Matthew 3 Questions and Proposed Answers

Matthew 3

Questions and Proposed Answers

(See Accompanying Matthew 3 Literally Rendered on this site.)

Note: This document has not been finely edited. It is written during studies. Please expect to find errors in spelling, words missing, etc. If you use the document and desire to participate in editing it, please do so. I will need the number-letter address along with a partical quote of the error, and what you know or think it should say. Please send it to james842@eeweems.com.

1. a) What was Yokhanan proclaiming? He was proclaiming a command: Repent and information: The kingdom of the heavens has drawn near.

1. b) Was Yokhanan a Baptist? He was not a Baptist. No Baptist existed until the Anabaptists who were against infant baptisms. Yokhanan was a Jewish son of a high-ranking priest, and was thus in line for a ranking priesthood.

1. c) Why would Yokhanan have any success making a proclamation in the wilderness versus in the city? First, the wilderness of Judaea is not far from the city. Secondly, folks were drawn to hear him. The wilderness was quiet, had hills (so that Yokhanan had an acoustic podium), and lacked trees to interfere with sight. Thirdly, Yokhanan’s message was about a voice calling in the desert; therefore, he needed to call in the desert (which is what the wilderness actually is). Yokhanan had a great drawing; many folks desired to hear him and responded to his call. In the city, Yokhanan would be subject to authorities that might not like his influence. They didn’t have authority over the desert areas that Yokhanan used.

1. d) Why did Yokhanan use the wilderness (desert) of Judaea instead of other locations besides the reasons given above? Its proximity to Jerusalem, the true capitol of all Israel is very important.

2. a) From what were the Israelis being commanded to repent? The Israelis were confessing their sins (see verse 6). Thus, repentance was from sin.

2. b) What does repentance mean? The Hebrew word means to turn or to return. The difference between the two is whether the person had been there in the first place, or whether this was a new change. Verse 6 indicates that they confessed their sins.

2. c) What is a kingdom? It consists of a king (a monarch), the king’s subjects, a land, and a rule of law.

2. d) What is the kingdom of the heavens? This is a kingdom whose ruler is temporarily located in the heavens. Thus, it is identified by location.

2. e) What is the kingdom of God? This is the kingdom that belongs to God. While the wording is the same as in kingdom of the heavens, the heavens don’t own the kingdom. The Whitehouse of Washington, D.C. is not owned by Washington, D.C. The Whitehouse of the president, while not being owned by him, is for his usage during his administration. Thus, when the president speaks, some will report it by saying, “Today, the Whitehouse declared that illegal aliens…” The two kingdoms are one and the same, but the descriptions (kingdom of God, kingdom of heaven) are distinct and vital.

2. f) In what respect had the kingdom of the heavens drawn near? Yokhanan made the legitimate offer of the kingdom arriving in Israel in his day if certain conditions were met. If they were not met and the kingdom still came, Israel would be destroyed, in which case Messiah could not come (because of His promises). The conditions include all Israel (still alive) coming to faith and righteousness. Thus, the kingdom had drawn near in the respect of time and location.

2. g) Did the kingdom of the heavens arrive in or after Yeshua’s day? It hasn’t yet arrived.

2. h) If the above is true, why didn’t Yeshua bring the kingdom as He promised? Yokhanan didn’t promise the kingdom in his day, but instead announced that it had drawn near. Yeshua didn’t bring it because of the terrible slaughter of the vast majority of Jews that would necessarily take place immediately after its arrival. The kingdom of the heavens is incompatible with sin. The entire book of Ezekiel includes a description of the Spirit of Yehovah going into exile because of Israel’s sin.

Yeshua elsewhere stated,

Matthew 21:43 Therefore say I unto you, The kingdom of God shall be taken from you, and given to a nation bringing forth the fruits thereof.

The nation mentioned in this verse is Israel. No other text replaces Israel in the plan of Yehovah. Thus, Israel will be that nation.

2. i) Did Yokhanan expect that the kingdom of the heavens would arrive in his day? He certainly did. This was the reason why he was so shaken when it didn’t arrive even to his arrest and execution. Yokhanan lost his faith over this issue. Had he read texts carefully and literally, he would not have made that error. He read as most today read, thinking themselves the center of the fulfillment of the plan of God. He found out that this was not the case when Yeshua would not even ask for his life.

3. a) Who is ‘he’ who was spoken by Isaiah the prophet? Yokhanan is the fulfillment of that text.

3. b) What text is in mind?

Isaiah 40:3 A voice is calling in the desert: “Turn ye the way of Yehovah! Straighten-ye in the arid-region a highway for our Gods! 4Every valley shall be lifted and every mountain and hill shall lower. And the crooked-item is to a straight-item. And the rough-terrains are to a cleft [in the mountains: a pass]. 5And the Glory of Yehovah will be revealed. And they shall see─all flesh─together. For the Mouth of Yehovah spoke!”

3. c) What voice would be calling in the desert? That is the voice of Yokhanan the Immerser.

3. d) What is that voice calling? He is calling for the Israelis to turn the way of Yehovah and to straighten a highway for ‘our Gods’ in the steppe.

3. e) Why is the voice in the desert? The proposed answer is given above; the terrain is best for sound being carried. It is also where Yokhanan resided. A desert is noted for the difficulties finding ready food and ready water. If the Israelis who find themselves in the desert will obey this command, Yehovah will supply them.

3. f) What does “Turn ye the way of Yehovah” mean? This means to turn from any other way (which is a sinful or unprofitable way) to the one single way of Yehovah (which is a way of righteousness). This will also refer to the literal way they need to go to survive and arrive at Mount Zion.

3. g) What is this way? It is the way of righteousness according to Yehovah’s standards. It is the way of life, the way of everlasting life. It is describing a clearly marked place for one to walk, the Biblical description of how one leads his or her life. It obviously has an ending: a destination, and that is not the destination described in Pilgrim’s Progress, since that book set the destination as the ‘Celestial City’. Heaven is not a proper destination; the Millennium is a proper destination, and the New Earth is also. Yet, Mount Zion is the physical destination, and the only way to come to Mount Zion during the Tribulation will be to turn the Way of Yehovah. Yokhanan was addressing folks in history. The Spirit of Yehovah through him was addressing those who will respond in the future.

3. h) What steppe is in mind in this text? Since a steppe is flat, semiarid and often grassland, this doesn’t describe much of Israel, though part of the eastern side adjacent to Jordan is steppe. I propose that this is the steppe mentioned here.

3. i) Why must the steppe in particular be the location of the future straightened highway? This is part of the gathering, but a different part. This is where the Gods of Israel will travel on His way to Mount Zion. Thus, this text is giving away this information for readers who will carefully consider it. Yeshua will be coming from the city of Botzrah when He is heading for Zion. His garments will be covered with blood from the slaughtering He will do (Isaiah 63).

3. j) How can a group straighten a highway? This is accomplished by curve removal. Much straighter highways have replaced many curvy highways.

3. k) What is the need for highway straightening? If this is the Way of Yehovah, and if folks will be turning the Way of Yehovah (that is, entering into it in order to be saved from physical death and enemies), the highway that is for the Gods of Israel will be used by the returners. They don’t need an inefficient and curvy road system; they need one that is the shortest route and the easiest to see potential enemies. I propose that this route will be for returners who use the very way Yeshua will follow.

3. l) Why construct a highway? What is wrong with just marking trails? It is to keep returners from floodwaters! A highway is essential in order to avoid being washed to death during a flood.

3. m) The pronouns ye and our appear to refer to different groups. Identify ye and our. Yokhanan is the voice; he is the speaker in this text. He spoke to the Israelis, calling them ye. The Israelis are responsible to do the highway straightening. Our seems to refer to a larger group, but of the same group of Israelis. Thus, the ye in that case would be a subgroup of the ‘our’ constituents. Both would then be Israelis. Yet, I cannot exclude the non-Jewish Saints from our in this text. If that is true, the subgroup of the Israelis are responsible to build this highway so that non-Jewish Saints can accompany Jews making returns to Mount Zion.

