Deuteronomy 7:12-11:25 - Isaiah 49:14-51:3 - Luke
24:13-32
This week's edition of The Set Table contains:
Questions and Commentary on Parashat Eqev
Chayyei Yeshua - A Devotional Commentary on the Besora Reading
In Summary
Looking Ahead
Questions & Commentary on Parashat Eqev
1. On the surface, the provision of manna seems like a
blessing, but according to Deuteronomy 8:16, it served "to humble" Israel
and "to test" them. How did the manna serve as a test for Israel?
Why did God want to test Israel?
Did Israel pass
the test? What lessons were they supposed to learn? How is this passage
connected to the temptation of Messiah in Matthew 4:1-11 & Luke 4:1-12?
Rabbi Jonathan
Kaplan
In Deuteronomy 8:16, Moses uses the language of
testing to describe God's provision of manna to our ancestors. He says that God
fed our ancestors manna in the wilderness lema‘an nassotekha "in order
to test you." Interestingly the same language is used above in 8:2. In both
places, Moses goes on to explain the reason for the testing. In 8:2, God tests Israel
with hardships "to learn what was in your hearts: whether you would keep his
commandments or not." In 8:16,
God tests Israel
with these hardships "only to benefit you in the end." It would seem that these
clauses are parallel. Thus, God determines what is in our hearts through
testing, and this knowledge is ultimately for our benefit. This testing tells
both God and us the inclination of our hearts, whether we will keep the
commandments or not.
One might wonder how keeping of the commandments
associated with manna tells both God and us whether or not we might be inclined
to keep all of the commandments. The relationship between the commandments
associated with manna and the rest of the commandments is clearer when we look
at Exodus 16. There Moses instructs the people to collect a double portion of
manna on Friday so that one portion will be available for them to eat on
Shabbat. But after they received Moses' instructions, some
people in the community quickly violated this commandment.
Yet some of the people went out on the seventh day to gather,
but they found nothing. And the LORD said to Moses, "How long will you people
refuse to obey my commandments and my teachings? Mark that the LORD has given
you the Sabbath; therefore he gives you two days' food on the sixth day. Let
everyone remain where he is: let no one leave his place on the seventh day." So
the people remained inactive on the seventh day.
Exodus 16:27-30
On a halakhic (legal) level the people's failure to
set aside a double portion on the sixth day leads them to violate the
prohibitions against work on Shabbat. On a spiritual level the people's failure
to set aside a double portion indicates their lack of trust in God's promise
that the extra portion would be there the next day. They probably assumed that,
as on the other five days of the week, if one gathered more than one day's
portion, the extra would rot by the next morning (Exodus 16:17-20). Therefore,
those in Israel
who believed God's promise and kept God's commandments indicated their trust in
God.
Both Matthew 4:1-11 & Luke 4:1-12 describe
Yeshua undergoing a series of tests during 40 days (like Israel's
40 years) in the wilderness. In Matthew's besora in particular, Yeshua
is the one man Israel
who identifies with his people's suffering and is faithful in the tests in
which Israel
did not succeed. All of Yeshua's responses to temptation come from Deuteronomy
6-8. To the tempter's suggestion that he turn rocks into bread to ease his
hunger, he responds, "One does not live by bread alone, but by every word that
comes from the mouth of God" (Deuteronomy 8:3; Matthew 4:4). To the suggestion
that Yeshua cast himself down from the Temple and allow the angels to save him,
Yeshua responds "Do not put the LORD your God to the test" (Deuteronomy 6:16;
Matthew 4:7). To the tempter's suggestion that Yeshua worship him, Yeshua
responds, "Worship the LORD your God, and serve only him" (Deuteronomy 6:13; Matthew 4:11). Yeshua stands with Israel
in accepting the challenges the Jewish people faced in the wilderness, and he
succeeds! His fidelity enables the fidelity of the Jewish people (including
Messianic Jews) to the covenant. Yeshua's fidelity is not merely for the sake
of Israel
and their renewed fidelity to Torah but also so that those outside of Israel,
the nations, might be able to approach God. Through Yeshua's fidelity, God is
able to determine the inclination of our hearts. Thus, his testing "only . . .
benefit[s us] in the end."
2. Do God's blessings depend on our actions?
Nick Amic
Parashat Eqev contains the verses that make
up the second passage of the Shema which Jewish people recite daily
(Deuteronomy 11:13-21). A simple
reading of this passage could lead one to conclude that our actions create a
cosmic "cause and effect" scenario. However, earlier our parasha clearly
contradicts this idea: "Do not say to yourself . . . ‘Because of my
righteousness, the Lord has brought me to possess this land,'" (Deuteronomy
9:4-5). So what are we to conclude?
