Genesis 34 – Vengeance

Vengeance

Background and Printed Text: Genesis 34

 

Genesis 34:1 And Her-Adjudicator (Dinah), the daughter of Weary (Leah) that she bore unto He-Will-Heel (Jacob), went out to see with the daughters of the land. 2And Shoulder (Shechem) the son of Ass (Hamor) the Hivite the prince of the land saw her. And he took her. And he lay with her. And he humiliated her. 3And his being clung unto Her-Adjudicator (Dinah) the daughter of He-Will-Heel (Jacob). And he loved the youth [masc.]. And he spoke upon the heart of the youth [masc.].

 

4And Shoulder (Shechem) spoke unto his father Ass (Hamor) to say, “Take this child to me for a woman.” 5And He-Will-Heel (Jacob) heard that he had made Her-Adjudicator (Dinah) his daughter unclean. And his sons were with his cattle in the field. And He-Will-Heel (Jacob) made himself silent until their coming.

 

6And Ass (Hamor) the father of Shoulder (Shechem) went out unto He-Will-Heel (Jacob) to speak with him. 7And the sons of He-Will-Heel (Jacob) came out of the field when they heard. And the men were labour-pained. And they were very hot because he had wrought folly against Israel to lie with the daughter of He-Will-Heel (Jacob). And established, he shall not be done!

 

8And Ass (Hamor) spoke with them, saying, “My son Shoulder (Shechem)—his being cleaves into your daughter. Give-ye, na, her to him for a woman. 9And make ye marriages with us. Give your daughters to us and take our daughters to you. 10And ye shall dwell with us. And the land shall be before you. Dwell. And trade ye her, and possess ye in her.”

 

11And Shoulder (Shechem) said unto her father and unto her brethren, “I will find favour in your eyes. And I will give what ye shall say unto me. 12Multiply upon me very much a dowry and a gift, and I will give according as ye shall say unto me. And give the youth to me for a woman.”

 

13And the sons of He-Will-Heel (Jacob) deceitfully answered Shoulder (Shechem) and Ass (Hamor) his father. And they spoke—Who had made Her-Adjudicator (Dinah) their sister unclean? 14And they said unto them, “We cannot do this thing—to give our sister to one who has a foreskin, for it is a reproach to us. 15But we will consent unto you via this: If ye will be like us to be circumcised for yourselves—every male. 16And we will give our daughters unto you, and we will take your daughters to us. And we will dwell with you. And we will become one people. 17And if ye will not hearken unto us to be circumcised— And will we take our daughter, and we will go.” 18And their words were good in the eyes of Ass (Hamor) and in the eyes of Shoulder (Shechem) Ass’s (Hamor’s) son. 19And the young man did not procrastinate to do the thing. For he delighted in He-Will-Heel’s (Jacob’s) daughter. And he is more important than all the house of his father.

 

20And Ass (Hamor) came, and Shoulder (Shechem) his son, unto the gate of their city. And they spoke with the men of their city to say, 21“These men—they are peaceable with us. They have dwelt in the land and have traded her. For the land—behold—is large enough before them. We shall take their daughters to us for women, and we shall give them our daughters. 22The men will only consent to us to dwell with us to be one people via this: by our being circumcised—every male—as they are circumcised. 23Their cattle and their substance and every beast of theirs, are they not ours? Only we shall consent unto them. And they will dwell with us.” 24And they hearkened unto Ass (Hamor) and unto Shoulder (Shechem)—all going out of the gate of his city. And every male was circumcised, all that went out of the gate of his city.

 

25And he was in the third day, via their being pained-[ones]. And two of the sons of He-Will-Heel (Jacob), Hearkener (Shimon) and My-Near-One (Levi), Her-Adjudicator’s (Dinah’s) brethren, took each man his sword. And they confidently came upon the city. And they slew every male! 26And they slew Ass (Hamor) and Shoulder (Shechem) his son with the edge of the sword. And they took Her-Adjudicator (Dinah) out of Shoulder’s (Shechem’s) house. And they went out. 27The sons of He-Will-Heel (Jacob) came upon the slain. And they spoiled the city because they had defiled their sister. 28They took their sheep and their oxen and their asses and that which is in the city and that which is in the field. 29And they took captive all their wealth and all their little ones and their women. And they spoiled, and all that is in the house.

 

30And He-Will-Heel (Jacob) said unto Hearkener (Shimon) and unto My-Near-One (Levi), “Ye have troubled me to make me stink among the inhabitants of the land, among the Canaanites and among the Perizzites. And I am dead-[ones] of a number. And they shall gather themselves upon me. And they shall slay me. And I shall be destroyed—I and my house!” 31And they said, “Will he make our sister a whore?”

 

 

 

I. The Rape-like Event (verses 1-3)

 

Dinah (pronounced DEE NUH) was a young girl, probably a middle teenager. She wanted to go out to see the daughters of the land—girls her own age.

 

While Dinah was going around with her girlfriends, the prince of the land (Shechem, pronounced Shkhem in Hebrew) was watching. He took her and he had sexual intercourse with her.

 

Shechem’s entire being, his body, his soul and his spirit, clung to Dinah. He loved the youth. And he spoke “upon the heart of the youth,” which means that he spoke to her about what had happened, and what was on her mind. It was an intimate conversation.

 

Questions

 

1. Did Dinah do wrong by going out to see with the daughters of the land?

 

2. What did they go out to see?

 

3. Was Shechem’s actions in seeing her wrong?

 

4. What was involved in the statement, “He took her”?

 

5. Did Shechem rape her?

 

6. Did Shechem do wrong?

 

7. What does “he lay with her” mean, and why is this wording used?

 

8. The next sentence states, “And he humiliated her.” Did he mistreat her? What does this mean?

 

9. What does “his being clung unto Dinah” mean?

 

10. Did Shechem love her?

 

11. Why is the word youth masculine when describing Dinah?

 

12. What is love?

 

13. Was Shechem’s love for Dinah good, or was it bad?

 

14. What does speaking upon the heart of someone mean?

 

15. What did he discuss with her as he spoke upon her heart?

 

16. Will Shechem make a good husband?

 

 

 

II. The Two Fathers (verses 4-5)

 

Shechem gave his father a request: “Take this child to me for a woman.” Shechem called the girl a child. He wanted the child bride.

 

Jacob heard that Shechem had made his daughter unclean. Jacob’s sons were in the field. Jacob made himself silent until they came from the field and from the cattle.

 

Questions

 

1. Is taking a child for a woman (wife) wrong?

 

2. Was the way that Shechem requested this wrong? Wasn’t he being demanding with, “Take this child to me for a woman”?

 

3. How did Jacob hear that Shechem had made his daughter unclean?

 

4. What is involved with being made unclean in the Bible?

 

5. What does their being in the field tell the reader?

 

6. What does “Jacob made himself silent” mean?

 

7. Was Jacob’s making himself silent wise?

 

8. Whose coming did Jacob await?

 

III. The Rage (verses 6-7)

 

Hamor came to speak with Jacob. In the meantime, Jacob’s sons heard what had happened, and they came from the field. They were “labour-pained,” meaning that they suffered terribly like a woman giving birth.

 

They were very furious because Shechem had wrought (worked) folly (foolishness of a terrible nature) against their father, Israel, by lying with Jacob’s daughter. They determined that this kind of behaviour will not be done!

 

Questions

 

1. Was Hamor coming in a friendly way?

 

2. How did the sons of Jacob hear?

 

3. Why were the sons of Jacob so pained?

 

4. Did they have the right to be hot against Shechem?

 

5. What is folly in the Bible?

 

6. Why didn’t they call it rape?

 

7. Why did the brothers state that the folly was wrought (worked) against Israel, and not against Dinah?

 

8. When they said, “established, he shall not be done,” what did they intend to do about it?

 

 

 

IV. The Offer (verses 8-10)

 

Hamor explained that his son’s being clung into their daughter. He requested that they would give their daughter to his son for a woman. (The expression for a woman means to deal with as a wife, including having children with her, and including taking full responsibility for her safety and health.)

 

Hamor offered even more: “make ye marriages with us. Give your daughters to us and take our daughters to you.” (Notice how he worded it to not be demanding.)

 

He also proposed, “Ye shall dwell with us. And the land shall be before you. Dwell. And trade ye her, and possess ye in her.”

 

Questions

 

1. What is having one’s being cleaving (clinging) into another like?

 

2. Why did Hamor say, “his being cleaves into your daughter”?

 

3. When Hamor said, “Give-ye, na, her to him for a woman,” was he being demanding?

 

4. Was the offer, “make ye marriages with us,” a kind offer?

 

5. Why wasn’t Jacob eager to make this alliance with Hamor and his son, Shechem?

 

6. Is dwelling with Hamor’s people bad?

 

7. Was this offer of the land being before Jacob so that he could dwell and trader her (the land) and possess in her a bad offer?

 

 

 

V. Shechem Speaks (verses 11-12)

 

Shechem desired to find favour in the eyes of the family of Dinah. He wanted to turn what had occurred into something beneficial. He was willing to pay a very high price for the child bride. Whatever it was, he wanted Dinah for his woman.

 

Questions

 

1. Why didn’t Shechem confess that he had done wrong, and apologize for it?

 

2. Why did Shechem offer to give whatever they put upon him to acquire Dinah?

 

3. Did Jacob have a similar experience?

 

 

 

VI. The Feigned Deal (verses 13-19)

 

Jacob’s sons deceitfully answered Shechem and Hamor. They wanted to know: who had made Dinah their sister unclean?

 

They then became religious. “We cannot do this thing—to give our sister to one who has a foreskin, for it is a reproach to us.” They then agreed that there was one condition that would solve the problem: “If ye will be like us to be circumcised for yourselves——every male.” The brothers promised, “we will give our daughters unto you, and we will take your daughters to us. And we will dwell with you. And we will become one people.” If they will not do this, Jacob’s sons will take Dinah, and Jacob and his family will go.

 

Hamor and Shechem liked this plan. Shechem quickly got to work convincing his group of the benefits, because he delighted in Dinah.

 

Shechem was more important in his village than all the house of his father.

