Deuteronomy 11:26-16:17
- Isaiah 54:11-55:5 - Luke 24:33-49
This week's edition of The Set Table contains:
Questions and Commentary on Parashat Re'eh
Chayyei Yeshua - A Devotional Commentary on the Besora Reading
In Summary
Looking Ahead
Questions & Commentary on Parashat Re'eh
1. What does the Torah mean when it says that we should
"hold fast" or "cleave" to God? Why is "holding fast" to the Lord so
important? How is it accomplished?
Rabbi Jason Sobel
Frequently, Scripture uses repetition to stress the
great significance of key concepts and commandments. Twice in last week's Torah
portion (Deuteronomy 10:20,
11:22)
and once in this week's parasha (Deuteronomy 13:5), we are exhorted by
God through Moses to "cleave" to the Lord our God. The Torah's repeated
emphasis on this matter should cause us to pause and ponder both the meaning
and importance of "holding fast" to God.
In Deuteronomy 13:5, the children of Israel
are exhorted to:
Follow none but the LORD your God, and revere none but him;
observe his commandments alone, and heed only his orders; him shall you serve
and to him shall you hold fast.
The phrase "shall you hold fast" is a translation
of the Hebrew verb tidbakun, which literally means to "cleave." This
term is closely related to the concept of devequt, which in Jewish
thought refers to a state of continued closeness to God.
The Ramban (Moses ben Nachman or Nachmanides), a
renowned mystic and scholar who lived in Spain
during 13th century, defined the Torah concept of devequt as follows:
It warns man not to worship God and somebody else
beside him; he is to worship God alone in his heart and his actions. And it is
plausible that the meaning of "holding fast/cleaving" is to remember God and
his love constantly, not to divert your thought from him in all your earthly
doings. Such a man may be talking to other people. But his heart is not with
them since he is in the presence of God. It is plausible that those who have
attained this rank do, even in their earthly life, partake of eternal life, because
they made themselves a dwelling place for the Shekina [God's manifest
Presence in the World].
Ramban on Deuteronomy 11:22
Thus, devequt is adhering and attaching
ourselves to God in such an intense way that all our thoughts, words, and deeds
are focused on him, so that our life and our will becomes one with his. We are
called to cleave to God like a husband who leaves his parents to cleave to his
wife (Genesis 2:24).
Cleaving to God is foundational to our physical and
spiritual well-being as Deuteronomy 4:4 states, "But you who cleave to the Lord
your God are alive, everyone of you this day." This verse implies that cleaving
to the Lord is the only means of achieving true and lasting spiritual life.
Our Sages however were perplexed by the concept of devequt
since God is described as a consuming fire throughout the Torah (Exodus 24:17;
Deuteronomy 4:24,
9:3). How is it literally possible for a person to cling to the Eternal One and
not be destroyed? One solution was to attach oneself to a great prophet and tzaddiq
like Moses, who, on the basis of their deep knowledge and intimate relationship
with God could helps us achieve devequt:
Moses our teacher is the intermediary between Israel
and the Holy One. "And they believed in the Lord and in Moses his servant"
(Exodus 14:31). How can one cleave
to God, for after all, faith and knowledge of God are expressions of devequt? Scripture answers: "they
believed . . . in Moses his servant"; by believing and being attached to Moses,
who attained knowledge of God and devequt
with God, as a gift of grace, they were able to believe in the Lord . . . Thus,
through Moses they were able to attach their minds and heart to God.
R. Yaakov Yosef, Ben
Porat Yosef, p. 9b
For us, as Messianic Jews, Messiah Yeshua is the
Prophet like Moses who helps us achieve the highest level of devequt.
Through faith in and faithfulness to Yeshua and his Messianic Torah, we begin
to experience the ultimate goal of devequt, which is yichud,
union with the God. Thus, devequt resulting in yichud is the
natural out-working of being "in Messiah" as Yeshua states in John 17:20-23:
I do not pray for these alone, but also for those who will
believe in me through their word; that they all may be one, as you, Father, are
in me, and I in you; that they also may be one in us, that the world may
believe that you sent me. And the glory which you gave me I have given them,
that they may be one just as we are one: I in them, and you in me; that they
may be made perfect in one, and that the world may know that you have sent me,
and have loved them as you have loved me.
By cleaving to Messiah Yeshua like Israel
cleaved to Moses after leaving Egypt,
we are able to attach ourselves to the Eternal One, thereby achieving a
continual state of union with God, a constant awareness of his presence in our
lives, and abundant life now and in the World to Come.
2. Why does the Torah portion begin with the command re'eh "to see," and what does that have
to do with a relationship?
Joshua Brumbach
According to the Jewish philosopher Abraham Joshua
Heschel, from the beginning of creation, God has been in pursuit of a
relationship with us. Part of any relationship is in understanding the role we
each play, and in protecting that relationship.
Whether familial, romantic, or professional, every relationship entails
that we establish boundaries and safeguards to maintain and mature those
connections. When those boundaries are violated, the consequence is that we
often end up overstepping our relational positions, and possibly end up putting
the relationship in jeopardy.
