Trust Enough to Ask God to Help You to Trust

In Chapter Nine of the Gospel of Mark we read about a man who asks Yeshua to heal his son, if he can. When Yeshua says all things can be done if you trust, the man’s response is something that we should all confess we need.

If you prefer to watch a video, click on this link: Watch the video.

When Yeshua tells the father that if he trusts anything is possible, we are told (CJB):

 Instantly the father of the child exclaimed, “I do trust — help my lack of trust!”

So, how can he say he does trust if he needs help for his lack of trust? It seems that either we trust, or we don’t trust, right?

Not right; trust is tiered, not absolute.

And because we are human, that goes for trusting God, too. Even though we all know he is 1,000% trustworthy, trust is an emotional thing. As such, it has different levels: we can trust someone who doesn’t trust us, and vice-versa.

For example, a man who has been paroled from jail for robbery asks us for a job as cashier because he did that before he stole from where he was working. He says that he has learned his lesson and repented, so we give him a chance.

But we don’t trust him, well, not completely, so we have a video system to watch his every move which we check every night when we double-check his closing-out numbers. Now, he trusts us to allow him to continue to work there so long as he remains honest, but we don’t trust him enough to leave him unobserved.

We trust his ability to do the job, so there is that level of trust, but he trusts us as his employer a whole lot more than we trust him as our employee.

Eventually, if he has really repented of his criminal desires and proves, over time, that he is trustworthy, then the levels of trust can be more equal.

Getting back to the Bible story, when this man trusted that Yeshua could heal his son, he still doubted because of his own insecurities. I believe that is why trust is so hard for so many, myself included, because we always interpret the world through our own experiences and knowledge. If we have had a life of difficulty, or been misled and cheated on, we will find it difficult to trust anyone, even someone like Yeshua who we heard so much about.

And that time in Israel’s history was a very untrustworthy period; the Sanhedrin were composed often of political hacks who weren’t Levites, the king of Israel was not a descendant of David, and the High Priest was a descendant of Aaron, but he was appointed by a Roman official, not by lot.

It was probably the most dishonest time in Israel’s long history, so trusting did not come easily for many.

I confess that I am like that man: I trust that Yeshua is the Messiah and that he did those things we read about, but when it comes down to asking for healing for myself, or someone I care about, well… I don’t trust that I am trusting enough to deserve that help.

Yeah, yeah, I know what you are going to say- God is trustworthy to do what we ask him to do, and he will bless us even if we do not deserve it. And blessings, unlike salvation, is something we can earn (Deuteronomy 28). But still, whether we need to deserve a blessing or not, it is up to God to bless or not to bless, and I will always feel that my level of trust is undeserving of his blessings.

Yet, I know he blesses me every day, so I trust, but I need help to trust more. I have known God’s work in my life, I know absolutely that he is there and watching me, and I also know, absolutely, that he knows what is best for me.

There are some prayers I have been praying for decades which haven’t really been answered; at least, not as I was hoping they would be. God did answer me once, and it was something that I didn’t want to hear: after asking many times for God to excise certain thoughts from my brain that I don’t want, thoughts that are sinful, he told me that it doesn’t work that way.

He said that if he just took away all my evil thoughts then I would never be able to call on his power when having to face the Enemy’s temptations.

In other words, if God just made it happen then I would not be able to stand on my own when faced with temptation. God is not a “helicopter parent”, he is a coach and he will teach us how to trust, how to live, and empower us when we call on him for help. But, we also need to be able to stand on our own two feet when facing tsouris (troubles) because spiritual strength comes from spiritual exercise, and if God does everything for us, we will never develop those spiritual muscles.

I believe that every single one of us has good reason to ask God to help our lack of trust because we are human beings, which means we are weak, self-absorbed, and easily led to sin.

When we are truly humble, we will be able to recognize our weaknesses, and then we can remember what Shaul (Paul) learned. In his second letter to the Corinthians (verses 12:9-10), when asking God to remove the thorn in his side, God replied (CJB):

“My grace is enough for you, for my power is brought to perfection in weakness.”

Shaul goes on to say he will boast of his weakness.

I, also, am strong enough to confess that I am weak.

And with that oxymoron to consider, I will thank you for being here, ask you to continue to share these messages with everyone you know, and wish you an early Shabbat Shalom.

What Not to Have Faith In

Last time we were together I spoke about what we need to have faith in, and now we need to understand the other side of that argument- which faith is useless, maybe even deadly.

If you prefer to watch a video, click on this link: Watch the video.

I am going to tell you the first, and most important thing NOT to have any faith in, and this will probably shock you- have no faith in a religion.

And yes, that includes Judaism, although if you have to faithfully believe anything, Judaism is the closest thing to what God said to do. Yet, even within Judaism, there are so many Talmudic things which are not in the Torah (or even go against the Torah) that you need to watch out for.

Within Christianity, well…there is one unchanging God, yet there are some 64,000 (Yes, THOUSAND!) Christian religions, all claiming that they are the one, correct way to worship God!

So, how can that be?

Overall, having faith in any religion that tells you the law was done away with by the son of God is misplaced faith.

Think about it: sin is breaking the law of God, right? And God gave us the Torah which identifies what sin is (Romans 5:13), so if there is no longer any Torah then there is no longer any sin, right? I mean, how can you break the law if there is no law?

