Shaul Took Hints from Isaiah

Way back when during the time of Isaiah, he preached to the people living in Judea and Jerusalem, saying they had backslid so much it was like they had to be taught the Torah, all over again, just like little children.

Shaul (Paul) took this same approach to the Gentiles he was teaching how to live a Torah observant life.

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

Let’s go to Isaiah 28:9-13 to see what I am talking about (CJB):

Can no one be taught anything? Can no one understand the message? Must one teach barely weaned toddlers, babies just taken from the breast, so that [one has to use nursery rhymes]? —
Tzav la-tzav, tzav la-tzav, kav la-kav, kav la-kav, z‘eir sham, z‘eir sham
[Precept by precept, precept by precept, line by line, line by line, a little here, a little there].

Shaul travelled throughout the Middle East and Asia, going first to the Jews and then to the Gentiles, preaching about the Messiah and how through his sacrifice we could attain eternal life.

When preaching to the Jews he could concentrate on showing how Yeshua was the Messiah using his vast knowledge of the Tanakh, but he had to preach to the Gentiles in a totally different way because they had no knowledge of the Tanakh. As he said in 1 Corinthians 9:19-23, he will be all things to all people; in other words, he works his audience in order to get the Good News out to people in a way they can understand it.

And, as I said, to the Jews he could concentrate on the messianic passages in the Tanakh because they already knew the Torah and what God wanted from them, and all he had to do was compare that to what happened during Yeshua’s life, which many already knew of.

But with the Gentiles, well…he was starting from square one, so he did what Isaiah did with the people back in his day, and took these Gentiles a little at a time, precept by precept, so that they could learn at a pace they could handle.

You have to remember that these people were pagans, being brought up for generations living a hedonistic, drunken, and sexually perverse lifestyle, which was (to be honest) a lot of fun! Now, here comes this little tent-making Jew from Tarsus telling them to give all of that up so that when they die they can be in heaven.

Let’s face it, that’s a tough sale. And then along come these believing Jews telling them that on top of all that, they have to cut off the top of their penis!

No wonder Shaul was so teed-off at the Gentile Galatians paying attention to that, and even more so with the believing Jews there who were pressuring them to become 100% Jewish overnight.

I think Shaul also knew of the parable of the seeds, and saw all his Gentile congregations as seeds taking root, but being choked by the believing Jews pressuring them to convert totally.

So, here’s the lesson: next time you hear someone say that Shaul was against the Torah and he only went to Gentiles, that is not true. He said that in Acts 13 when he was in the town of Antioch and after the Jews rejected him, he said he would go only to the Gentiles, but he meant only the Gentiles in Antioch. In every town he always went to the Jews first.

And he never preached against the Torah, but did as Isaiah was doing in Judea some 800 or so years earlier, teaching the Gentiles just a little at a time so that they would not be scared off by too much change having to be done too quickly. After all, they were making a paradigm shift in lifestyle, and that needs time to happen.

And the Elders in Jerusalem knew that was what he was doing, and agreed it was proper. That is why they wrote that letter in Acts 15 to support his precept-by-precept, tzav la-tzav approach. James said that the Gentiles would learn the Torah eventually because they would hear it preached at every Shabbat service (Acts 15:19-21).

The major mistakes we Jews have made, which Christianity has multiplied over the centuries, is that we only want to do what we want to do, which is why we have been punished so often. Thankfully, God keeps his side of the covenants (even when we break our side) and so long as we truly repent, he will forgive us and save us from the punishment we have been made to suffer.

Shaul knew that learning to live according to the Torah would be very hard, so he taught those neophyte believing Gentiles only what they needed, only at a pace they could handle, which is why he had to write all those letters. They weren’t scripture, although they quoted scripture: they were managerial directives to get back on the right track and only follow the conversion program Shaul set out for them, and to stop listening to anyone else.

Sadly, once Shaul was dead and Gentiles took over those congregations, they failed to follow Shaul’s program and mutated what had been a Jewish movement learning Torah to a totally different religion, which within a century had totally rejected the Torah.

Thank you for being here and please remember to comment and 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!

Go On A Weight Loss Program for Salvation

I know that sounds sort of silly; after all, what does losing weight have to do with salvation? 

That’s what I am going to explain. 

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

When we go on a diet, we investigate what foods to eat, what proportions of fats, protein, and roughage to have at each meal, and try to avoid all those fad diet ideas. 

But the one thing that every diet requires is a combination of discipline, will power, and self-control. 

We have to know what we need to eat, how much we eat every day, and to keep at it until it becomes a habit.

And we must always remember that good habits are hard to form and easy to break, while bad habits are easy to form and hard to break.  

So, how does this relate to salvation?

Well, to start with, we need to know what to “eat” to start our path to salvation, and that is the Bible. And I mean ALL of the Bible, from Genesis through Revelation.  

Next, we need to consider what proportion of the Bible we should have? Well, there are those daily proverb calendars, or tracts that many religious groups hand out weekly or monthly, or just opening the book when you remember to and reading wherever you end up.

But that doesn’t work because there is no discipline or regularity, and when you go on a diet you certainly want to remain regular.  

The proportion of the Bible that I use on my “salvation diet” is to read a little every day in order, from start to finish and then all over again. In order to make sure that is done, I keep my Bible in the bathroom because I know no matter what else I have planned to do, I will spend at least enough time sitting there to read a chapter or two.

