Without Humility You Can Never Be Truly Faithful

Humility is not weakness; in fact, it takes a lot of emotional maturity and inner strength to be humble. On the other hand, it takes little or no effort at all to be prideful.

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Look at Moses- he was certainly a strong leader, yet he is also described as being the most humble of all men (Numbers 12:3), and I think we can agree that if we were to think of who was the most faithful of all people in the Bible, Moses would have to be right up there in the Top Ten.

But think of the most prideful person in the Bible and whichever name you come up with, I’ll betcha that person doesn’t show a humble bone in his (or her) body, do they?

So why is it that I say without humility you can’t be really faithful? It’s simple: pride is the antithesis of humility, and pride is the mother of all sins, so if someone is exceptionally prone to sinfulness, how can they be truly faithful?

Now, don’t go all the way to the moon with this: I am not saying someone who has pride can’t be faithful, but let’s see what God said (Jeremiah 9:23-24) about his thoughts on this:

Thus says the Lord: “Let not the wise man boast in his wisdom, let not the mighty man boast in  his might, let not the rich man boast in his riches, but let him who boasts boast in this, that he  understands and knows me, that I am the Lord who practices steadfast love, justice, and  righteousness in the earth. For in these things I delight, declares the Lord.”

Later…MUCH later… this same thought was stated by Shaul (Paul) in his letter to the Corinthians, which was that a man should only boast in the Lord; over the centuries this relationship has been known to holy men of God:

Pride and faith do not go together.

We generally feel proud of things we have accomplished, such as creating something beautiful or doing such a good job at work we receive a promotion, but doing well at what we are supposed to do is expected of us, isn’t it? Yeshua said that when we do what we are supposed to do, we don’t really deserve any special reward (Luke 17:10), and aren’t we told in Colossians 3:23 that we should do everything as if for the Lord, and not for men?

So, going forward, let’s each of us try to remember that to be truly faithful, we have to be humble, and that humility shouldn’t be a false one but come from the understanding that whatever we are able to do that is worthy of respect and admiration is because God gave us those gifts.

On our own, we aren’t worth diddly-squat; if not for the gifts God gave us when we were born, and the insight we receive through the Ruach HaKodesh (Holy Spirit), which is also a gift from God, we would have nothing to brag about.

So when you are being complimented for saying or doing something remarkable, say what I say:

Whatever I do that is good is because it is God working through me;
when I screw up totally, then I can take full credit.

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, and I will be on vacation all next week, so until we meet again, l’hitraot and Baruch HaShem!

Is It God or Your Expectations of God ?

I am sure we all know someone who has complained about God because of some tsouris (troubles) they have had in their life, saying that God didn’t do what he should have done, or why did he do what he did.

But is it God who failed to be the way he is supposed to be, or was it their expectation of who God is that was wrong?

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Christianity teaches that God is forgiving and holy and compassionate, and that is also how he is described in the Tanakh. And he really is like that.

But he is more than that- he is also the Holy One of Israel who is judge, jury, and executioner of those who disobey his rules. He is compassionate and understands our weaknesses, but unless we are humble, contrite, and accept Yeshua as our Messiah, faithfully believing that through his sacrifice we are able to receive forgiveness of sins, we are not going to see that side of God.

Humans are prideful, and as such, we don’t like the idea that God is all-powerful and the ultimate authority. We want to compartmentalize him into a God who forgives us, whose divine powers are there to help us, and who always loves us. As such, he will forgive us anything and we don’t really have to do much, other than love each other and say we believe Yeshua is the Messiah.

Judaism has learned it ain’t that easy- we know that the instructions God gave us in the Torah are not just for us, but for everyone, and we also know that as much as God loves us and really wants to forgive us (Ezekiel 18:23), he is too holy to ignore his own rules.

Deuteronomy 28 is at once the most wonderful and frightening chapter in the entire Bible. That is where God promises a plethora of wonderful blessings for those who obey his Torah, then he goes on to tell us all the terrible and horrible curses that will befall us if we refuse to obey his Torah. It is known as the “Blessings and Curses” chapter.

Christianity teaches the opposite, in that they say love each other and “believe in Jesus” (whatever the heck that is supposed to mean) and you will be saved. It rejects nearly every commandment, law, regulation, ordinance, Holy Day, and lifestyle that God says we should live.
Talk about unreasonable expectations, if you go by what most Christian religions teach, rejecting God, his commandments, and even replacing him with his son, they make salvation look like a “Come-As-You-Are” party!