And (here’s the real kicker!) if there is no law, then there is no sin, so there is no need for a Messiah anymore- he doesn’t have to return. With no law there is no sin, so everyone goes to heaven and there can’t be an Apocalypse because it would be wrong of God to punish people for sinning if there is no sin.

Bottom line?- if Yeshua did away with the law then everything in the New Covenant about the End Days is wrong.

I don’t know about you, but I don’t put any faith in that statement.

Another thing not to put any faith in is a human being because, as I said the last time, humans are innately sinful, selfish, and self-absorbed.

And we are easily fooled, so even someone who thinks they are doing what is right can be led to reject God and bring others along with them on that path to destruction.

Here’s a good example of how easily we can be fooled into doing something hurtful: you know those posts that say something very compassionate and then challenge you to copy and paste it if you feel the same way? Or maybe you see a post or saying on Facebook that you love, sent to you by someone you know, so you copy and paste it then send it to everyone you know because it is such a wonderful, compassionate statement.

Well, that is how many viruses are spread. You see, in HTML (the language of the Internet) a series of coded statements, including an executable (which runs a program) can be hidden within a paragraph of text. All the person has to do is codify that section of writing as (0,0) and it will not be visible to the reader, but it will be there, all the same, and the computer will recognize it, and perform it.

Faith in what you see on the Internet is just plain ignorant and foolish, and that means ANYTHING you see on the Internet whether it be news, posts, quotations from famous people or whatever. There are no rules of validation or requirement to be true for anything on the Internet.

Another reason not to place your faith in a religion is because God has no religion: he only has his rules for how to worship him and how to treat each other. That isn’t a religion, it is a lifestyle.

Men created religion so they could have power over other men, so the more faithfully you follow a religion the more you are putting your faith in people, and we just went over why that is foolish and leads you to the path of destruction.

Now, I do not want you to think I am suggesting that you never follow any religion. I am trying to say that you should not blindly put your faith in any religion. What you need to do is read the Bible and be aware of what God says so that you can tell when a religion is going in the wrong direction.

You will find the only place where God says what he wants us to do is in the Torah- everywhere else when he speaks (as he does to his prophets) he is not giving any new instructions; what he is doing is to warn the people to get back on track with the original instructions.

And the only time God speaks in the entire New Covenant is when he tells us Yeshua is his son, whom he loves and we should listen to him.

So, put no faith in people or in a religion, and here’s another hard to accept statement: do not put faith in your version of the Bible.

You see, there are literally thousands of versions in hundreds of different languages, and every single version of the Bible is subject to the interpreter’s personal understanding of the original language, the correct cultural usage of the words and terms when the Bible book was written, and personal bias.

So, where are we? Put no faith in a human being and except for the commandments and laws found in the Torah, which were dictated to Moses by God, everything else in the Bible was written by humans, and we know about them.

I know, I know, if what I am saying is true then we can’t put our faith in anything, right? It seems that way, but there is one thing you can absolutely have faith in, and that is God and his Ruach haKodesh, his Holy Spirit, which will guide you to see God’s truth, no matter which version of the Bible you are reading.

Thank you for being here and please remember to share these messages with everyone you know, even non-believers. Hey, after all, you never know how fertile the soil is until you plant a seed in it.

That’s it for today, so l’hitraot and Baruch HaShem!

Saved by Faith, but Faith in What?

The saying “Saved by faith” has been around since Shaul made it popular way back when, and even today people keep saying, “We are saved by faith!”

But faith in what?

If you prefer to watch a video, click on this link: Watch the video.

The answer is really simple, but there is more than just one thing to be faithful to.

First of all, you have to understand that faith means choosing to believe in something that you can never really prove. Proof is the antithesis of faith because if something can be proven, then you have it as a fact and there is no need for faith. I can tell you that there is plenty of proof that God exists, but it is all just as easily dismissed as coincidence or science.

People who want to disprove God’s existence explain things scientifically, but what they fail to catch on to is that God created science and is not restrained by it.

So, to start with, when it comes to being saved by faith you must first faithfully believe in God. DUH! Without faith in God, you have nowhere else to go except to live your life knowing that there is no one behind you, no one caring about you, and no one you can truly, absolutely have faith in except another human being.

And given how human beings are, that is one in the loss column before you even start to play the game.

Next you have to have faith that what God says he will do will be done. Period.

The next thing is to faithfully believe that Yeshua IS the Messiah God said he would send. The reason this is essential for salvation is because there is no temple, and without the temple we cannot bring a sacrifice to be forgiven, and without forgiveness of sin there can be no salvation.

No one stained with sin will ever be allowed into God’s presence, so the way we are saved is through being forgiven. The shedding of innocent blood is the means by which we receive forgiveness, but it is forgiveness alone that saves us.

To receive forgiveness under God’s Torah, we had to shed innocent blood (Hebrews 9:22), and that had to be at the place God put his name (Deuteronomy 12:11), which was the temple in Jerusalem (Deuteronomy 12:5).

No temple, no forgiveness, no salvation no matter how faithfully you try to obey Torah (and I say “try to obey” because no one can be 100% Torah obedient 100% of the time).

This is where Yeshua comes into the salvation picture- his sacrifice, as the Messiah, replaced the need to bring an animal to the temple in Jerusalem, so through faith that God does what he says, faith that Yeshua is the Messiah and faithfully believing that as the Messiah, Yeshua’s sacrifice is a once-and-for-all sacrifice for everyone, you can receive the forgiveness that will save you.

