Newsletter 5861-009
The 2nd Year of the 5th Sabbatical Cycle
The 30th year of the 120th Jubilee Cycle
The 27th day of the 2nd month 5861 years after the creation of Adam
The 5th Sabbatical Cycle after the 119th Jubilee Cycle
The Sabbatical Cycle of the Red Heifer, Famine, Captivity & The 2 Witnesses
April 26, 2025
Shabbat Shalom to the Royal Family of Yehovah,
Shabbat Shalom to you all.
We are still touring the Philippines and I want you all to watch our latest presentation.
Please copy and paste this to at least 20 of your friends and on your social media pages. Help us to get this message out to the rest of the Philippines and the world as Yehshua told us in the Great Commission.
Understand that since presenting this teaching on Tuesday, April 22, 2026, Yehovah has revealed even more about July 12, 2026 and potential events for that date. I will try to get it written out even though we are traveling still. The scriptures are all coming together. Please tell as many others as you can to watch this video and subscribe to our two free books https://sightedmoon.com/the-stones-cry-out-lp/
I was not able to get that written out, but I am presenting it in ISabella on Shabbat for the first time. Stay tuned.
Here is their introduction to the video:
Get ready for a life-changing experience! Join us in the Philippines in 2025 as the renowned biblical Prophecy teacherJoseph F. Dumond returns with urgent, awe-inspiring revelations that will leave you speechless! Since his first visit in 2015, Dumond has been sharing jaw-dropping prophecies that have come true with stunning accuracy—prophecies that have shaped the nation’s destiny and revealed its divine role in the end times.Back in 2015, Dumond warned Atty. Jeremiah Belgica of a looming war with ISIS, predicting the Philippines would face conflict by 2020. Just as he foretold, the five-month Battle of Marawi erupted in 2016, proving his words were no mere coincidence. Returning in 2018, he sounded the alarm about the calamities of 2020, unveiling the Philippines’ pivotal role in the last days through powerful teachings rooted in the Book of Isaiah. He revealed how this nation would bring the Torah to the world—a prophecy unfolding today as Filipino missionaries spread hope across Asia and beyond!In 2022, Dumond returned to unpack the shocking events of 2020, tying the global COVID crisis to the “daily being taken away” and warning of the Abomination of Desolation set to appear in 2023. His conviction was so strong that he traveled to Israel in September 2023, searching for this very abomination. He even wrote to the Prime Minister and Chief Rabbis on September 10, 2023, warning of an imminent surprise attack. Just days later, on October 7, 2023, a devastating attack unfolded—over 1,200 lives were lost, 250 people were kidnapped, and 891 IDF soldiers later died fighting Hamas.Now, in 2025, Prophet Dumond is back in the Philippines with his most urgent message yet! He’s revealing how these past events confirm the final 10 Days of Awe—the last 10 years of judgment before the Messiah’s return. With his teachings recorded on YouTube and featured on The 700 Club Asia, Dumond is here to warn of coming plagues and to remind the Philippines of their divine calling in these final years. Prepare to be amazed as he uses the Sabbatical and Jubilee Cycles to decode end-time prophecy with astonishing precision.Don’t miss this electrifying opportunity to hear Prophet Dumond’s teachings live!It’s a wake-up call you’ll never forget—a chance to understand the shocking accuracy of his prophecies and discover how God is using the Philippines in these pivotal last days. Join us for an unforgettable event that will ignite your faith and open your eyes to the future!
We are now approaching Shavuot, when the first fruits of wheat are to be harvested. Once again, just like the barley, we are right on time. While all the others are clearly one month too late, we are in sync with Yehovah and His timing. Do not let those with all sorts of excuses buffalo you. Just look at the evidence, and then you decide. We will provide you with additional evidence later in this Newsletter. But know the wheat is ready NOW!!!
I also want to welcome the many new brethren you have just watched me teach them about the Wave Sheaf Offering. Shavuot, as you will remember, is about the next resurrection of the Saints. This is all about us. I hope you begin to learn the deeper aspects of this subject with some of the articles we are providing.
Torah Portion
Torah Portions
We read through the entire Torah along with the Prophets and the New Testament, once over the course of 3 1/2 years. Or according to the Sabbatical Cycle which means we read it all twice over a 7-year period. This allows us to cover more in-depth rather than being rushed to cover as much as is covered on an annual basis. We allow all to comment and take part in the discussions.
Septennial Torah Portion
If you go to Torah Portion in our archived section, you can then go to the 1st year, which is the 1st year of the Sabbatical Cycle, the one we are in now, as we state at the top of every Newsletter. There, you can scroll down to the proper date and see that this Shabbat, we could very well be midrashing about:
Exodus 16
Isaiah 8-11
Psalm 122
John 5:30 – 6:27
We are in the 1st Sabbatical Cycle in 2024-2025. We go through the entire bible twice in a 7 year cycle. This means we cover the entire bible once every 3 1/2 years. It gives us more time to debate and discuss each portion we read.
If you missed last week’s exciting discoveries as we studied that section, you can go and watch past Shabbats on our media section.
Join Our Sabbath Meetings
Join Our Sabbath Meetings
There are many people in need of fellowship and who are sitting at home on the Sabbath with no one to talk to or debate with. I want to encourage all of you to join us on Shabbat, and to invite others to come and join us as well. If the time is not convenient then you can listen to the teaching and the midrash after on our YouTube channel.
What are we doing and why do we teach this way?
We are going to discuss both sides of an issue and then let you choose. It is the work of the Ruach (Spirit) to direct and to teach you.
The medieval commentator Rashi wrote that the Hebrew word for wrestle (avek) implies that Jacob was “tied”, for the same word is used to describe knotted fringes in a Jewish prayer shawl, the tzitzityot. Rashi says, “thus is the manner of two people who struggle to overthrow each other, that one embraces the other and knots him with his arms”.
Our intellectual wrestling has been replaced by a different kind of struggle. We are wrestling with Yehovah as we grapple with His Word. It is an intimate act, symbolizing a relationship in which Yehovah and you and I are bound together. My wrestling is a struggle to discover what Yehovah expects of us, and we are “tied” to the One who assists us in that struggle.
Today, many say Israel means “Champion of God”, or better — the “Wrestler of God”.
Our Torah sessions each Shabbat teaches you and encourages you to constantly challenge, question, argue against, as well as view alternative views and explanations of the Word. In other words, we are to “wrestle with the Word” to get to the truth. Jews worldwide believe that you need to wrestle with the Word and constantly challenge Dogma, Theology, and views or else you will never get to the Truth.
We are not like most churches where “The preacher talks and everyone listens.” We encourage everyone to participate, to question and to contribute what they know on the subject being discussed. We want you to be a champion wrestler of the Word of Yehovah. We want you to wear the title of Israel, knowing that you not only know but are capable of explaining why you know the Torah to be true with logic and facts.
We have a few rules though. Let others talk and listen. There is no discussion about UFO’s, Nephilim, Vaccines or conspiracy-type subjects. We have people from around the world with different world views. Not everyone cares who is the President of any particular country. Treat each other with respect as fellow wrestlers of the word. Some of our subjects are hard to understand and require you to be mature and if you do not know, then listen to gain knowledge and understanding and hopefully wisdom. The very things you are commanded to ask Yehovah for and He gives to those who ask.
Jas 1:5 But if any of you lacks wisdom, let him ask of God, who gives to all liberally and with no reproach, and it shall be given to him.
We hope you can invite those who want to keep Torah to come and join us by hitting the link below. It is almost like a Torah teaching fellowship talk show with people from around the world taking part and sharing their insights and understandings.
We start off with some music and then some prayers and it’s as though you were sitting around the kitchen back in Newfoundland having a cup of coffee and all of us enjoying each other’s company. I hope you will grace us with your company someday.
Sabbath services begin at 12:30 PM EDT where we will be doing prayers, songs and teaching from this hour.
Shabbat midrash will begin at about 1:15 pm Eastern.
We look forward to you joining our family and getting to know us as we get to know you.
Joseph Dumond is inviting you to a scheduled Zoom meeting.
Topic: Joseph Dumond’s Personal Meeting Room
Join Zoom Meeting
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The Perpetual Calendar
The Perpetual Calendar
We have available from our website a calendar you can use to keep track of the days of the month based on when the barley is ripe and when the moon is sighted. All you have to do is download it. https://sightedmoon.com/perpetual-calendar/
With the new year about to begin, you can learn about the calendar as you record it. This is a great tool to have and it is free to anyone who wants it.
SightedMoon Sukkot 2025
SightedMoon Sukkot 2025
We are planning to have a SightedMoon.com Feast site this Sukkot at Cleftrock Kentucky. There are a limited number of places available, and if this is of interest to you, then please contact Ella Morgan to help in the organizing, set-up, and activities. You need to contact Ella ASAP and reserve a spot. There are 55 places available, and you need to make a $100 deposit by April 11 and the final payment by August 15.
Contact grannyella44@gmail.com, and you can check out the site at https://cleftrock.org. The Noah’s Ark site is just over an hour’s drive away. More info will come, but it’s time to sign up ASAP. Sukkot will be from September 8 to September 15, with check-in on September 7 and check-out on September 16.
The Stones Cry Out Are Free
The Stones Cry Out Part 1 & Part 2
Do you want to know how to prove the Zadok Calendar, the Enoch Calendar, and the Book of Jubilee Calendar false?
Do you want to know how the calendar issue became so confusing?
I go this awesome endorsement and I want to share it here now. with you.
In The Stones Cry Out, I walk you through the history of each change and why those changes came about, starting with the Maccabean days. Yes, it all began around 164 B.C. When Yehshua was here, he was dealing with two schools of thought. The Sadducees were all but wiped out when the Temple fell in 70 C.E. This left only the Pharisees, who began to be persecuted after the failure of the Bar Kochbah Revolt in 134 C.E.
The truth began to become out of focus around 160 C.E. when Rabbi Jose wrote the Seder Olam. This work originally was written to proof Simon Bar Kochbah was the Messiah. When that did not pan out the history was later revived and then redacted as the truth into the Mishneh Torah by Rabbi Judah ha Nasi in 180 C.E. After this the Jerusalem Talmud begins to debate these issues. It was then during this time as the Jerusalem Talmudist are forced to flee and the Babylonian Talmudist continue to grow until the 6th century that Hillel came up with a solution to help them keep the Holy Days at the proper time while they were out of the land of Israel. He did this in 358 C.E. This work was then modified and adjusted over the next 800 years with additions added and other rejected. Until it was finally redacted once again in 1177 by Rambam. And with that we now have the modern Hillel calendar which includes the errors passed on during each redaction. These errors included the time of the Sabbatical and Jubilee years.
Once the Temple was destroyed in 70 C.E., the Jews recorded time by counting from the time It was destroyed. This is why the 40 tombstones of Zoar, which record this information, are crucial to understand.
When you understand why the Postponement rules were first created so that the crescent moon would not be seen in another part of the world before it was seen in Israel then you can understand how they were still trying to follow the crescent moon to begin the month. The Tombstones show us this exact thing. The tombstones also show us when the Jews changed from a crescent moon to a Conjunction moon to begin the month. They also show us when the Jews changed the year from the month of Aviv to the Tishri to begin the year.
I really want you to understand these things so you know why you do what you do as far as following a calendar to keep Yehovah’s moedim.
Get your Free copies of The Stones Cry Out Part 1 and Part 2 here https://sightedmoon.com/the-stones-cry-out-lp/
And share this information with your FB friends and Bibles Study groups. If they don’t like it, it never cost them anything.