And it is surprising how quickly you go through the Bible that way when you are all alone, and no one wants to interrupt you.

I like to think that God is on his throne and I am learning about him while on my throne.  

So we have covered what to eat (the Bible), how to eat it (daily, a little at a time), and now we have to consider avoiding those “fad” religious diets.

What am I talking about? Some fad ideas are which calendar is correct, how to pronounce the Tetragrammaton, replacement theology, and even the idea of the Trinity.

Why do I say they are fads? Because a fad is something that makes what you want to do seem easier, such as the idea that “believe in Jesus and be a good person” is all you need to be saved. That is a fad because it sounds easy to do and is a quick path to salvation. The problem is, like with all fads, it doesn’t really work in the long run. First off, what does “believe in Jesus” mean?

Believe he existed?
Believe he is the Messiah?
Believe he was supernaturally born from God?
Believe he died and was resurrected?
Believe his sacrifice makes it possible for us to be forgiven of sin?    

Guess what? Every demon in hell, including Satan, all believe that, but are they saved?  Of course not!  

“Oh”, you say, “That’s because they are not also a good person.”

What did Yeshua (Jesus) say about being good? Let me remind you- in Mark 18:19 he said that no one is good except God.  So, unless you happen to be God, you can’t really be good.

As for calendars, pronunciation, divine or not divine, none of those things save us because we are not saved by being on the absolutely correct date when celebrating a Holy Day, or knowing how to pronounce Y-H-V-H, or whether or not God and Yeshua are the exact same entity. 

NO!

We are saved by faithfully believing that Yeshua is the Messiah God promised to send, that he sacrificed himself as a sin sacrifice for us and that his sacrifice was accepted (because he was risen from the dead to eternal life in God’s presence), and that through his sacrifice we can find forgiveness from our sins which is how we are saved.

That is what we need to believe, and none of those other things really make any difference. They are just fads, which never really have a lasting beneficial effect.  

I can’t lose weight very easily, for a number of reasons, but I can maintain my salvation diet. And whether I die fat or thin, at least I get to be in God’s presence for all eternity so long as I stay on this diet.  

Thank you for being here and please remember to comment and 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!

The Difference Between Knowing and Understanding

** It took nearly 5 hours to upload this simple 10-minute message because the cell tower I use was overloaded. **

They say that experience is the best teacher, but in fact experience is not a good teacher, it is nothing more than a database. If you don’t understand what the data means, you’re not going to learn anything.

The same is true with the Bible- we may know what is in there but without understanding we can’t really be edified or learn anything.

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

I believe the most efficient way to understand what the Bible says is to have your understanding come through the Ruach HaKodesh, the Holy Spirit. This divine understanding is what separates those who blindly follow a religion from those who understand what God wants from each of us, and are able to reject whatever a religion tells them that is not in alignment with God’s commandments.

That takes more than understanding- it takes courage. You need courage to be able to reject a teaching that all your family and friends find absolutely to be the “word of God”, and to be willing to be expelled by a church or synagogue because you know that you understand correctly.

The most potent information you can have is not just knowing what is said, but understanding the meaning of it.

In Judaism, we have a biblical exegesis tool called PaRDeS, which is an acronym for P‘shat, Remes, Drash, and Sud. P’shat is the literal, plain-meaning of the word, such as Do not Kill. The Remes is the deeper, spiritual understanding of the P’shat, such as do not so much as hate someone in your heart. A Drash is a story that has a spiritual moral, which is generally the same as a parable. The Sud is a mystical understanding, and I don’t even have an example to give you.

So, in real life, Yeshua taught the Remes, which is why people said he spoke with authority and that no one had ever taught or spoke like him before. That is because the Pharisees only taught the P’shat.

Have you ever been visited by Jehovah’s Witnesses? Meaning no disrespect, but in my experience with them they know the Bible backwards and forwards, but they have no understanding. Their responses to questions are “patented”Party Line” and they have no more understanding of what they are saying than a parrot does when it is trained to respond to a stimulus.

Most Christian religions teach one or more of the following falsehoods: God and Yeshua are the same entity, Yeshua did away with the law, and Born-Again Christians are now God’s chosen people because God has rejected the Jews because the Jews have rejected Jesus.

All of those are man-made lies, justified by taking bits and pieces from the Bible and creating those theologies. None of these ideas come from the true scripture, which is only in the Tanakh, the Old Covenant or “Jewish” Bible.

They justify the Trinity (a man-made idea first created by Tertullian in the middle of the Second Century) almost exclusively from misinterpretations (knowledge without understanding) from the Gospel of John, they justify the doing away with the law by knowledge of Matthew 5:17 without understanding, and they came up with the ridiculous idea of Replacement Theology from the letters written by Shaul (Paul) to congregations of mostly Gentiles who were having issues of faith and interpersonal relationship problems.

The New Covenant writings are NOT scripture, but they do contain a lot of scripture taken from the Tanakh. The Gospels teach nothing new because everything Yeshua taught was the Remes (remember what that is?) of the Torah, and the letters by Shaul were nothing more than managerial directives to help congregations get back on the right track for salvation.

I know this seems wrong to many of you, but this is more than knowledge- it is understanding.

