Deuteronomy 32:1-25 - Hosea 14:2-10;
Micah 7:18-20; Joel 2:15-27
- Luke 15:11-32
This week's edition of The Set Table contains:
Questions and Commentary on Parashat Ha'azinu
Chayyei Yeshua - A Devotional Commentary on the Besora Reading
In Summary
Looking Ahead
Questions & Commentary on Parashat Ha'azinu
1. The first letter of the first four words in Deuteronomy
29:17 in Hebrew - shoresh poreh rosh
vela‘ana "a root that bears gall and wormwood" - form the word shofar. This teaches us that the sound
of the shofar is capable of uprooting
from the heart the roots of evil that "bear" gall and wormwood (Sefer HaQedoshim as quoted by Me‘eina shel Torah). How does the
hearing of the shofar uproot evil from our hearts? Of what does the blowing of
the shofar remind us?
Rabbi Jason Sobel
In Jewish tradition, Yom Teru‘a (the Feast
of Trumpets, i.e. Rosh Hashana) is also known as Yom Haddin, the Day of
Judgment; for on this day God begins the yearly divine judgment of the world.
This view is derived from the book of Zephaniah that connects God's future
judgment with the sounding of the shofar:
The great day of the LORD is near; It is near and hastens
quickly . . . That day is a day of wrath, a day of trouble and distress, a day
of devastation and desolation, a day of darkness and gloominess, a day of
clouds and thick darkness, day of trumpet and alarm.
Zephaniah
1:14-16
One of reasons that the shofar is blown
during the month of Elul and on Rosh Hashana is to remind us to prepare
ourselves for Yom Haddin, the Day of Judgment. When we hear the sound of
shofar, it should instill the fear of the Lord in us and inspire us to
repent. As the Prophet Amos states, "Can a shofar be blown in a city and
the people not tremble?" (Amos 3:6). Therefore, one way the shofar
uproots evil from our hearts is by reminding us of the sobering reality of
God's judgment. Ultimately every human being, even followers of
Messiah, will have to give an account of their lives before the Lord (2
Corinthians 5:10).
A second reason that we blow the shofar is
to mark Rosh Hashana as the anniversary of God's creation. According to
tradition, God began the work of creation on the 25th day Elul, five days
before Rosh Hashana. Six days later, on the first of Tishri, which is the day
of Rosh Hashana, the Lord created the first man and women (b. Rosh
11b-12a). The reason we remember God's act on Creation on Rosh Hashana and not
on the 25th of Elul is that humanity is not only God's final act of creation,
but the reason for creation. God created the world so that humankind could
enter into an intimate loving relationship and bring God glory by proclaiming
divine kingship. As we say in the words of Adon Olam, "At that time when
God made everything according to his will then God's name was proclaimed as
King." Biblically, the connection between Rosh Hashana and creation is based on
Psalms 98:6 in which the God's kingship and the blowing of the shofar
are linked, as it is written, "with trumpets and the blast of the ram's horn -
shout for joy before the LORD, the King." By blowing the shofar we
announce that the Lord is the sovereign ruler of all. This is analogous to the
trumpets that are blown at the coronation of a new king.
What, however, is the connection between Rosh
Hashana as the time of judgment and creation? Commenting on this one rabbi
writes,
Since it was God's desire that man proclaim Him King, He
chose the anniversary of the day when it all began to review the results of the
previous year and determine how to proceed in the next . . . Rosh Hashana is the
reason of God's Kingship, the time when God brings man to judgment on how well
has carried out the mission of proclaiming Hashem
melekh, the Lord is King.
Rabbi Scherman, Artscroll
on Yom Kippur, p. 20-21
This mission is underscored in Genesis by the reason
given for humanity's placement in the Garden of Eden:
The LORD God took the man and put him in the Garden of Eden
to work it and take care of it.
Genesis 2:15
A better way of translating the second clause of
this verse is "to worship and obey." God did not create man to be a farmer or
gardener but rather created man and woman to worship him as Creator and King
and to obey God's Commandments. Thus the writer of Genesis portrays Adam and
Chava as performing the divine service (worship of God) in much the same way as
the kohanim are latter appointed to do. Worship itself is woven into the
very fabric of creation and is one of the basic reasons for humanity's
existence.
We must therefore examine our lives and ask
ourselves several tough questions. "Who truly is the King of my Life, me or
God?" "Do I primarily seek to do His will or my own?" "Have I added to the
sovereignty of God or diminished it?" "Have I influenced others this year to
draw closer to God through King Messiah Yeshua?" "What has been the quality of
my spiritual service?" As we listen to the sound of the shofar, evil
begins to be uprooted from our hearts as we begin to prepare ourselves for the
Day of Judgment by answering these tough questions and by ensuring that King
Yeshua is the Lord of our lives.
2. Parashat Ha'azinu
begins, "Give ear, O heavens, and I will speak; listen, O earth, to the words
of my mouth" (Deuteronomy 32:1). According to Rashi, the reason Moses begins
his song by mentioning heaven and earth is because he is calling them to bear
witness. Why do they serve as the most
appropriate and best-suited witnesses? To what are they meant to bear
witness?