Get your copy today. If you want a paperback copy, I have them on Amazon for the least amount they would let me post them there. Order both of them and start to understand the history of how these changes affect those who follow Yehovah and keep His Feasts.
I would like to add this recent comment to encourage you all to get this book and learn these truths. And the Book is FREE. You have no reason not to get it.
Most people assume that Hillel created the calendar in 358 C.E. They then assume that because it was a Sanhedrin, they are not allowed to change in order to obey Yehovah. The Hillel calendar has been changed many times since 358 C.E. up until 1177 C.E. Few people talk about these changes but we do in our latest Book The Stones Cry Out Part 1 which is free on our website. The Hillel calendar was changed on many occasions and many sought to make other changes during this time. They never needed a Bet Din to approve those changes. They just did them. So this excuse that we do not have the right to obey Yehovah because the Bet Din has not approved it is a crock of crap.
You have the obligation to obey Yehovah. You have the duty to prove which calendar you are to go by. You must prove it beyond all doubt. Yehshua never followed the Hillel calendar. Nor did any of the Apostles.
The reason no man can know the day or the hour is because it refers to a crescent moon to begin the 7th month. That is the day He was born on and the day He comes to judge on. At a day and hour no one can know. Using the Hillel calendar predicts Yom Teruah years in advance so every one knows when to keep it. But even in the Hillel calendar they keep two days of Yom Teruah reckoning back to the sighted moon. Also in the postponement rules developed long after Hillel, they again state that if the conjunction is at a certain time then the day begins at such and such, in order that the moon will not be seen in another part of the world before it is seen in Israel. That was rule number 2.
Everyone has to choose. You have the right to be wrong. But if you choose to be wrong then you also must live with the consequences that come with sin. And that is the death penalty for not keeping the Holy Days, these Sabbath at the proper time. It is your choice.
Just because you write in to me to justify your position does mean it is right. It just means your sounding off.
Allow me to share this endorsement of our latest book again. If you have read our books, please share your thoughts about them with us in the comments below or email me.
And yes, many observe the Equinox. There are many who are deceived, improperly educated. And this is why Joe puts out a newsletter every week, why he writes books, why the SightedMoon Zoom Shabbat service started, why he travels to places like England and the Philippines to share this message and why were are going to the NRB in February. The calendar is always a divisive issue in social circles because the details are many, that’s why there are so many books Joe has written. I’m not looking to put Joe on a pedestal here. This is not about Joe worship. But Joe has tenaciously studied out the calendar from every angle, not to prove himself right, to to seek to find and share what Yehovah is telling us about His Calendar.
In The Stones Cry Out, Joe has shared the history of all the different groups within Israel, and the beliefs they had about the scriptures and the feast days and the calendar. When you line it all up, you can see for yourself the how and why these misunderstandings and arguments about how and where and why they came about.
This is my new favourite book and I’m only 60-70 pages in. And I encourage you to read the footnotes in this one. Sometimes there’s more footnote on the page than Joe’s words.
Sombra Wilson
When I wrote Stones Cry Out, I wanted it to be one of our FREE books so everyone would have it. It is more of an encyclopedia than a book to read. It will be your quick resource book; you will have access to every question about any calendar, how it got started, and who started it. You will also learn the history of how the Mishnah was assembled, when it was assembled and why. Then, you will learn how that information was transferred into both the Jerusalem and the Babylonian Talmud until it reached its final stage in the Mishneh Torah. Along with this progression, the calendar also progressed and changed long after 358 C.E. when Rabbi Hillel first published it. But…what was before the Hillel calendar? What does the Mishnah record about those things?
The Stones Cry Out was originally going to be one book explaining all the various proofs we have discovered, demonstrating when the Sabbatical and Jubilee years are throughout history.
You can know; it is not a mystery.
As I began to write The Stones Cry Out, I quickly found myself going back, time and time again, to explain how the calendar is behind the confusion of the Sabbatical and Jubilee years. The Rabbis, as they began to write the Mishnah, incorporated wrong understandings, and those errors were written into what became known as the Talmud and then the Mishneh Torah. The expulsion from the land and subsequent persecutions in trying to send out messengers to report the barley being found or the crescent moon being seen, proved to be more and more dangerous over time. All of these things took place over 14 centuries.
Then as I was working on The Stones Cry Out, I discovered that many people were now accepting the Zadok calendar as factual. This is when we pivoted to include all the details of the various calendars that have crept back into public knowledge today and are being used to mislead new people who are just starting to learn about the calendar. All of this was directly connected to the period starting with the Hasmonaeans, up to the destruction of the Temple. Then, with the compiling of the Mishnah, the studies that led into the writing of the Jerusalem Talmud, then the Babylonian Talmud and finally the Mishneh Torah, each error that was added is compounded over time.
The Stones Cry Out, Part 1 explains the history of how each compilation of the Oral Torah incorporated errors, leading the followers thereof away from the actual Torah. In understanding these facts, it is then possible to understand more readily how the Sabbatical and Jubilee years were then mixed and later changed. By explaining all this history, I will be able to help you the reader understand the tombstones when most authorities do not. They have assumed, to their error, the Hillel calendar to have always been in use since Mount Sinai. Not understanding the history of the calendars is why most authorities dismiss the tombstones as too confusing to use. Once you understand The Stones Cry Out Part 1, Part 2 will be very easy to grasp.
Daniel 7:25 tells us he will change the appointed seasons and commandments. Many assume Constantine did this when he made Sunday the Sabbath. Few have considered the calendar’s many changes and how they relate to us today. Hidden in this proverbial swamp of confusion is the truth about the Sabbatical and Jubilee years. The Sabbatical and Jubilee years reveal the truths about the calendar that have been hidden for almost 2000 years.
We are in the very last days and Yehshua warned us that during this time:
Mat 24:10 And then many will be offended, and will betray one another, and will hate one another.
Mat 24:11 And many false prophets will rise and deceive many.
Mat 24:12 And because iniquity shall abound, the love of many will become cold.
Mat 24:13 But he who endures to the end, the same shall be kept safe.
Paul also warned Timothy about these last days, warning that some would leave the truth and begin to follow demonic teachers:
1Ti 4:1 But the Spirit expressly says that in the latter times some shall depart from the faith, giving heed to seducing spirits and teachings of demons,
Paul again warned the Thessalonians that the Great Falling away would take place in the last days. How can you fall away if you have never come to know the truth? So who is Paul talking to? Those who are called and answer that calling begin to walk this road of restoration back to Yehovah, and then at some point along that walk, they change and leave this walk following the teachings of demons to false calendar.
2Th 2:1 Now we beseech you, my brothers, with regard to the coming of our Lord Jesus Christ and our gathering together to Him,
2Th 2:2 that you should not be soon shaken in mind or troubled, neither by spirit, nor by word or letter, as through us, as if the Day of Christ is at hand.
2Th 2:3 Let not anyone deceive you by any means. For that Day shall not come unless there first comes a falling away, and the man of sin shall be revealed, the son of perdition,
2Th 2:4 who opposes and exalts himself above all that is called God, or that is worshiped, so that he sits as God in the temple of God, setting himself forth, that he is God.
We must endure until the end. We must not let ourselves become offended by personalities and leave the faith once given.
I want you all to have access to and the ability to read this book and use it as a reference. https://sightedmoon.com/the-stones-cry-out-lp/ Click on the link fill in the form and you will have access to the FREE PDF anywhere in the world. If you want a copy you can hold in your hands we have published it at Amazon for the lowest price they would allow us. Order you copy after Shabbat and begin to read it today.
It Was a Riddle, Not a Command
It’s a Riddle, Not a Command
Cracking the Code of Christ’s Return
Counting of the Omer
Counting of the Omer
When counting the Omer, someone is surely going to ask you or say it publicly: where are we commanded to count the Omer?
When you are asked this then you will take them to Lev 23:15
“You shall count seven full weeks from the day after the Sabbath, from the day that you brought the sheaf of the wave offering. You shall count fifty days to the day after the seventh Sabbath. Then you shall present a grain offering of new grain to the Lord.
The English word sheaf is the Hebrew word Omer.
H6016 (Brown-Driver-Briggs) עמר ‛ômer
BDB Definition:
1) omer
1a) a dry measure of 1/10 ephah (about 2 litres)
2) sheaf
Here, you are told that there are two different methods of counting the 50 days. The first was to count 7 full weeks and the second was to count out the full 50 days.
Again, in Deut 16:9, you are told to COUNT. It is a commandment to count the days and/or weeks. You start from the time the sickle is first put to the Barley grain, which was done after sunset, after the weekly Saturday Sabbath. This counting began with Wave Sheaf Day. It is because of Deut 16:9 that you can not harvest before as some claim until Wave Sheaf Day or Saturday evening after sunset.
“You shall count seven weeks. Begin to count the seven weeks from the time the sickle is first put to the standing grain.
According to some the commandment ‘and you shall count for yourselves fifty days’ means to simply observe the 50th day as Shavuot while others actually declare out loud the number on each of the fifty days. A medieval Karaite Jewish practice combines two different methods of declaring the daily count. The first method is the counting of seven weeks. Each day, the number of the week and the number of the day in the week are declared. So for example, the first day is ‘first day of the first week’. The second counting method used is an overall number for each day. In this method Day one is ‘the first day’ and Day 25 is ‘the twenty-fifth day’. These two methods are used to satisfy the commandment to count seven weeks (Deuteronomy 16:9) as well as the commandment to count fifty days (Leviticus 23:16).
During each one of these days of Counting the Omer to Pentecost, Jewish tradition has developed around reading the Psalms on certain days. I find this to be very beneficial. It is customary that following the “Counting of the Omer,” one recites Psalm 67, for according to tradition, that Psalm has forty-nine words, which corresponds perfectly to the forty-nine days of the “Counting of the Omer.”
And as you meditate on and do these readings, which includes the Counting of the Omer command, keep in mind what this symbolizes. It is the counting of the Sabbatical and Jubilee Years and where we are in that cycle. We are in the thirtieth year in 2025, which corresponds to the thirtieth day of the “Counting of the Omer.”
Wave Sheaf day is so exciting to understand and amazing to believe because it forebodes when we will be changed and raised. If you want to call this the Rapture then I can except that if you are obeying Yehovah. If you’re not obeying Yehovah and you think the laws are done away with, then you will not be in this resurrection or raptured. You will be told to be gone you workers of lawlessness, I never knew you.
We will speak more about this as Pentecost draws closer. It is the Feast of Oaths, the 8th day of the Jubilee year.
When you count from the Wave offering of the barley to Pentecost, it is called the counting of the Omer. You are to count each day up to the 50th day. This Sunday, March 16, 2025, is day one. We are to count the Omer.
As I said, this is the most special time of year for me and in years past I couldn’t put my finger on exactly why, other than it had something to do with Yehshua’s resurrection and waiting in anticipation for Shavuot. While I cannot put into words how my understanding of this has grown, all I can say is that “it clicked!” and “now I get it!”, at least more than before. Understanding follows obedience. So OBEY and learn. You learn by doing as we are told in James.