Surely, this question deserves a more comprehensive
answer, but I want to offer up a few ideas. First, we recognize the paradox of
God's freedom from time, yet intimate involvement in the history of humanity.
We can grammatically and theologically say "God knows yesterday what you did
tomorrow. " If God is outside time, a "cause and effect" system makes no sense,
because it assumes a "before" and "after." Second, we examine the concept of
God's immanence. Although God is not bound by time or space, God is completely
present and involved in every aspect of creation. The same God that exists
outside of time and space intimately controls both time and space. This
knowledge builds a faith/trust relationship with the Creator. God invites us to
participate in a relationship-oriented existence where I can expect God's
promised providence and care when I follow God's Torah.
Returning to our parasha, we note a subtle
difference between our passage (11:13-21)
and the first passage of the Shema (Deuteronomy 6:4-9) that is lost in
translation. The first section of the Shema calls upon an individual to love
God with all his heart, all his soul and all his possessions, while the second
section teaches us to love God "with all your hearts, and with all your souls."
The individual is blessed by obeying the Torah command to love God by giving
his time, talent and treasure to another. When this standard is met by all the
members of a nation the entire society benefits - with rain, crop and animal
growth, etc. Conversely, when this standard is abandoned the whole society
suffers. The spiritual consequence of national disobedience is an exile from
God's presence and supernatural care; we are communally left to our own
devices.
Under Messiah's kingship the paradox of God's
existence outside time and God's intimate involvement with us is clearly
witnessed in the person of Yeshua. Yeshua encapsulates both aspects of the
reward and punishment system. On a communal level, Yeshua took upon himself the
consequence of Israel's
national punishment. On an individual level he obeyed the call to love God with
all his resources, even to the extent of offering his own life. Let's follow
Yeshua's example and "do nothing out of rivalry or vanity; but, in humility,
regard each other as better than yourselves, looking out for each other's
interests and not just for our own" (Philippians 2:3-5).

Scott Nassau
Luke
13-32 - Resurrection Perspective
Following his resurrection, Yeshua appears to two of
his followers on a road leading out of Jerusalem.
The irony is that Yeshua's followers fail to recognize their resurrected
Messiah. They are obviously disheartened over his recent crucifixion. Despite
their conviction that he was a prophet to the nation and recent reports of his
empty tomb, the two men believed he failed to redeem the nation of Israel.
They likely envisioned Yeshua providing freedom for the nation, including
political deliverance from the Romans. Yeshua chides the two men, because they
did not understand that the Hebrew Scriptures predicted that it is necessary for
the Messiah to suffer before he enters into his reign. Finally, the two men
recognized Yeshua during their evening meal. It is possible that they noticed
the scars in his hands from his execution or that they recalled how Yeshua
broke bread when he fed the five thousand (9:16).
While Luke does not mention what triggered this discovery, he emphasizes that
they finally identify their resurrected Messiah. Now the excitement they
experienced when Yeshua presented the Messiah in the Hebrew Scriptures, while they
walked along the road, finally makes sense.
The two men along the road were dejected, because
they did not understand that God could still work following the crucifixion.
Not only could God work in spite of Yeshua's death, but also the suffering of
the Messiah was God's plan from the beginning. The men had an incomplete
understanding of God's plan. They hoped in a Messiah who would deliver Israel
from the Romans in a way they envisioned. While God did provide redemption for
his people, it was not in the way or in the time that the men anticipated.
Unfortunately, we are often like the two men who met
Yeshua on the road outside of Jerusalem.
We experience depression and discouragement, because our experiences make us
believe that God has failed to keep his promises. Yet, God has not failed, but
our own understanding of God is incomplete. We construct God in our own image,
rather than allow God's revelation to shape the way we understand him. When we
pray, we often expect God to respond according to our purpose and we fail to
recognize that God's intention may be different from our own. We must allow
Scripture and not our own preconceptions to shape the way we understand God and
his design for how we should conduct our lives.
This narrative provides assurance about the
resurrection. Death cannot thwart God's
plan. The resurrection shows that in the midst of the deepest despair, God
provides hope. Even when it appears God's plan has failed, he is victorious. While
our experiences may make us think that God has abandoned us, we can look
forward to the hope of the resurrection. God has not promised us an easy and
tranquil life, but, like our Messiah, we will experience suffering. Yet, in the
midst of this suffering, we can look forward to the resurrection.
NEXT WEEK'S READINGS
- PARASHAT RE'EH
Deuteronomy 11:26-16:17
Isaiah 54:11-55:5
Luke 24:33-49
UPCOMING YACHAD NETWORK EVENTS
4th Annual Young Leaders Shabbaton
New
York City ●
June 2008
7th Annual Young Messianic Jewish
Scholars Conference
New
York City ●
June 2008
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