3. n) If the good guys are fleeing during the terrors of the Tribulation and the enemies on their tails, how in the world will they have the equipment, the time, and the desire to participate in physical road building? I propose that returners will come to obstacles that they will not be able to circumvent while they are being chased by enemies. They will therefore ask Yehovah to move mountains and do other such things, including walking on water, and He will. If He can part the Red Sea when enemies are chasing the Israelis, He certainly can do the same during the Tribulation.

4. a) Why did Yokhanan wear camel’s hair, of all materials to wear? I propose that this was a poor man’s material. Light garments would have been extremely expensive, whereas skins that could be acquired when an animal died would be far less expensive.

4. b) Why wear a leather girdle, and what is this girdle? I also propose that this is another way to describe a belt, and perhaps one with back support, since he did much walking. The terrain required some form of belt in order to avoid snagging cacti.

4. c) What are these locusts? They are grasshoppers. They are not related to the tree by the same name.

4. d) Why did he eat wild honey? The locusts provided protein, and the wild honey provided carbohydrates. His diet was very good for hard desert work.

4. e) What does this diet tell about Yokhanan? He was a desert ‘mountain man’. He lived off the land, and he was not dependent upon cities.

4. f) How did Yokhanan come to be a desert dwelling hermit? He wasn’t truly a hermit at least later in life; he had contact. It appears that his parents died early in his life. His family may have been the target of assassination, since he was legitimately in the priestly line. Murders in the priestly line had begun around this time. (I don’t have proof of this.)

5. a) Why did Jerusalem and all Judea, etc. go out to him? Yokhanan spoke and ‘preached’. This reputation spread. The Israelis were looking for something Spiritual to happen. They also tended to believe in reincarnation. Yokhanan was a haunting and preaching character who spoke the truth with authority. His messages were exciting, and his calls touched their hearts. They were ready (or so they thought) for some type of interaction from God.

5. b) Why didn’t the text indicate that all Jerusalem went out to him? Jerusalem is inside Judea, so that all Judea going out to him would include all Jerusalem.

5. c) What ‘country’ was around the Jordan? The word country means territory. This is the Jordan River; the country of Jordan didn’t exist at that time. There were settlements where water could be found. Folks came from up and down the Jordan River areas to hear Yokhanan.

5. d) What does Yokhanan mean? It means “Yo (Yehovah) favours.”

6. a) What was the purpose of Yokhanan’s immersion?

Mark 1:4 Yokhanan did baptize in the wilderness, and preached the baptism of repentance for the remission of sins.

This baptism is not akin to any form of modern-day ‘Christian’ baptism, though a number of denominations will think that it is. These folks were repenting of specific sins before they were immersed. A repentance baptism is not the type of baptism declared in Acts or in Matthew at the end.

They were immersed as a separation from their former sins. It was not associated with salvation.

6. b) Was this baptism for remission of sins? It was not for remission of sins; that would be a form of blasphemy.

Sin remission is the full payment of justice for sins committed. It is like a remittance in business. A person makes a purchase, then is billed. The person then (if honest) sends a check with the remittance copy. A receipt is then returned, indicating that the debt has been remitted.

Acts 2:38 was wrongly rendered from Greek into English:

Acts 2:38 Then Peter said unto them, “Repent, and be baptized every one of you in the name of Jesus Christ for the remission of sins, and ye shall receive the gift of the Holy Ghost.”

This expresses a theological error. A proper rendering would be worded like this:

Acts 2:38 Then Peter said unto them, “Repent, and be baptized every one of you in the name of Jesus, the One anointed for the remission of sins, and ye shall receive the gift of the Holy Ghost.”

This indicates that Jesus (actually, Yeshua) is the One anointed for sin remission. The term Christ (from the Greek, Christos) either refers to a title or to an assignment. If the title is used rather than the assignment in a text, the text will give error. Yeshua was the One anointed by Yehovah to bring sin remission.

The baptism itself only accomplishes what the person being baptized has determined to do. It is an act and a declaration of a point of cut-off from former sins. Its benefit is to the person, not to anyone else, if the person truly refuses to return into sin.

Yokhanan was immersing folks whom he knew were not born of God. This immersion cannot be compared with immersion of folks in faith. They are not the same. Some were in faith, and were immersed by Yokhanan, but their own immersions were not the normal immersion that Yokhanan did. Anyone who is not born of God can be immersed after repenting (including turning) from sin. That doesn’t affect any salvational change, and it doesn’t require salvation.

Yokhanan knew they were not born of God (with a few exceptions); that was not a problem to him and to his disciples, because the issue was whether Israel even in unbelief would obey the Torah while in the land. That is was is necessary for Yehovah to do benefits to Israel.

In order for Salvation to come, the person must meet certain absolute prerequisites. These include:

  • A Biblical and proper fear of the Biblical Yehovah
  • Faith in the Word of Yehovah (all of it)
  • Hearkening to the Word of Yehovah
  • The request for Salvation
  • Turning to Yehovah from idols or whatever the person had or didn’t have as an object of faith
  • Receiving a love of the Truth

 

Plus, Yehovah must also do certain things, including:

  • Immersing the person into the Body of Messiah (an act that is invisible, and isn’t related to any water or physical form of baptism)
  • Applying His Grace to that person for Salvation
  • Recreating that person
  • Giving that person a love of the Truth

6. c) What is the benefit and purpose of sin confession? Verbal sin confession can be the first step to turning from that sin. It can be; that doesn’t mean that it is. A person who confesses sins is sometimes demonstrating the type of humility that a person who won’t admit a problem doesn’t have. Those who have sins that they won’t confess also have areas they hide, showing that they may desire to do the sin again, and don’t desire others to know about it.

6. d) Did all who confessed their sins truly mean what they were doing? It isn’t likely. If all had meant what they said, Yeshua would have had many more faithful followers, and Israel would have been ready for the Kingdom of God.

7. a) What is a Pharisee? This is an Israeli who is a separatist (being the meaning of Parosh, Pharisee in Hebrew) from the world and sin. In other words, a true Pharisee believed in being righteous at all times in behaviour, belief and word. All who are born of God must follow the same supposed standards of the Pharisees. That doesn’t mean that all Pharisees were righteous; some were not. Some were. Considering all Pharisees as hypocrites, evildoers, etc. is wrong. Yeshua Himself told the Israelis to do as the Pharisees said, because He said that they sit in Moses’ seat.

Matthew 23:1 Then Yeshua spoke to the multitude and to His disciples 2saying, “The scribes and the Pharisees sit in Moses’ seat. 3All therefore whatsoever they bid you observe, that observe and do!”

7. b) What is a Sadducee? This is an Israeli who claims to be part of a righteous group (the meaning of Sadducee in Hebrew) that only acknowledged the Torah (first five books), didn’t believe in a resurrection of the dead, and proved to be very liberal in Biblical interpretation. Some of the Sadducees challenged Yeshua and His literalness. Thus, we can safely say that modern Christianity follows the teachings of the Sadducees (without the Torah, and thus, without anything) in practice, practicality, and decisive lack of literal views of many texts.

7. c) What are distinctions between Pharisees and Sadducees? Those distinctions include how literally the Bible should be taken, what books are the Word of God, whether or not there is a resurrection of the dead, and what type of life should a believer lead (righteous or not). The Pharisees had among them true Saints. The Sadducees had among them truly violent rebels who succeeded in bringing on the ire of the Roman empire to the degree that the Temple was burned.

7. d) Why would a Pharisee come to John’s type of immersion? These particular ones didn’t recognize that they had a sin problem at all, so their reasons for coming didn’t include a heartfelt desire to confess sins and be immersed. It was to look good in the community; it was only for outward appearances. They had no stock on John’s immersion. (Other Pharisees who were born of God were quite the opposite, and knew the vital importance of John’s position and his work.)

7. e) Why would a Sadducee come to John’s type of immersion? It would be for the same reason as the Pharisees. That is why John prophetically put them in the same category. Anyone at this time who openly spoke against John would be greatly diminished in the eyes of the common Israelis. This was politically stupid.

7. f) Why wasn’t John pleased that these two highest-ranking groups came to his immersion? It was more of a mockery than anything spiritual. They had come, among other reasons, to see (as in, to spy) what John was doing and teaching and to be seen. They also demonstrated their spiritual insincerity.