In the Torah, God is pretty clear on what we can expect from him, and what he expects from us.

It seems to me that people reject God because they have lost a loved one, or because they prayed for something they didn’t get, or because they grew up forced to be in a religion that they didn’t like. They become angry, and because of the wrong expectations they were taught about what to expect from God, instead of realizing their expectations were wrong, they project that anger directly against God, blaming him for not being what they wanted him to be.

My experience with people who blame and/or reject God because they have suffered losses or had prayers go unanswered do so because they do not consider that what they expected from God was wrong, to begin with.

Our human pridefulness cannot accept the ultimate and unquestionable authority of God. It kills us that he can do whatever the heck he wants to, and that not only do we do not have the need to know, but he doesn’t have to explain anything to us!

And I believe that is why so many people reject God; they just can’t handle the fact that he doesn’t have to be the way they want him to be.

And that is a shame, because until someone has the emotional maturity to be humble before God (and yes- you need to be emotionally mature to be humble) and to read the Torah so they can know who he is and what he expects from them, they will never have the correct expectation of who and what God is.

And whether we are talking about God or just life in general, when your expectations are unreasonable you will never be satisfied.

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

Lord Isn’t Always Lord.

The word “lord” is used so often in the Bible I’d need a calculator to count the number of times, but there is a difference between “lord” and “The Lord”.

The problem is so many people don’t know what that difference is.

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In John 13:13, Yeshua says to his Talmudim (disciples) (CJB):

“You call me `Rabbi’ and `Lord,’ and you are right, because I am.”

But is he saying he is THE Lord, God, or just that he is their lord, as in a person with legal authority over others?

The Greek word for “lord” used in the Septuagint is “Kyrios“, and there it is used to refer to God, the God of Abraham, Isaac, and Jacob. And that makes sense, doesn’t it? The Septuagint was written sometime between the 3rd and 1st Century B.C., so the only “Lord” Jews knew at that time was God; Yeshua wasn’t even born yet!

Coming forward in time, some of the earlier gospels were written in either Hebrew or Aramaic, but by the time we get to John’s gospel (which, I have often said, is not a “real” gospel) which (according to the Internet) was written between 90-110 A.D., it was most likely originally written in Greek, the Lingua Franca of that time. And as such, since by then Christians were already starting to separate themselves from their Jewish roots, the use of Kyrios was assigned, so to speak, to Yeshua instead of the proper word for him, which in Greek was Christos (the Hebrew word being “Mashiach“).

The difference between “lord” (small case ‘l’) and “The Lord” (capital ‘L’) is that the former is a title representing some level of legal authority or birthright, and the other is a reference to the one and only God of Abraham, Isaac, and Jacob.

Of course, “Lord” is also the translation of the name Ba’al, and (I am sure) of other gods, as well, but that doesn’t mean Ba’al is THE Lord. For so many “Holy Namers” who refuse to use the word “lord” because they say when you pray to the lord, you are praying to Ba’al, well…really? I mean, what can you say to someone that far off the mark?

This may be another reason why so many people get confused- someone can be a lord but there is only one Lord.

When Yeshua said it was correct to call him Rabbi and Lord, he wasn’t claiming to be God- he was claiming his authority given to him by God, as he was born to be the Messiah. And as we read further, the context in which he used those titles was to demonstrate that he was washing their feet, humbly, and so they (when they have their own level of authority) should also maintain their humility.

Yeshua was the Messiah, and in traditional Judaism the Messiah is also the king. That is one of the reasons the power elite in Jerusalem wanted Yeshua dead, because as king he would have deposed them all from the Sanhedrin and taken his place as the ultimate authority over the people, which at that time was held by the Pharisees. So, when we see the word “lord” referring to Yeshua, it is the political, legal, and authoritative meaning of that word, and NOT to identify him as the God of Abraham, Isaac, and Jacob.

Going forward, please be sure when, reading the Bible and you come to the word ‘lord’, that you are understanding it in its proper context.

Here’s a final thought: If the word ‘lord’ always means God, then we should never be disrespectful to England because they have an entire house full of lords!

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 We Really Need to Invoke Yeshua’s Name?

In the Gospel of John, verse 14:13, Yeshua said (CJB), “If you ask me for something in my name, I will do it.”

Those of you who follow this ministry know that I believe the Gospel of John is a false one, and this one verse is further proof of that because I really do not believe Yeshua would tell us to pray to him, or that he will answer prayers instead of God.