And lets’ set the record straight right now: the once-and-for-all sacrifice doesn’t mean that all sins are automatically forgiven… NO! It means that every time we sin, we can find forgiveness when asking God to forgive us by means Yeshua’s shed blood. And you DO need to ask forgiveness for every single solitary sin you commit for the rest of your life.

And don’t think for a second that all you need to do is to ask. Without real t’shuvah (repentance), without feeling guilty and ashamed for having sinned, God will not forgive you.

God is not stupid or ever fooled- he knows your heart and what you are thinking, so without true repentance, you are no better off than a faithless person.

Oh, I almost forgot- faith in God is demonstrated by obedience to God, and not some religion. Don’t take my word for it: that’s what the brother of Yeshua said in James 2.

And, just in case you missed it the first time, the only place in the entire Bible where God, himself, tells us what he wants us to do is in those first five books, called the Torah. If your religion tells you, in any way, that you don’t need to follow the Torah, then you can never prove your faith by works, so your faith will be dead.

You can be the nicest person on the earth, give to the poor, go to church or synagogue every Shabbat, love everyone, and be as good a person as any human being can be BUT… if you reject anything in the Torah, such as reject celebrating the Holy Days God said to celebrate, reject God’s laws of Kashrut (Kosher) by eating whatever you want to, have intimate relations when you are not supposed to, or with someone you shouldn’t, or violate any of the other rules in the Torah, all that “good’ stuff you do will not help you.

Oh, yeah, and here’s the biggie!- according to the Messiah, as he tells us in Matthew 6:14-15, if you do not forgive those who sin against you, God will not forgive your sins against him, and (here’s another kick in the pants)… every sin you commit is against God.

So, there you have it, saved by faith means:

  1. Faithfully believing (that means without needing proof) that God exists and is 1,000% trustworthy to do as he says he will.
  2. Faithfully accepting that Yeshua is the Messiah.
  3. Faithfully believing his sacrifice was an acceptable sacrifice.
  4. Faithfully believing that because of his shed blood you can receive forgiveness of sin.

Salvation is what we are able to receive only when we are totally cleansed of sin, which is why it is so imperative that each and every day you ask God to forgive you, even if you don’t think you sinned.

Better to be covered than cursed.

Thank you for being here and please remember to share these messages with everyone you know, even non-believers. Hey, after all, you never know how fertile the soil is until you plant a seed in it.

That’s it for this week, so l’hitraot and (an early) Shabbat Shalom!

What I’ve Learned

It’s been nearly three decades since I first chose to accept that Yeshua is the Messiah God promised to send, and was happy to find that I could continue to live a Jewish lifestyle, even though I “believed in Jesus”.

And since then, I have learned a lot, and if I may, I would like to share some of that with you.

Warning: This is one of the longest messages I have given, but please stay around till the end because I really believe this is also one of the most important messages I have shared.

If you prefer to watch a video, click on this link: Watch the video.

Many of the spiritual lessons I have learned have a real-life, physical element of truth that, whether you are a “believer” or not, and even if you are an atheist, these lessons are valuable and can improve your life.

Let’s start with a touchy topic- forgiveness.

I have learned a very important fact, which is that forgiving someone does NOT make them right with God, but it does make YOU right with God.

In my experience, most people think that when they forgive someone for doing something bad to them it lets that person “off the hook”. What they don’t know is what King David did, and said so in Psalm 51, where he said his sin was against God, and God, alone.

Now, if you’re not familiar with which sin that was (Davey committed more than just one sin during his lifetime), it was a triple-play: he committed adultery, he committed murder, and he made his commander-in-chief, Yoav, an accomplice to murder.

You see, any time anyone sins, it is always against God. Yes, that sin is also against a person, but sinning is a rejection of God’s commandments, and (like it or not) God always comes first. So, if you forgive someone (which doesn’t mean you have to trust them), they still have to deal with God.

Here is the other side of that coin- if you do not forgive them, then you will also have to deal with God! Yeshua tells us that if we do not forgive on the earth, we will not be forgiven in heaven (Matthew 6:14-15), so you really must forgive those who sin against you: not for their sake, but for you own.

One other, and maybe the most important thing I learned about forgiveness, is this:

Until you truly forgive someone, the hurt will never go away.

If you have trouble forgiving someone, do what I do when I hit that roadblock: imagine what they will have to suffer if they never repent. If you have any level of compassion, you will feel so bad for them that it will make it easier to forgive them.

And this brings us to another lesson I have learned: how to love people better. By remembering all the ways we have constantly rejected God, especially my own people, the Jews, over the past 5 millennia yet he constantly is not just willing to forgive us, but he desires to forgive us (Ezekiel 18:23), it motivates me to be better, to be more compassionate (and that is not who I was before), and to be more humble.

Another really good lesson I have learned is that being humble is not being weak. In truth, it takes a lot of inner strength to be humble, and without humility you have little chance of every being saved.

Humility allows us to love better, to be more compassionate, and to accept that God is in charge. Being humble makes you a better friend, spouse, parent, and just an all-around better person.

True humility brings us closer to God, and improves our life tremendously.

I know I am much more humble since accepting God’s will over my own because before I knew the Lord as I do now, if someone was hurt of upset by something I did or said, I wouldn’t care. What I would do is to turn it around, and make it seem it was their fault that they felt that way.

Now you have to understand this was wrong because I DID do something wrong, I DID say something inappropriate or cruel, and it was MY fault. But not having humility, I was a coward and tried to avoid my responsibility for having done that.