Let’s take something from the Gospel of Matthew and use this to show the difference between knowledge and understanding: Yeshua said that he did not come to change or do away with the law but to fulfill it (Matthew 5:17). A typical Christian teaching is to first interpret “fulfill” as “complete”, and then to go further and say that by completing the law he finished it, i.e., made it obsolete (which is often incorrectly validated by what Shaul says in Galatians 3:24-25.) As such, Gentiles who believe in Yeshua (whatever that is supposed to mean) are not obligated to follow the Torah.

But that is just knowledge of what he said; to understand it is to know that the word “fulfill” back then meant to interpret the law correctly- to misinterpret it was a trespass (sin). And that understanding is validated by the fact that when Yeshua gave his Sermon on the Mount, he taught the Remes of the law to those who had no knowledge or understanding.

The lack of understanding made it easy for the people (as is the case even today) to be misled, and the emphasis on knowledge (without understanding) is why people are so easily led astray (as Isaiah said).

Religion, in general, teaches only knowledge because that makes it easier to mislead people, and over the millennia has caused millions to reject God because when you reject what God says to do, you reject God. The only place in the entire Bible, from Genesis through Revelation where God, himself, tells us what he wants us to do, is in the Torah.

Everything after Deuteronomy is either historical narrative or commentary.

God chose the Jews to be a nation of priests (Exodus 19:6), then gave us the Torah. Why? Obviously to learn it so that as priests we could take it to the Goyim, the Nations, which means everyone else. Knowledge tells us Jews are a nation of priests, and knowledge tells us God gave the Torah to the Jews, but understanding is why we can put those two things together to realize that the Torah is for everyone who professes to worship the God of Abraham, Isaac, and Jacob and that is why the Jews are God’s chosen people- chosen to be God’s priests to the world, something that will never change.

So, nu? are you satisfied just with knowledge or do you want understanding?

The best place to get understanding is to first gain knowledge by reading your Bible over and over…and over, again, and then ask God- not me, not your Pastor, not your Minister, not your Priest, not your Rabbi- but God to give you his divine understanding.

And allow yourself the right to make your own decisions without threat of going to hell or being excommunicated. The truth will always set your free, and if what you understand to be the truth gets you kicked out of your place of worship, well- you have just been set free.

But here is a caveat: always be open to hearing what others believe because when you stop being open to new ideas you stop learning, and you have nothing to fear from really listening because the truth will always remain the truth.

Thank you for being here and please remember to comment and 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!

Legalism Lives!

Recently one of the Messianic groups on Facebook was asking about why people in that group seemed so legalistic, not lighting fires on Shabbat, etc.

My answer is one of those that I felt was worth sharing here, especially because it was the topic I felt led to discuss today, anyway.

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

I started out justifying my reasons for feeling that what I said was worth listening to, so for the benefit of anyone out there who is not familiar with me, and not to brag (honest!), I left that part in. So, here is how I replied:

“I am Jewish (in fact, I have the genetic marker of a Levite), raised Reform, a Bar Mitzvah, and accepted Yeshua as my Messiah about 30 years ago. I have served in many ways in both a Messianic synagogue and a Hebraic Roots church, and even have some credentials from the Messianic Bible Institute. I also have an online ministry with hundreds of international followers (messianicmoment.com).

I say this just so that you know my background, and certainly not to brag.

In all this time, my experience is that a Messianic Jewish congregation is usually composed of less than 40% Jews.

I believe the neo-legalism that has infiltrated Messianic Judaism is because so many Messianic congregations are mostly composed of people who came from some Christian background, where (again, this is from my personal experience) they were raised in a legalistic environment.

Christianity is, in my opinion, a very legalistic religion, having created its own tenets and traditions, and forms of worship that are elaborate and very ceremonial. And that “do-it-because-you-are-supposed-to-do-it” regimen has not left all of the people who have left the religion.

Here are what I consider to be neo-legalistic ideologies that have infiltrated Messianic Judaism:

1. This recent drek (Yiddish for garbage, and sometimes even worse words!) about Christmas and Easter being pagan holidays (despite the fact there are no pagan gods involved);

2. The Holy Namers (if you don’t pronounce the Tetragrammaton or the name of the Messiah the way they say then you are praying to a false god);

3. The calendar people who insist that you are celebrating on the wrong day because their calendar is the correct one (even though in ancient days the beginning of the month could be off by a few days simply because it was too cloudy to verify the new moon was out).

All of these “religious” ideologies are representative of a legalistic mindset.

Legalism is a performance-based salvation, where “doing” has more importance than faith.

If you do anything in order to be “correct”, then you are doing it for the wrong reason.

Faithful obedience, the kind that counts with God, is doing what God said (meaning what is in the Torah, not what some religion says) to the best of your ability simply because God said to do it.

If you need proof or justification, well… that is not a faith-based system. ”

And that is where I left it.

I am not going to open a discussion about those holidays, but I will give a quickie demonstration of why I believe they are not pagan:

You go to a restaurant and order a chicken salad sandwich, and they bring you a tuna fish salad sandwich, so you say,” Hey! I ordered chicken”
“Yes, Sir, I know, but this was made the same day and has all the same ingredients we use for chicken salad, so it is no different.”
“Uh, yes it is- there is no chicken in here, only tuna fish. I asked for chicken.”
“Well, Sir, there used to be chicken in it but now there is tuna fish, so it is essentially the same thing. We use the same ingredients and make it the same way, and both are served on bread so they are no different.”
“Yes, they are different- one is made from chicken and one is made from tuna.”