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There are a few slight differences in how this one verse is stated, depending on which Bible version you are using, but the point remains that Yeshua, according to whoever wrote this gospel, is saying that when we pray to him, he will make sure we get what we ask for.

In some versions he says when we pray in his name, he will make sure we get it, or when we pray in his name, to glorify the Father he will make sure we get it. But in the end, he is saying that he will answer our prayer.

You may not agree with me, but that sure sounds like he is saying he will handle it, God doesn’t have to get involved. And, again, you may not agree with me, but that doesn’t sound like a son who really wants to glorify his father, but it does sound like a son who wants to take things away from his father. In fact, it reminds me of when Absalom told the people that they won’t get justice from the king, but if he was king he would make sure they did. (2 Samuel 15)

Another thing about this particular verse is that it is not stated in any other gospel. One of the many reasons I do not believe John is a valid gospel is because Yeshua says so many things that are not in the other gospels, failing a necessary tool of Bible interpretation, which is that everything in the Bible must be hermeneutically validated by the same statement or condition found elsewhere in the Bible.

I have, in the past, written how we do not need to invoke the name of Yeshua every time we pray to God. For instance, if we are offering a prayer of thanks, we aren’t asking for anything, so we don’t need to invoke the power of Yeshua’s name. If we are just talking with God, and not really asking for anything specifically, we don’t need to invoke the power of his name.

I used to believe that we should ask in Yeshua’s name whenever we pray to God for something, especially something important. And I have always stated we do not pray to Yeshua, directly, but to God, only referring to Yeshua as our Intercessor.

But that has always confused me a bit, because God knows my heart, he knows my mind, and he knows that I accepted Yeshua as my Messiah nearly 30 years ago, so why do I have to refer to Yeshua when I pray? Doesn’t God know this? Isn’t Yeshua there as my Intercessor anyway?

I mean, if I do not ask for something in Yeshua’s name, does he tell God to reject my prayer?

Is this some sort of spiritual “Simon Says”? ….

“In Yeshua’s name raise your right hand.” (my right hand is raised)
“In Yeshua’s name, lower your right hand.” (my right hand is lowered)
“In Yeshua’s name, raise your left hand.”( my left hand is raised)
“Lower your left hand.” (I lower my left hand)
“Ah-hah!! I didn’t say ‘In Yeshua’s name’- your prayers are rejected!”

My introduction to Messianic Judaism, where I was saved and served in many positions, even as Rabbi-Pro-Tem for 18 months or so, was at a Messianic synagogue in Philadelphia. The rabbi there was raised in an Orthodox Jewish household, and even went to a seminary school (he called it “Cemetery School”). It was there that I was taught Yeshua is God (we used to say, “Yeshua hu Adonai”), and that we must pray in his name.

It is almost three decades later, and after having studied the Bible every day and in this ministry (which is about 8 years old now) issuing messages from (what I believe) are inspirations from God, written 5 books, and answered hundreds of tough questions from people all across the world, I have come to some conclusions that go against what I was originally taught.

The first realization is that Yeshua is not God, but he was created from God (not from a man), and being filled with the Ruach HaKodesh (Holy Spirit) from birth, he was able to demonstrate that he is the Messiah; and, as the Messiah, his sacrificial death is available as a sin sacrifice for everyone.

I also have come to believe, after years of thinking it over, is what I am about to tell you right now: I do not believe that we ever need to pray in Yeshua’s name, for anything.

And that is not just because the only place he says to do that is in John’s Gospel, which I reject as valid, but because it makes no sense, whatsoever, when we read the Bible.

Throughout the Bible, God is clear that he is the one, and only, God, and that praying to anyone or anything other than him is idolatry. Yeshua always prayed to God, and always gave the credit for everything he did to God, so why would he suddenly say that we need to refer to him if we want to receive something in prayer?

And not just refer to him, but he said that by referring to his name, he will make sure we get it!

He isn’t saying he will intercede for us; what he is saying is that he will give it to us, essentially taking God out of the picture. Again, I am sorry, but that doesn’t sound at all like the obedient son who lives to glorify his father.

No. It sounds to me like someone who is trying to take over his father’s business.

So, starting today, this very minute (because already this morning I still prayed in Yeshua’s name- conditioning is very hard to get over), I will no longer invoke Yeshua’s name when asking God for forgiveness or anything. I trust God to know my heart and mind, to know that I am a true believer in his Messiah, Yeshua, to now that I am always trying to live in accordance with his instructions in the Torah, to know that I am a member of Yeshua’s flock, and I trust that Yeshua will, and is, always interceding for me in every prayer I make to God because I am one of his flock.