The very first word in this week's Torah portion is re'eh.
This word, from which we get the name for this week's portion, is conjugated in
an imperative form. Meaning that it is a command to do, to pay attention to,
and "to see to" all the instructions God is setting forth. The book of
Deuteronomy is actually a repetition of the entire Torah, and this week's
portion is an even further condensed repetition. Within Parashat Re'eh
are found the majority of the biblical commands. As such, the opening verse of
the portion speaks of the importance of re'eh, "seeing" to all that God
requires of us.
The mitzvot serve as boundaries in the Jewish
people's relation to God. When we, as Messianic Jews, violate the boundaries of
our relationship, and either put another love ahead of us, introduce practices
that are offensive, or invest in that which has no value, we weaken our
relationship to God. We strengthen our relationship by observing those
safeguards, and "seeing" to invest in that which will promote and mature our
relationship instead of violating it.
When we invest in our relationship with God, and
draw closer in our spiritual paths by observing that which the Torah puts
forth, we are choosing to see spiritually. Parashat Re'eh gives us the
keys to establishing those boundaries, the steps in centering our entire lives
around our relationship with God. This week's portion guides us through the
observance of kashrut, the dietary laws, the rules for offering gifts
(tithes, offerings, and sacrifices), and for the mo'edim, the prescribed
set times when God chooses to meet with us. The appointed times of the shalosh
regalim, the three pilgrimage festivals when we are to appear before God -
Pesach, Shavuot, and Sukkot - are all opportunities God gives us to pursue our
relationship with him.
Why does this week's Torah portion begin with the
command re'eh "to see?" Because God wants us to see spiritually in order
to see physically that which he commands. May God see fit to cause our
relationships with him to become deeper, and may we, through our blessed
Messiah Yeshua, have the ability to greater follow in his footsteps, and
protect the boundaries of our relationship with our Creator.

Leah Vaks
Luke
24:33-49 - Handle Me and See
In our Besora portion (Luke 24:33-49), we,
Yeshua's disciples, behold the Risen Messiah standing in our midst. The one
whom we buried only two days ago, on Erev Shabbat, is once again eating our
food and teaching us Torah. We barely believe our eyes. How can it be? Someone
who dies, we thought, descends to Sheol and becomes a disembodied spirit, a ruach.
Even in those rare cases when a ruach comes back to earth in human form,
there is no way it could possess real flesh and bones! For example, when the
deceased prophet Samuel was conjured up for King Saul, the medium who saw the
Prophet described him as an elohim, a divine or angelic being, though he
looked like an old man wrapped in a robe (1 Samuel 28:13-14). Samuel must have
had a glorious, unearthly appearance for him to be called an elohim and
for King Saul to prostrate before him! So when we see Yeshua resurrected, we
naturally assume that he is a ruach (Luke 24:37), an awesome spiritual
being, but not one who is physically alive.
To our joy and marvel, Yeshua challenges that
assumption by saying, "See my hands and my feet, for it is I. Handle me and
see; for a ruach does not have flesh and bones, as you see I that I do"
(Luke 24:39). Master's body certainly feels solid, but only when he eats a real
piece of food (Luke 24:41-43), are we convinced that this is no illusion. But
how physical is our resurrected Messiah? He can appear suddenly in a closed
room without walking through a door (Luke 24:36) and disappear just as suddenly
in the middle of a meal (Luke 24:31). He may look like his old self, but may
take on the appearance of someone else-a traveler (Mark 16:12), a gardener (John 20:14-15),
or a fisherman (John 21:4), so that we can't even recognize him. By showing us
the wounds in his wrists and in his side, Yeshua removes our final doubts as to
his true identity (John 20:20). He
is not a ruach, but a living man, the same man whom we knew as our
Teacher Yeshua, who died and rose to life some 36 hours later.
But is Yeshua's resurrection no different than that
of Elazar (Lazarus), whom Yeshua brought back to life after four days in the
tomb (John 11:43-44)? Or from other
miraculous resurrections performed by Yeshua and the early prophets? Clearly,
yes. Yeshua teaches us that his resurrection was prophetically imbedded in the
Tanach. For example, Psalm 16:10 says: "For you shall not abandon my life to
Sheol; You shall not let your Pious One see corruption." Hosea 6:2 may have
been read as follows, "He will bring him to life in two days; on the third day
he will raise him up." And Psalm 49:16 says, "Yet God will redeem my life from
the hand of Sheol, for he will take me." Yeshua fulfilled all three verses
because his body was not corrupted by death but raised to life on the third
day, after which he was taken up to heaven (Luke 24:51). All the other people
brought back to life would eventually die again and go down to Sheol. But
Yeshua's natural body was not only resurrected, but was clothed with
immortality.
Messiah's resurrection is promised to us as well.
"So will it be the resurrection of the dead. The body that is sown is
perishable - it is raised imperishable; it is sown in dishonor - it is raised
in glory; it is sown in weakness - it is raised in power; it is sown a natural
body - it is raised a spiritual body (1 Corinthians 15:42-44). May that day come soon!
NEXT WEEK'S READINGS
- PARASHAT SHOFETIM
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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