 

Questions

 

1. Why did Jacob’s sons deceitfully answer Shechem and Hamor?

 

2. Why did they ask, “Who had made Dinah their sister unclean?”

 

3. What is a foreskin?

 

4. What does circumcise mean?

 

5. Dinah’s brothers said, “We cannot do this thing—to give our sister to one who has a foreskin, for it is a reproach to us.” Was this true?

 

6. They then said, “But we will consent unto you via this: If ye will be like us to be circumcised for yourselves—every male.” Were they speaking the truth?

 

7. Were Dinah’s brothers Godly men who were interested and invested in Spiritual things of Yehovah the God of Avraham, Isaac and Jacob?

 

8. The brothers also said, “And we will give our daughters unto you, and we will take your daughters to us. And we will dwell with you. And we will become one people.” Was this offer a gracious and kind offer? Was it a good offer?

 

9. What was so wrong about these Hivites (that included Shechem and Hamor), that Yehovah would later (that is, in 400 years) command the Israelis to totally annihilate them, including their babies and their cattle and sheep?

 

10. The brothers also said, “And if ye will not hearken unto us to be circumcised— And will we take our daughter, and we will go.” Where would they go?

 

11. Why did the brothers call Dinah “our daughter”?

 

12. Why didn’t Jacob speak up when he heard his sons speaking what isn’t true to these Hivites?

 

13. What does delighted in mean in, “For he delighted in Jacob’s daughter”?

 

14. What does “he is more important than all the house of his father” mean?

 

 

 

VII. The Agreement (verses 20-24)

 

Hamor came with Shechem to the gate of their city to present the offer to their people. They started by declaring that Jacob and his group are peaceful toward them. They have dwelt in the land, and have traded her. There is plenty of land for them.

 

They then explained that the Hivites can take Jacob’s daughters to them for women, and the Hivites will give Jacob’s people their daughters.

 

They do require one action that the Hivites must do in order to dwell with the Hivites and to become one people with them: every male must be circumcised as they are circumcised.

 

These two then said, “Their cattle and their substance and every beast of theirs, are they not ours?” They then urged the men to consent to Jacob’s men’s requirements. “And they will dwell with us.”

 

The Hivites, all going out of the gate of his city, hearkened unto Hamor and Shechem. Every male was circumcised—every male that went out of the gate of his city.

 

Questions

 

1. Who is her in “They have dwelt in the land and have traded her”?

 

2. What did they trade, according to the text, and was this true?

 

3. The text says, “For the land—behold—is large enough before them.” For what was the land large enough?

 

4. They also said, “We shall take their daughters to us for women, and we shall give them our daughters.” How many daughters were there to be taken?

 

5. Did Jacob’s sons agree to be one people with the Hivites as Hamor and Shechemstated?

 

6. What did they mean by, “Their cattle and their substance and every beast of theirs, are they not ours?”

 

7. What does “all going out of the gate of his city” tell readers?

 

 

 

VIII. The Attack (verses 25-29)

 

On the third day, the men who had been circumcised were very sore and in much pain. Shimon and Levi, two of the sons of Jacob who were Dinah’s full brothers, having the same mother (Leah), took their swords. They confidently came upon the city, determined to attack it. They slew every male! That included Hamor and Shechem. They then took Dinah out of Shechem’s house, and they left.

 

The sons of Jacob came upon the slain. They spoiled the city (they took all its valuables) because they had defiled their sister. Among the spoils, they took their sheep, their oxen and their asses. They also took all the valuables from the field. They took all their wealth captive, all their little ones, and their women. They stripped the place.

 

Questions

 

1. Why did Shimon and Levi wait until the third day to make an attack?

 

2. Was killing every male right?

 

3. How did Dinah feel about what her two brothers had done?

 

4. What is vengeance, and is it right?

 

5. The text says, “The sons of Jacob came upon the slain.” What does this tell readers?

 

6. What does spoil mean in this text?

 

7. Why did they spoil the city?

 

8. Why did they take captive all their little ones and their women?

 

9. In what condition would these women and children who were captured be?

 

10. Did the women and children who were captured know why this violence occurred?

 

11. Was taking the women and children and all their stuff right?

 

 

 

IX. Jacob’s Frustration (verses 30-31)

 

Jacob stated, “Ye have troubled me to make me stink among the inhabitants of the land, among the Canaanites and among the Perizzites.” His concern also was because of the smallness of his group’s number. “They shall gather themselves upon me. And they shall slay me. And I shall be destroyed—I and my house!”

 

His two sons responded, “Will he make our sister a whore?

 

Questions

 

1. Why wasn’t Jacob’s first concern for the slaughtered men, the women who now had no husbands, and the children who now had no fathers?

 

2. What does “ye have troubled me to make me stink” mean?

 

3. Why does the Hebrew language of the Bible use dead ones of a number to describe a group that is small?

 

4. Jacob said, “And they shall gather themselves upon me.” Was he right?

 

5. He also said, “And they shall slay me.” Was this also true?

 

6. Jacob then expressed, “And I shall be destroyed—I and my house!” What type of reaction is this?

 

7. The two sons responded, “Will he make our sister a whore?” What were they saying about what happened, and why did they word it this way?

 

8. Jacob’s sons got away with the slaughter. Why did Yehovah allow them to get away with this murderous act?

 

Genesis 34 – Vengeance QA Supplied

Vengeance

With Questions and Proposed Answers Supplied

Background and Printed Text: Genesis 34

 

Genesis 34:1 And Her-Adjudicator (Dinah), the daughter of Weary (Leah) that she bore unto He-Will-Heel (Jacob), went out to see with the daughters of the land. 2And Shoulder (Shechem) the son of Ass (Hamor) the Hivite the prince of the land saw her. And he took her. And he lay with her. And he humiliated her. 3And his being clung unto Her-Adjudicator (Dinah) the daughter of He-Will-Heel (Jacob). And he loved the youth [masc.]. And he spoke upon the heart of the youth [masc.].

 

4And Shoulder (Shechem) spoke unto his father Ass (Hamor) to say, “Take this child to me for a woman.” 5And He-Will-Heel (Jacob) heard that he had made Her-Adjudicator (Dinah) his daughter unclean. And his sons were with his cattle in the field. And He-Will-Heel (Jacob) made himself silent until their coming.

 

6And Ass (Hamor) the father of Shoulder (Shechem) went out unto He-Will-Heel (Jacob) to speak with him. 7And the sons of He-Will-Heel (Jacob) came out of the field when they heard. And the men were labour-pained. And they were very hot because he had wrought folly against Israel to lie with the daughter of He-Will-Heel (Jacob). And established, he shall not be done!

 

8And Ass (Hamor) spoke with them, saying, “My son Shoulder (Shechem)—his being cleaves into your daughter. Give-ye, na, her to him for a woman. 9And make ye marriages with us. Give your daughters to us and take our daughters to you. 10And ye shall dwell with us. And the land shall be before you. Dwell. And trade ye her, and possess ye in her.”

 

11And Shoulder (Shechem) said unto her father and unto her brethren, “I will find favour in your eyes. And I will give what ye shall say unto me. 12Multiply upon me very much a dowry and a gift, and I will give according as ye shall say unto me. And give the youth to me for a woman.”

 

13And the sons of He-Will-Heel (Jacob) deceitfully answered Shoulder (Shechem) and Ass (Hamor) his father. And they spoke—Who had made Her-Adjudicator (Dinah) their sister unclean? 14And they said unto them, “We cannot do this thing—to give our sister to one who has a foreskin, for it is a reproach to us. 15But we will consent unto you via this: If ye will be like us to be circumcised for yourselves—every male. 16And we will give our daughters unto you, and we will take your daughters to us. And we will dwell with you. And we will become one people. 17And if ye will not hearken unto us to be circumcised— And will we take our daughter, and we will go.” 18And their words were good in the eyes of Ass (Hamor) and in the eyes of Shoulder (Shechem) Ass’s (Hamor’s) son. 19And the young man did not procrastinate to do the thing. For he delighted in He-Will-Heel’s (Jacob’s) daughter. And he is more important than all the house of his father.

 

20And Ass (Hamor) came, and Shoulder (Shechem) his son, unto the gate of their city. And they spoke with the men of their city to say, 21“These men—they are peaceable with us. They have dwelt in the land and have traded her. For the land—behold—is large enough before them. We shall take their daughters to us for women, and we shall give them our daughters. 22The men will only consent to us to dwell with us to be one people via this: by our being circumcised—every male—as they are circumcised. 23Their cattle and their substance and every beast of theirs, are they not ours? Only we shall consent unto them. And they will dwell with us.” 24And they hearkened unto Ass (Hamor) and unto Shoulder (Shechem)—all going out of the gate of his city. And every male was circumcised, all that went out of the gate of his city.

 

25And he was in the third day, via their being pained-[ones]. And two of the sons of He-Will-Heel (Jacob), Hearkener (Shimon) and My-Near-One (Levi), Her-Adjudicator’s (Dinah’s) brethren, took each man his sword. And they confidently came upon the city. And they slew every male! 26And they slew Ass (Hamor) and Shoulder (Shechem) his son with the edge of the sword. And they took Her-Adjudicator (Dinah) out of Shoulder’s (Shechem’s) house. And they went out. 27The sons of He-Will-Heel (Jacob) came upon the slain. And they spoiled the city because they had defiled their sister. 28They took their sheep and their oxen and their asses and that which is in the city and that which is in the field. 29And they took captive all their wealth and all their little ones and their women. And they spoiled, and all that is in the house.

 

30And He-Will-Heel (Jacob) said unto Hearkener (Shimon) and unto My-Near-One (Levi), “Ye have troubled me to make me stink among the inhabitants of the land, among the Canaanites and among the Perizzites. And I am dead-[ones] of a number. And they shall gather themselves upon me. And they shall slay me. And I shall be destroyed—I and my house!” 31And they said, “Will he make our sister a whore?”

 

 

 

I. The Rape-like Event (verses 1-3)

 

Dinah (pronounced DEE NUH) was a young girl, probably a middle teenager. She wanted to go out to see the daughters of the land—girls her own age.

 

While Dinah was going around with her girlfriends, the prince of the land (Shechem, pronounced Shkhem in Hebrew) was watching. He took her and he had sexual intercourse with her.

 

Shechem’s entire being, his body, his soul and his spirit, clung to Dinah. He loved the youth. And he spoke “upon the heart of the youth,” which means that he spoke to her about what had happened, and what was on her mind. It was an intimate conversation.