I really don’t think I need to remind either of them of that fact.

And one other thing, which I hope you will agree with: Yeshua never wanted anyone to put him in God’s place.

Well, this is certainly an eye-opener, if not for you, it is for me. I have wondered and battled with myself over this question for years, and I already felt secure that John’s gospel is a false one, but now I also feel secure that we never had to invoke Yeshua’s name in order for a prayer to be heard or answered, which is essentially what John says Yeshua said we have to do.

Look, I am not saying that everything in John’s gospel is bad, only that it is not a “real” gospel. It falls more in line with the Epistles; writings that are not God-breathed scripture, but from men who had an intimate relationship and knowledge of God. And as such, whatever is said in those letters must be in agreement with the rest of the entire Bible, hermeneutically validated that it is in line with everything God said.

If you want to continue to pray in Yeshua’s name, I don’t believe that is a sin, and I also don’t believe there is anything really wrong with that. What I do believe is wrong s to think if you don’t pray in his name, your prayers will be rejected. So, pray in his name, or don’t pray in his name, but always pray to God, and try to live in accordance with how God said to live, not some religion, and as Yeshua lived.

I truly believe and trust that God knows who is a real Believer and who is not, and will always act accordingly with their prayers.

If you are told the Bible says something that cannot be found in at least one other place in the Bible, then it can’t be a valid interpretation.

Thank you for being here, and 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.

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

No Torah, No Salvation

The Torah is the scroll containing the first five books of the Bible, and most Christians, and even most Jews, know it as “the Law”.

But the word “Torah” means learning, or teaching, and even though The Torah has laws, it is really God’s “User Manual for Righteousness”.

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Let’s start off by trying to agree on something: when we disobey God, that is a sin. So far, so good? OK, then the next thing to agree on is that sin is “lawlessness”.

Are we also okay with that? Good, because now we are all in agreement with the Bible because the apostle John tells us in 1 John 3:4 (NIV):

Everyone who sins breaks the law; in fact, sin is lawlessness.

So, sin is not obeying the law, but what law was John talking about? Well, truth is, at that time there was only one law- the Torah.

So, nu? Where are we?

Christianity has taught you that Yeshua (Jesus) did away with the law, which if that is true, means that the son of God told you to ignore his father and live a life of sin.

That doesn’t really make sense, does it? The Messiah, son of God, was sent by God to be a means for us to be forgiven of sin, so what he does is teach everyone to sin.

What is that, some sort of job security?

Yes, it makes absolutely no sense, so what did the early Christian leaders do? To make it seem sensible, Christianity has come up with the idea of moral and ceremonial laws, and that even though they say Yeshua did away with the law, now they don’t mean ALL the law, just the ceremonial ones.

Which, of course, begs the question: who decides which is ceremonial and which is moral?

Isn’t God moral? If he is, then he wouldn’t tell us to do anything that wasn’t morally correct…. right? Well, God told us how to worship him (Leviticus 23), what social and familial relationships are righteous and which are sinful (Leviticus 18), which foods are best for us and which we should avoid (Leviticus 11), and many other ways to live a righteous and worshipful life throughout those first five books.

Now ask yourself this: if God is moral, and everything he tells us to do is morally correct, then although people try to separate moral from ceremonial, isn’t it all moral, anyway?

Of course it is! Whatever God tells you to do is not just righteous but morally correct, and anything God says you should do that you refuse to do, is a sin, which is lawlessness, and the wages of sin is…death! (Romans 6:23)

The choice is yours. I have given you biblically correct information so that you can make an informed and biblically correct decision; you can continue to follow some man-made religion (for the record, every single Christian religion is man-made) or you can decide to follow God.

I can tell you, and I am sure you will agree, that to reject God is not a good idea, yet remarkably enough, that is what Christianity tells you to do.

In nearly every respect it rejects God: it doesn’t celebrate the Sabbath when God said to, it doesn’t honor any of his Holy Days, it eats all the foods God said not to, it teaches that Yeshua did way with his father’s commandments, and there are some forms of Christianity where the people pray to statues and their houses of worship are full of graven images, and …well, you get the idea.

Follow a Christian “torah”, or follow the Torah that God gave to all humanity so that they know what is right and what is wrong. The choice is yours, but let me give you one more thing to consider….