7. g) Who is John calling a viper? John is referring to their parents.

7. h) Why did John call their parents vipers (instead of calling them vipers)? He was indirectly calling them vipers, but he was insulting them in a far worse manner by indicating that they came from viper stock. This is far more hard-hitting than calling them vipers, since folks often think fondly of their parents. It is worse than calling them ‘sons of bitches’. This means that their very nature was viprous.

7. i) Was John doing right to call them and their parents by such terms? He was right, because he was speaking prophetically: he was quoting Yehovah. Yeshua said similar things.

7. j) Why didn’t they respond by killing John (perhaps in secret)? John was very popular and respected by the best of the land and by the common folk. (Anywhere there’s a big crowd, a politician will show up.)

7. k) Were they forewarned of the coming wrath? They didn’t believe the Word of God, so they took no forewarnings. Thus, the answer is that they were not. That is not why they had come. (Again, I am referring to a subgroup of the Pharisees that wasn’t righteous, and all the Sadducees.) Yet they were, because the Bible stated it clearly (if one takes the Bible literally). Nothing is clear in the Bible if it isn’t literally read.

I am proposing that John’s question is rhetorical in nature: they didn’t come to flee from any wrath; they thought they were in cozy with God.

7. l) What wrath is this? It is the wrath of Yehovah, referring to the Tribulation. I do not understand this to refer to everlasting wrath of the Lake of Fire and Sulfur.

7. m) Is fleeing from the wrath to come appropriate? It is appropriate if the person’s flight is to Truth and to Yehovah. That is literally what folks will be doing during the Tribulation who go to Mount Zion and who help others on the way.

7. n) What was John’s view of the timing of this coming wrath? John thought that it was right around the corner, and thus involved these specific Pharisees and Sadducees (as well as all Israelis who were not right with Yehovah). His timing problems will lead to the destruction of His faith in Yeshua at a later time.

8. a) Can the Pharisees and Saducees of the ‘viper’ ilk produce fruits worthy of repentance? Yes, since they are commanded by the Spirit of God to do so. Yehovah never commands what cannot be done through His own power. They cannot in their present states with their present mindsets.

8. b) Can anyone produce fruits worthy of repentance? Yes; if one has truly repented, that person will produce fruits worthy of that repentance. This is not a text indicating that John believed that fruits worthy enough would be necessary first before repentance. Everyone born of God has this responsibility and privilege.

Yet, producing fruits worthy of repentance before repentance cannot be ruled out, otherwise the Sheep/Goat Judgment (Matthew 25:31 and following) would be ruled out.

8. c) What is repentance? It is turning from a particular set of actions to an opposite set of actions. A person can repent from sinning to righteousness, but a person can also repent from righteousness to sinning. It isn’t a verbal issue; it isn’t the same as confession. This is a matter of true turning.

8. d) What are some impetuses for repentance?

  • Some will repent once they become filled with sorrow for the destruction their sins have wrought.
  • Some will repent once they gain a hatred for sin and its consequences.
  • Some will repent out of a newly acquired fear of Yehovah.
  • Some will repent because they fear the wrath of Yehovah.
  • Some will repent because they now understand how their ways and their beliefs were false, and how the ways and teachings of Yehovah are Truth.

8. e) To what is therefore attached in texts above? It is attached to sentence before it. Supposedly the Pharisees and Sadducees that John excoriated had come in order to flee from the wrath to come. If that is the case, they would thus begin to produce fruits worthy of repentance. If they came for some other reason, however, they would not produce such fruits.

9. a) What logic did the supposed spiritual leaders use to circumvent repentance and doing works worthy of that? They used their being from an ancestor, Avraham in order to declare themselves in a good light before Yehovah.

9. b) Would God ever raise children to Avraham from stones? First, the text declares His ability. I don’t think that many outside of liberal camps would doubt Yehovah’s ability to turn stones into children of Abraham. So this question has to do with what God would do rather than with His ability.

Consider the following:

  • All humans are made from soil.
  • Stones are made from soil.
  • Thus, humans are made also of stones in the soil.
  • Stones are not living. Non-saints are not alive in the Biblical use of everlasting life; they are dead while they live. (Stones are not really dead. They have no life.)
  • The Bible refers to Jewish Saints as living stones. Yeshua is also called a stone. Thus, if Jewish Saints are living stones, and are built into the House of God, the same is true of non-Jewish Saints, for they are also part of the same Body.

One thing must be established in order to answer this question: “Would there ever be a need to do so?” If the answer is, “Yes!” then Yehovah would do it. He only does what is needful and useful for His plan and for the benefit of His creation. John stated this prophetically. In other words, I suspect there will be a need.

10. a) What trees are these? These trees refer to humans. The Bible often enough has tree personifications. Psalm 1 uses the simile: the man is like a tree… Thus, this is not an easily misunderstood picture.

10. b) What axe applied to the trees? Identify the axe… An axe is a tool. It is used in this case to cut down a tree. Since a person is a tree, this axe is a tool in Yehovah’s hand to cut down persons. We have not identified how this tool will appear, but many in this human forest will die when it is applied.

10. c) Why is the axe applied to the root? That is where life is. If the axe were used higher than the root, the tree might come back again.

10. d) What forest is this with these trees in this simile? This is the forest of Israel. We are still in Matthew, and John’s prophetic warnings are still to the Jews.

10. e) What event occurred in John’s day that would indicate that the axe is already applied? I know of no event that occurred in John’s day. The man was a prophet, and he prophesied of things to come. Yet, he was mistaken about timings, and thought that wrap-up events would occur in his own day. I suspect that these very words are the ones that entrapped him later when he thought that Herod, Herodius, etc. should be among the chopped trees, when he himself ended up dead, and not them. The axe is applied, but I do not see any chopping in Yeshua’s and John’s day; that chopping awaits the Tribulation. That is when roots will especially be chopped. Every holocaust, in the meantime, is also an obvious chopping. Consider how many genetic lines of Israel were cut permanently during the Holocaust. Yehovah has instituted intentional thinning of the forests of Israel by the cutting of millions of individuals (each being ‘a tree’) at one time.

10. f) If the tree thinning is Yehovah’s judgment against Israel in a cycle of holocausts, does this mean that trees bearing good fruit will be spared the cutting by the axe? This axe is in Yehovah’s hand. He never misses His target, and He never targets the innocent. Thus, the axe will not come against the trees bearing good fruit. That does not mean that enemies of Yehovah and of the Saints won’t manage to kill the righteous; they will, but they are not inflicting the justice of Yehovah in the process.

Yehovah gives warnings before swinging that axe. Those who heed the warnings must leave “the forest” during that cutting time, or take the risk of being collateral damage at the hands of evildoers in order to benefit a few.

10. g) What constitutes good fruit? Good fruit is always nourishing and beneficial ‘for eating’ and thus, for providing sustenance for life. It also contains the seed in itself that can sprout and produce another tree that will produce good fruit. Thus, keeping alive comes from eating good fruit. Therefore, whatever makes for true and good life that one can give to another, and that contains the seed in itself for producing another fruit-producing tree will be good fruit.

Many examples of good fruit are found in the Bible, but yet this concept is one that is harder to grasp than most Biblical concepts.

Consider the following examples of producing good fruit:

  • Moshe did as Yehovah commanded. The intention was to give life by challenging Pharaoh’s false gods.
  • Moshe took the Israeli slaves out of cruel slavery; that was a good work.
  • Caleb feared Yehovah and did what was right: he believed Yehovah. That was a good work.
  • Joseph did a good work in Egypt, saving the entire Middle East from starvation. He did good works as a slave and as a prisoner. He saved them regardless of their being pagans. He did a good work.
  • Sarah did a good work. Hebrews chapter 11 describes the various good works of some. She herself received strength to conceive seed, and was delivered of a child when she was past age, because she judged Him faithful who had promised.

Many more examples exist. All good works are the product of good fruit.

10. h) Can a non-saint produce good fruit? Yes. If good fruit could save, they would be saved.

10. i) Will one who is born of God always do good works? There are cases where they haven’t. This answers the question in a sad way. That will make for the great distinctions in rank in the Kingdom of the heavens.