 

Questions

 

1. Did Dinah do wrong by going out to see with the daughters of the land? She did not do wrong. What she did was risky, but it was not wrong. Her being friends with idolatrous girlfriends was not wrong. It is risky; but then, friendships are risky. She did put herself in danger, however.

 

2. What did they go out to see? They went to walk together, to explore the area and the various inhabitants; they went to see what life was like for each other.

 

3. Was Shechem’s actions in seeing her wrong? This also wasn’t wrong. What he next did was wrong, but seeing her and being attracted to her was not wrong.

 

4. What was involved in the statement, “He took her”? He physically took her from her companions, and he took her to another place where he had sexual intercourse with her. The text does not automatically imply force, but it does indicate some type of strong action. The text did not say, “She went with him.”

 

5. Did Shechem rape her? I have not been able to tell if she was raped. I suspect that it was a form of rape, but not of the most violent types. She may have been willing, or more likely, she may have been taken by such surprise, that she didn’t know how to react.

 

The text does not indicate how long and how many times she went with the daughters of the land. This action may have been after weeks of seeing her.

 

6. Did Shechem do wrong? He took advantage of her; that was wrong and selfish according to the culture of Jacob (and therefore Dinah). A man taking a woman to be his wife is not Biblically wrong; it can be quite right to do. One must consider the culture and the relationship before doing this. Shechem did not consider what would happen to her. What he did may have been proper in his culture! Again, there are cultures where men literally take women. In other cultures, however, families will meet, arrangements will be made, and delays will occur. Every culture is different.

 

7. What does “he lay with her” mean, and why is this wording used? The idea of of laying with someone is because a bed or bed-like area is normally used when sexual intercourse occurs. This expression is not used for sleep; it is used to describe sexual intercourse.

 

8. The next sentence states, “And he humiliated her.” Did he mistreat her? What does this mean? In the Hebrew language, humbling and humiliating are the same word with the same meaning! A person who is humiliated is forced into being humble: that is, being humbled. What Shechem did was put Dinah in a humiliated position. She now had had sexual intercourse before and outside of marriage. Her responsibilities and her position in society changed—it became greatly lowered. While she was a youth and a virgin, she was viewed not as an adult with adult responsibilities, but as one who should be protected and treated very well until she could take on adult responsibilities. Had she married, her status might have gone up. Being unmarried and having had sexual intercourse greatly lowered her position in society so that some would pity her and others would view her in ways that were not as good as they had been. She, also, did not know what to do, now. Thus, Shechem had humiliated her; he life was now totally changed.

 

The text doesn’t state that he mistreated her; yet what he did is either rape, or so close to rape, that we can’t tell; these actions are a form of mistreatment even if she had consented. He had no business dealing with her in that way. She was a guest in his neighbourhood.

 

9. What does “his being clung unto Dinah” mean? Shechem was ‘stuck on her!’ He greatly desired her to become his woman. This involved every part of him—not the physical part.

 

10. Did Shechem love her? Yes, he did. He greatly loved her.

 

11. Why is the word youth masculine when describing Dinah? When the Bible refers to any person generically, that is, in a way that is not specific, but a description as if the person (male or female) is a being from Adam, the masculine form is used.

 

12. What is love? It is seeking the highest, best interest of and for another without regard to self. It is also greatly desiring another even to the point of being addicted to another to serve that other person without regard to self. Love is usually good; it can also be twisted into something bad.

 

13. Was Shechem’s love for Dinah good, or was it bad? His love was good, but it had expressed itself as something else. He hadn’t shown her highest been interested without regard to himself by doing something that either was rape or that close to rape. It started out as lust with a selfish thrust.

 

14. What does speaking upon the heart of someone mean? This means to discuss whatever is on the heart (mind) of a person with that person. It is a conversation that involves fears, desires, disappointments, hopes, etc.

 

15. What did he discuss with her as he spoke upon her heart? She now needed to know what she should do. She knew the trouble that this would bring to her father, and she may have realized that her brothers would also be very angry. I propose that Shechem and she would have discussed their futures together, and what he would do next.

 

16. Will Shechem make a good husband? This is difficult to predict. If he is always willing to speak with his woman regarding those things on her heart, he will probably make a good husband. The issues of culture and gods don’t have to interfere in a good relationship. On the other hand, the violence done in that part of the world could make being a good husband much more difficult.

 

 

 

II. The Two Fathers (verses 4-5)

 

Shechem gave his father a request: “Take this child to me for a woman.” Shechem called the girl a child. He wanted the child bride.

 

Jacob heard that Shechem had made his daughter unclean. Jacob’s sons were in the field. Jacob made himself silent until they came from the field and from the cattle.

 

Questions

 

1. Is taking a child for a woman (wife) wrong? One must know how old the child is. Arranged marriages often include child brides, but they normally are protected from sexual intercourse until they are physically ready and mature enough to not be endangered. Again, what Shechem requested wasn’t wrong.

 

2. Was the way that Shechem requested this wrong? Wasn’t he being demanding with, “Take this child to me for a woman”? This would be very demanding according to many of our cultures. It was not demanding in Shechem’s culture. It was a request that was given with respect.

 

3. How did Jacob hear that Shechem had made his daughter unclean? The text never states how he knew. His sons didn’t know. I propose that Jacob’s source was the Spirit of Yehovah; if this is true, Yehovah told him that in order for him to keep composure when they came to tell him.

 

If, instead, Jacob heard by word of mouth, the text does not tell us this means, or why Jacob would know, and his sons did not yet know.

 

4. What is involved with being made unclean in the Bible? Anyone becomes unclean in the Bible by eating unclean creatures (including some animals, like dogs, pigs, rabbits, squirrels, shark, etc.), by having an oozing sore that won’t heal, by touching a dead person or an animal that was killed by animals, by disease or by accident, or by touching another person who is unclean.

 

Semen (sperm from a male) renders a person who touches it unclean once it comes out of the body. It is as if Yehovah is teaching that humans are unclean from conception, since sperm are needed to fertilize a woman’s egg in order to produce pregnancy.

 

5. What does their being in the field tell the reader? It tells the reader that they probably had not heard of what happened to their sister; otherwise, they would have come together with their father to see what they needed to do.

 

6. What does “Jacob made himself silent” mean? This means that Jacob intentionally didn’t say anything about this (or anything else) to anyone.

 

7. Was Jacob’s making himself silent wise? It was very wise! Saying anything about this gives others reasons to talk, to twist things, to make gossip, to get riled up and angry, and to do very stupid things. Jacob knew not to do that.

 

8. Whose coming did Jacob await? He awaited the coming of his sons.

 

 

 

III. The Rage (verses 6-7)

 

Hamor came to speak with Jacob. In the meantime, Jacob’s sons heard what had happened, and they came from the field. They were “labour-pained,” meaning that they suffered terribly like a woman giving birth.

 

They were very furious because Shechem had wrought (worked) folly (foolishness of a terrible nature) against their father, Israel, by lying with Jacob’s daughter. They determined that this kind of behaviour will not be done!

 

Questions

 

1. Was Hamor coming in a friendly way? Yes; he was not coming as an enemy. He hoped to make peace from this situation.

 

2. How did the sons of Jacob hear? The text does not say how they heard. They all lived in tents; anyone near a tent could hear conversations within the tent.

 

3. Why were the sons of Jacob so pained? The text doesn’t say why. I suspect that they loved their sister.

 

4. Did they have the right to be hot against Shechem? They did nothing wrong by being angry. They would have been doing wrong if they hadn’t cared! Being angry is fine. What one does with anger is another issue!

 

5. What is folly in the Bible? lbn, nabal means foolish, senseless, coming from the root meaning to be senseless, be foolish; to sink or drop down, languish, wither and fall, fade; to droop. Yehovah uses this word for a carcass, a corpse of humans, as well as idols, animals. Thus, fools of this type show the same amount of sense as a corpse. This isn’t an innocent type of foolishness; it easily leads to death!

 

6. Why didn’t they call it rape? They didn’t know whether it was rape. As far as the brothers knew, Dinah may had consented. That didn’t stop them from being furious at Shechem (rather than at Dinah), since the event took place in Shechem’s culture and village.

 

7. Why did the brothers state that the folly was wrought (worked) against Israel, and not against Dinah? Dinah was still under Jacob’s care. Anything done against Dinah was an attack on Jacob.

 

Some folks read texts like this, and then they conclude that women were worth less than men in Israel. This is not the case.

 

8. When they said, “established, he shall not be done,” what did they intend to do about it? The main way to keep this type of occurrence from again happening is to put fear into others who might try the same thing.

 

 

 

IV. The Offer (verses 8-10)

 

Hamor explained that his son’s being clung into their daughter. He requested that they would give their daughter to his son for a woman. (The expression for a woman means to deal with as a wife, including having children with her, and including taking full responsibility for her safety and health.)

 

Hamor offered even more: “make ye marriages with us. Give your daughters to us and take our daughters to you.” (Notice how he worded it to not be demanding.)

 

He also proposed, “Ye shall dwell with us. And the land shall be before you. Dwell. And trade ye her, and possess ye in her.”

 

Questions

 

1. What is having one’s being cleaving (clinging) into another like? That person desires to be with the other person all the time, taking a very strong interest in everything about that person and wanting to please that person. This also happens when someone ‘has a crush’ on someone else. While ‘being clinging’ can be love, it might not be long-lasting.

 

2. Why did Hamor say, “his being cleaves into your daughter”? Hamor recognized the mother and the father, but also that Dinah was the daughter of her people! This is the proper way to view any member of one’s cultural group. The group is always responsible for each of its members.

 

3. When Hamor said, “Give-ye, na, her to him for a woman,” was he being demanding? No. See the Hebrew word, na? It is a softener in Hebrew, telling those who hear or read that the words were not demanding.

 

4. Was the offer, “make ye marriages with us,” a kind offer? It was a kind offer.

 

5. Why wasn’t Jacob eager to make this alliance with Hamor and his son, Shechem? Jacob had been taught how his grandfather (Avraham) and his father (Isaac) specifically sent to Syria for wives. Yehovah had taught them to not obtain wives from the races that are in the land that would much later become the land of Israel. These men knew that Yehovah would eventually destroy these races. Jacob was not eager for his daughter to be the wife of one of these races, and he was certainly not eager for an alliance that would make void what Yehovah had taught.