James 2:18 But someone will say, “You have faith and I have works.” Show me your faith apart from your works, and I will show you my faith by my works. You believe that God is one; you do well. Even the demons believe—and shudder! Do you want to be shown, you foolish person, that faith apart from works is useless? Was not Abraham our father justified by works when he offered up his son Isaac on the altar? You see that faith was active along with his works, and faith was completed by his works; and the Scripture was fulfilled that says, “Abraham believed God, and it was counted to him as righteousness”—and he was called a friend of God. You see that a person is justified by works and not by faith alone. And in the same way was not also Rahab the prostitute justified by works when she received the messengers and sent them out by another way? For as the body apart from the spirit is dead, so also faith apart from works is dead.
All 50 days and each of the Psalms can be found at the back of our book, Remembering the Sabbatical year of 2016
Today is the seventh day of the sixth week of seven weeks. Today is the forty-second day of the counting of fifty days from the day of the waving of the Omer on the morrow after the Sabbath. Today is Sabbath, the sixth Sabbath of seven Sabbaths. Today completes the sixth week of seven weeks.
Psa 67:1 Elohim does favour us and bless us, Cause His face to shine upon us. Selah.
Psa 67:2 For Your way to be known on earth, Your deliverance among all nations.
Psa 67:3 Let the peoples praise You, O Elohim, Let all the peoples praise You.
Psa 67:4 Let the nations be glad and sing for joy! For You judge the peoples uprightly, And lead the nations on earth. Selah.
Psa 67:5 Let the peoples praise You, O Elohim; Let all the peoples praise You.
Psa 67:6 The earth shall give her increase; Elohim, our own Elohim, blesses us!
Psa 67:7 Elohim blesses us! And all the ends of the earth fear Him!
Day Forty-Two | Yehovah & His People (Part VI) Psalm 105:1-11
Psa 105:1 Give thanks to Yehovah! Call upon His Name, Make known His deeds among the peoples.
Psa 105:2 Sing to Him, sing praise to Him; Speak of all His wonders.
Psa 105:3 Make your boast in His set-apart Name; Let the hearts rejoice of those seeking ????.
Psa 105:4 Seek Yehovah and His strength; Seek His face always.
Psa 105:5 Remember His wonders which He has done, His miracles, and the right-rulings of His mouth,
Psa 105:6 O seed of A?raham His servant, Children of Ya?aqo?, His chosen ones!
Psa 105:7 He is Yehovah our Elohim; His right-rulings are in all the earth.
Psa 105:8 He has remembered His covenant forever, The Word He commanded, for a thousand generations,
Psa 105:9 The covenant He made with A?raham, And His oath to Yits?aq,
Psa 105:10 And established it to Ya?aqo? for a law, To Yisra’?l – an everlasting covenant,
Psa 105:11 Saying, “To you I give the land of Kena?an, The portion of your inheritance.”
WEEK SEVEN | 7
Today is the first day of the seventh week of seven weeks. Today is the forty-third day of the counting of fifty days from the day of the waving of the Omer on the morrow after the Sabbath.
Psa 67:1 Elohim does favour us and bless us, Cause His face to shine upon us. Selah.
Psa 67:2 For Your way to be known on earth, Your deliverance among all nations.
Psa 67:3 Let the peoples praise You, O Elohim, Let all the peoples praise You.
Psa 67:4 Let the nations be glad and sing for joy! For You judge the peoples uprightly, And lead the nations on earth. Selah.
Psa 67:5 Let the peoples praise You, O Elohim; Let all the peoples praise You.
Psa 67:6 The earth shall give her increase; Elohim, our own Elohim, blesses us!
Psa 67:7 Elohim blesses us! And all the ends of the earth fear Him!
Day Forty-Three | Yehovah’s Graciousness Psalm 106:1-5
Psa 106:1 Praise Yah! Oh, give thanks to Yehovah, For He is good! For His loving-commitment is everlasting.
Psa 106:2 Who does relate the mighty acts of Yehovah? Or declare all His praise?
Psa 106:3 Blessed are those who guard right-ruling, Who do righteousness at all times!
Psa 106:4 Remember me, O Yehovah, in the acceptance of Your people; Visit me with Your deliverance,
Psa 106:5 To see the good of Your chosen ones, To rejoice in the gladness of Your nation, To make my boast with Your inheritance.
Today is the second day of the seventh week of seven weeks. Today is the forty-fourth day of the counting of fifty days from the day of the waving of the Omer on the morrow after the Sabbath.
Psa 67:1 Elohim does favour us and bless us, Cause His face to shine upon us. Selah.
Psa 67:2 For Your way to be known on earth, Your deliverance among all nations.
Psa 67:3 Let the peoples praise You, O Elohim, Let all the peoples praise You.
Psa 67:4 Let the nations be glad and sing for joy! For You judge the peoples uprightly, And lead the nations on earth. Selah.
Psa 67:5 Let the peoples praise You, O Elohim; Let all the peoples praise You.
Psa 67:6 The earth shall give her increase; Elohim, our own Elohim, blesses us!
Psa 67:7 Elohim blesses us! And all the ends of the earth fear Him!
Day Forty-Four | In Praise of Yehovah Psalm 111:1-10
Psa 111:1 Aleph Praise Yah! I thank Yehovah with all my heart, B?t In the company of the straight, and of the congregation.
Psa 111:2 Gimel Great are the works of Yehovah, Dalet Searched for by all who delight in them.
Psa 111:3 H? Splendour and greatness are His work, Waw And His righteousness stands forever.
Psa 111:4 Zayin He has made His wonders to be remembered; ?et Yehovah shows favour and is compassionate.
Psa 111:5 Tet He has given food to those who fear Him; Yod He remembers His covenant forever.
Psa 111:6 Kaph He has shown His people the power of His works, Lamed To give to them the inheritance of the nations.
Psa 111:7 Mem The works of His hands are truth and right-ruling, Nun All His orders are trustworthy,
Psa 111:8 Samec They are upheld forever and ever, Ayin Performed in truth and straightness.
Psa 111:9 Pe He sent redemption to His people, Tsadi He has commanded His covenant forever. Qoph Set-apart and awesome is His Name.
Psa 111:10 Resh The fear of Yehovah is the beginning of wisdom, Shin All those doing them have a good understanding. Taw His praise is standing forever.
Today is the third day of the seventh week of seven weeks. Today is the forty-fifth day of the counting of fifty days from the day of the waving of the Omer on the morrow after the Sabbath.
Psa 67:1 Elohim does favour us and bless us, Cause His face to shine upon us. Selah.
Psa 67:2 For Your way to be known on earth, Your deliverance among all nations.
Psa 67:3 Let the peoples praise You, O Elohim, Let all the peoples praise You.
Psa 67:4 Let the nations be glad and sing for joy! For You judge the peoples uprightly, And lead the nations on earth. Selah.
Psa 67:5 Let the peoples praise You, O Elohim; Let all the peoples praise You.
Psa 67:6 The earth shall give her increase; Elohim, our own Elohim, blesses us!
Psa 67:7 Elohim blesses us! And all the ends of the earth fear Him!
Day Forty-Five | The Happiness of a Good Person Psalm 112:1-10
Psa 112:1 Aleph Praise Yah! Blessed is the man, Who fears Yehovah, B?t Who has greatly delighted in His commands.
Psa 112:2 Gimel Mighty in the earth shall be his seed, Dalet The generation of the straight ones shall be blessed.
Psa 112:3 He Wealth and riches are in his house, Waw And his righteousness is standing forever.
Psa 112:4 Zayin Light has risen in the darkness to the straight ones, Those showing favour, ?et The compassionate, And the righteous.
Psa 112:5 Tet Good is a man showing favour and lending, Yod He sustains his matters in right-ruling.
Psa 112:6 Kaph For he is never shaken; Lamed The righteous is remembered forever.
Psa 112:7 Mem He is not afraid of an evil report. Nun His heart is steadfast, trusting in ????.
Psa 112:8 Same? His heart is upheld, he is not afraid, Ayin While he looks on his adversaries.
Psa 112:9 P? He scattered abroad, He gave to the poor, Tsadi His righteousness is standing forever. Qoph His horn is exalted with esteem.
Psa 112:10 R?sh The wrong one sees it and shall be vexed; Shin He gnashes his teeth and shall melt. Taw The desire of the wrong ones does perish.
Today is the fourth day of the seventh week of seven weeks. Today is the forty-sixth day of the counting of fifty days from the day of the waving of the Omer on the morrow after the Sabbath.
Psa 67:1 Elohim does favour us and bless us, Cause His face to shine upon us. Selah.
Psa 67:2 For Your way to be known on earth, Your deliverance among all nations.
Psa 67:3 Let the peoples praise You, O Elohim, Let all the peoples praise You.
Psa 67:4 Let the nations be glad and sing for joy! For You judge the peoples uprightly, And lead the nations on earth. Selah.
Psa 67:5 Let the peoples praise You, O Elohim; Let all the peoples praise You.
Psa 67:6 The earth shall give her increase; Elohim, our own Elohim, blesses us!
Psa 67:7 Elohim blesses us! And all the ends of the earth fear Him!
Day Forty-Six | The Reward of Obedience Psalm 128:1-6
Psa 128:1 Blessed are all who fear Yehovah, Who walk in His ways.
Psa 128:2 You shall eat the labour of your hands. Be blessed, and let it be well with you.
Psa 128:3 Let your wife be As a fruit-bearing vine within your house, Your sons like olive plants all around your table.
Psa 128:4 Look, so shall the man be blessed Who fears Yehovah.
Psa 128:5 Yehovah shall bless you out of Tsiyon, And let you see the good of Yerushalayim All the days of your life,
Psa 128:6 And let you see your children’s children! Peace be upon Yisra’?l!
Today is the fifth day of the seventh week of seven weeks. Today is the forty-seventh day of the counting of fifty days from the day of the waving of the Omer on the morrow after the Sabbath.
Psa 67:1 Elohim does favour us and bless us, Cause His face to shine upon us. Selah.
Psa 67:2 For Your way to be known on earth, Your deliverance among all nations.
Psa 67:3 Let the peoples praise You, O Elohim, Let all the peoples praise You.
Psa 67:4 Let the nations be glad and sing for joy! For You judge the peoples uprightly, And lead the nations on earth. Selah.
Psa 67:5 Let the peoples praise You, O Elohim; Let all the peoples praise You.
Psa 67:6 The earth shall give her increase; Elohim, our own Elohim, blesses us!
Psa 67:7 Elohim blesses us! And all the ends of the earth fear Him!
Day Forty-Seven | A Prayer For Help Psalm 130:1-8
Psa 130:1 Out of the depths I have cried to You, O Yehovah.
Psa 130:2 O Yehovah, hear my voice! Let Your ears be attentive To the voice of my prayers.
Psa 130:3 O Yah, if You should watch crookednesses, O Yehovah, who would stand?
Psa 130:4 But with You there is forgiveness, That You might be feared.
Psa 130:5 I looked to Yehovah, My being has looked, And for His word I have waited.
Psa 130:6 My being looks to Yehovah More than those watching for morning, watching for morning.
Psa 130:7 O Yisra’?l, wait for Yehovah; For with Yehovah there is loving-commitment. And with Him is much redemption,
Psa 130:8 For He shall redeem Yisra’?l From all his crookednesses.
Today is the sixth day of the seventh week of seven weeks. Today is the forty-eighth day of the counting of fifty days from the day of the waving of the Omer on the morrow after the Sabbath.
Psa 67:1 Elohim does favour us and bless us, Cause His face to shine upon us. Selah.
Psa 67:2 For Your way to be known on earth, Your deliverance among all nations.
Psa 67:3 Let the peoples praise You, O Elohim, Let all the peoples praise You.
Psa 67:4 Let the nations be glad and sing for joy! For You judge the peoples uprightly, And lead the nations on earth. Selah.