If a holiday once was chicken, but now is tuna, they aren’t the same thing; if once, thousands of years ago, on a certain day they celebrated Saturn, but today they celebrate Yeshua, they are different. Even if some things seem to be the same, such as decorations and use of a tree, or eggs and bunnies… they are not the same.

These legalists also have just enough knowledge to be wrong.

For instance, the calendar thing- in the ancient days, the new moon had to be verified by at least three people, and if the weather was overcast then they couldn’t validate if there was a new moon or not until they could actually see the darn thing! That means their new moons could not be as exact and trustworthy as modern day calendars.

The modern Jewish calendar was created by Hillel II in 358/359 AD. Before 359 AD, the Sanhedrin used testimonies of witnesses seeing the new crescent moon. Hillel II replaced this with a calculated system. Hillel’s calendar relies on a 19-year cycle (Metonic cycle), containing 12 common years and 7 leap years (which add a second month of Adar), and the reason he did this was so that Jews in the Diaspora would be able to celebrate the Holy Days at the same time.

You want an absolutely exact calendar? Fine, here’s how to get it- create a time machine, go back to the first day of freedom from Egypt and move through time marking down each new moon for the past 3,300 or so years.

And to add one more nail to their coffin, God doesn’t live on a linear plane of existence as we do, and I truly believe that if we all agree to a certain calendar, and we all celebrate the same Holy Day at the same time, then we are in accordance with the Torah.

The one thing that bothers me more than anything else about these neo-legalistic theologies is that they insult God. How? By clearly indicating that God does not know our hearts and minds, that he is so egocentric and obsessive-compulsive that if we use Adonai instead of Jehovah, he will reject one of those prayers. They imply that by using “Lord” we are praying to Ba’al, and that God can’t tell the difference.

Now, as for you Holy Namers, I offer this bit of wisdom:

We are saved by faith, not by pronunciation.

Can you see how legalistic these ideologies are? They have absolutely no bearing on salvation, since salvation comes from faithfully believing that Yeshua is the Messiah and through the blood he shed we can find forgiveness of sin, which is the only way to be allowed into God’s presence, which is what being “saved” means.

And don’t even get me started on the Trinity thing!

There are so many religious differences not just within Christianity, but also within Judaism, and everything that is not specified in the Torah is man-made. That doesn’t mean a man-made ceremony or tradition is bad, unless it overrides and is given higher precedence than what God said to do in his Torah.

And, obviously, if what your religion teaches ignores anything from the Torah, then it is a religion that rejects God- something his son, the Messiah Yeshua, NEVER said or taught anyone they should do.

So what’s the point? The point is that Moses was right when he said that obeying God is not so hard (Deuteronomy 30:11-14). The issue is whether you try to be obedient to God, or try to be obedient to a man-made religion.

We will all face God one day, and when I do I will be able to tell him that I tried to obey his Torah. If your religion has taught you that the Torah is only for Jews, then you will have to tell God that you tried to obey what some man-made religion told you to do and you didn’t obey his Torah.

So, nu? … which one of those forms of worship do you think God will honor?

Thank you for being here and please remember to comment and 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!

Today We See Isaiah’s Warning Coming to Fruition

I am the first one to say that taking a verse or passage from the Bible out of context is asking for a misinterpretation. But I think that looking at Isaiah 5:20 is an exception to that rule.

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

The chapter in Isaiah begins with a warning to the people how they were given everything one could ask for from God, but instead of worshiping him properly they rebelled against him and so, as a result of their rejection he will take away from them what they have been given.

Verses 11-23 give warning to those who drink too much, who have misused property boundaries, and who- in general- have rejected God’s laws in how they react and interact with others. From verse 23 to the end he tells them how God will punish them.

So this entire chapter is about how, having been given so many good things, by rejecting the way God said to live they will end up having all that good stuff taken away from them and given to others.

Today, throughout the world, we see one of those warnings being exemplified by our own political parties, as well as the mass media. I am speaking about Isaiah 5:20, which says (CJB):

Woe to those who call evil good and good evil, who change darkness into light and light into darkness, who change bitter into sweet and sweet into bitter!

There is a rise of antisemitism throughout the world, and especially here in America. Did you know that it was Jewish money that paid the troops during the Revolutionary War, without which today we would be driving on the wrong side of the street! This country owes SO much to us Jews, yet today there is rampant antisemitism: the media is behind this because they are calling what Israel is doing to protect itself bad, and what Hamas and the other terrorist organizations are doing as good.

That’s exactly what Isaiah warned us about in this one passage.

People in America are protesting against the military action in Iran (there isn’t a war without a declaration of war), something that the Christians in Iran are ecstatic about! After all, our CIA (being asked to do so by Great Britain) removed the democratically elected Prime Minster and installed the Shah back in the 1950s, which ended up pretty bad for the Iranians. Now we are freeing them from the same sort of despotic rule that the person we had placed in charge initiated.