When you face God at Judgement Day, which we all will do, he might ask you why you lived the way you did, and when you tell him, “I was just doing what they told me to do.”, I can’t speak for the Big Guy upstairs, but I think he will respond with something to the effect of:

“I know you 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 this week, so l’hitraot and (an early) Shabbat Shalom!

How Important is the Trinity Regarding Salvation?

One of the biggest arguments within Christianity is the idea of the Trinity, meaning that God, Yeshua (Jesus), and the Ruach HaKodesh (Holy Spirit) are all really the same entity, in different forms.

It is a very hotly argued topic, but my question is this:

With regard to how we are saved, does it really matter if Yeshua is God or not?

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I know that there are a lot of people right now who are screaming, “Of course it does!”

OK, why? Are we saved by believing that Yeshua is God? Is there anywhere in the Gospels or the writings of Shaul (Paul) that states if we do not believe Yeshua and God are the exact same entity, we can’t be saved? Doesn’t Shaul write about how important it is to faithfully believe that Yeshua is the Messiah?

Look, I don’t believe Yeshua is God simply because it doesn’t make sense, spiritually or biblically. There are some 130 messianic passages in the Tanakh, yet not one of them indicates that the Messiah is going to be God.

Every single person who ever existed was created through the joining of a human male with a human female, with three exceptions: Adam, Eve, and Yeshua. And because of Adam’s major screwup, we are all born with a sinful nature (called the Yetzer Hara), also referred to as Original Sin, which traditionally has been passed down from Adam; original sin is transmitted through the father.

But Yeshua’s father was not human, and was not sinful- in fact, he was (and is) the holiest of all holies that has, does, or ever will exist. Yeshua had to be 100% human so that he could live a human life and know human temptations. But as the messiah, he also needed to be imbued with the Holy Spirit, which is the inheritance he received from that divine conception. It was his humanity filled completely with Holy Spirit that empowered him to overcome sin. And because he was able to live a sinless life he was an acceptable sacrifice for others- which was the ultimate the goal of the Messiah’s first coming.

He was born of flesh and spirit, but even though his conception was divine, he was not divine. What was divine was the Ruach HaKodesh that lived within him, just as we who accept Yeshua and have asked for this gift from God, have the Ruach HaKodesh inside us.

Do you believe you have the indwelling Holy Spirit? Does that make you God?

But let’s get back to this salvation thing: if I believe Yeshua is God, am I more “saved” than someone who doesn’t believe that? What if he is God, and I believe he is not, does that mean I can’t be saved?

Even if I believe he is the Messiah?

If I believe Yeshua is the Messiah and believe I can receive forgiveness of my sins by means of the shedding of his innocent blood, but I don’t believe he is God, am I doomed to damnation?
Everything I read in the Bible states that faith is how we are saved, but it must be a faith that motivates us to obey God and reject sin.

But nothing says we have to believe that Yeshua is God to be saved.

Let’s wrap this up: I will never tell anyone what they must believe, so believe what you choose to, but I believe that Yeshua is not God, and more than that, I believe it doesn’t matter whether he is or not when it comes to salvation because we are not saved by the belief that Yeshua is God, but by faithfully believing he is the Messiah God promised to send. And that he died for our sins, and because he was sinless he was resurrected, proving he was an acceptable sacrifice.
And that he now sits at the right hand of his Father, the one and only God, interceding for us.
You know, when you think about it, if he is God, why would God intercede with himself?
Like I said, I don’t believe that Yeshua’s being God or not has any effect on how we are saved, but since it causes so much division within the body of the Messiah, doesn’t it make sense that we all just concentrate on Yeshua’s role as the Messiah, and let God remain God?

Thank you for being here and please remember to share these messages (yes, even this one) 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 God Really Desires

“For what I desire is mercy, not sacrifices, knowledge of God more than burnt offerings.”

Hosea 6:6 (CJB)

OK, so does that mean nothing else matters?

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God also tells us he isn’t interested in sacrifices in Isaiah 1:11, Micah 6:6-8, Psalm 51:16-17, and Jeremiah 7:21-23.

Yikes! I guess Leviticus 1-7 doesn’t count any more.

That’s not so, and the only reason the sacrifices outlined in those chapters of the Torah aren’t done today is because the temple where they have to be performed has been destroyed.

I have often said, and will continue to do so, that taking a specific verse or passage out of context is a dangerous way to interpret the Bible, so let me assure you that the context of all the passages I cited above is the prophet (or psalm writer) pointing out that the people have been just going through the motions, performing sacrifices that were not truly from their heart. Using animals that were not correct, and sinfully worshiping other gods and goddesses just before coming to the temple and sacrificing to God.

