יום שלישי, מאי 31, 2005

poem:

two doors
which one is unlocked?
do i dare try to open one?
what if i should try to enter
and gain suffering for all my effort?
should i sit in this hall
waiting
waiting
fearing
wondering
what was behind that door?

יום שישי, מאי 27, 2005


by Howard Finster, Visions of Great Mansions, 1987 Posted by Hello

יום רביעי, מאי 25, 2005

Today's quotation is from the book Tramp for the Lord, by Corrie ten Boom

'Five reasons why I believe the Bible is inspired:
(1) It says so. "...holy men of God spake as they were moved by the Holy Ghost" (2 Peter 1:21).
(2) The effect it has upon all who believe and follow it.
(3) Though some of it was written more than two thousand years before Jesus arrived on earth, yet all the writers agree.
(4) The authors do not offer any excuses for their own faults or sins.
(5) The writers record some of the most harrowing scenes which affected them greatly, yet they never express one word of emotion. The Holy Spirit wanted the facts recorded, and not their feelings about the facts.

Many persons make the mistake of thinking they can measure the certainty of their salvation by their feelings. It is the Word of God that is their foundation and therefore it is essential for the new convert in Christ to have a practical knowledge of the Bible. More than anyone else it is the new convert who will come under the fire of the enemy. He needs the knowledge of the Sword of the Spirit. As the Lord Jesus used this Sword to overcome the evil one in His temptation experiences, so we must learn to defend ourselves against every sort of attack.'

This weekend I went on the first canoe trip of the season; an overnight trip on the South Saskatchewan River with four friends. The first day was rainy and windy, but the second day was pleasantly hot.

I bought an airplane ticket to Israel today. I leave on November 1st.

יום שלישי, מאי 17, 2005

YESHUA

The Law-maker on the throne,
And the Law-keeper in my heart.

Shavuot was pretty fun. Over a hundred wild Israelis partying it up on the prairie. On Shabbat I was in Sedley, SK, to see a girl I know become Bat Mitzvah. I helped some friends paint their new fence last week. That's the goings on for me recently. There's the internal journey happening within me as well (Abba's always teaching me something) but that's harder to articulate.

The Lesser of Two Weevils. A blog which has Hebrew as one of it's main topics. Go to!

יום ראשון, מאי 15, 2005

50!

!חג שמח

Happy Shavuot to everyone observing it today.

יום רביעי, מאי 11, 2005

46
It's the forty-sixth day of the Omer! Shavuos is nigh!

"One day as Father and I were returning from our walk we found the Grote Markt cordoned off by a double ring of police and soldiers. A truck was parked in front of the fish mart; into the back were climbing men, women, and children, all wearing the yellow star. There was no reason we could see why this particular place at this particular time had been chosen. 'Father! Those poor people!' I cried. The police line opened, the truck moved through. We watched till it turned the corner. 'Those poor people,' Father echoed. But to my surprise I saw that he was looking at the soldiers now forming into ranks to march away. 'I pity the poor Germans, Corrie. They have touched the apple of God's eye.'"
-Corrie ten Boom, The Hiding Place

Dr. Wong points to a picture of Adolf Hitler: "It's my brother Adolf! Yes, he went wrong and did evil. But he's my brother."


I 've been thinking about the Holocaust. Killing Germans and cutting off their supplies only eradicated a symptom of the disease that plagues the world. It sure didn't cure the disease. Defeating the Nazis was like cutting the biggest and most prominent tumor from a body riddled with cancer, but leaving hundreds of smaller tumors entact lurking under surface, still in the process of killing their struggling host. It reminds me of what Aleksandr Solzhenitsyn wrote:
"If only there were evil people somewhere insidiously committing evil deeds, and it were necessary only to separate them from the rest of us and destroy them. But the line dividing good and evil cuts through the heart of every human being. And who is willing to destroy a piece of his own heart?"