Now when someone tells me that I did something to hurt them, my immediate response is to apologize. Even if I know that I did nothing wrong, it is more important to me that I deal with their feelings before my own.

Now there are times when someone will over-react and they need to be told that, but I will do it after I apologize. Yes, you may think I am eating crow that I shouldn’t have to eat, but that is what humility is- the strength to put someone else’s feelings ahead of your own.

Here is something else I have learned from knowing the Bible and observing the world:

The faithful are fearless and the faithless are fearful.

Without faith in God, it will never be any better than me against the world. Faith in humans is always going to be disappointing because we are, well…human! But faith in God is what strengthens you to be able to face anything, because even if you are to die, faithful people get to be with God forever, which is much better than anything we can have here on earth.

And, for the record, faithful to God does not mean following any religion, it means doing as God said to do, and that is found only in the Torah.

Something that is important to know is faith resulting from a miracle is having weak faith, at best, and that isn’t going to last because Satan can make miracles happen, as well.

You must choose to believe, and not be influenced by an event in your life because if one miracle turns you to God, another may just as easily turn you to Satan, and you won’t even know.

God will never provide absolute proof that he exists because if his existence can be proven, you don’t really need faith, but faith is the only way we can be saved.

I have also learned that there is a difference between what is important to know and what is just “nice to know” information. The “Acid Test” question I ask myself to determine which is which is this:

How does this affect my salvation?

If it doesn’t directly save me, then it isn’t important to know.

I now also know the answer to those two, age-old questions: “Why are we here?” and “What is life all about?” Would you like to know? Okay, I’ll tell you:

We are here to choose where we will spend eternity.

I’ve learned you can’t tell anyone what to believe, but you can tell them what you believe and why. Before anyone will accept what you believe, they have to first doubt what they believe, and you get them to do that by asking questions they can’t answer, but you can using the Bible to justify what you believe.

Finally, and I think what is probably the most important thing I have learned, is this:

We all have Free Will to choose what we will believe,
and we all will be held accountable for that choice.

So let me leave you with this thought: if you choose to reject the Torah (which, sadly, traditional Christianity teaches you to do) and you come before God at Judgement Day, which we all will have to do, and God asks you why you didn’t obey him you’ll have to say, “But Lord- I did what they told me I should do”.

Well, you know, I can’t speak for the Big Guy but I am pretty sure he will respond with something to the effect of….

“I understand, my child, that you only did what they told you to do,
but it is what I say that counts!

Thank you for being here and please remember to share these messages with everyone you know, even non-believers, Hey, after all, you never know how fertile the soil is until you plant a seed in it.

That’s it for today, so l’hitraot and Baruch HaShem!

Just Because He Can Doesn’t Mean He Will

Have you ever had to work under a micro-manager? You know the kind- always watching everything you do, checking every little detail, making you feel like you don’t know what you are doing?

And that leads you to ask yourself, “Doesn’t he have anything else to do?”

If you prefer to watch a video, click on this link: Watch the video


God knows every, little thing we do. He knows what is in our hearts, and he knows our thoughts before we do.

That sounds to me like the ultimate micro-manager.

But God doesn’t micro-manage us, even though he can. Yes, he controls our lives (if we ask him to) and he also can make anything happen, but does he really get that involved?
I mean, I know he has plenty of other things to do than to watch me 24/7/365.

And we read in the Bible how God has made things happen in people’s lives, both to help them and to punish them. We also know that if we reject him, he will reject us.

I believe when we read about the curses we will have to suffer for disobedience (Deuteronomy 28), that God doesn’t actively do bad things to us, he just removes his protection and leaves us alone to suffer what the world will do to us.

God is not a micro-manager or a helicopter parent, but he is always available to us when and if we need him, but only if we ask him. That’s why I say even though God can control every aspect of our lives, he doesn’t.

It’s all part of that Free Will thing.

Of course, if he has a specific plan for us, he will intercede and even interfere as he deems necessary, but still, if we reject the call, he will simply find somebody else.
Do you recall from the Bible all the stories about all those people who rejected God’s call? No? Not one? You might say Jonah, but he came around and did as God wanted him to do.

Everyone else who chose to reject God’s calling never got mentioned the Bible, and probably won’t make it into his presence after Judgement Day, either.

I was in management for most of my career, working in different jobs for different companies, and I learned that you need to let people make their own mistakes. I have always felt a good manager can correct what little things go wrong, and prevent the really big ones from happening by interfering at the right time. But watching what people do doesn’t have to mean standing over their shoulders.

God is always watching us, he is always concerned, and I believe he feels really bad when we reject his help, which is more easily done than you might think: you don’t need to ask him to stay out of it, you simply need to not include him from the start.

One of the biggest lies from the pit of Sheol is: “God helps those who help themselves.”
The truth is when I try to do it on my own, I am telling God to mind his own business, and I am left at that point to face the entire world, on my own.
The result is always a foregone conclusion: if it is me against the world, I will lose.

And God will allow me to lose, but what is really great about him is that if I repent of my prideful and stubborn attitude, humbly come before God and ask that he help me get out of the mess I created, he will.

So, remember this: in every endeavor you need to first ask God to work with you. Even when I just go for a bike ride, and even though I stay on the sidewalks as much as possible, I try to remember to ask God to watch out for me before I even get on the bicycle.