10. j) Can one who is born of God continuously not do good works? (This includes not doing bad works.) This text states that any tree not producing good fruit most certainly will be ‘axed’ and cast into fire. That is damnation as clearly as daylight.

10. k) What if a fearer of Yehovah doesn’t have occasion to do good works? Consider a tree. It doesn’t move (except during earthquakes and big winds), and it may not have a single human visitor. Yet, it can produce an abundance of excellent fruit that just falls to the ground and is ingested by organisms.

In the same light, a person will always have occasions (seasons) to bring forth good fruit whether anyone picks it or not. Fruit production is seasonal.

The owner of all trees is Yehovah. Any tree that would have produced good fruit, but never had the means would be able to blame Yehovah for that.

10. l) What is this fire? This is the Lake of Fire and Sulfur.

10. m) Why did Yehovah need to add sulfur to the Lake of Fire? Why wouldn’t fire be enough? Sulfur burns hot, and it is cleansing. Thus, the picture is that of persons who are always unclean.

10. n) Does Yeshua love everyone, according to this verse? John’s introduction of the Lake of Fire and cutting folks down like they are deadwood shows only contempt.

11. a) What was the purpose of John’s baptism, according to this verse? His baptism was specifically unto repentance. This wasn’t rededication.

11. b) From what were these Israelis repenting? They were repenting from sins they actually had done. Their violations were of the Teaching (Torah).

11. c) Why was water associated with repentance? Water is associated with a barrier. When the Israelis exited from Egypt, they went through a dried water barrier through which the Egyptian army could not pierce. That was a baptism. All baptisms have a barrier in mind through which the one being baptized goes.

The most common ‘Christian’ baptism is a death baptism: being immersed into Yeshua’s death. Death is a barrier taking one from slavery (to sin) to freedom (which is slavery, since it always includes responsibility) to righteousness.

In the same way, John’s baptism had a barrier in mind: sin itself. Repentance was the crossing of that barrier if and only if the person quit sinning.

11. d) Where folks repetitiously immersed after sinning again? I cannot prove this, but I don’t think John or his disciples would have tolerated that great violation.

11. e) Why did so many desire to come to John to turn from sin (repentance) publicly? He was a priest of the Levitical order. He spoke Truth. His speeches attracted many. Some came because of the glamour, but others came because of the conviction. Life under Roman occupation drove many Jews to look for some brightness during a terrible, frightening, mentally torturous time. Some wanted to know what was necessary for Yehovah to be pleased enough to turn Israel from Israel’s present dire state. It was a setup for a ‘revival’.

11. f) Who is coming after John? This is Messiah Yeshua.

11. g) In what way is Yeshua mightier than John? Yeshua is all-powerful (omnipotent). He is more powerful in every sense of the word.

11. h) What is the pertinence of Yeshua being mightier than John in this text? John was not as Jacob. Jacob wrestled with Yeshua, and prevailed. John will disagree with Yeshua, and will not prevail. Jacob did prevail, and insisted upon a blessing. John’s faith will fail.

11. i) Why is John not fit to bear Yeshua’s sandals?

First, which is higher, Yeshua’s sandals, or His image? His image is far higher than His sandals.

Who is fit to carry Yeshua’s image? All humans are fit in the view of Yehovah Who placed that image on every human. Therefore, with that image comes responsibility. Anyone with the image of God must render to God what is His property: the image. Thus, each has a responsibility to give himself/herself to God.

He will not carry out his responsibilities before Yehovah by giving Himself to Yeshua in faith in Yeshua. His faith will destruct. The man was a prophet. He spoke infallibly while prophesying. He said things about himself that were not only true, but were Truth. He wasn’t just being self-effacing; he was giving the ‘low down’.

John expected Yeshua to arrive as a mighty king. That will be true when Yeshua comes to Mount Zion in the future. John was totally confused about timings and events of arrivals. John thought the kingdom was coming at that very time.

John was expressing the greatness of rank of Yeshua above himself, and how unworthy John was to carry even His sandals. He was also expressing the omnipotence of Yeshua as a contrast to John’s own weak power. John is saying who the Messiah is, and that He is coming. John and Yeshua had mamas who loved each other and who visited each other. It seems obvious that John and Yeshua would have been children together at various times, and that they heard and knew that Yeshua is the Messiah.

John was deflecting the great attention given to himself toward Yeshua who really was and is the important One of Israel’s history. Folks may have thought that John was the one (the Messiah). He determined to apprise them that he is not the Messiah.

11. j) Why are sandals mentioned in particular? In the Middle East, even today, the bottoms of shoes are considered the dirtiest part of a person’s dress and person. They are left at the door, and in some traditions the bottoms are never elevated toward another’s face unless to insult that person with great intent. Carrying sandals for another person, then, would be an act of great humiliation.

11. k) Is being immersed with the Holy Spirit and with fire good? These are two opposite immersions. They are not connected as one immersion. Since they are opposite, the combination is not good and not bad, but both: very good and very bad. This refers to a division of where Israeli folks will end up.

11. l) What is the purpose of being immersed with the Holy Spirit? This is to take a person from death into everlasting life.

11. m) Define spirit as used in the Bible: The essence of God is not physical. He is a spirit: that is, He is a being that is real, and incorporeal: non-physical. A spirit is a living entity or is a life-giving entity. Everything that has a spirit is alive. Removing the spirit is removing life. Therefore, the spirit is the object in which life exists or through which life exists.

God is spirit; therefore He is the source of life as well as life itself.

11. n) Define Holy Spirit: Holy means owned. Spirit is defined above. Thus, a Holy Spirit is an owned, incorporeal living entity that also is able to give life, and is the Life. A better expression than ‘Holy Spirit’ is ‘Spirit of the Holy-One’ referring to the Spirit of Yeshua, the Holy One of Israel. (In truth, every spirit, demonic or otherwise, is holy by definition; each one belongs to someone or to Yehovah. And then, every spirit in the universe comes from Yehovah—referring to its source, not to its disposition—and every living thing owes its life to the Owner of all life in the universe: to Yehovah.)

11. o) What is the purpose of fire immersion? This is the judgment of the damned. The purpose is to truly punish those who defiled the image of God to their deaths.

12. a) What is a winnowing fan? It is a fan used for chaff separation (winnowing).

12. b) If the winnowing fan is in His hand, what does the chaff represent? The chaff represents the bad guys, as Psalm 1 reports:

Psalm 1:4 The ungodly are not so: but are like the chaff which the wind drives away.

12. c) How much respect does Yeshua have for the ungodly in this judgment? He has the amount of respect that folks looking for wheat have for chaff; He has none.

12. d) What is His floor? This text contains a picture common to the Israelis: that of a winnowing of grain. When grain is winnowed, chaff that is very easily separated from the husk (wheat kernels) is blown. The process is accomplished by throwing the wheat into the air; the kernels fall quickly and the chaff spins slowly. When a hand fan is moved, the chaff blows away from the kernels. This process is repeated until the kernels are close to chaffless. The floor is a section beneath ground level outside so that the chaff is blown out of the floor area, but the kernels fall back into that floor area.

This picture is used to describe how Yeshua will separate the wheat (the Israelis who are or will be born of God) from the chaff (the Israelis who will never believe) using Yeshua’s fan. His fan will blow the chaff Israelis into a flame, burning them up, while the wheat Israelis will be gathered to Mount Zion.

The floor, then, is the location of the separation (or the locations of the separations).

13. a) Why did Yeshua come to be immersed by John? Yeshua came to fulfill all righteousness. Being immersed by John or one of his students was part of righteousness. Yehovah had sent John. John’s messages were important, and being immersed by him was vital.

13. b) What was the purpose of John’s baptism?

Mark 1:4 John baptized in the wilderness and preached the baptism of repentance unto remission of sins.

The word unto indicates direction and the final goal. The baptism was of repentance. Those desiring to repent from sin were baptized. Their sins were not remitted. If their baptism was serious and they feared Yehovah, the next step would be to obtain sin remission. This is more clearly seen in the following text where the word christos in Greek is translated instead of transliterated:

Acts 2:38 Then Peter said unto them, “Repent! And every one of you be baptized in the Name of Yeshua, the One-anointed for the remission of sins! And ye shall receive the gift of the Holy Spirit!”