 

These folks were willing to make peace, but they were also producing one of the very sinful and evil races. This decision to make peace with them by marriage alliances (agreements) would have destroyed the people of Israel.

 

6. Is dwelling with Hamor’s people bad? It isn’t bad, but intermarrying with a group that Yehovah will later destroy isn’t too smart.

 

7. Was this offer of the land being before Jacob so that he could dwell and trader her (the land) and possess in her a bad offer? It wasn’t a bad offer, but was like another offer in another part of the Bible:

 

Matthew 4:8 The devil takes [Yeshua] up into an exceedingly high mountain. And he shows Him all the kingdoms of the world and their glory. 9And he says to him, “I will give thee all these things if thou wilt fall down and worship me!” 10Then Yeshua says to him, “Get thee hence, Satan! For it is written, ‘Thou shalt worship Yehovah thy God, and thou shalt serve only Him.’”

 

Both this text and the text we are considering make offers to give land or lands for compromise. These are tempting. Both Jacob and Yeshua determined to not compromise in order to gain something prematurely.

 

 

 

V. Shechem Speaks (verses 11-12)

 

Shechem desired to find favour in the eyes of the family of Dinah. He wanted to turn what had occurred into something beneficial. He was willing to pay a very high price for the child bride. Whatever it was, he wanted Dinah for his woman.

 

Questions

 

1. Why didn’t Shechem confess that he had done wrong, and apologize for it? He knew that would do little good, and would focus on loss. He determined to focus on what could be gained by the relationship.

 

2. Why did Shechem offer to give whatever they put upon him to acquire Dinah? He loved the girl.

 

3. Did Jacob have a similar experience? Jacob loved Raquel. He understood about being willing to work hard for a woman.

 

 

 

VI. The Feigned Deal (verses 13-19)

 

Jacob’s sons deceitfully answered Shechem and Hamor. They wanted to know: who had made Dinah their sister unclean?

 

They then became religious. “We cannot do this thing—to give our sister to one who has a foreskin, for it is a reproach to us.” They then agreed that there was one condition that would solve the problem: “If ye will be like us to be circumcised for yourselves——every male.” The brothers promised, “we will give our daughters unto you, and we will take your daughters to us. And we will dwell with you. And we will become one people.” If they will not do this, Jacob’s sons will take Dinah, and Jacob and his family will go.

 

Hamor and Shechem liked this plan. Shechem quickly got to work convincing his group of the benefits, because he delighted in Dinah.

 

Shechem was more important in his village than all the house of his father.

 

Questions

 

1. Why did Jacob’s sons deceitfully answer Shechem and Hamor? They had made plans. Their plans required them to deceive these men and to effectively disarm them.

 

2. Why did they ask, “Who had made Dinah their sister unclean?” I propose that they desired an admission from Shechem, and they desired to weaken Shechem’s and Hamor’s position in the bargain. They also desired to cause Shechem to really feel guilty in order for the deception of their very kind and good offer to take hold.

 

3. What is a foreskin? It is a small covering of skin over the head of the penis. Removal of the foreskin is painful in an adult male and an older youth, but it involves very little pain for a child who is eight days old. The foreskin isn’t necessary for any function.

 

4. What does circumcise mean? The word circumcise means to cut around. It refers to cutting off the foreskin.

 

5. Dinah’s brothers said, “We cannot do this thing—to give our sister to one who has a foreskin, for it is a reproach to us.” Was this true? This was not true. I have seen no text indicating that non-Israeli males who take Israeli women for wives must be circumcised. If they will join the Israelis, well, they must be circumcised. But if they will not join and do not desire to be part of the culture of their wives, I have found no command that they must be circumcised. I propose that Dinah’s brothers were making this up.

 

6. They then said, “But we will consent unto you via this: If ye will be like us to be circumcised for yourselves—every male.” Were they speaking the truth? The text will indicate whether they spoke the truth shortly. They didn’t speak the truth.

 

7. Were Dinah’s brothers Godly men who were interested and invested in Spiritual things of Yehovah the God of Avraham, Isaac and Jacob? They were not Godly men. They are the same brothers who will plot to murder Joseph, and who lie to their father about his supposed death. They learned to lie with much practice.

 

8. The brothers also said, “And we will give our daughters unto you, and we will take your daughters to us. And we will dwell with you. And we will become one people.” Was this offer a gracious and kind offer? Was it a good offer? It was not a gracious and kind offer since it was a lie. It also wasn’t a good offer, since Jacob and his sons had no business becoming one people with a group that Yehovah would later command to be annihilated.

 

9. What was so wrong about these Hivites (that included Shechem and Hamor), that Yehovah would later (that is, in 400 years) command the Israelis to totally annihilate them, including their babies and their cattle and sheep? It wasn’t their idolatry, since the sons of Israel also kept secret idols. They became so sinful in their vile sexual practices and in their human sacrifices and delight in seeing the blood of others, that Yehovah finally determined that they must be killed.

 

If the Israelis became one people with them, they would quickly learn to do the very same things, except worse.

 

10. The brothers also said, “And if ye will not hearken unto us to be circumcised— And will we take our daughter, and we will go.” Where would they go? They would travel to other pastures, and take Dinah with them. The grass was not so thick that one could keep cattle and sheep in one area; they had to travel because the grass was sparse (that is, not many plants in any location).

 

11. Why did the brothers call Dinah “our daughter”? Their use of our was not only referring to them, the brothers of Dinah, but also to Jacob, his wives, his concubines, all the slaves—everyone who was part of the people of Jacob. Thus, the brothers were speaking for Jacob, in the place of Jacob (as if Jacob had nothing to say).

 

12. Why didn’t Jacob speak up when he heard his sons speaking what isn’t true to these Hivites? Jacob recognized his sons as men, not as children. He demonstrated respect for them by not arguing with them in front of others, especially in front of others who might become hostile. He therefore said nothing.

 

13. What does delighted in mean in, “For he delighted in Jacob’s daughter”? This means to greatly desire, have pleasure in, long for, greatly enjoy the company of. He liked everything about her.

 

14. What does “he is more important than all the house of his father” mean? This means that he has greater status (and perhaps wealth) than all the rest of his immediate family put together. He is a community leader.

 

 

 

VII. The Agreement (verses 20-24)

 

Hamor came with Shechem to the gate of their city to present the offer to their people. They started by declaring that Jacob and his group are peaceful toward them. They have dwelt in the land, and have traded her. There is plenty of land for them.

 

They then explained that the Hivites can take Jacob’s daughters to them for women, and the Hivites will give Jacob’s people their daughters.

 

They do require one action that the Hivites must do in order to dwell with the Hivites and to become one people with them: every male must be circumcised as they are circumcised.

 

These two then said, “Their cattle and their substance and every beast of theirs, are they not ours?” They then urged the men to consent to Jacob’s men’s requirements. “And they will dwell with us.”

 

The Hivites, all going out of the gate of his city, hearkened unto Hamor and Shechem. Every male was circumcised—every male that went out of the gate of his city.

 

Questions

 

1. Who is her in “They have dwelt in the land and have traded her”? She is the land. The word for land is feminine in gender in Hebrew.

 

2. What did they trade, according to the text, and was this true? They traded land, indicating that the bought and sold land. They had bought land for a grave site, but I don’t know a text that declares that they had sold land.

 

3. The text says, “For the land—behold—is large enough before them.” For what was the land large enough? It was large enough for Jacob and his group to live, and large enough for their cattle and sheep to have good pasture without interfering with the Hivites.

 

4. They also said, “We shall take their daughters to us for women, and we shall give them our daughters.” How many daughters were there to be taken? I only know of one at this time: Dinah. That doesn’t mean that there weren’t other daughters, including daughters of slaves, etc. in Jacob’s household.

 

5. Did Jacob’s sons agree to be one people with the Hivites as Hamor and Shechemstated? Yes, they did in verse 16.

 

6. What did they mean by, “Their cattle and their substance and every beast of theirs, are they not ours?” If Jacob and his sons become one people with the Hivites, all Jacob’s cattle, substance and animals will become almost as common property through working arrangements, property purchases, and other dealings. The Hivites wanted to obtain what Jacob had; they all could become wealthy.

 

7. What does “all going out of the gate of his city” tell readers? Those who could hearken were old enough to go outside of the gates of their cities. The very young children didn’t hearken; they were circumcized by their parents. Those going outside the gates went to work in the fields or to trade with traveling merchants.

 

This also tells the reader that all the males participated in this very painful operation—painful to adults. (It doesn’t hurt children who are about eight days old.)

 

 

 

VIII. The Attack (verses 25-29)

 

On the third day, the men who had been circumcised were very sore and in much pain. Shimon and Levi, two of the sons of Jacob who were Dinah’s full brothers, having the same mother (Leah), took their swords. They confidently came upon the city, determined to attack it. They slew every male! That included Hamor and Shechem. They then took Dinah out of Shechem’s house, and they left.

 

The sons of Jacob came upon the slain. They spoiled the city (they took all its valuables) because they had defiled their sister. Among the spoils, they took their sheep, their oxen and their asses. They also took all the valuables from the field. They took all their wealth captive, all their little ones, and their women. They stripped the place.

 

Questions

 

1. Why did Shimon and Levi wait until the third day to make an attack? That was when the men would be the most sore. A man who is sore after circumcision will not be able to do battle or even defend well; the pain is too great and too distracting to put up resistance.

 

2. Was killing every male right? No, it was not right. Had Shechem murdered Dinah, killing Shechem would have been right. Had Shechem murdered Dinah, and had the entire city protected Shechem, killing the males of the city would have been right; all protecting a murderer are likewise murderers. Shechem didn’t kill Dinah; he loved her. Shechem did wrong; what he did is not a capital punishment (death penalty) offense. Thus, Shimon and Levi committed murder!

 

3. How did Dinah feel about what her two brothers had done? The Bible is very silent on this issue. I cannot tell whether she loved Shechem, or whether she felt humiliated and raped.