Nothing- absolutely nothing- is so unimportant that we shouldn’t ask God to help us.

There is an old saying that it is better to ask forgiveness than to ask permission, and in the human world, I believe that is best.

But when it comes to God, always ask first.

Thank you for being here and please remember to share these messages with everyone you know, even non-believers. Hey, after all, you never know how fertile the soil is until you plant a seed in it.

That’s it for this week, so l’hitraot and (an early) Shabbat Shalom!

Do Your Actions and Your Words Match?

When I was in Sales, I learned a very important lesson: people don’t mean what they say, they mean what they do. Yeshua also taught this lesson when he said to let your “Yes” be “Yes” and your “No” be “No” (Matthew 5:37).

So, do your words match your actions?

If you prefer to watch a video, click on this link: Watch the video.

Going back to my Sales experience, I was what is called a “Tinman”; not the kind that was with Dorothy, Scarecrow, and the Cowardly Lion. “Tinman” is an old term used for someone who sells aluminum siding for your house. I also sold window replacements and kitchen refacing, and these sales came off tele marketed leads and were a one-call close.

That means the day I see you is the day I sell you; either I leave with a signed contract or I leave empty-handed, but there was no going back. And those who bought had three business days to cancel their sale and get their deposit back.

Okay, so where is this related, at all, to a spiritual message?

I’m glad you asked.

Of all the sales I made, the ones I could almost be certain would cancel before I even got the paperwork into the office were the ones I made with so-called “Believers”.

That’s right, and yes, it is sad. And to a one, when I would call to try to save the sale (which you do, even though you know 99.9% of the time it’s not going to work) they would use this excuse…

We prayed on it and now believe this isn’t the time to do this.

If that was their excuse, I would remind them of what Yeshua said about no being no, etc., and that they gave me a yes.

You know what?- that didn’t make any difference. What they really should have said, to be honest, was that they changed their minds and are reneging on their word.

And yes, just because there is an option to cancel, that doesn’t mean if you take it you haven’t lied.

And when they say they prayed on it and need to change their minds, that is even worse because now they are blaming God!

Oh, yeah- like it or not, when you say you “prayed on it” and now feel differently, that is no different from saying God told you not to do it.

That brings us back to today’s spiritual question: do your words match your actions?

If you say you feel this way, but act that way, then you are a liar!

Now, even though every lie is a sin, that doesn’t mean every lie is unjustified. There are times, and we see this happening in the Bible over and over, when lying is the only way to continue to live. Or sometimes a “little white lie” is the more compassionate thing to do. I would still ask God to forgive me for doing it, but what is wrong in all cases is making a contract and then reneging on it. The exception to this is if you know you were being lied to by the salesperson.

Other than that, the cancellation period is not some “Get out of jail free” card you can pull just because the next morning, when you look at your checkbook, you say, “What the heck did I do?” That’s called “Buyer’s Remorse”, and is normal even when you are positive you did the right thing.

Look, if you profess to believe in God and want to do as God says, then do not do or say something that you aren’t absolutely certain you will feel the same way about in the morning.

And, even if you feel you made a mistake, live with it! Unless you have good reason to think you were bamboozled (that’s a great word, isn’t it?), you must make sure your words match your actions.

Yeshua is the ultimate example of “I am what I say” and if you want to follow in his footsteps, you must also make sure that your words and your actions are the same thing.

In everything you do, let your “Yes” be “Yes”, and your “No” be “No” because how you keep your word reflects on you, but as a Believer it also reflects on God.

Be thou holy as I am holy is not a suggestion.

Thank you for being here and please remember to share these messages with everyone you know, even non-believers, Hey, after all, you never know how fertile the soil is until you plant a seed in it.

That’s it for today, so l’hitraot and Baruch HaShem!

What the Bible Doesn’t Say

Did you ever hear the saying, “Money is the root of all evil”? Think it is from the Bible?

Well… it isn’t. And there are a number of “biblical” sayings that are not from the Bible.

If you prefer to watch a video, click on this link: Watch the video.

Most people do not know one thing from the Bible, but they think they do because they have heard people say, “The Bible says…”.

And those people don’t know what they are talking about because they are just repeating what someone else told them is in the Bible, who heard it from someone else who also doesn’t know what the Bible really says.

They just heard it from somewhere.

People easily believe what they like to hear, and adamantly refuse to believe what they don’t want to hear, and the sad thing about that is most of the time what they don’t want to hear is the truth.

Are you familiar with these sayings, supposedly from the Bible?

God helps those who help themselves.”;
“Cleanliness is next to godliness.”;
“The Lord works in mysterious ways
.”

Sorry to burst anyone’s bubble, but none of these are from the Bible.

The one about money being the root of all evil is close- what the Bible does say is that the love of money is the root of all evil (1 Timothy 6:10). When you know what the Bible really says, it makes a whole lotta difference, doesn’t it?

There is nothing wrong with money, or having money, or even wanting to earn more money. Where things go wrong is when the money becomes more important to you than God or family. Many of the holiest people in the Bible were rich- Abraham, Job, and Joseph were very rich, just to name a few.

And as for the lie that God helps those who help themselves, well, this is one of my favorite ones to hate. Not only is it NOT from the Bible, but it leads people to reject God!

In Joel 2:32, which is repeated in Acts and Romans, we are told that all who call on the name of the Lord will be saved: it doesn’t say all who try on their own will be helped. We are not told anywhere in the Bible to depend on our own power or strength, but rather the opposite- we are to depend on God!