This baptism is not the same as John’s baptism; their purposes are different. John’s baptism was a repentance baptism; the baptism that Peter addressed was into Yeshua, the One that the Israelis had not yet known.

Sin remission is never by water; it is only valid when it is by the blood of a worthy and perfect sacrifice.

14. a) Was John’s hindering Yeshua in respect? Yes. John felt his own personal lower rank than Yeshua, and thus he determined to hinder Yeshua because of his own unworthiness.

14. b) Did John really hinder Yeshua in the way we understand hindering? We see hindrance as being far more drastic. John was determined (at first) to reverse the baptism so that Yeshua would immerse John. That is his hindrance; he isn’t immediately cooperating with Yeshua by immersing Yeshua.

14. c) Did John need to be immersed by Yeshua with the baptism that John himself performed on others? I believe John! He needed that immersion for repentance; only, Yeshua immersed no one. (We propose that this is to avoid judging each one’s salvation: those whom Yeshua would refuse will be damned, and those whom Yeshua would immerse will be or are born of God. This would have made idols out of those who were immersed by Yeshua, and this would throw into disrepute any baptism done by others after Yeshua’s time. Yeshua will not judge before the time.

John 12:47 And if any man hears my words and doesn’t believe, I don’t judge him. For I didn’t come to judge the world, but to save the world.

14. d) Why was John so taken aback that Yeshua would come to John to be immersed? John had preached repentance. For what did Yeshua to repent? It made no sense to John.

15. a) Why would Yeshua say, “Permit now” as if He is acquiring something akin to permission from John? The expression appears to be more a command than an acquisition of permission. Yeshua was telling John that this must occur.

15. b) Identify us in this text: They must be the Israelis. It is always becoming to the Israelis to fulfill all righteousness.

15. c) What does becoming mean? It means a combination of appropriate and attractive.

15. d) What is becoming to the Israelis in this text? It is becoming to the Israelis to fulfill all righteousness! Anything short of that isn’t becoming; it is totally ugly and inappropriate.

15. e) What did Yeshua’s being immersed by John have to do with the Israelis fulfilling all righteousness? Yeshua is classifying Himself as being one of the Israelis. (Every other Israeli must do likewise: that is, fulfill all righteousness in order for anything to be done right.)

15. f) Why did John concede and ‘permit’ Yeshua to come to him for immersion? He did what he was told; his respect for Yeshua was very high and total (at this time).

16. a) Did Yeshua repent before He was immersed? He had nothing for which to repent.

16. b) Why did He go immediately up from the water after His immersion? The only reason I could consider why He would not have immediately left the water would be to make a speech. Yeshua made no speech. Yeshua had no intention of detracting from John’s ministerial work.

16. c) Why were the heavens opened to Him? The heavens opened so that He (and folks around Him, if they also were permitted to see) could see the Spirit of God descending.

16. d) Were the others able to see the opening of the heavens? If they heard the voice in verse 17 (which they did), they also saw the heavens opened.

16. e) Like what does the opening of the heavens appear? We have no idea. This event would be frightening.

16. f) Who saw the Spirit of God descending? We know that at least one being saw the Spirit of God: John. We haven’t established whether others saw this or not. The Bible notes that the Spirit of God visibly appeared, but that doesn’t mean that others saw this event.

We proposed that the crowd needed to see the Spirit of Yehovah descend, since John had been speaking of Yeshua in a special way, and this would give some confirmation to John’s claims about Yeshua’s rank.

16. g) Why did the appearance of the Spirit of God come in the form of a dove (of all animals or representations)? The text does not state that the Spirit of God appeared in the form of a dove. It stated that the Spirit of God descended in the same manner that a dove descends.

16. h) How does a dove descend? Is it straight down? It flutters down. It is not a rapid descent.

16. i) What does this slow descent demonstrate? A slow rate of descent is easier to see. It is also more gentle. Had the Spirit of Yehovah descended like an eagle or like lightning, a very different characterization of the Spirit of Yehovah would have resulted. A child will rarely be afraid of an item descending slowly like a dove.

16. j) What was the appearance of the Spirit of Yehovah, and how did those who saw the Spirit know that this was the Spirit of Yehovah? If the appearance is the same as in other places in the Bible, the Spirit appeared as a cloud. This is how the Spirit of Yehovah physically appeared with Israel after leaving Egypt. The Spirit was a cloud by day and fire by night.

17. a) What is the source of the voice? The source must be Yehovah the Father.

17. b) Why did Yehovah identify the source in the text? He did by saying, “This is my Son.” No more identification is necessary.

17. c) What does beloved mean? The Greek root, agapao, traces to the Hebrew ahavah meaning to pant after with great desire, but not necessarily involving lust. It is the strong Hebrew word for love, for seeking the highest, best interest for another without regard to self.

17. d) Why did Yehovah need to think well of Yeshua? First, think well is a verb indicating that Yehovah had very good regard for Yeshua. Of course, He would, since Yeshua is part of Him.

Yeshua volunteered to life mortally, suffer sickness, die painfully, be brutalized, and shed His own blood, being despised by His own in order to accomplish Salvation, Redemption, and not having to pour the cup of wrath (that filled up from the sins of Israel) on Israel.

Yeshua is therefore a hero before Yehovah. Yehovah sees heroism, and records it, as well as declaring it. Yehovah needed to think well of Yeshua, since Yeshua will be the ultimate example of a hero who refused to sin and who refused to become bitter against those determined to kill Him. He instead provided everlasting life for them and for all by His heroism.

 

Psalm 023 – Another Look

Psalm 23: Another Look

With Questions and Proposed Answers

 

 

The Text

1A ballad to David. Yehovah is my shepherd. I shall not lack. 2He will couch me in pastures of green. He will lead me beside waters of rests. 3He will restore my being. He will conduct me in the cartpaths of righteousness for the sake of His Name. 4Indeed when I will walk in Death-Shadow Valley, I will not fear bad. For Thou art with me. Thy rod and Thy staff—they will console me. 5Thou shalt order a table to my faces in front of my afflicters. Thou hast greased my head with oil. My cup is abundance. 6Only good and grace will chase me all the days of my lives. And I will dwell in the House of Yehovah to the length of days.

 

 

 

Questions and Proposed Answers

1. a) Why is this a ballad? Since a ballad tells a story in song, this song will be sung during the Millennium. It describes a particular set of events that has good guys and bad, danger and rescue, and other aspects typical of an American Western.

 

1. b) Is this ballad about David? No. David is a prophet. True prophets rarely speak of themselves in their prophecies, but always state what Yehovah commands them to state regarding any topic of Yehovah’s choosing. Particular statements later in this Psalm describe what cannot refer to David if this Psalm is understood literally. For example, verse two uses the verb couch, which only describes a physical position of a four-footed animal at rest.

 

1. c) Why are some Psalm writers identified, while others are not? A reader can compare or contrast the Biblically described experiences of the named writers with their Psalms, in some cases, to correctly conclude that the events are not about their writers. The reader can then begin to understand that the Psalms must refer to another, and then consider who. Some Psalm writers are not identified in the Psalms, but are identified elsewhere, in the ‘New Testament’, for example:

 

Acts 4:25 Who by the mouth of thy servant David hast said, Why did the heathen rage, and the people imagine vain things?

 

Psalm 2:1 Why do the heathen rage, and the people imagine a vain thing?

 

Not all Biblical writers must be identified for the texts to be the Word of God. Yehovah has a vital purpose for the identification, if they are identified.

 

1. d) Who is saying, “Yehovah is my shepherd”? To answer this question, one must be identified who will dwell in the House of Yehovah to the length of days. If an individual person dwells in His House, a bedroom must be provided unless he sleeps on the floor. The House of Yehovah is not that large, and won’t be that large. Only the appropriate priests can even enter the House of Yehovah. What  priest can sleep inside it? Jerusalem the city will be where the House of Yehovah is located, so the city won’t dwell in the House of Yehovah. Israel as a nation, however, will continually dwell in the House of Yehovah, since a priest of Israel will enter and work in this House on a continual basis throughout the Millennium. Whatever one Israeli does, being part of Israel, he or she represents all of Israel, just as David did when he took on Goliath. If, when one Israeli sins, all Israel has sinned, if one Israeli will always be occupying the House of Yehovah throughout the Millennium, Israel will dwell in the House of Yehovah throughout the Millennium. Thus, I propose that Israel is the dweller. Israel is described as a singular ‘sheep’ in Jeremiah 50:17.

