and healing for him, he went from writhing in pain to peace and fell asleep. For a moment I had to look to see if he was still breathing he was so still. When he woke up again he seemed still in pain, though not as before, and I taught her that now that Jesus lived inside of her she had authority of His name to pray for people and she could lay her hand on him gently and speak peace over him in Jesus' name. She did and he settled down again. She told me she would share this with others because what better place is there than an emergency room to share Jesus with people.  Born again for an hour and already she's wanting to share Him with others. That's what I'm talkin' about.



       As I went to leave, in the next cubicle was a young man about thirty years old holding his jaw and looking like he too was in a lot of pain. I went in and talked to him. He couldn't move his jaw to talk but he responded with his eyes.  I asked him The Question:  Did he know Jesus?  Jesus could help him, did he want Jesus? He nodded almost imperceptibly but his eyes signaled yes.  I laid my hand on his shoulder and again prayed for Jesus to touch him and ease his pain. I told him to pray in his heart, following me in what I was going to say which he did and turned his life over to Jesus. I could see it on his face. A re-dedication if not a salvation.  I went back to check on my friends again before I left and when I went past the second man's cubical on my way out, he  waved to me. Felt like a brother waving to me. There seemed to be a message in the wave, like "Thanks for bringing Jesus to me." Joy! That's when you can feel the Lord's joy, bringing Him to someone who knows He just entered their lives in a meaningful way.



      I got to lay my hands on someone else parked on a liter in the hallway who was in extreme pain and pray and see her settle down, at least for a while. I had to go back and pray a few times until the doc finally came to her. The suffering was almost overwhelming in that ER, and many of the people outside waiting for rides, etc. are living lives that are far from my own daily experiences. Compassion arises. It puts some of my intellectual head stuff in a different perspective. Loving people who are suffering suddenly seems to take on a whole new visibility. I wonder if God isn't doing some editing of His own in the book of my life. 

Friday, June 15, 2012

The Fallacy of Ownership


The key to your heart's true lasting security and rest in God has been found! You thought I was going to say in Yeshua, didn't you? Well, yes, He is the only way to it. But how many true believers in Yeshua are not fully at rest in Him, try as they might? Are you one of them?  Even sometimes? Would it surprise you to learn that the key is in thinking like a Hebrew. If you thought like a Hebrew, you would have a different understanding of life in God then you more than likely do now. You would be able to live in the same peace, power and fearlessness that Yeshua's first disciples did.  


As you read on, you will see why God's adversary, the devil, hates Israel. Because Israel - and it's language - is the one way we can truly understand God and His Word as He meant for all who follow Him to know Him. There are so many deep meanings in Hebrew that do not exist in other translations. Hebrew was lost as a spoken language following the destruction of Jerusalem. But God prophesied through Jeremiah that it would be spoken in the same Land again:  Thus says the Lord of hosts, the God of Israel, “Once again they will speak this word in the land of Judah and in its cities when I restore their fortunes"  (Jer. 31:23).  In order to know how God really thinks, we must think like a Hebrew. We are blessed today to grasp some of the deeper foundational truths of salvation through the restoration of the language of Hebrew since Israel has been back in their Land.



What you are about to read is how Yeshua understood the Bible, including the prophesies and how His desciples would have understood God and His Words to Israel.  The Bible says we are to have the mind of Messiah.  Before Yeshua returns, according to the "restoration" that must take place before He does (see Acts 3:21), it is quite likely that His people must think as He thinks. Would you marry someone with whom you couldn't really communicate, who didn't understand your deepest thoughts and desires? Marriage is a type of our relationship with Messiah Yeshua. We are to worship, that is to say, relate to God in Spirit and in truth. All else is misleading and false. So what does He see is false so we can avoid it?



The Fallacy of Ownership: [1]  One of the numerous properties of Biblical Hebrew is that there are no words that are possessive. Our lives largely circle around the things we posses, what we own, the obtaining of them, earning the money to pay for them, the caring for them, the protecting them. The same thing goes for relationships. We say things like my wife, my husband, my friend, my dog. We also say my car, my house, my business and even, my problem.  In ancient Hebrew there is no such thing as anyone owning anything. You  cannot say "I have a car, I have a degree, I have ..." 



This was the language of Abraham, Isaac and Jacob who lived in tents and didn't own much compared to what we do. Could you imagine Abraham and his kin shlepping a bureau or a dining room table with them each time they moved?  It's also the language of the priests to the nation.  The royal priesthood were given no inheritance but the Lord. They couldn't own anything. In the same way, Hebrew is a priestly language. There is no ownership but the Lord is our (only) inheritance. And we have to think like a Hebrew to know what God is really saying.