God doesn’t want us to leave him out of it, but rather to include him from the start. Yeah, sure, God will help us as we go through life, but only when we go through life the way he says we should. If we want to do it on our own, God will let us; but doing it on our own is rejecting God, and when we reject him, he rejects us. Now, because he is a forgiving and compassionate God, after failing miserably on our own, if we humble ourselves, repent of our sin (of rejecting him), and ask him to forgive us and help us, he will be all-in for that.

But if you want to do it on your own, don’t expect him to help.

The “biblical” wisdom about cleanliness and God working in mysterious ways is not found anywhere in the Bible. It is true that we are told God is so far above us we can never understand him (Isaiah 55:8-9), and there are laws God gave us to obey that are called Chukim, meaning laws that we cannot understand why God gave them to us, such as the showbread. So, okay, yes- there are mysterious things about God, but he doesn’t work mysteriously. In fact, Moses said it best in Deuteronomy 30:11, when he told the people that the Torah is not difficult to do or to understand.

So, nu? …what’s my point?

It is this: if you don’t read the Bible for yourself, so you know what is in there and what isn’t, like Isaiah said (Isaiah53:6), you will be easily led astray.

When a cop stops you and tells you that you broke a traffic law, and you say you weren’t aware of that law, you know what their reply will be, right?

Ignorance of the law is no excuse.

When you find yourself facing God on Judgement Day (and we all will) and he asks you, “Why didn’t you do what I said to do?”, your only answer will be “But I did what they said I should do- how was I to know I was rejecting you?”

Expect to hear this:

Ignorance of the law is no excuse.

You can be ignorant, or you can be saved, but you can’t be saved from your ignorance.

Thank you for being here and please remember to share these messages with everyone you know, even non-believers. Hey, after all, you never know how fertile the soil is until you plant a seed in it.

That’s it for this week, so l’hitraot and (an early) Shabbat Shalom!

Yeshua and God Must Be Separate Beings for Salvation to Work

One of the main religious issues that causes disruption, as well as distraction, is the idea of the Trinity: is God separate from Yeshua or are they the same entity, in different forms.

As far as salvation is concerned, the question of Trinity or Unity is irrelevant because Yeshua MUST be the Messiah, and not God, for the plan of salvation to work.

If you prefer to watch a video, click on this link: Watch the video.

The plan from the start was that God would send a Messiah to make it possible for us to overcome our sins and be able to commune with God, which is only possible after we have been cleansed of sin. Now, with the destruction of the temple in 73 AD, because the Torah required a sin sacrifice at that temple, and no where else, without a Messiah we could never be forgiven.

When Yeshua sacrificed himself, it was the means for us to be forgiven in that his sacrifice- as the Messiah- replaced the need to bring an animal to the temple in Jerusalem. That is why he said the only way to the father is through him ( John 14:6) because the temple was no longer available.

The Messiah serves as a substitution for the sacrificial animal, and only God can forgive sins. Oh, yeah, I know what you’re going to say, “Yeshua said he can forgive sins”, and you’re right, he did say that. BUT… that was only while on the earth (look it up in Matthew 9:6). Once his role as the substitutionary sacrifice was completed, and he was raised into heaven to sit at the right hand of God, sin forgiveness reverted back to God, and God, alone.

Yeshua, as Messiah, is an intercessor, not an interceptor. We worship God, we pray to God, and we thank God for forgiving us because only God can forgive sins.

Yeshua provides the way to come before God so we can ask for forgiveness, by means of the blood sacrifice performed on our behalf by God’s Messiah.

If Yeshua is God, then why refer to him? Why pray in his name? Why have anything at all to do with him? If he is God, what sense is there in going to God to ask God to refer to himself when we ask God for forgiveness?

Yeshua always referred to God as his father, and never made the literal claim stating that he is God in the flesh (that was what some guy wrote in the beginning of the Gospel of John, and Yeshua never said that about himself).

Here’s something else to consider… how do we know Yeshua is the Messiah? The answer is that he fulfilled nearly every prophecy about him, all of which are in the Tanakh (the Old Covenant, aka the “Jewish” Bible). Some of those prophecies are still to be fulfilled, and that will happen when he returns- not as God, but as the Messiah. So, if Yeshua is God, then the prophecies about the Messiah would indicate that he will be God, but here’s the kicker- not one prophecy about the Messiah in the entire Tanakh indicates that he will be God.

Aright, here we go again: I know, I know, you are going to say, “What about Yeshayahu (Isaiah) 9:6, where it says he will be called “Mighty God”? That verse doesn’t say he IS God, only that he will be called “Mighty God”. That is more of a warning about the creation of the Trinity than it is about confirming the Messiah is God.

(In the description is a link to a message I just did about this misleading verse).

The fact is that there is not one, single reference to the Messiah in the Tanakh, which is the definitive source for knowing how to identify the Messiah, that indicates he is actually God.

Not one.

A man whose name was Tertullian, sometime around the middle of the second century, is the first one to use the term “trinity” when referring to Yeshua, and that is where this whole idea came from. The Gospel of John is the most often quoted source for any validation of Yeshua’s divinity, and that gospel is recognized to be so very different from the other three that it is suspect.