 

1. e) If Israel is the speaker, what does “Yehovah is my shepherd” mean? How is the speaker being viewed? The speaker is being viewed as a sheep, and Yehovah is being viewed as a shepherd over this sheep. Yehovah is therefore doing for this sheep as a good human shepherd would do for his sheep. Some shepherds have even given their lives for their sheep.

 

1. f) What do shepherds do? They have a range of responsibilities, including directing the sheep to good grazing, good water supplies and shelter when necessary. They must tend the sheep during lambing, if necessary. They must guard the sheep from predators. They must tend sick or wounded sheep, and either keep sheep from wandering or seek them out. They must shear them. They must deal with sheep that cause harm to the flock.

 

1. g) What are the implications of being shepherded by Yehovah? Since Yehovah’s shepherding would be absolutely perfect, any sheep under His care will prosper, be protected, be always directed to the best places, and will produce very good wool.

 

1. h) Does this mean that anyone being shepherded by God now will always prosper and be in good health? This text does not refer to being shepherded by Yehovah at the present time. Saints are vulnerable to disease, attack, deprivation and many other things. This Psalm refers to another time and another individual (like Israel, the people) when Yehovah will do these things in an absolute way. The Bible is not designed for application to one’s life, but for one to apply himself to it. The Bible will only make consistent sense to the degree that it is taken literally (unless it otherwise specifies).

 

1. i) Does Yehovah’s being the speaker’s shepherd eliminate Him from being the shepherd of others? No. He can be the shepherd of more than one.

 

1. j) Can another sheep rightly declare everything in this Psalm? This can apply to another sheep if it will also dwell in the House of Yehovah to the length of days. I know of no other group that will dwell there, however. The other races and peoples will live in their own lands that have been suitably designed for them. They will freely come to visit the House of Yehovah, but how could they dwell in it? No other priests are allowed to enter. This Psalm is only for one group.

 

1. k) Doesn’t this eliminate every other reader of the Psalms, except Jews, from reading this Psalm, since it isn’t pertinent? This Psalm cannot be pertinent to any living Jews today, since it is describing Tribulation and Millennium events. It does what most prophecies do, giving Truth regarding the plan of Yehovah. Few Biblical prophecies apply to us in our time, but they are still Truth and must still be learned. Folks who insist upon applying texts to themselves will never understand the Word of God, and do not believe or receive the Truth.

 

1. l) The speaker states, “I shall not lack.” Has he lacked before? Yes! No matter who the speaker is, he or she has lacked before, being experienced with bad (verse 4).

 

1. m) What will the speaker not lack? This is described in the following verses: grazing, water, rest, safety, righteousness, consolation, oil, a full cup, good and grace. The inference is anything.

 

1. n) What is ‘Israel’? Israel can refer directly to Jacob; it is the name that Yehovah gave to him when they wrestled. It is also the name by which he will be exclusively called in the Millennium. Israel can also refer to the land that Yehovah promised to Avraham, Isaac and Jacob. Israel can also refer to the nation (the same as the race), all who directly descend from Jacob. Israel can also refer to more than just the direct descendants by referring to the ‘people of Israel’. Ruth was a Moabitess, yet she became part of the People of Israel. Israel can also refer to the northern split in the kingdom, with Judah being the southern. Israel is the name given at the blessing by Yehovah, and therefore is a blessing to Jacob and the people of Jacob (especially those in faith, since the others will be cut off nevertheless). Israel cannot refer to the general category of all folks together in faith. Some claim that ‘the Israel of God’ refers to the popular ‘church’, and this violates the texts. The wife of Yehovah refers to Jerusalem:

 

Ezekiel 16:2 Son of man, cause Jerusalem to know her abominations, 3And say, Thus saith the Lord Yehovah unto Jerusalem; Thy birth and thy nativity is of the land of Canaan; thy father was an Amorite, and thy mother an Hittite…. 8Now when I passed by thee, and looked upon thee, behold, thy time was the time of love; and I spread my skirt over thee, and covered thy nakedness. Yea, I sware unto thee, and entered into a covenant with thee, saith the Lord Yehovah, and thou becamest mine.

 

2. a) What does “He will couch me” mean? The couching position is the restful position of four-footed creatures, when their legs are either in front of them or folded under them while their belly is on the ground. Yehovah will place this sheep in this position.

 

2. b) Why does Yehovah have to do this couching? The sheep either has been wounded or starved, or it is being told to couch there. Verse 3 indicates a needed restoration, telling me that the sheep has been wounded or starved.

 

2. c) A sheep that is couched cannot do much grazing. What is the benefit of being couched in pastures of green? Since pastures are plural, this sheep is being moved so that it can do grazing while it is recuperating. The text shows movement, since the sheep is being led beside waters of rests.

 

2. d) What does “He will lead me beside waters of rests” indicate? The rests are plural, showing that the sheep and the shepherd are on the move. The sheep is now tired, whereas it was previously in bad condition, lacking what was necessary for life.

 

2. e) Why will the Shepherd lead the sheep beside waters of rests rather than bringing water to the sheep, or taking the sheep into waters of rests? The Shepherd is strengthening the sheep by good exercise. Bringing the sheep water would provide no exercise. Bringing the sheep into waters could endanger the weakened animal. Sheep do not do well in swiftly moving waters. They can lose their footing, fall in and drown.

 

2. f) Where are the shepherd and the sheep going? The text does not say, but because of the destination of the House of Yehovah, it sounds like they are going back to the Land of Israel, to Mount Zion where the city of Jerusalem will be located, in which is found the House of Yehovah.

 

3. a) What does “He will restore my being” mean? This sheep cannot get entirely better on its own. The being is any combination of the body, soul and spirit. This shepherd must do for the sheep what naturally would not occur; the sheep would naturally die.

 

3. b) What are cartpaths, and what do they show? They are paths made by ox drawn carts, showing that others have traveled there before. These paths are not new, and are often very old.

 

3. c) What is a cartpath of righteousness? It is an old path that has been traveled by others who are ‘in the way of’ righteousness.

 

3. d) Why does this sheep need to be conducted in this righteousness cartpath if the path is clearly cut into the territory? Other paths divert from this righteousness path, so that the shepherd needs to guide this sheep to keep it from wandering from the path on which he has been commanded to walk.

 

3. e) For whose sake is the Shepherd conducting the sheep in the righteousness cartpath? The Shepherd is doing this for the sake of His own Name.

 

3. f) How is this for the sake of His own Name? The Shepherd has a Name that is associated with His reputation, that He does not want ruined. If this sheep either dies or never makes it to the House of Yehovah, the Shepherd’s reputation will be destroyed. Yehovah promised Avraham certain things, including a very large offspring and the Land of Israel. Were Avraham returned to the Land of Israel after his resurrection, only to find it devoid of his offspring, he would find Yehovah unfaithful. Israel must be turned to righteousness before Messiah will return. If Israel is not turned to righteousness, Messiah will not return and Avraham will still be waiting for the fulfillment of the promises.

 

3. g) Isn’t the Shepherd also doing this for the sake of this sheep? The text does not say so!

 

3. h) Identify the Shepherd’s Name: This Name is a person: Yeshua. Israel the people is being conducted by Yehovah the Father for the sake of Yeshua. The Name is declared to be a person in a number of texts, including the following:

 

Isaiah 30:27 Behold, the name of Yehovah cometh from far. Burning is His anger, and the burden thereof is heavy! His lips are full of indignation, and His tongue is as a devouring fire.

 

4. a) This sheep has now been restored. It knows that it will walk in Death-Shadow Valley. What is this valley? It is a place where attackers can easily hide and attack with immunity, since it is known for its high rock ledges on either side of the valley. Actual Death-Shadow valleys exist, and one particular place seems to be being described in this text. This is apparently the only way this sheep can come to return to Jerusalem. The Shepherd will completely protect this sheep.