Rabbi Jonathan
Kaplan
At the end of last week's parasha, Moses and
Joshua were commanded by God to assemble before God "all the elders of your
tribes and your officials that I [God] may speak these words [the words of Ha'azinu]
into their ears and I [God] may call heaven and earth as witnesses"
(Deuteronomy 31:28). So God begins the song Ha'azinu by calling heaven
and earth as witnesses to Israel's
future infidelity, "Give ear, O heavens and I will speak; listen, O earth, to
the words of my mouth" (Deuteronomy 32:1). The question remains however, why
heaven and earth? Why not Moses or
Joshua?
Rashi answers this question by borrowing from a
tradition recorded in Sifre to Deuteronomy where Moses says,
I am flesh and blood. Tomorrow, I will be dead. If Israel
says, "We did not assume responsibility for the covenant," who will come and
contradict them? Therefore, [God] established heaven and earth for witnesses
against them because they endure forever.
Ibn Ezra and Nachmanides, find other examples of
heaven and earth being called as witnesses in God's covenant lawsuits against Israel
for its infidelity. They both cite Micah 6:2 where the mountains are called to
testify in God's case against Israel,
"Hear, O mountains, the case [riv] of the LORD." Like the heavens and
the earth, mountains have an enduring quality to them. But the heavens and the
earth endure even longer than the mountains. For ancient Israel,
the heavens and the earth represented the totality of creation. They were the
first to be created, the object of God's first creative act (Genesis 1:1), and,
as we saw above in Rashi, they will endure until the end of time. They serve as
apt witness precisely because they outlive all the generations of Israel.
They can give a completely unbiased accounting of her successes and her
failures from beginning to end. Truly they are the best witnesses for God to
call in Ha'azinu.
But to what are they meant to bear witness? The
song Ha'azinu first enumerates God's
perfection and faithfulness (32:3). It then goes on to describe Israel's infidelity to God in face of God's perpetual
fidelity to them (32:4-18). Next, it details God's forsaking of his unfaithful
children (32:19-25). It culminates with a description of God's pity upon them
and his destruction of their enemies for their assault on Israel in their time of desolation (32:26-43). Ha'azinu ultimately bears witness to
God's loving faithfulness and challenges us to live a life worthy of the Rock
whose deeds are perfect (32:3). We read this passage most years on Shabbat Shuva ("the sabbath of
repentance"; the sabbath between Rosh Hashana and Yom Kippur) or on the sabbath
preceding Rosh Hashana because it challenges the Jewish people to renew our
commitment to God's covenant during the season when we celebrate the birthday
of the world and exalt the God of Israel as king over all the earth. For
non-Jews, who are grafted into Israel through Messiah Yeshua, it serves to challenge
them to deeper levels of faithfulness as gentiles to God the Father through
Messiah Yeshua.

Sean Emslie
Luke
15:11-32 - Time to Change
In this week's besora reading we come to Yeshua's
parable of "the prodigal son." This is a fascinating story of a young man that
leaves his father's home, using his portion of his father's inheritance, to
live a life pursuing pleasure and the other son that stays at home with his
father and is loyal to his family.
After he spends his newfound riches on reckless
living, the wine, women and song of his day, a famine comes and he goes from
the man of riches and luxury to being a hired hand on a pig farm (not the most
kosher place for a Jewish boy to be) and now out of hunger desiring to eat the
scraps thrown to the pigs just to survive. It is at this point that the error
of his ways comes to him and he decides to make a change in his life and return
to his father's house in repentance, knowing that even if he could be accepted
back as a slave that he would have food and would not have to wallow with the
pigs any longer. In preparation of speaking to his father we get these words of
a changed man seeking repentance:
I'm going to get up and go back to my father and say to him,
"Father, I have sinned against Heaven and against you; I am no longer worthy to
be called your son; treat me like one of your hired workers."
Luke 15:18-19
He realized that there would be a cost for him to
return home and that he had to seek humbly any opening with his father that he
had abandoned. With his repentant heart and words, he left for his former home
and his father. We next read in verse 20:
So he got up and started back to his father. But while he was
still a long way off, his father saw him and was moved with pity. He ran and
threw his arms around him and kissed him warmly.
His move away from his life of futility that led him
to a pig pen and his willingness to go back in repentance to his father brought
not condemnation from his father but forgiveness and restored relationship from
a father that was waiting for his return.
As we move into the High Holyday season, a time of
annual communal reflection on our lives and where we have fallen short of
walking in God's ways and our times as a prodigal from our Father, the God of
Israel, we too have the opportunity to follow the example of the prodigal son.
We, too, can realize that we have gone on the wrong path, decide to change our
wrong path, and return to God in repentance to begin anew. As we are entering
this holy time, we again hear the shofar blasts calling our souls to
repentance, may each of us examine our lives like the "prodigal son" did and
follow his example and in repentance return to God and his Torah this High Holyday
season. May we each know the acceptance of our repentance and the restored
relationship with our Father and our King.
NEXT WEEK'S READINGS
- PARASHAT YOM KIPPUR
Leviticus 16:1-34
Numbers 29:7-11
Isaiah 57:14-58:14
Hebrews 9:1-14
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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