 

In cases that happen that are like this, where brothers do violence for the sake of their sisters, the sisters sometimes feel very responsible and guilty for what their brothers did and for the harm done to others. Jacob intended to wait to hear an explanation before he did anything. Foolish men quickly decide to commit violence and vengeance for a relative who has been mistreated, and they usually do something worse because they are so angry. They don’t consider the desires of the original victims, their sisters.

 

4. What is vengeance, and is it right? Vengeance is intentionally doing harm to another as payment for a crime (or a supposed crime).

 

  • Vengeance is right if it is done by Yehovah.
  • Vengeance is right if Yehovah has given someone the responsibility of taking vengeance. He did this in several places in the Bible. One example is the following:

Numbers 31:1 And Yehovah spoke unto Moshe saying, 2 “Avenge the children of Israel of the Midianites. Afterward, thou shalt be gathered unto thy people.”

 

  • If Yehovah hasn’t given the responsibility of vengeance, taking it is wrong.
  • Yehovah has given the responsibility of vegeance to high-ranking leaders around the world.

Romans 13:3 For rulers are not a terror to good works, but to the evil. Wilt thou then not be afraid of the power? do that which is good, and thou shalt have praise of the same. 4For he is the minister of God to thee for good. But if thou do what is evil, be afraid! For he doesn’t bear the sword in vain! For he is the minister of God, a revenger to wrath upon him who does evil.

 

  • Personal vengeance (your doing something bad to another person or group for what the person or group did to you) is usually wrong. Self-defense is usually right. The problem with personal vengeance is that the one taking vengeance usually does more harm than what was done in the first place, and can harm or kill others who were not involved. It also can cause a cycle of violence (meaning that the person takes vengeance, then others take vengeance on that person, then others take vengeance on that person…). Yehovah commanded the Israelis to not take personal vengeance. He did command the Israelis to have judges who would command vengeance for certain crimes.
  • If the Israelis live under the full rule of the Torah (Teaching) of Yehovah, and if someone kills an Israeli, anyone who is near kin to the killed Israeli who knows (with proof) who killed the Israeli may chase the killer to kill the killer unless the killer goes to a city of refuge (a city in Israel where judges are located, and where this type of vengeance cannot be done without the judges commanding it). If the killer arrives in the city of refuge, the killer is tried. If the killer is found guilty, he or she is taken to the border of the city and is turned over to the near kin person to kill. If the killer accidentally killed, the accidental killer (‘manslayer’) must remain in the city of refuge until the death of the Israeli High Priest. If the accidental killer leaves the city before the death of the High Priest, the near kin can kill him/her without doing wrong. The Israelis are not living under the rule of the Torah at this time.
  • Taking vengeance where there are laws and authorities who will deal properly with the crime is wrong. If the laws and authorities are corrupt, and violence occurs against the innocent without anyone being permitted to do anything about it, folks begin taking vengeance, which will often lead to more and more violence, and finally to a civil war and much slaughter. Many countries are torn apart by violence and acts of vengeance that follow.
  • Taking vengeance during war is sometimes right. (Ask your instructress about when vengeance is and is not right by giving cases. See if you can determine when it is justified and when it is wrong.)
  • These sons of Jacob had no right taking vengeance.

5. The text says, “The sons of Jacob came upon the slain.” What does this tell readers? It told me that the other sons of Jacob who didn’t take part in the slaughter came a little later, and found the dead men.

 

6. What does spoil mean in this text? It means to take all the valuables. It isn’t the same as robbing a place, since spoiling is usually done during war or a war action.

 

7. Why did they spoil the city? They used the excuse that they (the now dead men) had defiled their sister. In their minds, all of the men of the city had participated in the action. This is the type of thinking that is used in the violence of racism. Folks refer to them and they, as if they are all alike. If one person in that group does what is viewed as wrong, they did it. This type of thinking is evil.

 

8. Why did they take captive all their little ones and their women? Jacob’s sons saw what they were doing as an act of war. Capturing slaves during war is right (in the Bible, and in many cultures).

 

9. In what condition would these women and children who were captured be? They were in shock and mourning over the slaughters of their fathers, husbands, brothers, cousins, uncles, grandfathers, great grandfathers, etc. This was a terrible and very unexpected act of violence.

 

10. Did the women and children who were captured know why this violence occurred? All likely heard what happened to Dinah. All were certainly aware of the circumcision plan. That doesn’t mean that they knew why this happened.

 

11. Was taking the women and children and all their stuff right? Had this been war, it would have been right. Instead, it was kidnapping after murder.

 

 

 

IX. Jacob’s Frustration (verses 30-31)

 

Jacob stated, “Ye have troubled me to make me stink among the inhabitants of the land, among the Canaanites and among the Perizzites.” His concern also was because of the smallness of his group’s number. “They shall gather themselves upon me. And they shall slay me. And I shall be destroyed—I and my house!”

 

His two sons responded, “Will he make our sister a whore?

 

Questions

 

1. Why wasn’t Jacob’s first concern for the slaughtered men, the women who now had no husbands, and the children who now had no fathers? His first concern was for the terrible violence that this would bring on his group. He could do nothing about the slaughter that they did, but he had to be concerned for the existence of his family.

 

2. What does “ye have troubled me to make me stink” mean? The actions of persons and groups produce a social ‘smell.’ If persons do well, the smell is good; if persons don’t do well, the smell is a stink. The same is true of groups. Some groups think that they do very well when they don’t; they stink as far as others are concerned. Groups that do violence against the innocent stink as far as families of the victims, friends of the victims, and individuals who are pleased with justice are concerned.

 

3. Why does the Hebrew language of the Bible use dead ones of a number to describe a group that is small? When a group has a very small number, members of that group can become part of other groups so that the name of that group is lost; it becomes dead. A small group can also easily be killed by an attacking larger group, and thus can become dead. Any group of persons (or animals) that becomes small can also become extinct, having no living members.

 

4. Jacob said, “And they shall gather themselves upon me.” Was he right? He was right. Yehovah will command Jacob to travel in the next chapter.

 

5. He also said, “And they shall slay me.” Was this also true? They probably would have tried. Yehovah made the Covenant with Avraham. I suspect that Yehovah would have protected him.

 

6. Jacob then expressed, “And I shall be destroyed—I and my house!” What type of reaction is this? Jacob was quite afraid. He was also very angry. His sons had brought a terrible reputation on his entire household. Jacob did not assume that death and much harm would not come upon him. He believed Yehovah and His promises in the Covenant made with Avraham, but he knew better than to assume that life would be without sorrow and great danger.

 

7. The two sons responded, “Will he make our sister a whore?” What were they saying about what happened, and why did they word it this way? They were claiming that Shechem was turning their sister into a whore—into a woman who earns money or benefits from various male clients by sexual means. Thus, they were almost accusing Shechem of pimping her.

 

  • I propose that they worded it this way so that Jacob would become outraged and furious toward Shechem instead of being fearful of the other groups.
  • They were justifying the slaughter they did by showing how evil Shechem was.
  • They were asking Jacob a rhetorical question (a question that already has an obvious answer, and that is used to make a point). Their question, “Will he make our sister a whore?” carries the obvious answer, “No way!” They desired Jacob to be indignant (furious and insulted) over what was done to their sister.
  • They also asked the question so that they could present it to any Canaanites and Perizzites who might ask why they did what they did. I propose that they figured that the Canaanites and Perizzites would also be outraged at what happened to Dinah, and would see their reasons for the slaughter.

8. Jacob’s sons got away with the slaughter. Why did Yehovah allow them to get away with this murderous act? If the Bible is true, no one gets away with anything for long. Justice is often not done during the lifetimes of those who did the injustice, but life is very short. Folks who have done murder will everlastingly pay for it (or Messiah will pay for it).

 

Later in Genesis 49, the Spirit of Yehovah will give Jacob prophecies over the tribes that come from these two sons. These two tribes will be forever affected because of what these two sons did:

 

Genesis 49:5 Shimon and Levi are brothers. Utensils of violence are their cutters! 6Come thou not via their secret, my being! Join not in their assembly, my glory! For they slew a man in their nose [anger] and they houghed [ripped up] an ox in their will! 7Cursed is their nose [anger] because-of strength, and their crossing-over because-of hardness! I will divide them in Jacob, and I have dispersed them in Israel!

 

The last part states, “I will divide them in Jacob, and I have dispersed them in Israel.” This has already occurred with Levi. The Levites became the tribe that had the priests and those who taught the Scriptures in Israel. They didn’t have their own lands, but instead lived scattered throughout Israel to teach Israel. Shimon has not experienced this yet. Both tribes will perfectly prove the prophecy at a future time, and Yehovah will turn that prophecy to benefit for all Israel and all the other races. How strange it is for the tribe of Levi to become the very priests and ministers of Israel!

 

In the meantime, Shimon and Levi will be judged for what they did. I have found no evidence that they turned to Truth and turned to Yehovah.

 

Various Cups in the Bible

The Various Cups of the Bible

 

 

A. Two Special Cases

Diviner’s Cup

 

Genesis 44:1 And [Joseph] commanded whoever is over his house, saying, “Fill the men’s sacks of food just as they will be able to carry. And put silver of a man into his sack’s mouth. 2And thou wilt put my goblet—the silver goblet—in the mouth of the sack of the little, and the silver of his break.” And he did according to the speech that Joseph spoke. 3The morning is light. And they sent the men, they and their asses. 4They exited the city. They didn’t distance, and Joseph said to whoever is over his house, “Arise! Pursue after the men and overtake them. And say unto them, ‘Why ‘peaced’ ye bad under good? 5Is not this in which my lord will drink? And he, divining, will divine via him! Ye bad-did what ye did!” 6And he overtook them. And he spoke these same words unto them. 7And they said unto him, “Why will my lord speak according to these words? Profanity to thy slaves from doing according to this speech! 8Behold, we returned unto thee the silver that we found in the mouth of our sacks from the land of Canaan. And how shall we steal silver or gold from thy lord’s house? 9With whom he will be found from thy servants, and he shall die! And we, we also shall be slaves to my lord!” 10And he said, “And also now he is established according to your speeches! He with whom he shall be found will be a slave to me! And ye, ye shall be innocent.” 11And they hurried. And they descended, a man with his sack to the land. And they opened a man his sack. 12And he dug. He began in the big and he finished in the little. And he found the goblet in Benjamin’s sack. 13And they tore their clothes. And a man loaded upon his ass. And they returned to the city. 14And Judah came, and his brethren to Joseph’s house. (And he, he is still there). And they fell to his faces landward. 15And Joseph said to them, “What deed is this that ye did? Did ye not know that, divining, a man who is as I will divine?” 16And Judah said, “What will we say unto my lord? What will we speak? And what will we justify ourselves? The Elohim found the iniquity of thy slaves. Behold, we are slaves to my lord, also we and also whom the goblet is found in his hand.” 17And he said, “Profanity to me from doing this! The man in whose hand the goblet is found—he shall be a slave to me! And ye—ascend ye to peace unto your father!”