 

4. b) Why will the sheep not fear bad, walking through Death-Shadow Valley? The Shepherd is with this sheep, and the Shepherd is not susceptible to harm or to defenselessness.

 

4. c) The Shepherd’s rod and staff are used to console the sheep. Why would the sheep need consolation? The sheep is not exhibiting fear of the circumstances, so the consolation is not because of fear that isn’t present. It must be because of loss and/or suffering that the sheep has endured. This area must be very dangerous, especially if the Shepherd were not present.

 

4. d) What uses do a shepherd’s rod and staff have? They are used as tools for walking on dangerously stony or unstable ground and for dealing with sheep, either to pull them out of binds or to ‘convince’ them to do as the shepherd directs. This sheep is being conducted in cartpaths of righteousness, so I do not assume that it is wandering. The rod and staff, then, can be used against enemies that would attempt to destroy the sheep. It can also be used for miracles:

 

Exodus 4:20 And Moses took his wife and his sons. And he set them upon an ass. And he returned to the land of Egypt. And Moses took the rod of God in his hand.

 

It is called ‘the rod of God’ because he will do miracles with it:

 

Exodus 7:9 When Pharaoh shall speak unto you, saying, “Show a miracle for you!” then thou shalt say unto Aaron, “Take thy rod, and cast it before Pharaoh, and it shall become a serpent!”

 

This rod is also mentioned in terms of the End Times:

 

Psalms 110:2 Yehovah shall send the rod of thy strength out of Zion.

 

Yehovah’s rod proceeds out of His mouth:

 

Isaiah 11:4 But with righteousness shall He judge the poor. And He will reprove with equity for the meek of the earth. And He shall smite the earth with the rod of his mouth. And with the breath of His lips shall He slay the wicked.

 

If the sheep is Israel, the sheep will have been beaten with the Assyrian’s rod:

 

Isaiah 10:24 Therefore thus saith the Lord Yehovah of hosts, “My people that dwellest in Zion, be not afraid of the Assyrian! He shall smite thee with a rod, and shall lift up his staff against thee, after the manner of Egypt. 25For yet a very little while, and the indignation shall cease, and mine anger in their destruction. 26And Yehovah of hosts shall stir up a scourge for him according to the slaughter of Midian at the rock of Oreb. And as his rod was upon the sea, so shall he lift it up after the manner of Egypt. 27And it shall come to pass, in that day, that his burden shall be taken away from off thy shoulder, and his yoke from off thy neck. And the yoke shall be destroyed because of the anointing.

 

Yehovah’s rod will be against His enemies. His staff, on the other hand, has also been used in miracles:

 

Judges 6:21 Then the angel of Yehovah put forth the end of the staff that was in his hand, and touched the flesh and the unleavened cakes. And there rose up fire out of the rock, and consumed the flesh and the unleavened cakes. Then the angel of Yehovah departed out of his sight.

 

The staff is used in walking, and pictures something upon which one can lean (depend), but in the above text it is used in provision (the fire of the acceptable sacrifice, for example). If the staff is faulty or weak, it can do much damage:

 

Isaiah 36:6 Lo, thou trustest in the staff of this broken reed, on Egypt; whereon if a man lean, it will go into his hand, and pierce it. So is Pharaoh king of Egypt to all who trust in him.

 

The sheep will find consolation in Yehovah’s staff, since it is fully dependable.

 

4. e) The previous statement was, “For Thou art with me” (present tense). Yet the rod and staff “will console me” (future tense). Why doesn’t the text read, “Thy rod and Thy staff—they console me”? Yehovah will use these items when necessary, like when they enter into Death-Shadow Valley. Justice has not yet come, and enemies are still around.

 

4. f) In many fairy tales and occult stories, rods and staves are used to cast spells, make light in the darkness, etc. Don’t texts like Psalm 23:4 have the potential for backing up the occult in these ways? Most occult stories and fairy tales seem to be directly linked to the Bible, describing what the Bible states, but in a manner not used in the Bible. For example, the Bible speaks of necromancers, and gives an example by having a witch bring Samuel from the dead. These texts, when put through the popular imaginations, have given rise to occult stories, like the search for the ‘holy grail’. The Bible is designed so that it can be used properly or improperly with equal ease, so that only one who desires Truth will see Truth. Psalm 23:4 can result in occult stories, or it can be read with Yehovah’s miraculous hand (or mouth) in mind on behalf of this sheep (Israel).

 

5. a) What is strange about verse 5’s use of table? Sheep do not utilize tables. This does not refer to a flat table land, but to some furniture for food.

 

5. b) What does “order a table to my faces” mean? The Shepherd will set up and prepare a place of food directly in front of the sheep while the sheep is watching.

 

5. c) Why will the Shepherd do this in front of the sheep’s afflicters? This is the beginning of payback to these afflicters. They will see all Yehovah’s provision for this sheep, yet will be unable or fearful to attack the sheep.

 

5. d) What does order mean? It means to arrange.

 

5. e) What is the purpose of greasing the sheep’s head with oil? It is normally used to keep bugs from safely landing and laying eggs or bothering the sheep. Even if Lord Fly (the meaning of BaalZvuv which is turned into Beelzebub in English) tries to distract the sheep, the grease will disallow any landing on the sheep’s head.

 

5. f) Explain, “My cup is abundance”: The easiest way to explain this is to look at other cups in the Bible:

 

Psalm 11:6 Upon the wicked He shall rain snares, fire and brimstone, and an horrible tempest—the portion of their cup.

 

Psalm 75:8 For in the hand of Yehovah is a cup, and the wine is red. It is full of mixture. And He poureth out of the same. But the dregs thereof—all the wicked of the earth shall wring out, drink.

 

Ezekiel 23:33 Thou shalt be filled with drunkenness and sorrow, with the cup of astonishment and desolation, with the cup of thy sister Samaria.

 

The cup refers to what has been prepared for anyone. The sheep’s cup is abundance, not fury, desolation or shock. This fits the beginning text, “I shall not lack.”

 

6. a) Why is chase used in “Only good and grace will chase me all the days of my lives”? The sheep was being chased for destruction before the Shepherd began leading the sheep. Many chasers attempted to round up the sheep for slaughter. Now, only good and grace will chase the sheep!

 

6. b) If good and grace do the chasing, what will happen to the sheep? The sheep will always be pursued by these two wonderfully delightful aspects of Yehovah’s character. No matter where this sheep goes or does, good and grace will catch the sheep and bring good and grace.

 

6. c) What is good? This is a description of Yehovah Himself. All good comes from Him. It is the opposite of bad, and can be more easily described using this. Bad is some form of harm or destruction, so good would be something that is fruitful (in a useful way) and that builds. Messiah is called good, and this is a form of calling Him deity.

 

6. d) What is grace? First, it is not ‘unmerited favour’, since this describes mercy, not grace. Fervent, ardent zeal that actuates one toward or against another is grace, or put another way, a very strong and active, burning zeal that motivates someone to act on behalf of, or against another is grace. This word can describe a good action or a destructive action. Since grace is doing the chasing with good, only the good side of grace will chase this sheep.

 

6. e) Why is the word lives plural? Every individual, including this speaker, has more than one life. Before a baby is born, the baby has a life inside its mother’s womb. Once it is born, it has a life as a dependent breastfeeder. It then develops a new life as a toddler, then as a young child. The life of a teenager is again different, as well as the life of an adult, then a senior adult. In the meantime, the life as a father is different from the life as a husband. There are also lives after death: everlasting life being one, and everlasting damnation being another. If the speaker is Israel, Israel also has a number of lives. Israel will be responsible for teaching the world the Word of God, showing His plan through every aspect of dress, conduct, food, and so on, and by direct handling of the texts.

 

6. f) How long will these lives last? They will continue to the length of days, discussed in the next question.

 

6. g) To what does the ‘length of days’ refer? It refers to the period of time during which days continue on this planet. No Temple will be present on the New Earth, so this text does not refer to that period of time. Days will continue through the Millennium and after it has ended, when the great attempted rebellion lead by Satan occurs.