In other words, they were practicing what Shaul (Paul) would call “Legalism”, which is assuming salvation can be attained solely through doing things as ordered, which is what I call a performance-based salvation.

God had the prophets tell this to the people as a way to correct what they were doing wrong, because God always does what he does in order to bring us back into communion with him. And what was wrong was that without faith, the works mean nothing.

And it’s possible that some of the people still faithfully believed in God, but because they were polluting their worship of Adonai with their worship of other gods, their faith was rendered useless.

You can’t work with fish all day and come home smelling nice; when you sacrifice to Ba’al, pour drink offerings on your rooftop to the Queen of Heaven, burn your children to Molech, then go to the temple and sacrifice to God, you reek of faithlessness and sin. And that stench prevents God from accepting you.

What the people didn’t understand, and why these messages were given to them, is that sacrifices to the false gods are worthless, but they make your sacrifice to the one, true God worthless, as well.

So, what does God want?

He wants obedience, but not from desire to earn salvation. He want us to do what he says because we are faithfully trusting in him. Trusting that he will do what he says, i.e. bless those who do as he commands (Deut. 28) and that he will forgive us when we ask for forgiveness, now through the sacrifice Yeshua made for us.

Yeshua didn’t do away with the Torah, just like when God said he doesn’t want sacrifice he didn’t mean never to sacrifice again. The message is that we should be obedient to what God says we should do because we trust that God tells us what to do for our benefit.

God will never steer us wrong, and he always directs us towards salvation. That’s what the Torah does- it tells us what is right and what is wrong, so that we can do what is right.

It’s really quite simple: ignore the way God said to worship him and to treat each other and you cannot be on the path to salvation. You probably will be walking alongside it at times, and you might even cross it now and then, but the path that ignores the Torah is the wide road leading to the wrong destination.

Do you check the news every day? That’s fine- there’s nothing wrong with being up to date on current events, but do you also read the Bible every day? I ask because there is a significant difference: the news tells you about where you are today, but the Bible tells you where you will be throughout eternity!

The Torah isn’t just a bunch of laws- it is the roadmap to salvation.

Let me leave you with this… ignore for a moment what your religion has told you, and ask yourself this question:

Why would God give us the Torah if it didn’t lead us to him?

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 is the Word, and the Word is the Torah

First of all, we need to remember that when Yeshua (Jesus) walked the earth, the only “word of God” that existed then was the Torah.

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Do you really understand what the New Covenant is? I’ll give you a hint… it isn’t found anywhere in the New Covenant writings.

Here is the new covenant that God made with Israel, which Yeshua also made available to the Gentiles, and it is in Jeremiah 31:31-33 (CJB):

Here, the days are coming,” says Adonai, “when I will make a new covenant with the house of Isra’el and with the house of Y’hudah. It will not be like the covenant I made with their fathers on the day I took them by their hand and brought them out of the land of Egypt; because they, for their part, violated my covenant, even though I, for my part, was a husband to them,” says Adonai. “For this is the covenant I will make with the house of Isra’el after those days,” says Adonai: “I will put my Torah within them and write it on their hearts; I will be their God, and they will be my people. No longer will any of them teach his fellow community member or his brother, ‘Know Adonai’; for all will know me, from the least of them to the greatest; because I will forgive their wickednesses and remember their sins no more.”

That is quite a covenant, wouldn’t you agree? It also happens to be the last covenant God made with us and I believe that is because it is the last one we will ever need.

In essence, God is saying that the Torah will be more than just a document we read, it will become a physical part of us, like blood or an organ, something that is an integral part of our very existence.

And that is what Yeshua brought to us- when he says in Matthew 5:17 that he fulfilled the law, he was teaching us the Torah’s spiritual meaning, the very “heart” of the Torah, and so that when we accepted him, and received through his name the Ruach haKodesh (Holy Spirit), we were having the Torah written on our hearts.

In other words, what Yeshua really fulfilled was not just a proper interpretation of the Torah, but he fulfilled the new covenant God gave to us through Jeremiah.

And as Shaul (Paul) points out in Romans, it was to the Jew first, then to the Gentile.

But then, the problems began: the main population of the Jewish people, having been coerced and threatened with excommunication by the power elite of Jerusalem, rejected Yeshua as the Messiah.

Later, after all the Jewish leaders of this new sect within Judaism died off, the movement was led by Gentiles who then rejected the Torah and created their own religion in order to not be targeted by the Romans, who were dealing with a Jewish rebellion.