Psa 67:5 Let the peoples praise You, O Elohim; Let all the peoples praise You.
Psa 67:6 The earth shall give her increase; Elohim, our own Elohim, blesses us!
Psa 67:7 Elohim blesses us! And all the ends of the earth fear Him!
Day Forty-Eight | A Call For the Universe To Praise Yehovah Psalm 148:1-14
Psa 148:1 Praise Yah! Praise Yehovah from the heavens, Praise Him in the heights!
Psa 148:2 Praise Him, all His messengers; Praise Him, all His hosts!
Psa 148:3 Praise Him, sun and moon; Praise Him, all you stars of light!
Psa 148:4 Praise Him, heavens of heavens, And you waters above the heavens!
Psa 148:5 Let them praise the Name of Yehovah, For He commanded and they were created.
Psa 148:6 And He established them forever and ever, He gave a law and they pass not beyond.
Psa 148:7 Praise Yehovah from the earth, You great sea creatures and all the depths,
Psa 148:8 Fire and hail, snow and clouds, Stormy wind that does His word,
Psa 148:9 The mountains and all hills, Fruit tree and all cedars,
Psa 148:10 Wild beasts and all cattle, Creeping creatures and flying birds,
Psa 148:11 Sovereigns of the earth and all peoples, Rulers and all judges of the earth,
Psa 148:12 Both young men and maidens, Old men and children.
Psa 148:13 Let them praise the Name of Yehovah, For His Name alone is exalted, His splendour is above the earth and heavens.
Psa 148:14 He also lifts up the horn of His people, The praise of all His lovingly-committed ones; Of the children of Yisra’?l, A people near to Him. Praise Yah!
Today is the seventh day of the seventh week of seven weeks. Today is the forty-ninth day of the counting of fifty days from the day of the waving of the Omer on the morrow after the Sabbath. Today is the seventh Sabbath of seven Sabbaths. Today completes the seventh week of seven weeks.
Psa 67:1 Elohim does favour us and bless us, Cause His face to shine upon us. Selah.
Psa 67:2 For Your way to be known on earth, Your deliverance among all nations.
Psa 67:3 Let the peoples praise You, O Elohim, Let all the peoples praise You.
Psa 67:4 Let the nations be glad and sing for joy! For You judge the peoples uprightly, And lead the nations on earth. Selah.
Psa 67:5 Let the peoples praise You, O Elohim; Let all the peoples praise You.
Psa 67:6 The earth shall give her increase; Elohim, our own Elohim, blesses us!
Psa 67:7 Elohim blesses us! And all the ends of the earth fear Him!
Day Forty-Nine | A Prayer of Thanksgiving Psalm 138:1-8
Psa 138:1 I give You thanks with all my heart; Before the mighty ones I sing praises to You.
Psa 138:2 I bow myself toward Your set-apart H??al, And give thanks to Your Name For Your loving-commitment and for Your truth; For You have made great Your Word, Your Name, above all.
Psa 138:3 On the day I called You did answer me, You made me bold with strength in my being.
Psa 138:4 Let all the sovereigns of the earth Give thanks to You, O Yehovah, When they shall hear the words of Your mouth.
Psa 138:5 And let them sing of the ways of Yehovah, For great is the esteem of Yehovah.
Psa 138:6 Though Yehovah is exalted, He looks on the humble; But the proud He perceives from a distance.
Psa 138:7 Though I walk in the midst of distress, You revive me; You stretch out Your hand Against the wrath of my enemies, And Your right hand saves me.
Psa 138:8 Yehovah does perfect for me. O Yehovah, Your loving-commitment is everlasting. Do not forsake the works of Your hands.
From Light or from Death
From Light or from Death: What the Animals Reveal
Shane Diltz shared this little gem in our SM Mishphocha Fellowship group on Telegram this week. If you are not part of this group, please come join us. here’s the link https://t.me/+7KGr85Z7owI1ZWYx We used this group to communicate during the week, sometimes continuing the midrash and sometimes sharing teachings, music, or news.
The author of this post is unknown.
New Moon
New Moon
The Wheat is Ready NOW!!!
The Wheat is Ready NOW!!!
Why Do We Silage Wheat?
Why Do We Silage Wheat?
Repost from April 6, 2024
I know most of you reading this have not grown up on a farm. The closest some of you have been to a farm is when you buy a bag of milk, a box of Cornflakes, or Cheerios. I am not making fun of you, but I understand why some do not grasp what we teach here. But I will try to help you to understand.
Last Sabbath, March 30th, 2024, was the 28th day of counting the Omer. Our first day of counting was on March 3, 2024. March 31, 2024, was Wave Sheaf Day for some people. It was then their first day of counting the Omer. For others, Wave Sheaf Day is not until April 28.
Then from each of these Wave Sheaf Days you must now count 50 days until the first of the Wheat or the Yom HaBikkerim wheat harvest begins.
So, Shavuot will be on April 21 for us, May 19 for the second group, and June 16 for the third group.
Yes, we believe in the seven species coming to fruition at the proper time, ready to be the FIRST FRUITS OFFERING. Shavuot, you are to offer the first fruits of the wheat harvest in the form of two loaves of bread with leaven in them.
I received a picture last Sabbath, and we have had others of the wheat fields being cut on March 29 for silage.
The following picture taken by יפעת ינוקא
Why would a farmer plant wheat, which is what this crop is, and then cut it before it was 100% ripe? Look at the tractor. It is not a combine for harvesting wheat. It is a tractor for mower or cutting the crop and putting it in rows to dry out. Why is he doing this?
After spending all that money to plant the field with wheat, why on earth waste it on silage?
Allow me to share a study about the nutrient value of silage at various stages of growth. Go to the charts at the link if you want to see more.
Typical recommendations for harvesting cereal small grains for silage have been an issue for many years. If the main goal is to maximize silage nutritive value, without considering DM yield then, the recommendation has been to harvest at boot stage. On the other hand, if the main goal is to maximize yield without sacrificing nutritive value, then the recommendations is to harvest at soft-dough stage. Harvesting at boot stage DM yield is lower by 31% (7.4 Ton/ha) relative to soft-dough stage. These recommendations have been developed from the agronomic standpoint and laboratory analysis, without feeding to dairy cows (Contreras- Govea et al., 2006; Coblentz et al., 2018).
In a recent study conducted by Randby et al. (2019), whole wheat was harvested at two maturity stages, early dough and soft to hard dough, and then baled and wrapped in plastic without additives for a minimum of 90 days. After a period of fermentation, bales were frozen and kept in the freezer until the feeding trial started. Before starting of the trial, half of the bales from each maturity stage were processed to reduce the particle size of the kernels. Then from each part of the wheat silage at each maturity stage, processed and no-processed, 4 treatments total, were formulated the four diets.
Whole wheat silage was offered ad libitum as the only forage, plus 7.5 kg/d of supplemental concentrate to midlactation dairy cows (average of 155 DIM and 22.1 milk kg/d). Many data for different parameters were collected from this study, but the main purpose of this interpretation is to highlight differences between the whole wheat maturity stages and the effect on cow’s performance.
The results indicated that there were not effects of wheat processing on any of the nutritive value parameters. Therefore, unprocessed and processed values were averaged (Table 1). Whole wheat nutritive value, protein, NDF, ADF, and in vitro digestibility were similar between the two maturity stages, which differs from previous studies, where typically NDF and ADF increase and digestibility decrease as maturity progress. On the hand, starch content was greater on the soft dough stage than on early dough. Such small difference between the nutritive value of the two wheat silages could explain the similar cow’s performance, even the greater DM intake and milk yield of cows fed soft dough wheat, which had greater starch content.
In summary, whole wheat silage harvested in either early dough or soft dough stage can be fed to midlactation dairy cows without precluding cow’s performance. However, a different cow’s performance could be expected from early lactating cows.
When is the best time to harvest wheat silage, so that it is best for the dairy cows?
The fiber, energy, protein, calcium and phosphorus data of Tables 1 and 2 and Figure 1 indicate that the best time to cut wheat as a forage for dairy cows is from boot to early head. At these two stages, energy was 68 to 76 therms per 100 pounds and crude protein was about 15 to 21 percent. The high producing cow should be getting about 70 therms of energy per 100 pounds dry matter and 15 percent crude protein, according to National Research Council recommendations. Thus, wheat for silage cut by boot or early head will contain enough energy and protein when fed in combination with a balanced grain ration to sustain high milk production.
Harvest probably should begin when the wheat just reaches the boot stage; if harvest proceeds quickly without interruptions from weather, etc., the last silage cut should be in the early head stage. Letting wheat progress to mid-head decreases energy and crude protein and creates a need for greater supplementation. Figure 1 illustrates this point: Two horizontal lines represent energy and protein requirements of the high producer. Wheat cut at boot and early head has energy and protein content above levels required for high producers. However, cows cannot eat enough wheat silage cut at boot and early head to meet energy requirements, and concentrates will be needed. Wheat cut at mid-head and later stages is below energy and protein requirements for high producers.
Although greater yields most likely would result if wheat is left to mature to the late head, milk, dough or seed stages, the wheat has less energy and protein (about 50 therms per 100 pounds and 8 to 10 percent crude protein). This is no better than average hay. Cows are not likely to produce at their maximum when consuming wheat forage cut later than early head.
On February 5, 2024, Marina Levi posted this picture on Facebook of the wheat just coming out of the boot around the Gaza Strip area. In the video on Instagram, you can see that the rest of the field does not have many heads coming out at this time. If we use the FEEKE’S chart above and then add 50 days to the Flowering stage, which is a 10.5 on the Feekes Scale, we will end up on March 25, 58 + 50 = 108 on the scale. If we use the scale with the heads of wheat just coming out of the boot, Feeke’s 10.1, then we end up on Feeke’s scale at the 100-day part of the scale on March 25, as well.
This next picture was taken by Marina Levi and posted on Facebook on March 10, 2024, from the Gaza Strip area. You can see the heads are heavier and beginning to lean, changing from green to a golden tinge. These heads are well past the flowering stage and somewhere around Feeke’s stage 11, which is about 75 days, give or take a few days. If you look closely, you can also see some of the stocks turning brown. According to the Feekes scale if we add 25 more days to this date the wheat will be 100 days and ready on about April 3, 2024.
Marina works in agriculture for many different farmers, so she has a wide variety of experience in everything from wheat to potatoes to oranges and avocados. She does it all by working on many farms, and we can see the state of the land everywhere in the south where she is working.
In the next two pictures, the wheat is being cut for silage. It is not left to dry out very much in the fields to keep as many of the nutrients in the wheat silage as possible, which is going to be used for Dairy Cow feed, as I shared with you above. It is cut after it heads and before it turns into a solid seed. It is cut in the dough range, approximately from about 10.5 to 11.2 or the 58 to 80 day range on the Feeke’s scale.
Last week, we posted our cover picture of the wheat in the early stages of golden. I will post it again below. They are from the Megiddo area and taken on March 28 and 29, 2024, by יפעת ינוקא
What stage would you put this wheat at? Notice the stems are now turning golden. Using Feeke’s Scale, it has to be past the flowering stage of 10.5 or 58 days. I would say it is past the first stage of ripening and about Feeke’s 11.2, whereas Feeke’s 11.4 is harvest-ready. Can you see this?
So here is the problem as of this day, March 31, as I prepare this newsletter for the next Sabbath on April 6.