Unspeakable thousands of children are slain every year in North America through abortions. How can those of us with a conscience and belief in a Creator who makes every human creature unique and special convince our neighbors of the evil of this mass legalized murder? By shooting "liberal" politicians or abortion doctors or bombing abortion clinics? Surely not. That would not cure our national illness. Change must begin in the heart. And the only surgeon that can perform this delicate heart operation is the Spirit of God. We can pray to our Creator, we can be bold in standing against sin, and we can live our lives of examples of Elohim's love. The remainder of the work is in the hands of Elohim.

Hmmm...I'm thinking too of America's mission to Iraq to preach their gospel of democracy and freedom through the medium of helicopters and guns. Their mission cannot truly succeed until the Iraqis themselves want democracy. Change of heart...although in this case it's not so clear whether the change would be good.

Well, I'm going to help my friends build a fence now. Shalom.

יום חמישי, מאי 05, 2005

40

Where in the Torah do you find the barley harvest defining Pesach? Let's look at some key passages.

"You shall count seven weeks for yourselves; from when the sickle is first put to the standing crop shall you begin counting seven weeks. Then you shall observe the festival of Shavuot for Yahweh, your God." Devarim (Deuteronomy) 16:9-10

We start counting from when the sickle is first put to the standing crop. When can we start the harvest?

"Yahweh spoke to Moses, saying: Speak to the Children of Israel and say to them: When you shall enter the Land that I give you and you reap its harvest, you shall bring an Omer from your first harvest to the Kohen. He shall wave the Omer before Yahweh to gain favour for you; on the morrow of the rest day the Kohen shall wave it...You shall not eat bread or roasted kernels or plump kernels until this very day, until you bring the offering of your God; it is an eternal decree for your generations in all your dwelling places. You shall count for yourselves - from the morrow of the rest day, from the day when you bring the Omer of the waving - seven weeks, they shall be complete. Until the morrow of the seventh week you shall count, fifty days; and you shall offer a new meal-offering to Yahweh." Vayikra (Leviticus) 23:9-11,14-16

We can start to harvest on the the morrow of the rest day. But which rest day? We learn earlier in Vayikra 23 that both the first and seventh days of Unleavened Bread are to be observed as rest days. Which one is it? Additionally, some claim that the rest day in question is merely the regular weekly Shabbat that falls during the week of Unleavened Bread. What day did they wave the Omer during the days of Yeshua? My friend Terry Fehr has done much research on this subject, and here is some information that he found from historical sources:

"In the month of Xanthicus, which is by us called Nisan, and is the beginning of our year, on the fourteenth day of the lunar month, when the sun is in Aries (for in this month it was that we were delivered from bondage under the Egyptians), and law ordained that we should every year slay that sacrifice which I before told you we slew when we came out of Egypt, and which was called the Passover; and so we do celebrate this Passover in companies, leaving nothing of what we sacrifice till the day following. The feast of Unleavened Bread succeeds that of Passover, and falls on the fifteenth day of the month, and continues seven days, wherein they feed on unleavened bread; on every one of which days two bulls are killed, and one ram, and seven lambs. Now these lambs are entirely burnt, besides the kid of the goats which is added to all the rest, for sins; for it is intended as a feast for the priest on every one of those days. But on the second day of Unleavened Bread, which is the sixteenth day of the month, they first partake of the fruits of the earth, for before that day they do not touch them. And while they suppose it proper to honor God, from whom they obtain this plentiful provision, in the first place, they offer the first fruits of their barley, and that in the manner following: They take a handful of ears, and dry them, then beat them small, and purge the barley from the bran; they then bring one tenth deal to the altar, to God; and, casting one handful of it upon the fire, they leave the rest for the use of the priest; and after this it is that they may publicly or privately reap their harvest. They also at this participation of the Firstfruits of the earth, sacrifice a lamb, as a burnt offering to God. When a week of weeks has passed over after this sacrifice (which weeks contain forty and nine days), on the fiftieth day, which is Pentecost, but is called by the Hebrews Asartha, which signifies Pentecost, they bring to God a loaf, made of wheat flour, of two tenth deals, with leaven; and for sacrifices they bring two lambs; and when they have only presented them to God, they are made ready for supper for the priests; nor is it permitted to leave anything of them till the day following. They also slay three bullocks for a burnt offering and two rams; and fourteen lambs, with two kids of the goats, for sins; nor is there any one of the festivals but in it they offer burnt offerings; they also allow themselves to rest on every one of them. Accordingly, the law prescribes in them all what kinds they are to sacrifice, and how they are to rest entirely, and must slay sacrifices, in order to feast upon them." Josephus, Antiquities of the Jews – Chapter 10 – Sections 5 & 6