 

6. h) What does “I will dwell in the House of Yehovah to the length of days” show? Israel (if Israel is the sheep) will never be ousted from the House of Yehovah. During the time of the Assyrian’s false prophet, Israel was ousted from the House of God (Matthew 24 describes this). It will never happen again.

 

 

 

Psalm 001 Literal Text

Psalm 1

Literally Rendered with footnotes

(See Psalm 001 Footnotes document)

 

1. Happy1 is the man who didn’t walk2 in the counsel 3 of culpable-ones,4 and didn’t stand in the way5 of sinners,6 and didn’t sit in the settlement7 of scorners.

2. But rather his delight8 is in the Teaching9 of Yehovah.10 And he will meditate daily and night11 in His Teaching9.12

3. And he shall be like a tree planted upon splittings13 of waters whose fruit he will give in his time. And his leaf will not wither. And all that he will do will prosper.14

4. Not so15 are the culpable-ones,4 but rather are like the chaff16 that the wind will drive-away.

5. Therefore the culpable-ones4 will not stand17 in the judgment,18 and sinners in the congregation of righteous-[ones].19

6. For Yehovah10 knows the way20 of righteous-ones. And the way of culpable-ones shall perish.21

Psalm 019 Questions and Proposed Answers

Psalm 19 Questions and Proposed Answers

(See Psalm 019 Literally Rendered)

1. a) Who is the overcomer? Numerous psalms begin with this announcement. We have not yet established who the overcomer is, though we have suspicion that it might be Israel. 1 John refers to the overcomer:

1 John 2:13 I write unto you, fathers, because ye have known him that is from the beginning. I write unto you, young men, because ye have overcome the wicked one. I write unto you, little children, because ye have known the Father. 14I have written unto you, fathers, because ye have known him that is from the beginning. I have written unto you, young men, because ye are strong, and the word of God abideth in you, and ye have overcome the wicked one.

1 John 4:4 Ye are of God, little children, and have overcome them. For greater is He Who is in you than he who is in the world.

1 John 5:4 For whatsoever is born of God overcomes the world. And this is the victory that overcomes the world: our faith. 5Who is he who overcomes the world, but he that believes that Yeshua is the Son of God!

The Spirit of Yehovah through John addressed the Israelis in the above texts.

1. b) Define overcome: It is to surmount opposition or an obstacle, be victorious. The idea of actually beating an enemy is not necessarily important in the definition of the Hebrew word. A person who overcomes is not a person who is conquering in a battle, but rather is refusing to be swayed or turned from a right objective. Refusing temptation to sin is overcoming. Joseph lived a perfect picture of overcoming. He didn’t conquer Potipher’s wife, but he refused to sin when being heavily tempted, and thus overcame the world.

Continue reading “Psalm 019 Questions and Proposed Answers”

The Feet

The Feet

 

Do birds have feet? Yet the description of the dove is world famous:

Genesis 8:9 But the dove found no rest for the sole of her foot. And she returned unto him into the ark, for the waters were on the face of the whole earth. Then he put forth his hand, and took her, and pulled her in unto him into the ark.

Yehovah told the Israelis,

Deuteronomy 11:24 Every place whereon the soles of your feet shall tread shall be yours from the wilderness and Lebanon, from the river—the river Euphrates—even unto the uttermost sea shall your coast be.

Children do a great deal of walking, once they are able. They understand their territory by where they can go (tread) with their feet.

They also understand what sliding with their feet involves:

Deuteronomy 32:35 To me is vengeance and recompense. Their foot shall slide in time. For the day of their calamity is at hand, and the things that shall come upon them make haste.

If their feet are guarded, they won’t slide:

1 Samuel 2:9 He will keep the feet of his saints, and the wicked shall be silent in darkness; for by strength shall no man prevail.

2 Samuel 22:37 Thou hast enlarged my steps under me so that my feet did not slip.

Children sit at the feet of adults, just as in the following text:

Deuteronomy 33:2 “Yehovah came from Sinai, and rose up from Seir unto them. He shined forth from mount Paran, and He came with myriads of saints. From His right hand went a fiery law for them. 3Indeed, He loved the people. All His saints are in Thy hand. And they sat down at Thy feet. Every one shall receive of Thy words.”

Children will sometimes take hold of an adult’s feet in order to make a request:

2 Kings 4:27 And when she came to the man of God to the hill, she caught him by the feet. But Gehazi came near to thrust her away. And the man of God said, “Let her alone, for her soul is vexed within her; and Yehovah hath hid it from me, and hath not told me.

Young Children observe feet much more closely than adults, especially in societies where the feet are exposed (as in sandals):

Isaiah 52:7 How beautiful upon the mountains are the feet of him that bringeth good tidings, that publisheth peace; that bringeth good tidings of good, that publisheth salvation; that saith unto Zion, Thy God reigneth!

They understand what stepping on bugs can do, so they would understand such texts as the following:

Lamentations 1:15 The Lord hath trodden under foot all my mighty-ones in the midst of me.

Children would more easily understand texts like the following:

Psalms 110:1 Yehovah said unto my Lord, “Sit thou at my right hand until I make thine enemies thy footstool.”

Because children sit at the feet of adults, and sometimes even place their legs around the legs of an adult, they know that they can become a stool for feet, and that it is good. This text describes Jewish enemies of Messiah turning to Him, and becoming a place for the resting of His feet upon His arrival.

One word for spies is a ‘childism’:

Genesis 42:9 And Joseph remembered the dreams that he dreamed of them. And he said unto them, “Ye are spies!” [This is literally, ‘feet’.] “Ye are come to see the nakedness of the land!”

Children who can walk and explore territories are ‘footing it’! On the other hand, some running children have evil destinations:

Proverbs 1:16 For their feet run to evil.

Many Bible texts that appear difficult to understand become clear if they are considered from the aspect of a child.

I will consider walking in another chapter.

The following texts have some interesting readings when translated literally:

Genesis 33:14 “My lords will cross-over, pray, to the faces of his servant. And I, I will conduct myself at my gentleness to the foot of the errand that is to my faces and to the foot of the children until I will come unto my lord to Seir.”

Exodus 11:8 “And all these thy servants shall descend unto me. And they shall prostrate themselves to me, saying, ‘Exit!—thou and all the people that is with thy feet!’ And afterward I will exit!” And he exited from with Pharaoh heats of nose!

2 Kings 21:8 “And I will not again make the foot of Israel move from the soil that I gave their fathers only if they will guard to do according to all that I commanded them and to all the Teaching that my servant Moshe commanded them.”

The next text can also refer to the feet of soldiers, as in the case of Nazis, whose high-stepping feet were a sign of their arrogance:

Psalms 36:11 Do not bring me the foot of arrogance.

Psalms 66:6 “He turned-over the sea to dry. They crossed on foot in the river. There we rejoiced in Him!”

I propose that the above text refers to walking on water.

Proverbs 6:13 He winketh with his eye. He uttereth with his foot. He teacheth with his fingers.

A child can quickly learn to read the foot of another, especially when it causes terror.

The next text shows how the feet can be used to express joy (that is evil, in this case):

Ezekiel 25:6 For thus saith the Lord Yehovah, “Because thou hast clapped thine hands and stamped with the foot and rejoiced with all thy contempt in the being unto the soil of Israel…”

For what are your feet known (whether you can walk or not)? Would your feet take you to the aid of Jews, should the choice be forced on you to aid Israel and suffer great loss, or to ignore Israel and be in less danger? Would Jewish children love your feet, or would they fear your feet as potential enemies?

 

Psalm 019

Psalm 19

Literally Rendered

1. To the overcomer: a ballad. To David.

2. The heavens are scrolling the glory of a Mighty-[One]. And the firmament is telling the doing of His hands.

3. Day to day will emit a saying. And night to night will enliven knowledge!

4. There is no saying and there are no speeches without their voice being heard!

5. Their measuring-line exited into all the land. And their words are into the edge of the planet. There is a tent via them to the sun!

6. And he exited as a bridegroom from his khupah. He will exult to run a path as a valiant-[one].

Continue reading “Psalm 019”