There is one group of brethren who are just now (March 31, 2024) keeping Wave Sheaf Day for the Barley. Randy and I confirmed the barley was Aviv on March 3, 2024. They strongly disagreed. Yet here we are when they claim it to be the time when the barley is to be harvested, and we can see the wheat is almost ready. In fact, in Brian Convery’s report of March 26, 2024, he stated this referring to the pictures he had posted:
Now notice what we no longer see growing in them. Correct, no more wild barley towering above them. It has already shattered and fallen to the earth.
He is telling you the barley has already shattered and reseeded itself. You are not allowed to harvest the barley until Wave Sheaf Day, which for him is March 31, the night before. If the barley is already shattering, then you are a month too late in your declaration. It is no longer the FIRST FRUITS that you bring to the Temple, but the last fruits, like Cain did, which we showed you in our video two weeks ago.
On Friday, March 29, 2024, Brian posted the following:
Just think Wavesheaf day is only two more days away so lets check on the imminent start to the Harvest.Yifat and Elad are in agreement: the domestic barley and wheat are ready to bundle into sheaves on Sunday or when the folks get back from the Feast of UB.In the third photo I have circled some of the last remnants of wild barley growing with their sisters the barley and their cousins the wheat that are still to be found in this region. Remember earlier in the year how much wild barley was towering over their relatives in these fields in Galed.
He is telling you that both the barley and the wheat are ready to harvest. WHAT? If March 31 is Wave Sheaf Day, then the first fruits of barley are to be waved, not wheat, and most definitely not both together. This is another indication that he is one month too late in timing the feasts this year.
On March 30, 2024, Brian posted the following comment. Please stop and think about what he is stating here for the higher elevations in the north. Then, what does this mean for the lower elevation in the south near Re’im? Randy and I reported the Barley Aviv on March 3, 2024.
Good Morning Brethren and a happy Sabbath rejuvenation to you.With this being day 5 in our keeping of the days of UB and Wavesheaf Day taking place tomorrow we thought it a good time to post some of the barley and wheat fields in the high elevations in the Center and the North being cut for hay. These are not silage operations. The hay will be dried in the field for a number of days being turned at least once to insure no moisture left in it. Once again this is barley and wheat as we have talked about in depth for those who have ears to listen. (first 5 pictures)All of these locations have reached the dough stages due to the intense sun, heat, and wind Father has applied to it and is continuing to apply to the Land. Yes, even in the high elevations and in the North rim of the Jezreel Valley.
As of this writing, March 31, 2024, those of us who kept Wave Sheaf Day on March 3, 2024, now have three more weeks or 21 days until the first of the wheat harvest can be offered to Yehovah. Anyone with honest eyes can see that the wheat is headed and starting to turn golden. It is on the Feeke’s scale somewhere in the 11 stage. It is 25 days until it reaches maturity, and I am only looking for 21 more days until Shavuot on April 21, 2024. HMMM. I wonder if we might just be right about keeping Passover last month.
Those keeping Wave Sheaf Day on March 31 now must count 50 days to the Shavuot Wheat First Fruits harvest, which, as we said for them, is now May 19 or 50 days from March 31. Trouble is, as Brian has testified, the wheat is now ripe. It is ripe now, according to Brian. So, the FIRST FRUITS are ripe now, and in 50 days, they will no longer be the first fruits, but they will be leftovers that they will present to Yehovah. Again, according to what Cain offered, this will not be acceptable.
But then there are the other groups who are keeping Passover about the same time as Hillel, based on the testimony of Yoel and Devorah who will be keeping it at that time. Brian is stating the barley is already shattered and not to be seen now. They will have none by the time they keep Wave Sheaf Day on April 28. And then 50 days after this is June 16. That is a full 10 weeks, or 70 days from now. Look at the pictures of the harvesting going on now. What will be left by April 22?
If Feeke’s scale shows us the wheat is somewhere around stage 11 now, with at most 25 days more until maturity, then where will the wheat be in the south in 70 days?
Then again on Sunday March 31, Brian posted the following comment:
Some keep asking about the wild barley. I simple tell them to go back and follow along for the past month of posts and you will be able to chew on all the facts. Most of the wild in 2 of the grain growing regions has already dispersed their seeds, both goat grass and acceptable wild.
He again tells you there is no barley available for Wave Sheaf Day because it has already shattered. This is a clear indication he is one month late. None of the pictures he posts belong to him but come from others on the Facebook page about Nature in Israel https://www.facebook.com/groups/1629688417246907
YOu can lead a horse to water but you can’t make them drink. You can provide all the facts to the world, but you can’t make a person think. We need many more critical thinkers watching and looking for the first of the seven species to be ripe at the proper times. Join this group on Facebook and watch and see the beauty of the land at the same time. https://www.facebook.com/groups/1629688417246907
Brian also posted this picture, which is from the Megiddo area and taken on March 28 and 29, 2024, by יפעת ינוקא
The first two of the Seven Species have come right on time. We are watching for the completion of the wheat cycle and then in two months time the first of the grapes. This would be from June 8 to July 7, 2024. This is the 5th month when the 10 spies brought back the large bunch of grapes.
Num 13:23 And they came to the valley of Eshcol and cut from there a branch with one cluster of grapes. And they carried it between two men upon a staff, and some of the pomegranates and of the figs.
Num 13:24 The place was called the valley of Eshcol because of the cluster of grapes which the sons of Israel cut down from there.
When they returned with the fruit of the land, they also brought an evil report. This is when the 9th of Av curse was given to them to wander in the wilderness for 40 years.
April 1, 2024: Look at this Stalk of Wheat.
Then, once you look at this one stalk, look at the fields behind it. This is taken by a lady working in agriculture in various forms around the Gaza Strip area. Randy and I declared the Barley Aviv and Wave Sheaf Day in the same area on March 3, 2024. Now, the wheat is turning golden yellow. By the time you read this, we will have just two more weeks to offer the first of the first fruits of wheat on Sunday, April 21. On April 22, many of the Kariates will be offering their barley, or the last fruits, for their Wave Sheaf Day.
The picture is taken by Marina Furman-Levi in the Gaza strip March 31, and posted April 1, 2024 on Facebook.
Some are accusing me of presenting a false picture, stating that this does not count because it is domestic wheat. Yes it is domestic wheat. What else did they plant? They did not plant wild wheat nor did they harvest wild wheat. It is a Takanot.
Some have proposed that we must only use wild emmer wheat to harvest at Shavuot. I also went along with this for a time. The trouble is no one in Israel plants it or harvests it. The reason is simple.
Although cultivated in ancient Egypt, wild emmer is not cultivated for human consumption in recent history,[7] perhaps owing to the difficulty with which the chaff is separated from the seed kernels, formerly requiring the spikes to be pounded with mortar and pestle.[10]
(7) Dalman, Gustaf (2020). Nadia Abdulhadi-Sukhtian (ed.). Work and Customs in Israel, volume II. Vol. 2 (Agriculture). Translated by Robert Schick. Ramallah: Dar Al Nasher. pp. 288–289. ISBN 978-9950-385-84-9.
(10) Amar, Zohar (2015). Flora and Fauna in Maimonides’ Teachings (in Hebrew). Kfar Darom. pp. 96–97. OCLC 783455868.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Emmer#cite_note-Dalman2020-7
The wheat used today for bread (Triticum Aestivum), originates from wild wheat, and is one of the most important crops in the world today, along with corn and rice. It originally developed in the Fertile Crescent, (the land from ancient Mesopotamia (Iraq of today) to Egypt, including Israel. Wheat is the first crop listed in the seven species of Israel, the “Land of wheat and barley and vines and figs and pomegranates, a land of olive oil and honey” (Exodus 8:8) and the many different names that the Torah uses to describe wheat in its various stages of growth and development indicate how important wheat is seen to be for mankind.
https://www.neot-kedumim.org.il/index-plant-of-the-month/wild-wheat/
When you create a Takanot or Mai’sim you are adding to the Torah. Yehovah is asking us to gather the first fruits to the land. the First Fruits of the seven species and to give them to Him.
I am not attacking any of the barley searchers for their beliefs. It has nothing to do with me or anyone else. It all has to do with serving Yehovah and keeping HIs feasts at the proper time. I have what I beleoive to be a proper understanding. Others have a different view. That does not make me hate them. BUt it does and has caused some brethren to hate me and my reports. This is sad. We are to wrestle with the word to discover the truth and then to repent and return to it when we learn it.
I do not think Devorah reads my newsletter. If she did she would not need to go out and do a search. One of the differences between us is the question about when can you harvest the barley. We have made our case and our video about this. Now you can read what she has to say about this matter and you decide.
Dear Friends,
As we’re preparing to carry out our 3rd Barley Inspection of the season next week, we would like to take this opportunity to respond to your questions regarding whether we’re permitted to harvest before Yom HaNafat HaOmer (The Day of the Wave Sheaf Offering).
We understand this question stems from “Yom HaNafat HaOmer (The Day of the Wave Sheaf Offering)”, being referred to as “when the sickle begins on the standing grain”, in Deuteronomy 16:9.And while some have interpreted this to mean that we can’t harvest before YomHaNafat HaOmer (The Day of the Wave Sheaf Offering), that’s not our understanding.
When look at this verse in its context (Dt 16:9-12), we see that it’s talking about ChagHaShavuot (Feast of Weeks), and seems to simply be using the phrase “when the sickle begins on the standing grain”, as a euphemism for Yom HaNafat HaOmer (The Day of the Wave Sheaf Offering), in order to point to the fact that the seven-week count (Lev 23:15), begins with us celebrating the start of the grain harvest(barley) (Lev 23:10), and culminates with us we celebrating the end of the grain harvest (wheat), on Chag HaShavuot (Feast of Weeks).
The understanding that we’re permitted to harvest before Yom HaNafat HaOmer (The Day of the Wave Sheaf Offering), is also supported by the fact that the omer, which we bring to the priest on Chag HaMatzot (Feast of Unleavened Bread), is from the harvest(Lev 23:10), and the fact that we need to harvest when the barley fields becomes ripe, or the heads will shatter (Ex 9:31, Mark 4:29).
Now, as you can imagine, those who believe this verse is insinuating that we’re prohibited from harvesting before Yom HaNafat HaOmer (The Day of the Wave Sheaf Offering), are forced to begin the year very early in the solar cycle, so that when the fields need to be harvested, they will be able to do so, and not lose their crop.
That’s why we see some people beginning the year with only an omer of Aviv Barley (what percentage of that “omer” is actually Aviv is questionable), from a single field, with poor soil health (others look at a cultivated strain of planted barley which ripens quickly), often times the field is in the desert (Negev), and some even think finding this by Yom HaNafat HaOmer (The Day of the Wave Sheaf Offering)even if it falls towards the end of the holiday, or it’s snowing in Jerusalem, are all fine for beginning the new year. Again, this is because if one believes we’re prohibited from harvesting before Yom HaNafat HaOmer (The Day of the Wave Sheaf Offering), they need to try and grab on to any sort of proof that it’s the beginning of the year, no matter how much of a stretch that may be.
In our opinion, those are not signs of the beginning of the year, and only exemplify that, the understanding that we can’t harvest before Yom HaNafat HaOmer (The Day of the Wave Sheaf Offering), is not correct.
In summation, there doesn’t appear to be a prohibition against harvesting before Yom HaNafat HaOmer (The Day of the Wave Sheaf Offering), however we are prohibited from eating from the harvest before the Wave Offering is brought (Lev 23:14).