“The Morrow after the Sabbath” The expression, “the morrow after the Sabbath” (Leviticus 23:11), has sometimes been misunderstood as implying that the presentation of the so-called “first sheaf” was to be always made on the day following the weekly Sabbath of the Passover-week. This view, adopted by the “Boethusians” and the Sadducees in the time of Christ, and by the Karaite Jews and certain modern interpreters, rests on a mis-interpretation of the word “Sabbath” (Leviticus 23:24, 32, 39). As in analogous allusions to other feasts in the same chapter, it means not the weekly Sabbath, but the day of the festival. The testimony of Josephus, of Philo, and of Jewish tradition, leaves no room to doubt that in this instance we are to understand by the “Sabbath” the 15th of Nisan, on whatever day of the week it might fall. Already, on the 14th of Nisan, the spot whence the first sheaf was to be reaped had been marked out by delegates from the Sanhedrin, by tying together in bundles, while still standing, the barley that was to be cut down. Though, for obvious reasons, it was customary to choose for this purpose the sheltered Ashes valley across Kidron, there was no restriction on that point, provided the barley had grown in an ordinary field - of course in Palestine itself - and not in garden or orchard land, and that the soil had not been manured nor yet artificially watered. When the time for cutting the sheaf had arrived, that is, on the evening of the 15th of Nisan (even though it were a Sabbath), just as the sun went down, three men, each with a sickle and basket, formally set to work. But in order clearly to bring out all that was distinctive in the ceremony, they first asked of the bystanders three times each of these questions: “Has the sun gone down?” “With this sickle?” “Into this basket?” “On this Sabbath (or first Passover-day)?” - and, lastly, “Shall I reap?” Having each time been answered in the affirmative, they cut down barley to the amount of one ephah, or ten omers, or three seahs, which is equal to about 29 liters (7 gallons 5 pints US measure). The ears were brought into the Court of the Temple, and thrashed out with canes or stalks, so as not to injure the corn; then “parched” on a pan perforated with holes, so that each grain might be touched by the fire, and finally exposed to the wind. The corn thus prepared was ground in a barley-mill, which left the hulls whole. According to some, the flour was always successfully passed through thirteen sieves, each closer than the other. The statement of a rival authority, however, seems more rational - that it was only done till the flour was sufficiently fine, which was ascertained by one of the “Gizbarim” (treasurers) plunging his hands into it, the sifting process being continued so long as any of the flour adhered to the hands. Though one ephah, or ten omers, of barley was cut down, only one omer of flour, or about 2.9 liters (6 US pints), was offered in the Temple on the second Paschal, or 16th day of Nisan. The rest of the flour might be redeemed, and used for any purpose. The omer of flour was mixed with a “log,” or nearly 0.4 liter (0.7 US pint) of oil, and a handful of frankincense put upon it, then waved before the Lord, and a handful taken out and burned on the altar. The remainder belonged to the priest. This was what is popularly, though not very correctly, called “the presentation of the first or wave sheaf” on the second day of the Passover-feast, or the 16th of Nisan." Alfred Edersheim, The Temple – Chapter 13

So there you have it. We start counting the forty-nine days to Shavuot from when the sickle is first put to the standing crop. The day that we can start the barley harvest has been shown to be the 16th of the first month, Nisan, which is the morrow of the first day of Unleavened Bread, the 15th of Nisan, which directly follows the Pesach meal. Thus the date of Pesach is directly connected to the barley harvest.

יום ראשון, מאי 01, 2005

36

The sun rose this morning, and all the snow of the past few days is melted. It's the first day of May. And we're in the sixth week of the Omer count.

I want some comments, so I have a question for everyone that visits this blog. Make it three questions.

Where were you born?

Who do you think discovered America?

What is a film/album/book that changed your life?


Thanks for your participation.