There are even American colleges supporting terrorists attacking innocent civilians, claiming that Israel is being genocidal while the truth is that the terrorists have one goal- to totally destroy all Jews in Israel. These cowardly monsters murder, rape, and then mutilate the dead bodies to drag through the streets, while the Gazan’s cheer!

And Israel isn’t their goal, the world is. These terrorists live to kill, and they are only starting with the Jews in Israel. Their influence is seen all over the world with the rampant rise of antisemitism, and once all the Jews are gone, believe me they will turn against the Christians, next.

What do you think “From the river to the sea” means? It doesn’t mean freedom for those alleged Palestinian people (a reference to people who never existed but was a propaganda program initiated by Yasser Arafat back in the 1970’s) to live in Israel, it means to totally destroy all Jews from the Jordan River to the Mediterranean Sea.

These Arab nations do not want the land- they had access to it for centuries before 1948, and never once built any permanent cities or businesses. The ones that were asked to leave when Israel became a state were nomads.

The media and politicians accusing Israel of genocide have it totally backward: Hamas and Hezbollah and ISIS, et.al., are the ones who want genocide, while the Israeli IDF has warned civilians of coming attacks against these terrorists, have sent food and medical supplies (which the terrorists have intercepted and not given to their own people), and tried to be as careful as possible when attacking, even though the terrorists hide under hospitals and next to schools, showing they have absolutely no concern for their own people.

And what does the mass media do? They support the terrorists, attacking in the papers Israel and anyone supporting Israel with twisted news reports and out-and-out lies!

Isaiah warned against those who call evil good and good evil, and that is exactly what we are seeing in the world, today- yes, even here in America, the land of the free.

HAH! The land of the free and the home of the brave is now the country of the ignorant, the land of the sheep, and the home of the misled.

What did Shaul (Paul) call Satan? Didn’t he call him the Prince of the Power of the Air (Ephesians 2:2)? And how does the news travel throughout the world? Isn’t it through the air?

See my point? We are being led down the path to destruction by the media and the political leadership of the world, centered in the United Nations, which I believe should be re-titled United Nations Against Israel. After all, that is clearly their desired goal.

So, what is all this rambling about? After all, I have stated that this ministry is not for political discussion, but I am not really talking about politics, I am talking about the political leadership leading us into damnation, helped along by the media.

Isaiah also states in this chapter (verse 13) that the people are being destroyed by their lack of knowledge, which Hosea reaffirms in his warnings, as well (Hosea 4:6, which I have at the bottom of my ministry home page).

So, I am saying all this as a warning to you, to ask that you please do not automatically believe anything you hear, about anyone or any country, from any source without thoroughly confirming it with multiple searches throughout the Internet. You may have to go through three or four pages of “hits” before you find some website you can trust, or at least gives what appears to be a fair report.

And this is especially true of anything you hear from anyone (yes, even me) regarding the Bible: you certainly do not want to be one of those destroyed because of your lack of knowledge.

Thank you for being here and please comment and 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!

How Many More Would Elisha Have Fed?

In 2 Kings 4:42, we are told how Elisha was able to feed 100 men with just 20 loaves of bread. I wonder…. what if there had been more than 100 men, would they all have been fed, as well?

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

This is a really simple question and it has a really simple answer: of course all the men there would have been fed.

How can I be so sure? Because God is capable of doing whatever he wants to do, that’s why.

And you need to remember that those loaves of bread weren’t like the bread you get at the grocery store. In fact, they were flat, round small loaves, looking like this:

So, now you can understand that 20 loaves of this size was way less than 100 men could have shared.

Yeshua fed 4,000 with a few fish and loaves of bread, and he also fed 5,000 with not much more. And the reason he did that was because he prayed to his father and God answered with a miracle.

Elisha, as well as many other prophets we read about in the Tanakh, also prayed and had their prayers answered.

Does this mean that you can buy a loaf of Wonder bread and a can of Bumble Bee tuna and expect it to last a month?

To be honest, probably not; but, then again, are you a prophet of God?

I’m willing to bet you aren’t, and neither am I. In truth, I would say even trying to do that would be tantamount to testing God, and we all know how he feels about that, don’t we?

What we should do is look for the miracles that are everywhere around us, every day. It is often said that the age of miracles is over, but every time you swallow food, that is a miracle.

The totality of events that occur in simply digesting a meal is miraculous- the balance, the interaction, every single, minuscule activity that starts from being able to swallow the food, how it goes down, how it is digested, how the nutrients are carried in the body, and even how the waste is ejected is all a miracle.

All of the scientists in the world, gathered together with unlimited resources using the most modern technology available, couldn’t duplicate that simple process of digestion.

And I could go on much longer with many, many other examples of miracles that surround us every moment of every day, but don’t fast forward!- I’m not gonna do that to you!

The point is that even though God can feed thousands on barely enough for a few, it is a rare thing and I believe it was done mainly to prove something God wanted people to know, such as Yeshua being the Messiah and Elisha being empowered by God.

As for you and me, well… we are who we are and all we need is to faithfully believe that God is watching us, that Yeshua is the Messiah he promised to send and that each and every one of us can find forgiveness of our sins by means of Yeshua’s shed, innocent blood.

And when we are forgiven, we are clean, spiritually, and as such can enter into God’s presence.

And isn’t that the greatest miracle of all? That a sinner like me can find eternal joy living in the presence of Adonai, El Elyon for all eternity simply by faithfully believing that Yeshua is the Messiah and be being as obedient to God’s instructions in the Torah as I possibly can be.