We are planning on carrying out another Barley Inspection just prior to the upcoming New Moon Observation (9 April2024), so be sure to subscribe to our newsletter and social media
platforms, so you receive that report as soon as it comes out.
Allow me to share one really cool picture here with you next. Picture was taken April 3, 2024 by דוד דניאל Israel is so beautiful.
Wheat Silage Continued
Wheat Silage Continued
I wanted to show you how big the wheat silage operation is in Israel. This is to follow up on our explanation last week about when wheat is silaged. These three videos are from 2023.
In this next video pay attention to when the silage is harvested. It says when the Wheat is in the flowering to soft dough stage. Last week, we showed a number of pictures of the wheat fields being harvested for silage. This video just confirms what we were showing you with the Feekes charts and how much time it takes until the wheat is golden brown and ready to harvest for cereal grains.
This next video is from March 28, 2024 in Emek Hefer. Just do the math now that you know when silage is cut and how much longer until the wheat is ripe. About 25 to 45 days.
Takanot and Ma'asim
Takanot and Ma’asim
One of the very first teachings I heard Nehemia Gordon give was on the Greek Jesus and Hebrew Yehshua way back in the winters 2004/2005 in Lansing Michigan. He blew me away with this profound understanding.
A few years ago, we went to Israel with the purpose of demonstrating how many of the barley searchers, some of whom were Karaites, had themselves incorporated Takanot and Ma’asim into the searching of the barley to begin the year. This year again, with all the hullabaloo and people calling me a liar for using their own testimonies to show that the barley was indeed Aviv or with green ears as we stated, it is once again time to look at exactly what Takanot and Ma’asim are and whether or not we have added to the Torah things we should not have added.
I am specifically speaking about the following takanots:
- You must have brown harvest ready barely by the end of the 12th month.
- You must have a field full of brown, ripe, harvest-ready barley by the end of the 12th month.
- You must have the entire country with fields of brown riipe, harvest-ready barley by the end of the 12th month.
- You must have brown harvest ready barley by the 10th day of the 1st month.
- You must have roastable green ears of barley by the 10th day of the 1st month.
- You must have lambs birthing.
- You must have grapes budding.
- You must have Storks migrating overhead.
- You must have ….. make up your own takanot.
As we are now approaching the Feast of Shavuot this weekend, we must also now address another bunch of takanot, some of which I was once a part of. First of all, none of the Karaite searchers look for wheat to follow up on their barley reports. Here are some of the takanot that have been added to the first fruits of the wheat harvest:
- You must only use the Black Emmer Wheat because it was the one used in the Temple.
- You cannot use GMO wheat that is grown today.
Although Emmer wheat has been found int the pyramids along with other varieties, it is a leap of faith to claim that this is the only wheat used in the Temple. Today the emmer wheat is only found around the Galilee and Golan areas which are at higher elevations.
No GMO wheat is being grown commercially in the world, with the exception of Argentina. To claim that all wheat is GMO and not to be used except the Black Emmer variety is not true.
Genetically modified wheat is wheat that has been genetically engineered by the direct manipulation of its genome using biotechnology. As of 2020, no GM wheat is grown commercially, although many field tests have been conducted, with one wheat variety, Bioceres HB4 Wheat, obtaining regulatory approval from the Argentinean government.[1]
Today in 2024, the genetic source of all our wheat comes from the wild Emmer wheat variety. Durum wheat is the descendant of the Emmer variety.
Every spring in the Biblical Garden, religious school students sow two strains of ancient wheat, einkorn wheat, the ancestral mother of all wheat, and emmer wheat, the genetic source of modern wheat varieties. Wild einkorn often survives in sandy or rocky soils where other varieties of wheat fail. Emmer wheat has a higher yield with fatter kernels and more nutrients than einkorn. Rich in gluten, it was the variety commonly grown for bread-making throughout the eastern Mediterranean region and in Egypt during the Israelite sojourn there. The “bread of affliction,” the unleavened dough which the Israelites, in their haste, carried on their journey from slavery to freedom, was made from emmer wheat. Indigenous wild wheat grows today in the rocky soil of the Galilee and Golan Heights. The genetic sources of modern bread wheat stem from these ancient grains.
In our day, wheat provides 20% of the calories and proteins consumed around the globe. The impacts of population growth, political instability, and climate change are of urgent humanitarian concern. Scientists are investigating ways to improve the hardiness, nutritional value and yield of modern wheat as one way to address the hunger that stunts the lives of millions of children and adults. Much of this work is being done in Israel. The Wild Cereal Gene Bank at the University of Haifa’s Institute of Evolution provides a gene pool of over 3,000 wild wheat samples, sourced mostly from Israel. Scientists use this material in searching for useful genes that can be cross-bred into domesticated wheat to improve drought and disease resistance, protein content, and adaptability to varied soils and rainfall levels.
https://www.templesinairi.org/biblical-garden-blog/ancient-wheat-in-todays-world
The cross-pollination over millennia does not disqualify all wheat. That is just absurd and another takanot being added to the Torah.
Jacob crossbred sheep. Does this mean that we are only allowed to eat the breed of sheep that lived before Jacob for Passover? What is coming up next will be the grapes. All grape varieties are crossbred to get the best variety for what the farmer or winemaker is looking for. We can create a new takanot that only green grapes can be used because the red or purple grapes don’t count for some asinine reason yet to be made up.
Takanot
I explained to my Torah-keeping Christian friend that the ancient name was Pharisees. And actually Pharisees comes from the Hebrew word Perushim, which means “the separated ones”, and at the time of the Second Temple they were separated off from the mass of the nation. Later on, after the destruction of the Temple, they began to take over more and more Jewish institutions, and today their modern name is the Orthodox Rabbis or Orthodox Jews.126 https://www.
Now, this is something that Orthodox Rabbis actually proclaim very proudly, that they are a direct continuation of the Pharisees of Second Temple times. And in fact, in order to be called an “Orthodox Rabbi,” a person must have rabbinical ordination from a previous rabbi, and that rabbi from a previous rabbi, going back in an unbroken chain all the way back to the Pharisees of the 1st century. So, the Rabbis of today are literally a direct continuation, one rabbi to the next, from the Pharisees of the 1st century.
And Pharisaism, ancient Pharisaism and modern Orthodox Judaism are both founded upon five fundamental principles, five fundamental principles of Pharisaism, which I lovingly call, “the five iniquities of the Pharisees.” And before we go into the first principle of Pharisaism, and which is really the most foundational principle, I want to throw out a question to you: how many Torahs are there? How many Torahs? Very simple question; it’s not a trick question. How many Torahs are there?
Audience: One!
Nehemia: One Torah. But if you’re a Pharisee, there are two Torahs. And that’s your most fundamental doctrine and belief – that when Moses went up to Mount Sinai for forty days and forty nights, the Creator revealed to him two separate and distinct revelations: the written Torah and the Oral Torah. The written Torah is what you were referring to, the Five Books of Moses. That was the revelation that was written down. However, the second Torah according to the Pharisees, which is the Oral Torah, which is also known in English as the Oral Law, and they believe that God revealed to Moses this oral revelation which was transmitted from Moses to Joshua and so on and so on, down to the Pharisees of the 1st century, and even down to the rabbis of today.
Doctrine of the Oral Torah
Now, everything we’re going to learn today about Pharisaism is really predicated upon this concept of the Oral Law, the Oral Torah. If we don’t understand Oral Torah, we’re not going to understand anything else about Pharisaism. Everything else flows from that concept.
Now, the concept of the Oral Law is really an ancient concept. The first reference to it, the first datable historical reference, is an incident from the era of Shammai. Shammai… many of you may have heard of Hillel. Hillel was the author of the Seven Rules of Hillel. His sidekick was Shammai. And an ancient source tells us, “An incident with a certain gentile that came before Shammai.” The gentile said to Shammai, “How many Torahs do you Pharisees have? Shammai answered: We Pharisees have two! Two Torahs, the written Torah and the Oral Torah.”
So, this is an ancient concept that goes back to approximately at least 20 Before the Common Era, approximately 50 years before Yeshua’s ministry. And really, it probably goes back even a few hundred years before that. So, this is an ancient doctrine, and really, the most fundamental principle of Pharisaism is the theology or the doctrine of the two Torahs, the written Torah and the Oral Torah.
Now, the Pharisees explain that the written Torah is sort of an outline; they often give the analogy of a lecture. The notes that you’re writing down right now, those notes, that’s the written Torah. And the actual details, everything I’m saying, that’s the Oral Torah. And because of this, the Pharisees explain that the written Torah is completely incomprehensible without the Oral Torah. The Oral Torah completes the written Torah and really fills in all the details. You cannot understand the written Torah without the Oral Torah according to the Pharisees.
Now, one of the major changes in Pharisaism in the last 2,000 years is that the Oral Torah has actually been written down, and today it’s written down and contained in four collections of writings.
The first one of these to be written down was the Mishnah, which was written down around the year 200 of the Common Era. And it contains the collection of Pharisaical traditions and teachings and practices and customs and laws, and that’s really the backbone of the Oral Law.
The next thing to be written down was the Jerusalem Talmud, which was written down around the year 350 of the Common Era. You might think it was written in Jerusalem, but in fact it was written in Tiberias. It was called Jerusalem to give it more prestige. That was written down around the 350 of the Common Era. In the Jerusalem Talmud, it contains discussions of, “When the rabbi said X,Y,Z in the Mishnah, what were they talking about?” And it elaborates and discusses and examines the Mishnah.
The next thing to be written down is the Babylonian Talmud, which actually was written in Babylon as the name implies, around the year 500 of the Common Era. Finally, the last thing to be written down was the Midrash, which was written down over many hundreds of years, from around 200 up until the year 900 of the Common Era.
These four bodies of writings, these four collections, collectively are today what’s known as the Oral Law. Even though it was originally oral – in the time of Yeshua it was still oral – today, the Oral Law has been written down. And this is really the most fundamental principle of Pharisaism, the doctrine of the Oral Torah. Everything else we’re going to hear today about Pharisaism is predicated upon this.
Absolute Authority of the Rabbis
The second principle of Pharisaism is the absolute authority of the rabbis; the rabbis have absolute authority on earth to interpret Scripture. And this is epitomized by the saying in the Midrash, which we now know as part of the Oral Torah. In the Midrash it says, “Even if the Pharisees instruct you that right is left, or left is right, you must obey them.”
Well, what does that mean? What that means is if my rabbis tell me that this is my right hand, I have to obey them. By the way, it doesn’t say I have to believe them. I’m allowed to even say and know that the rabbis are factually wrong, but I must obey their authority because they have the absolute authority to interpret Scripture.
And in fact, when I was growing up, I was told that if the rabbi is wrong, the sin is upon him. But you, as the individual believer, cannot take the initiative to question the authority of the rabbi. If your rabbi tells you this, you must accept it and follow it.
Well, I really had a problem with this when I was growing up and I began to study the Torah, and I began to study the Talmud, the Oral Law, and I could see in the Torah that this was clearly the word of God. In the Torah we read, “And Yehovah spoke unto Moses, saying.” And we get to the Prophets, and we read, “Thus says Yehovah.” It’s clearly the word of God. And we get to the Talmud, and we read, “Rabbi Meir says this, but Rabbi Akiva disagrees and says that.” And I looked at this and I went to my rabbis, and I said, “Look, one is the word of God, the other is clearly the words of men. Shouldn’t we accept the word of God over the word of men, especially since they’re not consistent with each other?” And my rabbi said, “No, absolutely not! Although these things are spoken as the words of this rabbi or that rabbi, the actual content of their words were revealed to Moses on Mount Sinai.”