Of course, that only worked to get the Jewish power elite coming against them. Later on, after the Romans destroyed the temple and killed thousands of Jews in their final battle, these Gentile believers thought they would be OK.

NOT!

Surprise! Now Rome came after them because the one thing Rome hated more than rebellion was some new religion being formed within their controlled territory.

So, what we have now, two millennia later, are Jews who stick to Torah obedience as God directed us to, and Christians, who profess to worship God, who say they follow in the footsteps of Yeshua, but reject nearly every single law, ordinance, regulation, and commandment God gave, which Yeshua obeyed perfectly, in order to follow man-made regulations, ceremonies, holidays, and tenets.

You know, within Judaism there are 5 different sects (6, if you count Messianic Judaism), but the one thing that is constant in all is that the Torah is the ultimate user Manual for Righteousness. From the Ultra-Orthodox (Chasidic) all the way down to the Reconstructionists, we go from extreme Torah observers to a humanistic viewpoint, but we all are trying to be Torah-obedient, in one way or another.

But Christianity, well, Christianity has a lot more than just 5 or 6 sects.

According to Google, there are as many as 45,000 different religions or sects that fall within the term “Christian”.

Forty-five thousand!

Now, as I recall, that nice Jewish tent-maker from Tarsus, in his letter to the Corinthians, said that God is not a god of confusion, but of peace.

You know what? If you ask me, when a religion has as its root tenet that it worships God and follows in the footsteps of Yeshua, but has some 45,000 different ways to do that, well… I am sorry, but I’ve gotta say that is one confused religion!

Hey, Folks- it’s easy! Really! God made the Jews his nation of priests to the world (Ex. 19:6), then he gave us the Torah, then he sent us the Messiah to teach us the true, spiritual meaning of the Torah, then the disciples of the Messiah brought the Torah (being God’s priests to the world) to the Goyim, which is Hebrew for the nations.

Simply stated, God gave Jews the Torah for us to learn so we could bring it to everyone else in the world.

Then the Goyim screwed it all up by rejecting the Torah, making up their own religions, and forcing us Jews to either convert or be tortured and killed.

Talk about killing the messenger!

So, what should you do? My suggestion is simple: read the entire Bible (that means start at Genesis and go through to Revelation) and then pray on it, asking God to guide you to HIS truth.

And let me offer this thought: when you stand before God at Judgement Day (which we all will have to do), and God asks why you didn’t do any of the things he said you should do, I guess that you will answer saying that you did what they told you to do because you thought they knew what they were talking about. I can’t speak for God, but I think he might say something to this effect…

“I know 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!

The Lord’s Prayer May Deny Your Salvation

I know this sounds impossible, right? I mean, how can a prayer straight from the son of God deny us salvation?

Well, I’ll show you how!

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Let’s take a look at the prayer; it’s in Matthew 6:9-13 (CJB):

Our Father in heaven! May your Name be kept holy. May your Kingdom come,
 your will be done on earth as in heaven. Give us the food we need today.
 Forgive us what we have done wrong, as we too have forgiven those who have wronged us.
And do not lead us into hard testing, but keep us safe from the Evil One.
For kingship, power and glory are yours forever. Amen.’

Let’s concentrate on that line in the middle, you know, the one that says God should forgive us as we forgive others. What is that verse really saying?

It’s saying that if we do not forgive others, then God should not forgive us!

And that interpretation is confirmed by verse 14 when Yeshua says:

For if you forgive others their offenses, your heavenly Father will also forgive you;  but if you do not forgive others their offenses, your heavenly Father will not forgive yours.

So, if you are not willing to forgive those who sin against you, then God will not forgive you.

And Yeshua further confirms this in the parable about the man who was forgiven a great debt he owed, but refused to forgive a small debt owed to him (Matthew 18:21-35) .

Now, you may say, “Yo, Bro! Wait a minute! This was before Yeshua shed his blood for us, by which we are forgiven! We’re golden.”

I have to disagree. Yeshua said if we do not forgive, then God won’t forgive us. There’s no escape clause, no “But what if..?”, no option other than we forgive or we aren’t forgiven.

Now can you see why I say that the Lord’s Prayer can actually deny your salvation?

Sure, Christianity makes a big deal out of love thy neighbor, but it seems to me Yeshua is making a bigger deal out of forgive those who sin against you. And I can see why- doesn’t Yeshua tell us in Luke 6:32-36 that even sinners love those who love them? And aren’t we hurt by those who love us, and don’t we hurt those we love? It’s part of the human experience, which doesn’t always stop us from loving each other.