Oh yeah, the Torah is still valid because it is the only place where God tells us what he wants us to do. If you have been taught by your religion that the Torah is not necessary any more, and that you are saved simply by saying you “believe in Jesus” (whatever the heck that is supposed to mean), then it will truly be a miracle if you find yourself saved at Judgement Day.

Thank you for being here and please remember to comment and 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 Does Matthew 5:19 Mean?

Many passages from the Bible have a special meaning all on their own, but we should always be cautious when taking a single verse or passage out of context.

In this case, I believe the message for today on this one passage is keeping with the overall gist of God’s word.

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

To start off, let’s review this chapter: Yeshua is teaching all about heaven and about the way people should be acting. He goes through the Beatitudes (affectionately called the “Be- attitudes”) and immediately precedes this passage with telling us he has not come to change any of the Torah laws but to fulfill (meaning interpret correctly) those laws. He specifically tells us that nothing will change until everything that must happen is accomplished.

In other words, until the Acharit HaYamim (End Days/Apocalypse) has been completed, and there is the new earth and new Jerusalem lowered from heaven, the Torah is intact, valid, and necessary.

I know that freaks out a lot of Christians who have been lied to about this passage, but that is just too darn bad- the Torah is for everyone who professes to worship the God of Abraham, Isaac, and Jacob and who believes Yeshua (Jesus) is the Messiah that God promised to send. Like it or not.

So, now that we know the context of where this passage comes from, let’s look at the passage, itself (CJB):

So whoever disobeys the least of these mitzvot and teaches others to do so will be called the least in the Kingdom of Heaven. But whoever obeys them and so teaches will be called great in the Kingdom of Heaven.

The message seems pretty clear- those who fail to teach the Torah will be considered least in the kingdom of heaven, but those who teach the Torah (which this ministry does) will be called great in heaven.

Okay, one thing we need to realize is that people do not go to heaven, so that must mean the ones being called least or great are somewhere else.

And that somewhere else doesn’t have to be on the earth: it could certainly be in Sheol.

This makes sense to me because how can someone who teaches to ignore the Torah ever get to be in heaven? The Torah defines sin, and if you teach to ignore the Torah, then you are, in effect, teaching how to sin, and that certainly won’t get you in good standing with God.

So those who have accepted Yeshua as their Messiah and teach others to obey the Torah are going to not only be saved, living on the new earth in God’s presence forever, but will also be considered great by God, Yeshua, and all the angelic host.

In essence, they will have a really good rep with the angels.

That also means those who, whether accepting Yeshua as their Messiah or not, teach to ignore the Torah will not be in God’s presence, and when the angelic host speak of them, the angels will consider them less than valuable or worthy of anything …and that will also be how they are viewed by God and Yeshua.

Personally, I am not as concerned with how I am perceived in heaven as I am about being saved. For all I care, they can consider me one of the less important or spiritual of all those who are saved, just so long as I am saved. I am more than happy to be relegated to “sleep outside the Tabernacle” (as Joshua did), just so long as I am where it is.

So let this passage be a warning to all who have been taught (especially those who teach) that the Torah is only for Jews, and Gentiles accepting Yeshua as their Messiah do not have to concern themselves with it. It doesn’t matter what form of justification you are given by your religious leaders, because Yeshua himself says that they are considered least by God and all of the heavenly host.

And I think we can agree that there is no one who outranks Yeshua.

Consider this: the Torah is God’s User Manual for Righteousness, and Yeshua proved that by living his life in complete obedience to it, which is why he was resurrected. God tells us how to worship him and how to treat each other in the Torah, so why would he tell Gentiles being grafted onto the tree God planted that they don’t have to do any of that?

Why would Yeshua show us how to live a Torah-observant life just to say that we don’t have to?

The Torah is God’s laws so if we do not live by them then we are, by definition, lawless, and which of you think that the lawless will be saved?

Oh, yeah, here’s one last thing: if you are going to parrot-repeat that ridiculous justification that there are some laws which are moral and some ceremonial and Gentiles only have to obey the moral ones, remember what James said in his letter (James 2:10), which is that to break one law is the same as breaking them all. And who is to say which is moral and which is not? Isn’t God moral? And if God is moral, then isn’t everything he says we should do morally correct?

You choose which laws you will follow if you want to, but as for me, I will try my very best to be as obedient to the Torah as I can be (no one can ever be as obedient as Yeshua) because when I meet God I want to be able to say, “I tried to be as you want me to be.”

How do you think God will react to the ones who can only say, “I didn’t do what you said because they told me I didn’t have to.“?

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!

You Can’t Automatically Trust What You Are Told

I was reading my Bible the other day, just as I do nearly every morning, and I was in 1 Kings, Chapter 13.

After reading that chapter it occurred to me that there is a really important lesson there, one that could save us from being led away from salvation and straight to damnation.

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

Let me review briefly what 1 Kings 13 is about:

A prophet from Judah is sent by God to curse the altar made by Yarov’am in Israel. The prophet is told not to eat or drink anything while there and to come home on a different road than the one he took to get there.