Personally, I totally reject the entire gospel of John, and even more than that, not only do I believe it is not a valid gospel, but I don’t even think it was written by a Jew! But, I digress…

God’s plan of salvation is simple: if you are stained with sin, you cannot enter into God’s presence. The way to be “saved”, i.e., to be in God’s presence, is to be cleansed of sin. This was done through the sacrificial system, with the blood of an innocent thing (lamb or goat) being spilled to atone for the sin of a person; the animal’s life served as a substitution for the person’s life (the life of a thing is in its blood-Leviticus 17:11) .

In Deuteronomy 12:11, God states that the only place a sacrifice can be made is where he places his name. Initially, this was at the Tent of Meeting (where the Ark was kept), and later at the temple in Jerusalem. That place has never changed.

With the destruction of the temple in 73 AD, there was no way that, in accordance with the Torah, anyone could be saved. Ah, but, that is where the plan for a Messiah now comes into play. The Messiah is a human being born from the Ruach HaKodesh (Holy Spirit), making him the Son of God (literally, not just spiritually), who would be the only human being able to live in complete accord with the Torah, 100% of the time, and as such be an acceptable sacrifice for sin.

This is essential! The Messiah has to be human to be an acceptable sin sacrifice! He has to be able to sin, otherwise his sinless life is just a cheat. There is no value in being sinless if you can’t sin, to begin with, which would be true if Yeshua was God. That is why Isaiah, in Isaiah 53, tells us that the Messiah was 100% human, that he knew illnesses and was as susceptible to sin as anyone else.

You’ve got to understand this: lambs are born sinless, but not humans, so for a human being to be sinless takes self-discipline, humility, and faithful obedience to God. An animal can’t be faithful but a human can, so for a human being, i.e., the Messiah, to be an acceptable sacrifice, he must have the ability to sin.

God can’t sin. That’s right, Folks- if you believe Yeshua is God, then your salvation can’t be real because God can’t sin, he can’t die, he can’t be a sacrifice, and God can’t forgive himself because he can’t sin, in the first place.

If Yeshua is God, that turns the entire sacrificial system upside down, and renders it impotent!

Faithful acceptance of Yeshua as the Messiah is the only way we can be saved- we are not saved by believing Yeshua is God, but by believing he is the Messiah God created and sent to the earth to provide a means for us to receive forgiveness of sin.

Like it or not, Yeshua HAS to be the 100% human Messiah, created by God through Miryam and not God in the flesh, in order to fulfill the prophecies about the Messiah and to be an acceptable sacrifice; otherwise, God’s plan of salvation can’t work.

Thank you for being here and please remember to share these messages with everyone you know, even non-believers. Hey, after all, you never know how fertile the soil is until you plant a seed in it.

That’s it for today, so l’hitraot and Baruch HaShem!

Yeshua and the Snake

In John’s Gospel, Yeshua says that he will be lifted up like the snake in the desert. Many consider this to be a prophetic statement about how he will die, but I believe it means more than that.

I believe he is saying he will become an idol, replacing his father as God.

If you prefer to watch a video, click on this link: Watch the video.

I suppose we should start by reviewing the snake incident.

In Numbers 21, after the people kvetched (again!) about something, God sent poisonous snakes to bite and kill them as punishment. The people repented, and asked to be saved, so God had Moses make a brass serpent and place it high on a pole. When someone was bitten, they only had to look towards the snake and they would not die.

(You know, there is an entire message in that one sentence, how people sinned and would not die but still suffered the consequences of their sin, i.e., they still got bitten! But that is for another time; actually, I just recalled I already did a message on that one, and I’ll put a link to it in the Description.)

Now, what happened to that snake is not mentioned again until centuries later, in 2 Kings 18, when we learn that this snake, which originally was designed to represent God’s salvation from death (by snakebite) was now being worshipped as an idol, a god in and of itself, and it was being called Nehushtan (“Nachash” is Hebrew for snake). King Hezekiah had it destroyed.

Now let’s see why Yeshua chose that event to tell us what will happen to him.

Yeshua was placed on a stake for all to see, and he tells us that those who see him there and believe in him will be saved. Just like those who saw the bronze serpent on a pole and believed in God would be saved.

Prophecy fulfilled, right? Not quite.

The snake was later turned into a god, and what the “Church” has done is the same thing with Yeshua, changing what he is (the Messiah FROM God) into God, himself!

Christians constantly pray to Yeshua instead of to God, they ask Yeshua for forgiveness, when God is the only one who can forgive, and they thank Yeshua for blessings in their life when those blessings come from God!

Let’s get something straight: While Yeshua did say he had authority to forgive sins (Matthew 9:6), he specifies that he has this authority on the earth. This is also in two other gospels, and the reason he says that is to prove he is coming from God, NOT that he is God, and since he is no longer on the earth, the sin forgiveness thing has reverted back to Daddy.

The prophecy Yeshua made was a dual-prophecy: first, a soon-to-occur prophecy that Yeshua would be raised on a stake and secondly, as a future prophecy that he would be worshipped and replace God.

Exactly what happened with the snake.

So, if you find yourself praying to Yeshua, stop it- pray to God.

If something wonderful happens in your life, don’t thank Jesus- thank God.

And next time someone tells you that it is all about Yeshua, remind them (as you are being reminded, now) that for Yeshua, it was ALWAYS only and totally about his father in heaven.

Hey, look- if Yeshua said it is all about his father, and that his father forgives, and that his father blesses, and that he only did and said what his father told him to do and say (that’s in John), then who are you or I to say anything different?