When Yeshua came to earth, He owned nothing. He had no possessive concepts.  At one time I realized that Yeshua owned absolutely nothing. It was somewhat disconcerting when I realized how encumbered I am with 'things'. He said He even "had nowhere to lay His head" (Matt 8:20; Luke 9:58).  Well,  God does give us all things to enjoy. On the other hand, Paul said to Timothy,  "Instruct those who are rich in this present world not to be conceited or to fix their hope on the uncertainty of riches, but on God, who richly supplies us with all things to enjoy" (1 Tim. 6:17).
We say, "I have" but it's really an illusion. Hebrew is very truthful, more than English.. Owning things is really an illusion.  Ba'al was the lord of the Canaanites - he was a fully unrighteous god in every way.  The word ba'al means "master" or "owner".  When you own things, and you possess them, you become a ba'al - like a god over your possessions. The more possessive we get, the more we take upon ourselves all kinds of anxieties and striving surrounding our possessions. They are a false sense of security at best.



In Hebrew you can't say something in yours, but you would say it is "to" me. Hebrew has a L' - meaning something or someone is "to" you..  L' = to.  You can't say I have a house. You say the house is "to" me. (My own name in Hebrew, pronounced L'ani means "to me.") Things are "to" you, they are not yours. fi they are to you, then they are from someone else - God!  He is the giver of all things. It implies direction toward us and our receiving them, contrary to our "having" them on own, or our ownership of them as if we could produce them on our own.  In Hebrew you really don't have things or own anything but rather things are to you.   What you have is really a gift to you from God. When you see things this way, and you let go of your sense of ownership, you begin to see His provision and love for you. When you let go of the false idea of ownership you are free to see the love of God who brings things L'atah. - to you.  You have to let go in order to receive the blessings of seeing how all things come to you from God



All things are really L'Adonai, or L'Yohavah. - to the Lord, or to YHVH.  They belonged to God.  The priests have on their turbans, "Holy to the Lord" "Kadosh L'Adonai" (Exodus 38:26). The Sabbath is Kadosh L'Adonai (Ex. 31:15), the altar in the Holy of Holies is Kadosh L'Adonai (30:10). There are 22 references to Kadosh L'Adonai in the Scritpures.  It may surprise you to see what is Kadosh L'Adonai - even you!  God owns all things, including you!  In Hebrew we say, "All things are to God."  Even our lives are His. We must give our lives to God. Like bride and bridegroom give themselves to one another in a covenant of love.  



This even applies in very practical ways. In Hebrew you can't even say: my need, my struggle, my problem. In Hebrew you say the problem is to me. You con't own the problem. When you release the problem, you're thinking like a Hebrew in your heart. It's not a problems anymore because it really belongs to God and He has promised for those who love Him that He will "work all things together for good..." (Romans 8:28).  When you see it like that, it's not yours anymore. It's His. Let it go.  Life is a gift. That's the Hebrew way of seeing life in its entirety. 



I picked up a non-Christian self-help book out of the blue just this week as God was showing me thsese principles. It said to close your eyes and locate your past and your future and to point to them with your hands over your head. Your past was supposed to be behind you and your future in front of you, but some people's past is still in front of them as they keep dealing with it. I saw that my past was right here with me, around me, and in me. At first I wondered what that could mean but then I realized that I am a product of my past. I have given all of my past to God, in some cases, incident after incident as I forgave or asked for forgiveness where needed.  Who I am today is the sum total of all I have experienced, the good or the not so good, because it has all been given to God so it's all "in Him."  My past is now all "for good" because He has "worked all things together for good" (Romans 8:28), for and in me. My past isn't mine. It was to me, but isn't even that anymore. I have no ownership in that sense of my past, whether the glories (they belong to Him) or the sorrows (He's taken my sorrows).  How wonderful is that?! How wonderful is He?!!!!

In the Song of Solomon, in English we read, "I am my beloved's and my beloved is mine." That's not what it says in Hebrew. It says, "My beloving is L'ani, to me and I am to him." There is no possessive.  The only proper response to God is to be "to him."  We can give up our ownership of each other. What a freedom that brings to a relationship. We are not each others to own or correct or judge. That's for God to do. We are to love one another as God loves us - unconditionally. When we give up the sense of owning another person, we can let God take care what we may have been frustrated about and just enjoy them. We can even give up our ownership of our past. Your past is no longer yours It was L'atah, to you, not your own. Let go and let God work everything for the good on your behalf. No more hurts. Give them to God and now they are to you for good. Let go and let God work all things "to you."  Thinking like a Hebrew in this way, as God meant for you to, will unlock the freedom in your heart you've been longing for. 



[1]  Much of this information on non-possessive Hebrew comes from a message by Rabbi Jonathan Cahn. For more of his teachings go to: HopeOfTheWorld.org . 

Friday, June 8, 2012

Assured of His Love


Could it be that the way you believe God to have been with Israel affects whether or not you can rest in His love for you? 