After he delivers his message, he heads home, but a prophet living in Israel goes after him. When he reaches the prophet from Judah, he asks him to come back and dine with him. The prophet says he is not to eat or drink anything while there, but the other prophet lies, saying he heard from God that the man from Judah is to go back and eat and drink with him.

So, the Judean prophet goes back and eats and drinks with the man who lied to him.

Just then the liar gets a word from God and tells the Judean prophet that because he went against the word he was given he will be killed by a lion on his way home, which is exactly what happens.

And here’s the kicker: the lion kills the man, then just sits down next to him. It doesn’t kill and eat the donkey or the man; it just sits there.

The lying prophet hears about this and retrieves the dead prophet’s body, having it buried in the very tomb he had cut out for himself.

I thought to myself how unfair it was of God to kill the man who was just believing what he was told. It should have been the lying prophet who was punished, but that isn’t what happened.

Then it occurred to me that there is a really important message here, one which this ministry is devoted to making known to everyone: you can’t trust what you are being told by anyone!

Not even me!

(Not to sound like I am bragging, but I would say I am one
of the more trustworthy ones to listen to.)

How many different Christian religions tell their congregants to ignore (which is the same as rejecting) God’s Torah, even though God tells us to obey his Torah?

They say that the Torah is just for Jews, basing that lie not on Yeshua’s teachings but on misinterpretations and misusing the letters that Shaul (Paul) wrote!

Judaism is founded on the Torah, which is (like it or not, no matter what your Christian teachers have told you) God’s User Manual for Righteousness. He gave it to the Jews, who he chose to be priests to the world (Exodus 19:6) to learn it then teach it to everyone else.

Who really thinks that Shaul outranks God?

When James offered his four requirements for the Gentile neophyte believers (Acts 15), he preceded that by saying they would learn the laws of Moses (i.e., the Torah) by attending Shabbat services. He fully expected the Gentiles would eventually adopt a Jewish lifestyle, which is how Yeshua lived and what Yeshua taught.

James also said that those who teach have a double obligation and will be judged more strictly (James 3:1-2), implying that teaching is something you should think about twice before doing.

I think about it more than twice, and so I am confident that when I say this story in the Tanakh is not just interesting, but is a salvation issue, and I am not just saying this to sound dramatic.

I have an “Acid Test” question about everything I hear or read regarding God, Yeshua, and the Bible. That question is this: “How does this affect my salvation?”

If something doesn’t affect salvation, it may be interesting or even edifying, but it is not something to get all worked-up about.

For example, the idea of the Trinity is a hot topic, but it isn’t really a salvation issue because we aren’t saved by faithfully believing Yeshua and God are one- we are saved by faithfully believing that Yeshua is the Messiah God promised to send, and that his death and resurrection really happened, paving the way for us to receive forgiveness of sin which is how we are able to be in God’s presence for eternity, i.e., “saved”.

But this biblical story in 1 Kings 13 IS a salvation issue because if we automatically believe what we hear, just because someone is a prophet or Priest, or Rabbi, or Minister, or whatever (with credentials or not), we are liable to be in the same spot that prophet from Judah was in when he ignored what God told him to do because a man told him something different.

God tells us all how he wants us to worship him and how he wants us to treat each other in the Torah. That is the ONLY place in the entire Bible where we read that God, himself, tells Moses to tell the people what he (God) wants them to do. There is no other place, anywhere, in the entire Bible where God says anything changes or gives any new commandments.

And you can look until your eyes bleed but you will never find anywhere in the Bible where God specifies some laws are for Jews, some for Catholics, others for Protestants, etc..

If you are Jewish or Christian, or whatever, and you reject what God says he wants you to do (in the Torah), then you are in the same boat as that prophet from Judah who was told to go straight home but turned aside from God’s command because he accepted as truth what some human being told him to do.

And even though it isn’t stated anywhere, I have to believe that the lying prophet got his comeuppance, eventually.

There are a number of places in the Bible where the leaders or prophets give the people the choice to follow Ba’al or follow Adonai, and today- right now as you are reading this- you have a similar choice. You can either follow God’s instructions for worship or follow a man-made religion.

Whatever you do, choose carefully because the choice you make definitely IS a salvation issue.

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!

Purim 2026 Message

Purim (which means “lots”) is one of (if not the) most joyous holidays in Judaism.

But after all the costume parties, parades, games, and hamantaschen, there are some serious and comforting lessons we can glean from this book of the Bible.

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

I think we all know the story about Hadassah (Esther), how the king kicked out his main squeeze Vashti because she refused to appear before his drunken friends (probably because she thought she would have to show off her beauty in a very specific manner), then the king got lonely so after searching all over, he found Hadassah and she became the Numero Uno lady for the King.

Meanwhile, her uncle Mordecai (who raised her as his own daughter) told her to keep her Jewish heritage a secret.

One day Mordecai, who always hung around the castle to keep an eye on Hadassah, overheard a plot to kill the king, which he told Hadassah who then related it to the king, who verified the accusation and then had the conspirators killed.

Now the Prime Minster, a descendant of the ancient enemies of the Jews, the Amalaki, was teed-off with Mordecai because he refused to bow to him, so he planned to hang him on a gallows 70 feet high. But that wasn’t enough for him, so he sorta tricked the king into signing a declaration (which could never be rescinded) to kill all the Jews throughout all 127 kingdoms. They drew lots to see which day that would be on (hence the name of this holiday; and I call it a holiday because it is a man-made celebration and not to be confused with a Holy Day, which is God commanded), and the lot fell on the 13th of Adar. This was to be the day Haman and all his army would kill all the Jews throughout the nations.