Yeshua always referred to himself as separate from God, identifying as the Son of God, and he always considered himself subservient to God, so how do you think he feels when people worship him instead of his Father?

Thank you for being here and please remember to share these messages with everyone you know, even non-believers. Hey, after all, you never know how fertile the soil is until you plant a seed in it.

That’s it for today, so l’hitraot and Baruch HaShem!

Does Isaiah 9:5-6 Really Say The Messiah Will Be Almighty God?

One of the most well-known prophecies in the Tanakh (everything in the Bible before Matthew) regarding the Messiah to come is Isaiah 9:5-6, where we are told that the Messiah will be called (among other things) the Almighty God.

But does that mean the Messiah will be God, or just that he will be called God?

If you prefer to watch a video, click on this link: Watch the video.

There are many, MANY versions of the Bible, and most of them are interpreted by Christians. There are a number of Jewish interpretations, of course, so let’s see where some are the same, and some are different when we look at Isaiah 9:5-6 (remember that not all Bible interpretations have the exact same numbering.)

The JPS Hebrew-English Tanakh (1999) says: “He has been named ‘The Mighty God is planning grace*; The Eternal Father, a peaceful ruler...”

( * It references Isaiah 25:1, where another prophecy
mentions how God has planned graciousness of old.)

The Sefaria (a non-profit digital library of Hebrew texts) interprets it this way: “He has been named ‘The Mighty God is planning grace; The Eternal Father, a peaceable ruler'”.

The KJV says: “~ and his name shall be called Wonderful, Counsellor, The mighty God, The everlasting Father, The Prince of Peace.”

The NIV says: “And he will be called Wonderful Counselor, Mighty God, Everlasting Father, Prince of Peace.”

The Complete Jewish Bible says: “Pele-Yo‘etz El Gibbor
Avi-‘Ad Sar-Shalom [Wonder of a Counselor, Mighty God, Father of Eternity, Prince of Peace]”

And let’s look at one more Jewish version, Chabad’s Complete Jewish Tanakh: “~ the wondrous adviser, the mighty God, the everlasting Father, called his name, ‘the prince of peace’.”

(This one seems to be describing God, and that God will call the Messiah the “Prince of Peace”.)

So… who is correct?

Every Christian version I looked at (and I looked at more than just the ones here) said he would be called some version of “Almighty God”, and I even saw that in some of the Jewish versions.

But as you see, some other Jewish versions do not call him mighty God, but show that the mighty God calls him the Prince of Peace.

Interesting, isn’t it? The more Orthodox Jewish interpretations do not indicate Messiah will be God, while most every other version, some Jewish and all the Christian ones, indicate that Messiah will be God.

But wait a minute! Does it say he will be God, or does it say he will be called God?

You know, there’s quite a difference between what one is called, and what one is. Think of all the things you have been called throughout your lifetime, and ask yourself if what you have been called is always really what you are.

During my lifetime the things people have called me isn’t really what I am…. well, maybe some of the things, but not all of them!

Remember how Yeshua said that he would be like the snake in the desert (John 3:14)? And remember that the snake set up by Moses in Numbers 21:9, to represent God’s salvation from the snake bites, was later worshipped as a god and called Nehushtan (2 Kings 18)?

Well, I believe Yeshua’s prophecy wasn’t just about how he would die (being raised on a stake), but also how he would later be worshipped as a god; actually, as the one and only God. He knew that people would replace worship of the one, true God, his father, with him: praying to him, asking him for forgiveness, and basically replacing his father with him, something Yeshua would never have even thought of doing.

I believe this passage from Isaiah has been misunderstood, and now is being used as a justification for the Trinitarian belief that God (the father) and Yeshua (the Messiah) are the same entity.

As I said earlier, there is a BIG difference between what someone is called, and what they are. I am inclined to go along with the more Orthodox Jewish interpretation that indicates the Messiah will be called, BY GOD, the “Prince of Peace.” That the authority placed on his shoulders will be from God, and not self-generated (which, if Messiah is God, would have to be the case).

In Matthew 22:45, Yeshua disarms the Pharisees trying to trick him by asking them why, in Psalm 110:1, does David call his son (meaning the Messiah) “Lord”? Yeshua points out that if the Messiah is David’s son, how can he be David’s Lord? Similarly, if Yeshua is the almighty God, how can he be a prince?

I wonder how, after all these centuries, no one has noticed this obvious disparity? If the Messiah is the almighty God, then how can he be a prince of anything? Wouldn’t he, as God, have to be the Lord of Peace? Or the King of Peace? Whatever, if he was the almighty God, he certainly wouldn’t be just a Prince of Peace, would he?

This is why I go along with the Orthodox Jewish interpretation that indicates when the Messiah is born, he will be a counsellor, he will be a prince of peace, and his authority and rulership will come from God, but he will not be God.

I also believe that the interpretations saying the Messiah will be called almighty God are based on Christian Trinitarianism, and the Jewish Bible versions that also say “almighty God” are wrong, as well.

To finalize, it is imperative to accept that what someone is called is not what they are. Yeshua said we can tell who people are by their fruits, so, nu … what fruits did Yeshua demonstrate? Well, when I read the Gospels, it appears to me that his fruits were always giving his father, God, the credit for everything, and he never called himself the almighty God.

Thank you for being here and please remember to share these messages with everyone you know, even non-believers. Hey, after all, you never know how fertile the soil is until you plant a seed in it.

That’s it for this week, so l’hitraot and (an early) Shabbat Shalom!