And I wasn’t convinced, and I came back, and I said, “Look, the way the rabbis are interpreting Scripture and the Oral Law, the way they’re interpreting the written Scripture is just not consistent with what it says in Scripture. And I can read, and I can see that’s not what it says.” And I said to them, “Shouldn’t we reject this Oral Law and just accept the written Scripture?” And my rabbi said to me, “No, absolutely not. You must not say such things. That’s what the Karaites say!”
And I said, “Who?” And I investigated and I found out throughout history there had always been Jews who only believed in the written Scripture, and they were called Karaites. Kara is the ancient Hebrew word for Scripture; Kara-ite is a follower of the Old Testament or the Hebrew Scriptures, and we’ll talk about that a little bit more later.
I really had a hard time with this Oral Law, and I just couldn’t accept it. One day, one of my rabbis sat down and he said, “Enough of questioning the authority of the rabbis, Nehemia. You must accept their authority.” And he began to tell me a very famous story, the story of Rabbi Eliezer, which is a foundational story in Rabbinical theology.
And the story of Rabbi Eliezer, it’s told in the Babylonian Talmud, and it goes as follows: Rabbi Eliezer was the greatest of the sages of his era. He was actually the teacher of Rabbi Akiva, who’s maybe one of the most famous rabbis that ever lived, so you can imagine how great Rabbi Eliezer was. And one day Rabbi Eliezer is in the Rabbinical Academy and he’s having a debate with all the otherrabbis on some minutiae of Rabbinical Law about whether a certain type of oven is ritually clean or ritually unclean. And Rabbi Eliezer says, “that oven is ritually clean”, and all the other rabbis say, “it’s ritually unclean”, and Rabbi Eliezer is trying to convince the other rabbis he’s right. He’s one and he’s against this mass of other rabbis.
And the Talmud explains that on that day, Rabbi Eliezer brought forth every argument in the world and he couldn’t convince the other rabbis he was right. He brought forth Scriptural arguments and rational arguments and he couldn’t convince them he was right. He doesn’t know what to do, he’s getting very frustrated, and finally he says, “I know what I can do to convince them, I’m going to invoke a miracle.” And Rabbi Eliezer shouts out, and he says, “If I’m right, let the trees prove it!” And at that moment they heard the snapping of wood, and all the rabbis ran outside, and they saw an entire orchard of trees being ripped from the roots and flying up in the air. And they looked at this and they said, “This is a miraculous occurrence. Rabbi Eliezer has invoked a miracle to prove he’s right, and the miracle has come to pass.” And they looked at this miracle and they turn to Rabbi Eliezer, and they say, “Sorry, Rabbi Eliezer, we don’t listen to trees.” Oh, boy! What’s he going to do? “You don’t listen to trees? I just brought a miracle!”
So, he says, “Okay, maybe we’re not quite understanding each other here,” and he says, “let’s try this again. I’m going to invoke a second miracle. If I’m right, let the river prove it!” And at that moment, they heard the rushing of the water. It was a very great river, and they run outside, and they see this mighty river begin to flow backwards, and they look at this and they say, “This is a miracle! A second miracle has now been invoked that Rabbi Eliezer has brought to prove he’s right. We’re very impressed.” They turn to Rabbi Eliezer, and they say, “Sorry Rabbi Eliezer, we don’t listen to rivers.” He’s brought two miracles and they’re not listening to what he’s saying. He’s brought Scriptural arguments and rational arguments and two miracles, and they won’t listen to him.
So, finally in desperation, he yells out and he says, “If I’m right, let the walls of the academy prove it!” And at that moment they heard the walls begin to shake and rumble. And the Talmud explains that the walls came to a 45-degree angle, collapsing in. Of course, if they’d fallen in the entire way, the story would have ended right here! And the rabbis look at these walls and realize they’ve almost been killed by these falling walls. And they turn to Rabbi Eliezer, and they say, “Wow! Three miracles! Now we’re really impressed. This can’t be a coincidence; this is clearly a series of miraculous events.” They turn to Rabbi Eliezer and say, “Sorry Rabbi Eliezer, we don’t listen to walls.” He doesn’t know what to do. Three miracles and they won’t accept his opinion; they won’t accept these proofs that he’s right.
And finally, in utter desperation he calls out and he says, “If I’m right, let heaven prove it!” And at that moment they heard the crack of thunder, followed by a voice, “Why do you dispute with Rabbi Eliezer? In all matters, the Law agrees with him.” And by the way, that’s an actual recording that was made at the time!
They’ve heard this voice calling out from heaven saying, “Rabbi Eliezer’s right, why are you arguing with him?” And they hear this and they’re very impressed. They turn to Rabbi Eliezer, and they say, “Scriptural evidence and three miracles and God calling down to us from heaven telling us you’re right,” and they turn to him and say, “we’re very impressed but sorry, we don’t listen to heaven.”
And as my rabbi was telling me this story, he opened up to me the Book of Deuteronomy, Deuteronomy chapter 30 verse 12. And there it actually says concerning the Torah, that the Torah is not in heaven, “it is not in heaven”. And these are the words that the rabbis said to Rabbi Eliezer, and they explained to him that God has no say in interpreting Scripture because the Torah is not in heaven. The Torah is here on earth, and the rabbis are the ones who have exclusive authority to interpret Scripture. God has no say in it.
And my rabbi turned to me as he was telling me this story and he said, “You see Nehemia? God Himself can’t question the interpretation of the rabbis. So, who are you to question their interpretation?” And as I was hearing this, I was in shock. And I have to tell you, for years I struggled with the Oral Law. It was very difficult for me, because my father was a rabbi, and many of my ancestors were prominent rabbis. The man after whom I’m named, Nehemia, was a famous rabbi in Chicago. And for me to break from this Oral Law, which had been the heritage of my ancestors, was very difficult for me. And for years I struggled with this, and I had doubts, and I wasn’t sure. But when I heard this story, I turned to my rabbi and I thanked him and I said, “Now I know this is not of God.”
Now the story actually has a continuation; it gets worse. The Talmud goes on… my rabbi didn’t tell me this part, but later, I read this directly out of the Talmud, and it tells about how, later on, after the faceoff between Rabbi Eliezer and the other rabbis, one of the rabbis named Rabbi Natan was wandering through the forest. And who does he meet in the forest? He meets the prophet, Elijah.
Of course, the rabbis believe that Elijah never died. If you’ve ever been to a Rabbinical Passover Seder, one of the things that you’ll notice very prominently, they’ll stop in the middle of telling the story of the Exodus and they’ll open up the door to let Elijah in.
Well, Rabbi Natan, according to the Talmud, actually met Elijah, and he said to him, “Elijah, when we said to God that the Torah is not in heaven,” and by the way, if you look at that passage where it says, “it is not in heaven” and you read two verses earlier, what it’s actually saying in the context is, “the Torah is not too difficult for you”. It’s saying there, “you have no excuse not to keep the Torah. It’s not too difficult, it’s not across the sea or in heaven that you have some excuse to say, ‘I need someone to go up to heaven to get it for me’. The Torah is not too difficult.” That’s what it actually says in Deuteronomy 30, but the rabbis only take those five words out of context. And Rabbi Natan asked Elijah, “What was God’s reaction when we said, ‘the Torah is not in heaven’?” And Elijah explains, according to the Talmud, that at that moment God laughed and said, “My sons have defeated me! My sons have defeated me!” And this appears in the Babylonian Talmud, the Tractate of Baba Metsia, page 59b.
The point of the story is, I don’t believe that God actually said those words as the Talmud claims. But the point of the story in the Talmud, whether the words were said or not, is that the rabbis have vanquished God; that the rabbis have absolute authority on earth to interpret Scripture, and the rabbis have defeated God in this sense. He has no say in how Scripture is to be interpreted on planet Earth. In heaven He can say whatever He wants, but down here on earth, the rabbis have absolute authority.
And this is a fundamental principle of Pharisaism – that you really can’t understand Pharisaism without understanding this concept.
Midrashic or Irrational Interpretation
Well, the third principle of Pharisaism is what I call Irrational Interpretation. The rabbis don’t call it that, they call it Midrashic Interpretation. This is sometimes translated into English as homiletical or hermeneutical interpretation. And what it does is it systematically ignores the language and context of Scripture. And the principle behind this method of interpretation, of this approach, is that Scripture is a divine code, and only the rabbis have the knowledge and authority and tools to decipher that divine code. And we’ve already seen an example of that with the words “it is not in heaven” from Deuteronomy 30. The rabbis took only those words “it is not in heaven” out of the context, disembodied them from the context, and imbued them with a meaning that was never intended, that God has no authority in how to interpret Scripture.
Let’s look at another example, a classic example of Midrashic interpretation, or irrational interpretation, Exodus 23 verse 2. There we read in the Torah, “You shall not go after the majority to do evil, neither shall you testify in a matter of strife, to incline after the majority to pervert justice.” What this means is that you must not follow what the majority says just because the majority says it. You must follow the truth, even if you’re the only one doing that. And if you’re testifying in a court case, you must not say that a certain person is guilty just because everybody says he’s guilty. You must testify the truth, even if you’re the lone voice of reason, because to do otherwise would be a perversion of justice.
Now, this is a very, very, important commandment in the Torah, that we must follow the truth and not the majority, not to be sheeple, following after the herd. But the rabbis take this verse, and of course, they have the absolute authority on earth to interpret Scripture, and using this authority, Scripture being a divine code, they arbitrarily take off words from the beginning and words from the end, and what they’re left with is the principle, “incline after the majority”.
And in fact, this is a very important principle in Pharisaism, when there was this debate between Rabbi Eliezer and the rabbis. Why was it so important for Rabbi Eliezer to convince the other rabbis that he was right? Why couldn’t he just say, “I’m a very wise man, you’re very wise men, let’s agree to disagree.” Why did he have to invoke miracles and have God calling out from heaven? Why couldn’t they just agree to disagree? Because the rabbis said to Rabbi Eliezer, “you must incline after the majority”. They said to him, “In Exodus 23:2, it has already been written that ‘you must incline after the majority.’ We’re the majority. You have to accept our opinion.” That’s why it was so important for him to convince them. If he can’t convince them, he has to accept this opinion that he knows to be factually untrue.
Now, what’s wrong with this? Who’s to say Scripture’s not a divine code? That’s what the rabbis would respond. They’d say, “Okay, we’re taking these words out of context, but that’s the original intent that God had when He gave the Torah. Who’s to say Scripture’s not a divine code?”
Well, I know Scripture is not a divine code because it tells us in Deuteronomy exactly how to interpret Scripture. Deuteronomy chapter 31 verse 12. It describes there a commandment that the Torah must be read out loud in a public reading. And there we’re told, “Gather the nation, the men, the women, the children, and the sojourner in your gates, in order that they hear, and in order that they learn and fear Yehovah your God and diligently do all the words of this Torah.” And the purpose of this public reading every seventh year of the entire Torah, from Genesis to the end of Deuteronomy, is so that Israelites would hear the Torah. By hearing the Torah, they would learn the Torah, and by learning the Torah, they would know to do the Torah.
It goes on in verse 13 and it explains, “And their children who did not know.” That seven-year-old boy who’s never heard the Torah before, it’s his first time, “their children who did not know, they shall hear and learn to fear Yehovah your God.” Now, this is very important, because what this means is that the way the ancient Israelites learned Torah was by hearing it. And actually, this is the way that God intended that the Torah be understood, by coming every seventh year and hearing it in the public reading. Someone who’s never heard Torah before, someone who does not know, will simply learn it by hearing it.