 

Joseph commanded that another type of cup be placed in Benjamin’s food sack. He called it the cup by which he would divine (a strictly occult term). Joseph was not into the occult; he feared Yehovah. Yet he prophetically filled a role that Yeshua will fill regarding Israel, for Yeshua’s prophecies will seem to be divination to the Israelis once they start happening before and during the Tribulation.

 

This very cup was used to save the lives of Joseph’s family, but Joseph’s brothers were terror-stricken by this cup’s presence in Benjamin’s sack. The same will occur when Yeshua sets His ‘divining tools’ into Israel’s ‘food sack’ during the Tribulation.

 

 

Drinking the Blood of Men

2 Samuel 23:15 And David lusted. And he said, “Who will water me, waters from the Beit-Lekhem well that are in the gate?” 16And three of the valiant-[ones] broke through into the camp of Palestinians. And they drew water from the Beit-Lekhem well that is in the gate. And they carried and came unto David. And he was not willing to drink them. And he poured them to Yehovah. 17And he said, “My profanity to her is to me, Yehovah, from my doing this—the blood of the men walking via their beings.” And he was not willing to drink them. Three valiant-[ones] did these.

 

1 Chronicles 11:17 And David lusted. And he said, “Who will water me, waters from the Beit-Lekhem well that are in the gate?” 18And three broke through into the camp of Palestinians. And they drew water from the Beit-Lekhem well that is in the gate. And they carried and came unto David. And David was not willing to drink them. And he poured them to Yehovah. 19And he said, “My profanity to her is to me from my Gods from doing this—will I drink the blood of these men walking via their beings? For they brought them via their beings!” And he was not willing to drink them. Three of the valiant-[ones] did these.
If anyone (or any group) risks his life to do a service for another, that person is offering his blood. If the benefactor willingly or unwillingly receives the benefit, the benefactor has drunk the blood of the one who took the risk.

 

While this is how Yehovah views simple heroism, there is another issue. If the service done is for entertainment and not to sustain life, attempt to restore health, or for some truly heroic purpose, the recipient of the entertainment has also drunk the blood of that person (whether the person died or not), and this is the same as enjoying blood sports in historic Roman arenas for personal entertainment. It is a great act of contempt against Yehovah, since the image of God has been risked for entertainment purposes.

 

Some make it their life’s work to take risks (Hollywood stunt personnel, race car drivers, etc.); they are in a different category. Those who willingly join the riskiest forms of the armed services (like the Navy Seals) are also the greatest risk takers. There is a major distinction between these two types of volunteers, however. A Navy Seal is risking his life for his country. That can include saving innocent lives; any lives they save by their risks fall under the drinking blood option above. Anyone whose life is saved by another, and who thus drinks that hero’s or heroine’s blood, is doing right by drinking. Anyone who derives entertainment from acts of heroism personally done for them (I am therefore not referring to race car drivers who love the thrill and do it for personal enjoyment, not to save lives), and no other benefit, is violently drinking the blood of others, and will receive appropriate condemnation.

 

This cup of the blood of men is another cup. Yeshua volunteered His life to save the lives of many and to everlastingly save many. All who grasp that Salvation, taking advantage of it, are drinking Yeshua’s blood.

 

 

B. Humanly Caused Cups

The Cup of Violence

Proverbs 4:17 For they eat the bread of wickedness, and drink the wine of violence.

 

The wine of violence is not from Yehovah; that is a manmade cup.

 

 

The Cup of Waters

Psalms 73:10 “Therefore He shall return His people here!” and “The waters of fullness shall be sucked-out for them!”

 

This is not a legitimate cup. Bad guys make these two statements in their sarcasm and bitter vituperations against Yehovah.

 

 

C. Deity-Caused Cups

The Cup of Wrath

Isaiah 51:15 “And I am Yehovah thy Gods, calmer of the sea, and his waves roared! Yehovah of Hosts is His Name! 16And I put my words into thy mouth! And I blanketed thee in the shadow of my hand to plant heavens and to foundation land and to say to Zion, ‘Thou art my People!’” 17Awaken thyself [feminine]! Awaken thyself [feminine]! Stand-thou [feminine], Jerusalem who drank the cup of His heat from the hand of Yehovah! Thou drank, thou drained the cheating of a cup of self-reeling! 18There is no guide to her from all sons she childed! And there is no grasper into her hand from all sons she reared! 19 “Twice, behold, I called thee! Who will be wandered to thee? The devastation and the shattering and the famine and the sword? Who? I will console thee!” 20Thy sons took-cover. They lay in the head of all streets as a luster of a net, the full-ones of the heat of Yehovah, rebuke of thy Gods! 21Therefore hearken-thou [feminine] this [feminine], humble-one [feminine], and drunk-one [feminine], and not from wine. 22So said thy Lords Yehovah and thy Gods! He will fight His people! “Behold, I took from thine hand the cup of self-reeling, the cheating of a cup of my heat! Thou wilt not gather-again to drink her again! 23And I will put her into the hand of thy grievers who said to thy being, ‘Prostrate! And we have crossed-over!’ And thou didst put thy body as land and as the outside for crossers-over!”

 

The word kavah in Hebrew has the flavour of spoiling and robbing, but these are best covered by other words. It is more akin to cheating with the following acceptations: to deprive by trickery; defraud; mislead, fool: illusions that cheat the eye; elude, escape: cheat death. Yehovah ‘cheated’ potential victims of the devastating cup of Yehovah’s heat (fury) they were about to drink. They didn’t know He did that, as if he had defrauded them, tricked them, etc. Yet, He saved their lives. It would be like a hero who takes the place of a prisoner who has been sentenced to death without the prisoner knowing what occurred, only to find later that the hero died in that person’s place.

 

The cup of heat is the cup of fury.

 

Psalm 11:5 Yehovah shall test a righteous-[one]. And His being hated a culpable-[one] and a lover of violence! 6He will rain traps, fire and brimstone and a spirit/wind of pouring-out-flights [where folks must flee their homes and lands] upon culpable-[ones], a portion of their cup! 7For Yehovah is righteous. He loved righteousnesses. They shall envision straightness within Him.

 

One aspect of Yehovah’s fury when that cup of iniquity is full is shown by Yehovah forcing folks out of their homes. If the fury is great enough, He will destroy the entire land (as He did with Sodom, etc.). Otherwise, losing homes and being taken captive will be the result.

 

Psalms 75:8 For a cup is in the hand of Yehovah. And the foaming wine was full, mixed. And He poured from this. But her dregs shall go-forth. All the culpable of the land shall drink!

 

This shows the location of the cup: “in the hand of Yehovah.” Yehovah pours, though in other texts He sometimes gives others that responsibility. He did so with Yeshua, and He did so with Jeremiah.

 

The dregs of the cup (the particulate matter at the bottom) also must go from the cup; it will be entirely emptied. All culpable folks (guilty before Yehovah) will drink from this cup. Most cups will be connected with races. This one is connected with all members of all races.

 

Jeremiah 25:15 For so said Yehovah Gods of Israel unto me, “Take this cup of the wine of the fury from my hand. And water her with him: all the races that I am sending thee unto them. 16And they shall drink. And they shall stagger. And they shall praise themselves from the faces of the sword that I am sending between them.” 17And I took the cup from the hand of Yehovah. And I watered all the races that Yehovah sent me unto them: 18Jerusalem and cities of Judah and her kings, her princes—to give them to her sword to desolation, to her shriek and to her worthlessness as this day, 19Pharaoh king of Egypt and his servants and his princes and all his people, 20and all the mixture and all kings of the land of Utz, and all kings of the land of Palestinians, and Ashkelon and Azzah (Gaza) and Ekron and the remnant of Ashdod, 21Edom and Moab and the sons of Ammon, 22and all kings of Tyre and all kings of Zidon and kings of the island that is in-over the sea, 23Dedan and Tema and Buz and all cutters of corners, 24and all kings of a [desert] crosser and all kings of abiding [desert] crossers in the desert, 25and all kings of Zimri and all kings of Elam and all kings of Medes, 26and all the near and far kings of the north, a man unto his brother, and all the kingdoms of the land that are upon faces of the soil. And King Sheshach shall drink after them.” 27And thou shalt say unto them, ‘So said Yehovah of hosts, Gods of Israel, “Drink-ye! And be-drunk-ye! And vomit-ye! And fall-ye! And ye shall not arise from the faces of the sword that I am sending between you!” 28And he shall be that they shall refuse to take the cup from thy hand to drink. And thou shalt say unto them, ‘So said Yehovah of hosts, “Drinking, ye shall drink!”

 

This cup is singular, and includes all kingdoms on the faces of the planet starting with Israel and ending with a King Sheshach. This one cup of Yehovah’s fury will be passed from one to the other by the hand of Jeremiah (who already did this, but the kings of the world have no clue, since these kings will not be born and reign for many centuries). Yehovah sends historical prophets to deliver messages to future persons, at times; time is no barrier to Yehovah.

 

Revelation 14:6-10 will cover these events from the angle of Babylon and the cups.

 

Jeremiah 49:12 For so said Yehovah,  “Behold, who it is not their justice to drink the cup—drinking, they shall drink. And thou art he—innocent—thou shalt be innocent? Thou shalt not be innocent! For, drinking, thou shalt drink!”

 

This text is speaking to Edom, including Petra (Botzrah). Yehovah is warning that Edom will most certainly drink from the cup of His wrath.

 

Lamentations 4:21 Rejoice and be glad, Daughter of Edom, my dweller in the land of Utz! A cup shall cross-over also upon thee! Thou shalt-be-drunk. And thou stripped-naked thyself!