 

      Contrary to the general Christian idea that Jews kept the laws of Torah under duress and stress in an exhaustive and futile attempt to gain God's favor, most of time Jews rested in the full assurance that God had chosen them for His very own people over all the others of the earth. They rested in His care and obeyed His Word out of affection and love for Him.  Aside from when a generation, as the Bible stories tell us, forgot about Him and was wooed away to worship other gods, Israel remained secure in God's care for them. When walking with God, Israel did not fear loosing His favor or His presence with them, but carried out His Word with hearts appreciative of His goodness and protection and provision to them. They weren't trying to be "saved" because their idea of salvation was that God's protection and favor was already theirs as a nation. And they didn't constantly fear displeasing Him as Christians often expect they did.  For the most part, Jews enjoyed God, loved Him and lived their lives entirely around Him in celebrations of Him and His bounty to them throughout the year.  



     For those who have thought of Torah as God's way of teaching mankind (Israel) that they can't keep His commandments, that would not have occurred to any Hebrew man or woman. Nor did God give them the Torah to keep Israel in a constant state of frustration and failure for two thousand years, generation after generation.  God gave them ways to be forgiven when they failed, just as He has given us Yeshua's gift of forgiveness and salvation. Theirs was much more complicated from the human standpoint - of having to take an animal for the sacrifice to the temple to have it slaughtered, but the goal is the same, forgiveness.   The difference is that when we accept Yeshua's forgiveness it is complete and total and eternal. The curse of the Fall of mankind is no longer upon us. We have been redeemed and restored to a place before Almighty God, a privilege Israel did not have under Torah alone.



       But God is "the same yesterday, today and forever."  Grace may be realized through Yeshua but it doesn't mean grace wasn't there before Yeshua. Read through David's psalms and make note of his security in God, and even when he sinned God forgave him. David speaks of his security in God, his love for His presence, and where he expected God's protection against his enemies. His assurance in God has been a great comfort to millions as they find that same assurance through David's faith in God. I suggest that his faith was more akin to how Israel saw God on their behalf than the idea that Christians often have of Israel struggling to keep laws to gain God's favor but never really getting there. This idea not only distorts God's ways with Israel, thereby affecting how many view God's attitude toward Israel even today, but more importantly, it distorts our understanding of God.  If we think God rejected Israel after all His promises to them, it may set up even an unconscious expectation that He might reject believers if we fail to meet His standards. 

    


     Note: "Replacement Theology" says that God's promises to Israel were revoked as no longer being God's promises to Israel and the Gentile believers then "replaced" Israel as the recipients of all those promises. Promises of the Land to Israel were supposedly replaced as promises of spiritual land, or the Kingdom of God. This goes against the very character of God's love and faithfulness and against His Word being true and immutable.  



      Please give the following statement some thought and don't dismiss it as unsound.  Could it be that if we think God turned away from Israel, it sets up somewhat of an insecurity in us that we could perhaps be rejected too if we don't make the grade? It could be one of those "Judge not lest you be judged" kind of things. Often when we judge someone else, we may not be judged by another person but rather we judge ourselves. (Selah.) Could this be a another key to unlocking why some of us struggle?  Do we see the Jews as trying to earn God's favor while we fear losing His favor ourselves. If this is the case, then we are living under a law of performances, thinking our own salvation is based on what we do, on maintaining a certain standard of behavior which we fear violating and therefore fear coming under God's disfavor. 



This is not only not a New Testament way to live with God, it's not even an Old Testament way to live with God. God did not give the teachings of Torah to Israel to make them stressed and under pressure all the time to be sure they were "doing it right" - of course not. And Yeshua certainly didn't die so we would remain stressed out and worried that we have to earn His favor either. Yeshua said, "Peace I leave with you. My peace I give to you...."  We receive His peace by giving up trying to get it, by allowing ourselves to accept that we're made acceptable to God by His doing, not ours. We live the same way, by "leaning the weight of our personality on Him" as the Amplified version of the Bible translates faith. You may feel like you're backsliding when you give up worrying, if that's how you've been living. But be assured, He will bring you through to peace.  






As Israel rested in God's choice of them as a nation, we can rest in His choice of each of us, having been chosen before the foundation of the world.  As Israel served Him with affection and gratefulness for His care and provision for them, so can we.  Israel's salvation was limited compared to ours but they didn't know it. Israel received forgiveness of the guilt of their sins through the blood of animals. They didn't know there was more, until Yeshua came. For those who have received Him, Jew or Gentile, ours is complete, entire, whole and eternal. We receive release from not only our sins but our sin nature by the holy blood of Yeshua!  The sacrifices for forgiveness of sins in Torah was the shadow or a type (prediction) of the forgiveness God would ultimately bring through His Son's sacrifice. We live in Yeshua in the completeness of what Torah was as a promise - all based on the goodness and mercy of God.