But when it comes to forgiving those who hurt us, that seems to be much harder to do, doesn’t it? Even those we love!

C’mon, be honest- how many times have you felt that someone just doesn’t deserve to be forgiven? The fact is we don’t have the right or the option to make that call- that call is up to God. What we are told is our responsibility is to forgive that person, no matter what our emotions tell us.

And when we forgive someone, don’t think that it makes them right with God, because it doesn’t- it makes YOU right with God!

This is the truth about forgiveness: it doesn’t do anything at all for the one we forgive, but it does a lot for us, in that it makes us right with God and it is the ONLY way to make the hurt go away.

The take-away from today’s message is simple…forgive others so that you will be forgiven and to make the hurt go away.

And here is a tip that helps me to forgive others: I imagine that person standing before God at Judgement Day, and if they haven’t done t’shuvah (repentance), when I think of what they will have to endure for all eternity, well…all I can feel is pity for them, and that feeling of pity is what helps me to forgive them. Maybe it will help you, too?

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!

Like It or Not, This is How It Works

It starts with the creation of everything. Human beings are created, and God gives us the gift of Free Will, because his love for us is such that he will allow us to choose where we spend eternity.

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God wants us to love him freely and without being forced to, but free will is a two-edged sword: if we choose to obey God from love for him, we will live, but if we choose to reject God from love for ourselves, we will die.

Happily for us, God is not just willing to forgive us, but he truly desires to do so (Ez. 18:23), and so he provides a means for us to be forgiven.

But not yet.

God eventually chooses Abraham, and promises that through his descendants the entire world will be blessed.

But first he needed to protect us. You see, Levi and Rueben had placed the entire Jewish population at risk by slaughtering an entire town in retribution for the prince raping their sister, Dinah, so God had the entire family go to Egypt.

(Yeah, I know I am skipping some events, but the main message remains valid.)

After a time, the family grows into a nation, and then God shows himself to the nation through the miraculous events he causes, freeing his people from slavery and bringing them into the desert.

Now we come to the main point of today’s message: God’s plan for the Jews and the rest of the world.

  1. He tells Moses to separate the Levites, who will serve God for the House of Israel (Num. 3:10-12; Num. 8:5-22).
  2. God tells Moses that the House of Israel will be his (meaning God’s) nation of priests to the world (Ex. 19:6). They have to be priests to the world because the Levites are already priests to Israel, and all that is left to priest to….is the rest of the world. Duh!
  3. God gives this nation of priests the Big Ten (Ex. 20), and over time, through Moses the entire Torah to learn so that they can teach it to the world.
  4. God promises, in Deut. 28, that if we obey his Torah we will be blessed, so it works like this: God gives us Jews the Torah promising if we obey it, we will be blessed, then he tells the Jews to bring it to the world, so the world can be blessed, as well, fulfilling the promise he made to Abraham.
  5. He sends the Messiah, Yeshua, so that when the sacrificial system is not available (after the destruction of the temple) there will still be a means for his people, as well as all people, to receive the forgiveness he wants us to have, so long as we faithfully accept his Messiah and continue to obey God’s Torah, just as Messiah Yeshua did.

My purpose is to do the best I can to teach others how religions are misleading us, and the only way to truly worship God correctly is the way God said to do it!

Again…DUH!

When the Messiah returns, I believe there will be a third temple, and the sacrificial system will be reinstituted, but not for sin- Yeshua took care of that one. There are many other sacrifices to be made, such as the wholly burnt sacrifice (demonstrating our total devotion to God), the Thanksgiving sacrifice, the daily sacrifices, the Rosh Hodesh and Holy Day sacrifices, not to mention any voluntary sacrifices people wish to make.

Well, that’s the plan, Folks! It is laid out clearly throughout the Bible, and despite what Christianity has taught, this plan is confirmed by Yeshua and the teachings within the New Covenant writings.

I think many of you already kinda knew this is what God’s plan was, from the start, but have become complacent and happy to use your religion as an excuse for taking the easy way out. Well, sorry to burst your bubble, but salvation is not a Come-As-You-Are Party. It is free for the asking, and once given no one can take it away from you.

But you can throw it away by not following God’s User Manual for Righteousness, colloquially known as the Torah.

As I said from the start, you were given Free Will to decide where you will spend eternity: please decide wisely.

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!