 

This cup of Yehovah’s wrath causes drinkers to be drunk. That drunkenness is from shock at the terrible and successful attacks of enemies or at the furious destructions of Yehovah.

 

A land stripping naked indicates a total loss of armour and the exposure of all sensitive body parts that not only can feel very great pain, but can quickly bring the body to death when harmed.

 

Obadiah 1:15 For the Day of Yehovah is approached upon all the races. Just-as thou did, He will do to thee! Thy retribution shall return via thy head! 16For just-as ye drank upon the mountain of my Holy-[One], all the races shall continually drink! And they shall drink, and they shall swallow. And they shall be as they were not!

 

Yehovah guarantees that the bad-guy races will drink, will swallow, and will obtain the retribution for their deeds. The end result is the erasure of their society. (He also protects His own who are among the races from being killed by His wrath; His wrath is very specific. That doesn’t mean they don’t suffer; they certainly do as they see their possessions, homes, family, friends, neighbours, etc. be destroyed or go into slavery at the hands of a very angry enemy.)

 

Habakkuk 2:16 Thou art filled: lightness [unimportance] from glory! Drink—also thou—and thy foreskin shall circle upon thee! A cup of the right of Yehovah and vomiting of shame is upon thy glory.

 

The cup is associated with vomiting and shame. Once Yehovah pours that cup, the group upon which it is poured will lose its importance (glory), and will be brought to great shame and sickness. Nakedness will also result—the nakedness of a group that is suddenly without any defense from attack—not even the clothing that the group would put on. (This is in contrast to another text commanding a group to put on the whole armour of God.)

 

Revelation 16:1 And I heard a great voice from the Temple saying to the seven angels, “Go your ways, and pour out the vials of the wrath of God upon the land!”

 

This text doesn’t mention the cup, but instead but instead, vials. These are shallow bowls. They contain the wrath of God. The entire chapter of Revelation 16 covers these.

 

Psalm 79:6 Pour out thy wrath upon the races that have not known thee and upon the kingdoms that have not called upon thy Name! 

 

 

The Cup of Waste and Desolation

Ezekiel 23:31 “Thou hast walked in the way of thy sister; therefore will I give her cup into thine hand.” 32Thus says the Lord Yehovah, “Thou shalt drink of thy sister’s deep and large cup. Thou shalt be laughed to scorn and had in derision. It contains much. 33Thou shalt be filled with drunkenness and sorrow, with the cup of waste and desolation, with the cup of thy sister Samaria.

 

This cup is deep and large. When a group finally drinks it, the result is waste and desolation, meaning that the previously occupied and busy land is now a destroyed ghost town. The population has suffered slaughter and has been taken captive. All the building, the business and the manufacturing goes into recycling, and into giving future archaeologists something to dig.

 

 

The Cup of Staggering

Psalms 60:3 Thou showed Thy people hardness. Thou made-us-drink wine of staggering!

 

Yehovah will sometimes make a people drunk (and thus easily conquered) if that people becomes vile and lovers of sin. (A people that is idolatrous doesn’t necessarily fall into this category.)

 

 

The Cup of Reeling

Zechariah 12:2 Behold, I am putting Jerusalem a goblet of reeling to all the peoples around. And he will also be upon Yehudah via a siege upon Jerusalem.

 

 

The Cup of Tears

Psalms 80:5 Thou hast fed them bread of a tear. And Thou hast watered them via the tears of a third-one.

 

This cup contains tears. The group that drinks this cup will deeply weep.

 

Psalms 102:9 For I ate ash as bread. And I mingled my drink via weeping 11from the faces of Thy indignation and Thy fury. For Thou carried me, and Thou slung me!

 

While the contents of this cup are not given (though they are mingled—that is, a mixed drink), they were mingled via weeping.

 

 

The Cup of Iniquity of a Particular Race

Genesis 15:16 But in the fourth generation they shall come hither again: for the iniquity of the Amorites is not yet full.

 

A text might not mention a cup, while alluding to it. The iniquity of the Amorites was stored in a cup. Yehovah will force them to drink their own iniquity once that cup has become full. Other texts discussed in this document show that all races have cups, and all will drink from their own cups once they are full.

 

 

The Cup of (Being) Babylon

Jeremiah 51:7 Babylon is a gold cup in hand of Yehovah. She is inebriating all the land from her wine. Races drank. Therefore the races shall praise themselves!

 

“All the land” includes all continents and islands. Babylon itself is this gold cup. Yehovah holds this cup, and will give drink to all the races. The races will become drunk. They will then praise themselves in their drunken stupor. (Certain forms of insanity include symptoms in which insane persons declare that they are able to do what they truly cannot do, and that they are what they are not. Thus, they commend themselves for what they did not and cannot do.)

 

 

The Cup of the Wrath of Babylon’s Fornication

Revelation 14:8 And there followed another angel, saying, “Babylon is fallen! Is fallen! That great city! For she made all races to drink of the wine of the wrath of her fornication!” 9And the third angel followed them, saying with a loud voice, “If any man worship the beast and his image, and receive his mark in his forehead, or in his hand, 10the same shall drink of the wine of the wrath of God that is poured out without mixture into the cup of His indignation! And he shall be tormented with fire and brimstone in the presence of the holy angels and in the presence of the Lamb!”

 

This text describes “wine of the wrath of fornication.” The other cups did not specify the offenses. Thus, this is a particular cup for a particular offense.

 

Babylon is a city (one in the past, and will be one in the future). Thus, fornication with a city requires other cities (or locations). It is as if those cities are ‘living together’ unmarried, but acting as if they are. Two cities with very different gods can always do trade. It is when they begin to take on the idolatries of each other that they are committing fornication.

 

Babylon did not know that she caused others to drink of the wine of wrath, since Babylon will have no investment in the Word of Yehovah and in belief of Yehovah. This is from Yehovah’s angle; He is saying that she caused them to drink of that wine of wrath.

 

The text then speaks of individuals: “If any man worship the beast and his image, and receive his mark in his forehead, or in his hand, 10the same shall drink of the wine of the wrath of God that is poured out without mixture into the cup of His indignation!” This wine of the wrath of God will occur in this life, and will continue into the Lake of Fire and Sulfur. This cup differs from the previous cup, since this cup is only for individuals, while the previous cup is for races. Thus, this text does give evidence or proof that individuals also drink from a cup from Yehovah.

 

The lack of mixture is a lack of cutting the strength of the wine; they will get it in its full potency.

 

I have not seen or heard of anyone drinking a liquid that was identified as this wine. That doesn’t mean it isn’t literal, since I also have not heard of anyone literally drinking of the waters of life; yet the Bible guarantees that that is literal water that folks will drink. (I can do some supposing at this point. This is only a guess. Suppose that each person will drink of a literal cup at the judgment after the Millennium, and the cup contains the full measure of the wrath of Yehovah toward that person even as that person waits then to enter the Lake of Fire and Sulfur.)

 

The cup itself is called “the cup of His indignation.” Therefore, sinning fills the cup of Yehovah’s indignation. Indignation means a strong passion or emotion of displeasure or antagonism excited by a real or supposed injury or insult to oneself or others, or by the intent to do such injury. For Yehovah, the definition would then be, Indignation means a strong passion of displeasure and antagonism excited by a real injury and insult to Himself and to justice including the intent to do such injury against Yehovah and justice. The word indignation in Hebrew is stronger than hatred. It is akin to outrage. It is the word katsaf, and represents a fervent drive to cut such a person off from the land of the living. Outraging Yehovah just isn’t smart.

 

Every person potentially has a cup of Yehovah’s indignation. That cup fills every time a person sins. The cup never empties (unless everlasting Salvation occurs), and thus the longer the person lives, the fuller that cup gets. This is one reason why Yehovah cut down longevity.

 

Revelation 16:19 And the great city was divided into three parts. And the cities of the races fell. And great Babylon came in remembrance before God to give unto her the cup of the wine of the fierceness of His wrath.

 

This cup is called “the cup of the wine of the fierceness of His wrath.” Therefore, it is akin to the Lake of Fire and Sulfur, since this lake is the expression of the fierceness of His wrath.

 

Revelation 18:6 Reward her even as she rewarded you, and double unto her double according to her works. Fill to her double in the cup that she filled.

 

Babylon is again considered in this text. You refers to the Israelis. They are told to reward Babylon just as she did to them. She doubled the punishments and torments of the Israelis; her cup filled as she sinned. Her cup’s portion will be doubled. She will thus drink double.

 

 

The Cup of the Waters of Poison

Jeremiah 8:14 Concerning what are we sitting? Assemble! And we have come unto cities of the fortification! And we were silenced there. For Yehovah our Gods silenced us. And He watered us waters of poison! For we sinned to Yehovah.

 

These Israelis are admitting that they sinned, and that Yehovah watered them with waters of poison. This is a very surprising text (to me). The next text explains:

 

Jeremiah 9:15 Therefore so said Yehovah of hosts Gods of Israel, “Behold, I am feeding them—this people—wormwood. And I will water them waters of poison.”

 

Yehovah promises to water them with waters of poison.

 

Jeremiah 23:15 Therefore so said Yehovah of hosts concerning the prophets, “Behold I am feeding them wormwood. And I am watering them waters of poison. For blasphemy exited to all the land from with prophets of Jerusalem!”

 

 

D. Cups That Lead to Benefit Or Avoid Suffering

The Cup of Yeshua

Matthew 20:22 But Yeshua answered and said, “Ye don’t know what ye ask. Are ye able to drink of the cup of which I shall drink and to be baptized with the baptism with which I am baptized?” They say unto Him, “We are able!” 23And He says unto them, “Ye shall indeed drink of my cup and be baptized with the baptism with which I am baptized. But to sit on my right hand and on my left is not mine to give. But it shall be given to them for whom it is prepared of my Father.”

 

That cup is the wine of the wrath of Yehovah on account of Israel’s accrued sins since the last pouring of the last cup.

 

Mark 10:38 But Yeshua said unto them, “Ye don’t know what ye ask. Can ye drink of the cup of which I drink, and be baptized with the baptism with which I am baptized?” 39And they said unto him, “We can.” And Yeshua said unto them, “Ye shall indeed drink of the cup of which I drink and ye shall be baptized with the baptism that I am baptized.”