Well, you can imagine this didn’t go over very well with the Jews, but there wasn’t anything they could do except pray.

Now, one night the king wasn’t able to sleep, so he called for the daily diary and had someone read it to him, and it just so happened they read about how Mordecai saved the kings life. The king asked what kind of reward did the man receive, and was told that nothing had been done for him. Just then Haman was in the courtyard and the king called him and said, “What should be done for someone the king wants to honor?”

Being a egotist, Haman figured it had to be him, so he told the king to dress the man in a royal robe the king had worn (I hope they at least washed it, first) and have him ride the king’s own horse through the city square. A noble prince was to lead the horse, proclaiming, “This is what is done for the man the king wants to honor.”

The king thought that was a great idea, so he told Haman he was to do that for the Jew called Mordecai.

Oy gevalt! Well, after that Haman’s wife told him that the tide has turned and Mordecai would become greater as Haman became less.

Now Mordecai asks Hadassah to go to the king to get this genocide reversed, but she, realistically scared for her life, said that unless the king called for her to go to him would be death, unless he extended his scepter to her (I think she was hoping that being the queen, she would escape the death sentence).

That’s when Mordecai set her straight by saying she would not escape just because she was the kings main squeeze; sooner or later, her true heritage would be exposed and then her time would come, as well.

Now we come to one of those really important lessons I mentioned, which is when Mordecai told her this (CJB):

“For if you fail to speak up now, relief and deliverance will come to the Jews from a different direction; but you and your father’s family will perish. Who knows whether you didn’t come into your royal position precisely for such a time as this?”

So, she goes to the king and he extends the scepter. (Whew!) She asks the king to come to a dinner she will prepare, and also to have Haman come, as well. Of course, Haman is all excited about this, and brags about it.

If only he knew.

At the dinner, she asks to come the next night, again, and when the king is fed and happy, she asks him to please prevent her death and the death of her people. When the king asks what she means, she says that Haman tricked the king into declaring all her people to be killed, which would include her.

Well, the king was really teed-off he had been tricked, and went onto the terrace to cool off. Meanwhile, Haman wants to beg the queen for his life and sits right next to her on the couch just as the king comes back into the room. The king, seeing Haman so close to his queen, assumes he is trying to get frisky with her and he calls out, “Is he even going to rape the queen here in the palace, before my very eyes?”; as soon as he said that, the attendants covered Haman’s head with a cloth and he gets hanged on the very gallows he built for Mordecai.

Now the king has Mordecai advise him and Mordecai says to let the Jews defend themselves, which the king orders to be done.

The day of the slaughter comes, but instead of the Jews being killed off, all of Haman’s family and army were totally destroyed, not just by the Jews but many of the people joined in because Mordecai had become very powerful and admired by the king, and the people knew which side their matza was buttered on.

And Mordecai gets Haman’s house for himself.

Hadassah declares that all Jews, everywhere, should celebrate this day from now on, and that is why we still celebrate it, today.

Nice story, right? Okay, so now the important lessons:

  1. This is the only book in the entire Bible were God is not mentioned at all. I have read that one explanation is that when it was written, they didn’t want to take a chance of insulting the Gentiles. Personally, I don’t buy that: I think God is not mentioned directly (although indirectly when Mordecai tells Hadassah that salvation will come from somewhere else) as a means of establishing that even when there is no obvious presence of God, he is still there.
  2. We never can know God’s plan for us, or for anyone, but we can trust that he is still working his will, and just because we don’t have a direct communication or sign, we can trust that he is with us. When we read this megillah (scroll) we can see God’s handiwork throughout it, even though he, himself, is not mentioned. The lesson is that we can be confident God is always watching out for us.
  3. You never know how your life will go, but when we trust in God we can feel secure that even if we aren’t having the time of our life, there is a reason we are going through this. Happy with everything, or dealing with tsouris, it is all part of what God has planned for us, and when we worship God (as he said to do, not as some religion says) then he will always be with us. But, when we reject his instructions for living as he wants, we are on our own. To me, there isn’t anything more frightening then thinking it is just me against the world.

Finally, I want to address some things you may be wondering about: why I use Hadassah and not Esther, and why I haven’t even once written out the king’s name. Ester is an Anglicized version of Hadassah, but it is really a form of Ishtar, the goddess of fertility, so I prefer to use the Hebrew name and not one that indicates a pagan goddess.

And the kings name is Achashverosh, but that’s a heckova lot to write over and over, so I was just being lazy by simply saying “the king”.

And when this megillah is read in the synagogue, whenever we hear the name “Esther” we all go, “Aaaahhhh” because she was so beautiful; when we hear the name “Mordecai”, we all shout “Yay!” because he is the hero; and when we hear the name “Haman”, we cry out “Booooo” and crank noisemakers (called Groggers) because he is the bad guy.

So, that is the annual reading of the Megillah of Hadassah with a quickie lesson included. I hope you enjoyed it and maybe even found it a little edifying.

That’s it for a while as I will be out of town until next week, so thank you for being here, please 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.

L’hitraot and Chag Sameach!