Exodus 13:17-17:16 – Judges 4:4-5:31 – Luke 6:1-16
This week's edition of The Set Table contains:
Questions and Commentary on Beshallach
Chayyei Yeshua - A Devotional Commentary on the Besora Reading
In Summary
Looking Ahead
Questions & Commentary on Parashat Beshallach
1. What happened at the location named Mara? What lesson
are we meant to learn from this story? On a spiritual level, how might it point
to the self-sacrifice of Messiah Yeshua?
Rabbi Jason Sobel
One month after leaving Egypt
and wandering in the wilderness, the Children of Israel ran out of water and
began to complain about it. God intentionally allowed this to happen in order
to test the Israelites and teach them an important lesson. They had to learn to
trust the Lord to meet all of their needs. As a people, Israel
had become dependant upon the Egyptians to provide for their basic needs.
Although they were no longer slaves in Egypt,
they still need to be liberated from the debilitating and demoralizing fear of
not having their basic physical needs met. Through this miracle Moses performed
by casting of the tree into the bitter water to make it sweet, the Lord was
trying to teach Israel to trust and depend upon him alone to meet their
spiritual and material needs..
Messiah Yeshua also underscores the importance of
trusting in the Lord to provide for the basic necessities of life when he says
in this week's Besora reading:
Therefore I say to you, do not worry about your life, what
you will eat or what you will drink; nor about your body, what you will put on.
Is not life more than food and the body more than clothing? Look at the birds
of the air, for they neither sow nor reap nor gather into barns; yet your
heavenly Father feeds them. Are you not of more value than they? Which of you
by worrying can add one cubit to his stature? So why do you worry about
clothing?" Consider the lilies of the field, how they grow: they neither toil
nor spin; and yet I say to you that even Solomon in all his glory was not
arrayed like one of these. Now if God so clothes the grass of the field, which
today is, and tomorrow is thrown into the oven, will he not much more clothe
you, O you of little faith?
Matthew 6:25-30 (NKJV)
Like the generation that left Egypt,
we also need to learn to free ourselves from the anxieties of life by trusting
the Lord if we ever hope to be truly free to fulfill our destiny as "a royal
priesthood and holy nation" (Exodus 19:6).
On a spiritual level, our lives are like the waters
of Mara due to the bitterness of sin, sickness, and death. The source of this
bitterness goes all the way back to the first Adam who ate from the forbidden
fruit of tree of the knowledge of good and evil. Once Adam and Chava partook of
this tree, humanity became like it, a mixture of good and evil. This struggle
between our good and evil inclination embitters our lives and ultimately leads
to physical as well as spiritual death for some.
Death however is not the final word. Through
Yeshua's self-sacrifice on a tree, we can see an illusion to the incident at
Mara as well as a reversal of the sin committed by the First Adam (both of
which are connected to a tree). Thus Yeshua died a bitter death upon a tree in
order to sweeten our lives which are embittered by slavery to sin and death. By
placing our faith in Messiah Yeshua, our lives are made sweet like the bitter
waters of Mara. Therefore, let us never harden our hearts and lose faith in the
Lord and his provisions as our ancestors did at Mara.
2. Why was God giving Manna from heaven a test as to whether
the people would obey the Torah or not?
Joshua
Brumbach
It is easy to point the finger and complain about
other peoples' grumblings. It is also just as easy to point the finger at the
Israelites wandering in the desert and think of ourselves more highly than we
really ought.
Although God gave manna to the Jewish people as a
result of their constant cry for food, the Torah makes it clear that it was
also given as a test. The question then arises as to how giving bread from
heaven serves as a test?
The manna forced every single person to approach the
gathering of the manna on multiple levels. For many, just the thought of eating
this unidentifiable "stuff" was ridiculous. They even asked, "What is it? "
(Exodus 16:15), thinking that this
white flaky stuff was nothing special compared to the pots of meat they had
back in Egypt
(16:3). So for those people, the manna itself was a test of their ego. To
others, it was a test of their faith. When told not to leave any until morning,
many did, and found it consumed by worms. It was also a test of obedience. When told not to expect any manna on Shabbat,
there were those that still arose to go out and gather, and found nothing. The manna served as a test of each person's
spiritual condition, as Moses even states, "Your grumblings are not against us,
but against the LORD (Exodus 16:8)."