 

Matthew 26:39 And He went a little further. And He fell on His face. And He prayed, saying, “My Father, if it be possible, let this cup pass from me. Nevertheless not as I will, but as Thou.”

 

Matthew 26:42 He went away again the second time. And He prayed, saying, “My Father, if this cup will not pass away from me except I drink it, Thy will be done.”

 

This cup is set for Israel. Israel had accrued iniquity upon iniquity by this time. The cup was full. Yehovah had given it to Yeshua to pour out, so that Israel would reap the full measure of iniquity. That would have meant Israel’s being torn to shreds, taken captive, and the Israelis being tossed out of the land. Yeshua did not desire to pour that cup. He knew that He could avoid pouring it by drinking it: taking Israel’s iniquities upon Himself. That is what He did.

 

Mark 14:36 And He said, “Abba (Father), all things are possible unto Thee. Take this cup away from me. And not what I will, but what Thou wilt.”

 

Luke 22:42 Saying, “Father, if thou be willing, remove this cup from me. And not my will be done, but thine.”

 

John 18:11 Then Yeshua said unto Peter, “Put up thy sword into the sheath. The cup which my Father hath given me—shall I not drink it?”

 

Yeshua personally suffered the way that all Israel would have suffered, being turned over to the Gentiles to be beaten, humiliated, cursed, bloodied, accused, and set for death.

 

 

The Cup of Vinegar

Matthew 27:34 They gave Him vinegar to drink mingled with poison. And when He had tasted thereof, He would not drink.

 

Had Yeshua taken from that cup, He would have died a suicide.

 

Matthew 27:48 And straightway one of them ran and took a sponge. And he filled it with vinegar. And he put it on a reed. And he gave Him to drink.

 

Yeshua was willing to drink from this cup. It was not poison, but was a type.

 

Psalms 69:21 And they gave poison into my [bread] breaking. And for my thirst they watered me [gave me to drink] vinegar!

 

Vinegar is from the verb, to be cruel. This cup, then, is the cup of cruelty. Humans give this cup to others.

 

 

The Cup of Blessing

Psalms 23:5 Thou shalt order a table to my faces in front of mine afflicters. Thou hast greased my head with oil. My cup is abundance.

 

A few of the cups are very good. It appears that more cups are disasters; more texts give warnings because more groups are headed for destruction.

 

This cup is abundance. It is a blessing because Yehovah has promised it (thus invoking it) and given it.

 

Psalms 36:8 They shall be abundantly satisfied with the fatness of thy house; and thou shalt make them drink of the river of thy pleasures.

 

1 Corinthians 10:16 The cup of blessing that we bless, is it not the communion [joint participation] of the blood of Messiah? The bread that we break, is it not the communion of the Body of Messiah?

 

The cup itself is the Covenant, and that Covenant was sealed in Yeshua’s blood. That Covenant, then, includes the Saints’ joint participation in Yeshua’s blood. That is a blessing, since it not only is unto everlasting life, but it also provides for whatever Saints (as a group) need to live Godly and to demonstrate faith (together as a group) to others so that they can be benefited (if they will desire).

 

1 Corinthians 10:21 Ye cannot drink the cup of the Lord and the cup of devils. Ye cannot be partakers of the Lord’s table and of the table of devils.

 

That cup of blessing is not available to those who are drinking from the cup of devils. Thus, the devils also have a cup.

 

 

The Cup of Yehovah’s Measure

Psalms 16:5 Yehovah is the measure of my portion and my cup. Thou art the Maintainer of my lot!

 

Can Yehovah be a cup? He can be anything He desires to be, but not all things are reasonable for Him to be. Yehovah is a Rock. I don’t see where He is a cup.

 

If this is the case, the division of the first statement would be, “Yehovah is the measure of my portion” and “Yehovah is the measure of my cup.” (The alternative would be a division like this: “Yehovah is the measure of my portion” and “Yehovah is my cup.”) I do not agree with the alternative because another psalm states, “My cup runs over.” If Yehovah were the cup, how could He run over? He fills all things. Therefore I will go with the first: “Yehovah is the measure of my portion” and “Yehovah is the measure of my cup.”

 

If Yehovah is the measure of any cup, and Yehovah is infinite, that cup’s measure cannot be limited, though the cup can overflow with blessings.

 

 

The Cup of Salvations

Psalms 116:13 I will carry the cup of Salvations. And I will call via Name Yehovah.

 

This cup contains more than one salvation. Each one is a rescue from death. Carrying that cup indicates that it is being transported for the sake of others, not just for the sake of the carrier. (Salvation is from the Jews.)

 

 

The Cup of the Waters of Life

John 4:9 The Samaritan woman therefore says to Him, “How dost thou, being a Jew, ask from me, a woman of Samaria, to drink?” For Jews have no intercourse with Samaritans. 10Yeshua answered and said to her, “If thou had known the gift of God and Who it is who says to thee, ‘Give me to drink,’ thou would have asked Him, and He would have given waters of life to thee! 11The woman says to Him, “Sir, thou hast nothing to draw, and the well is deep. From where, then, hast thou the waters of life? 12Art thou greater than our father Jacob who gave us the well, and drank of it himself, and his sons and his cattle?” 13Yeshua answered. And He said to her, “Everyone who drinks of this water will thirst again. 14But whoever will drink of the water that I will give him shall in no wise thirst forever. But rather, the water that I will give to him shall become a fountain of water in him springing up into everlasting life.”

 

Yeshua addressed this woman concerning the waters of life. While no cup is mentioned in this text, and while an artesian well is mentioned, I have still chosen to categorize this as a cup.

 

1 Corinthians 10:4 And they did all drink the same spiritual drink. For they drank of that spiritual Rock that followed them. And that Rock was Messiah.

 

Again, no cup is mentioned. The Rock is mentioned, and the waters of life came from that Rock.

 

 

The Cup of Consolation

Jeremiah 16:7 They shall not split to them upon mourning to console him concerning a dead-[one]. And they shall not water them a cup of consolations concerning his father and concerning his mother.

 

This cup of consolations is what one person can ‘pour’ upon another when they are both mourning over a dead person for whom they greatly cared. Yehovah is indicating what will not happen. (They will suffer many deaths, but the deceased loved ones will not be buried, and individuals will not separate from the group to console others in mourning. Instead, dead bodies will be everywhere.

 

 

The Cup of the New Covenant

Matthew 26:27 And He took the cup. And gave thanks. And He gave it to them, saying, “Drink ye all of it. 28For this is my blood of the new Covenant that is shed for many for the remission of sins.”

 

This text gives the appearance that the cup is His blood. Another text will correct this view, showing that the cup is the Covenant that is in His blood.

 

Luke 22:17 And He took the cup. And He gave thanks. And He said, “Take this and divide it among yourselves. 18For I say unto you, I will not drink of the fruit of the vine until the kingdom of God shall come.” 19And He took bread. And He gave thanks. And He broke it and gave unto them, saying, “This is my Body that is given for you. Do this in remembrance of me.” 20Likewise also the cup after supper, saying, “This cup is the new Covenant in my blood that is shed for you.”

 

(Body does not refer to Yeshua’s physical body; it refers to what is later called “the Body of Christ,” having all living Israel as its core, and having additions in Saints from all races.)

 

This text mentions two cups, but the first cup isn’t described. The second is the New Covenant, and that is in His blood. Thus, it refers to the shedding of His blood on the cross. Yet, the cup is not His blood. It is the Covenant. Thus, that cup represents that Covenant.

 

Who drinks that cup, and what does it contain? The cup Yeshua passed contained wine at this Passover meal. Yet, what are the contents of that cup that Yeshua is describing? The cup contains Yeshua’s blood. This will directly link to the other section in this document in which King David refuses to drink the blood of valiant persons who risked their lives to obtain good-tasting water for him. Everyone who takes advantage of Salvation provided by Yeshua’s blood being shed drinks His blood.

 

John 6:49 “Your fathers did eat manna in the wilderness, and are dead. 50This is the bread that comes down from the heavens so-that a man may eat thereof and not die. 51I am the living bread that came down from the heavens. If any man eat of this bread, he shall live forever. And the bread that I will give is my flesh, that I will give for the life of the world.” 52The Jews therefore strove among themselves, saying, “How can this man give us his flesh to eat?” 53Then Yeshua said unto them, “Faith! Faith, I say unto you, except ye eat the flesh of the Son of man and drink His blood, ye have no life in you. 54Whoso eats my flesh and drinks my blood has everlasting life. And I will raise him up at the last day. 55For my flesh is certainly food and my blood is certainly drink. 56He who eats my flesh and drinks my blood dwells in me, and I in him. 57As the living Father has sent me, and I live by the Father, so he who eats me—even he shall live by me. 58This is that bread that came down from the heavens—not as your fathers did eat manna, and are dead. He who eats of this bread shall live forever.”

 

Thus, anyone taking advantage of Yeshua’s sacrifice is drinking His blood.

 

Mark 14:23 And He took the cup. And when He had given thanks, He gave it to them. And they all drank of it. 24And He said unto them, “This is my blood of the new Covenant that is shed for many.”

 

1 Corinthians 11:25 Also, after the same manner, He took the cup when He had supped, saying, “This cup is the new Covenant in my blood. Do ye this in remembrance of me as oft as ye drink it.” 26For as often as ye eat this bread and drink this cup, ye do show the Lord’s death until He comes. 27Therefore whosoever shall eat this bread and drink this cup of the Lord unworthily shall be guilty of the Body and blood of the Lord. 28But a man shall examine himself, and so he shall eat of that bread and drink of that cup.

 

 

The Cup into the Spirit

1 Corinthians 12:13 For we are all immersed into one Body by one Spirit, whether we are Jews or Greeks, whether we are slaves or free. And we all have been made to drink into one Spirit.

 

This corresponds to the waters of life from the following text:

 

John 7:37 In that great last day of the feast, Yeshua stood. And He shouted, saying, “If any man thirst, he shall come unto me and drink. 38He who believes on me, as the Scripture has said, rivers of the waters of life shall flow out of his belly.” 39But He spoke this of the Spirit that they who believe on Him shall receive. For the Holy Spirit was not yet given, because Yeshua was not yet glorified.

 

Thus, drinking of the Spirit of Yehovah is drinking of the waters of life. While no cup is mentioned, a drink is still used.