Often you and I are also out chasing and gathering.
We're being fed in some way, but we don't know what it is. Like our
predecessors, we keep walking around asking "What is it?" And we too, go around
complaining, rebelling, and grumbling the whole time. It is easy to point the
finger at the Israelites, and accuse them of being stiff-necked and imprudent.
We even wonder how they could respond in such a way, especially after seeing
all the miracles God was continually doing for them. Yet we too do the same thing. We too
experience miracles on a daily basis, and yet still question why God has
dragged us out into the dessert to die.
Parashat
Beshallach is about choices and redemption. Yet, this week's Torah portion
also points to God's chesed and rachamim - his grace and mercy. Despite
all of our shortcomings, God is still faithful to bring about ultimate
redemption. That it is not because of our own merit, but because of his righteousness.
May we learn from the tests of our own personal manna, and may we all be
enabled to sing the ultimate song of redemption!

Joshua Tallent
Luke 6:1-16 - The Compassionate Way
In our Besora
passage for this week, we read two stories about Yeshua's perspective on
Shabbat. Both of these stories are clear examples of the differences between
the teachings of Yeshua and the teachings of the unnamed "Torah-teachers and Perushim" followed. In both instances,
Yeshua makes the case for a compassionate view in the interpretation of Torah
prohibitions regarding Shabbat.
In the first story, Yeshua's disciples are seen
grabbing heads of wheat and separating the wheat seeds from the chaff with
their hands. Yeshua defends his disciples' quick meal by relating the story of
David and his band eating the leftover showbread while they were on the run
from Saul (1 Samuel 21:7). The intention of Yeshua's analogy is clear: the
restrictions on the eating of food on Shabbat have to be flexible when compassion
requires it, whether compassion in the large degree as with David, or
compassion in the smaller degree as with the disciples. In the second story,
Yeshua encounters a man with a withered hand in the synagogue. Yeshua's
decision to heal the man on Shabbat is based on his compassion for the man's
situation.
Something that should be noted about both of these
stories is that in neither case does Yeshua veer away from an acceptable halakhic interpretation of the Torah.
His teachings and actions are completely in keeping with acceptable halakhic standards in his day and ours.
Shabbat observance is one of the central elements of
Jewish life. Every week the Jewish people are challenged to put aside work,
stress, and financial burdens and to focus energy on God. This challenge is not
always easy to surmount. Sometimes it can seem that no matter how hard you try,
something does its level best to intrude on the shalom that should pervade that
holy day.
The question inevitably arises, "Where is the
balance between observance and compassion?" I think that the answer resides in
the intent our hearts. Shabbat observance, just like the other areas of Torah
observance, is discussed in a variety of available resources. Observance
invariably follows instruction, so it becomes incumbent upon us to study the
Torah's precepts and to integrate its instructions into our lives. The balance
of compassion comes when we don't reach the goal we have set or when our
neighbor stumbles along their way. Compassion frees us to look at those
situations in a less critical way.
Of course, the balance of observance is also
important. If our "ox is in the ditch" because of our own bad decisions, we are
still required to be compassionate toward the ox and rescue it from its
distress. However, if we constantly let our ox out of its pen on Friday
afternoon, knowing it will head straight for the ditch, then we should take a
long look at why we allow that to happen.
Compassion is the key; don't forget to use it.
NEXT WEEK'S READINGS
- PARASHAT YITRO
Exodus 18:1-20:23
Isaiah 6:1-7:6;
9:5-6
Luke 7:1-17
UPCOMING YACHAD NETWORK EVENTS
PLEASE NOTE THAT
DUE TO LOGISTICS ISSUES WE HAVE MOVED THE FOLLOWING EVENTS FROM NEW YORK CITY TO BEVERLY HILLS, CA
4th Annual Young Leaders Shabbaton
Beverly
Hills, CA ● June 6-7, 2008
7th Annual Young Messianic Jewish
Scholars Conference
Beverly
Hills, CA ● June 4-6, 2008
|