Now, once we realize that, we realize that you can’t take five words out of context, “it is not in heaven”, because when I’m hearing it, I’m hearing the entire passage, I’m hearing the entire verse. I can’t take two verses here and three words there and half a verse here, and proof text myself into an entire theology. I have to actually read Scripture within its context and look at all the evidence and all the context, not just taking a few words here and a few words there, because that’s what the ancient Israelites would have understood and heard when they heard the Torah read out loud every seventh year.
Now, why is it that they had to hear the Torah? Why couldn’t they simply sit in their houses and read Torah like we do today? Why did they have to actually hear it out loud, and come all the way to Jerusalem every seventh year? Well, the reason for that is that the average ancient Israelite did not have a copy of the Torah in his house. It took great wealth and resources to have a copy of the Torah in your house.
And in fact, there’s a specific law in Deuteronomy 17 that the Messiah, anointed King of Israel, must write for himself a copy of the Torah. And the reason he must write for himself a copy of the Torah is that if he doesn’t write for himself a copy of the Torah, he won’t have one. He can’t go to the store and buy one for $3. If he doesn’t write it out letter for letter, word for word, he simply won’t have one. And if he doesn’t have one, he can’t reign as a righteous king. As a righteous king of Israel he has to have the Torah at his side at all times, and that’s why Deuteronomy 17 has a specific law commanding the king to write a copy of the Torah.
Again, why did it take such great resources to make a copy of the Torah? Let’s remember, in ancient times if I wanted a copy of the Torah, I had to start off with an entire flock of sheep that I could slaughter in order to make parchment. Not everybody could afford to do this. I had to have barrels and barrels of ink in order to actually write the Torah. And bear in mind, you couldn’t go in ancient times to Office Depot and say, “I need thirty barrels of ink.” You had to actually have someone go out and produce the ink and produce the barrels. This was the whole industry just to write one book! And finally, maybe the most expensive part is, you had to have a scribe sit for at least a year and sit and copy letter for letter, word for word, in order to have a copy of the Torah for yourself.
So, the average Israelite simply did not have a copy of the Torah. He didn’t have the wealth or the resources to produce a copy of the Torah. And the Creator knew this, and that’s why He took into account and said that the way the average Israelite will learn Torah, the simple shepherd and farmer, is by simply hearing it every seventh year. Once we realize this, we realize that the way Scripture is intended to be understood is by looking at the language and the context. And that’s key to understanding the correct interpretation of Scripture, looking at the language and the context.
Now, this is actually a big challenge for us. We can’t just show up every seventh year and hear it, because we have certain challenges that ancient Israelites did not have. The first challenge we have is a linguistic challenge, the language. The Torah is not written in King James English, it’s actually written in Biblical Hebrew. The problem is that nobody today in the world speaks Biblical Hebrew. I’ve lived in Israel for twelve years and I’m fluent in Modern Hebrew, and I actually read Biblical Hebrew fluently, but nobody speaks Biblical Hebrew as their native tongue.
To give you an idea of what the difference is, it’s like the difference between the English you speak here today and the English of Chaucer. You could pick up the writings of Chaucer and you probably would understand a few words on each page, but unless you’re specifically trained to read that dialect of English, you won’t understand what Chaucer is saying. And that’s the challenge we have with Biblical Hebrew. We have to understand the language as it was originally spoken 3,500 years ago, the language that was spoken by the ancient Israelite shepherds and farmers that could simply show up and hear the Torah read and understand it.
So, we have to work a lot harder than they did. And that’s part of what it means to be in exile, to be thrown out of the Land of Israel and lose our language, to be scattered throughout the world. These are the things that we have to deal with being in exile.
The next thing we have to look at is the context. And we’ve already talked about textual context. That is, I can’t just take the words “it is not in heaven” and disembody them from the context. I have to look at the entire passage or I’m twisting what Scripture says. And there’s also historical context. Let me illustrate what I mean by this historical context with an example. Three times in the Torah we’re commanded, “Lo tevashel g’di b’chalev imo”, “You shall not boil a kid in its mother’s milk.” Three times that appears, word for word, jot for jot, tittle for tittle, the exact same commandment, three times. Three times.
Now, the rabbis, of course, look upon Scripture as a divine code, and when they hear three times, Exodus 23, “You shall not boil a kid in its mother’s milk”, Exodus 34, “You shall not boil a kid in its mother’s milk”, Deuteronomy 14, “You shall not boil a kid in its mother’s milk,” they hear that three times and they say, “Scripture is a divine code, and when codes have repeated things, it’s to encode extra hidden meaning. And when it appears, the same commandment three times, that actually indicates three different things.”
What are the three different things this indicates? Of course, only the rabbis have the authority to interpret what those three things are. The first one, according to the rabbis, is you shall not eat meat and milk together. The second time it says, “You shall not boil a kid in its mother’s milk”, what it really means is you shall not cook meat and milk together, and the third time it appears, it means you shall not even benefit from meat and milk cooked together. What do they mean by benefit? You may not even feed it to your dog.
Well, that’s how the Pharisees, the rabbis, look at it. When I hear three times that the Creator tells me, “You shall not boil a kid in its mother’s milk”, I first ask the question, “What would the ancient Israelite shepherd or farmer have understood if he heard these exact words repeated three times? If he was that boy, that seven-year-old boy who knew nothing?” Deuteronomy 31 verse 13, he didn’t know anything; what would he have understood? And I came to the conclusion after a linguistic and textual analysis that what I would understand from hearing this three times is “You shall not boil a kid in its mother’s milk!” It’s very clear! It has nothing to do with meat and milk!
Now, today we know that’s correct. We know that’s the correct interpretation, because archaeologists have uncovered ancient documents written by the Canaanites from a city in Syria called Ras Shamra which had ancient Canaanite writings, and there the Canaanites talk about how they have a fertility rite where they would boil a kid in the milk of its mother as a fertility rite for one of their goddesses. And so today we know that the reason the Torah forbade us from partaking in this pagan practice or forbade us from boiling a kid in the milk of its mother, is that this was an ancient pagan fertility custom or sacrifice, and that’s why the Torah doesn’t say “don’t eat meat and milk together” or “don’t boil meat and milk together”. Because it’s not talking about that, it’s talking about a very specific pagan fertility sacrifice of boiling the kid in the milk of its mother. It’s not even a dietary law. It’s a pagan sacrifice we’re forbidden from partaking in.
And every ancient Israelite, shepherd or farmer, would have known this. They interacted with the Canaanites, and they knew these pagans. They knew their ways, and they knew that they were sacrificing kids in the milk of their mothers, and the Torah’s coming to forbid them from doing that.
That’s the difference between interpreting Scripture as a divine code and actually interpreting Scripture in its context, according to its language and according to its historical context. And what this teaches us is that we have to use archaeology and history in order to uncover and try to get a better picture and understanding of what the Torah is commanding us. That’s the third principle of Pharisaism.
Sanctified Tradition
The fourth principle of Pharisaism is sanctified tradition, and in Hebrew this is called minhag, or “custom”. And there’s a principle in Pharisaism, “minhag yisreal torah hi”, “A custom of Israel is law”. And what that means is that a custom done over and over by an Israelite or a Jewish community over time becomes sanctified, and it becomes an actual law.
So, I mentioned today that I’m dressed as a modern-day Pharisee. I don’t actually dress this way normally; I’m dressed in the garb of a modern-day Pharisee to illustrate to you what it would mean to obey the Pharisees. And this is actually a sanctified outfit, a tradition that’s been sanctified over time. And if you go to Jerusalem or New York or certain parts of Chicago you’ll see people all over dressed like this because they’re following the sanctified tradition of their ancestors.
Now, what do we mean by a sanctified tradition? The classic example of a sanctified tradition is wearing the head covering, and right now I’m going to illustrate to you what it would mean not to follow the traditions of the Pharisees, the sanctified traditions. We’re going to peel away some of these man-made laws, some of these sanctified traditions. I’m going to take off the hat because this is a traditional Pharisee hat. I’m going to take off the hat and peel away a layer of tradition. And now I’m left wearing the kippah, the skullcap; and the kippah is a tradition that’s been sanctified over the last approximately 800 years. A thousand years ago there was no such thing as Jews wearing kippahs; it didn’t exist. There was no such custom like that. Approximately over the last 800 years this custom has been sanctified over time. And today it’s been so sanctified that there is an actual law with its own rules and regulations that the Pharisees teach, that you must wear the skull cap if you’re a male. And this is described in the Shulchan Aruch, which we’ve seen before as the modern universally accepted guide to Pharisaical living. And there it says about the kippah, the skullcap, “One may not walk four cubits with an uncovered head.” So, this is not just a folk custom, “Oh, I feel Jewish if I wear a kippah.” No! If you wear the kippah, you’re following this man-made law that’s been sanctified over time, and now it’s taking on its own rules and regulations. “One may not walk four cubits with an uncovered head.” Let’s see how that would work.
So, I’m going to take off my kippah, peel away another layer of tradition, and we’re going to see what this means. So, if I’m following the sanctified tradition I can walk one cubit, and I can walk a second cubit, and a third cubit, and if I walk that fourth cubit then I’m violating the laws of the Pharisees, this sanctified tradition.
There’s another law there, in the Shulchan Aruch, concerning the head covering. And there it says, “It is forbidden to pray with an uncovered head.” That’s very interesting, and I think that matter speaks for itself. But what you can see here is that this is not just a folk custom or tradition, this is something that has been sanctified over time and now is taking on its own rules and regulations.
Well, what’s wrong with that? Many people will say, “Well, it makes me feel good to wear a kippah. It makes me feel more Jewish, not just to wear the kippah, the skullcap, but to follow all these different traditions, even if I’m not Jewish by extraction. I feel good following these traditions, it makes me feel closer to the ancient roots.” What’s wrong with that? What’s wrong with adding new commandments, with sanctifying these traditions?
What’s wrong with it is that the Torah specifically forbids us from doing this! In Deuteronomy chapter 4 verse 2 it says, “You shall not add unto the matter which I command you today nor shall you diminish anything from it, to keep the commandments of Yehovah your God which I am commanding you!” There’s a specific prohibition in the Torah from adding to the Torah!
So, if we add these man-made laws, if we follow these sanctified traditions, we are partaking in adding to the Torah. Now, it’s very interesting here, because in the same breath that it forbids us from adding to the Torah, it forbids us from taking away from the Torah. So, to follow one of these sanctified traditions is no different than abolishing the Sabbath. Adding to the Torah, taking away, those are both a violation of this fundamental law in the Torah of adding or taking away from the Torah.
Now, this appears a second time. There’s a second witness to this, Deuteronomy 12:32. “All that I’m commanding you, you shall diligently do; you shall not add to it or diminish from it.” You must not add to the Torah or take away from the Torah. And the question becomes, if you follow these man-made laws, these sanctified traditions, who are you obeying? Who are you being obedient to? Are you being obedient to our Creator? Or are you following these man-made laws which are in addition to the Torah?
This appears a third time! Proverbs 30 verse 6, there we’re told, “Do not add unto His words, lest He reprove you and you be found a liar.” I don’t want God calling me a liar. I don’t want any part of that.
Enactmets (Takanot)
The fifth principle of Pharisaism is very similar to number four, and the fifth principle is the“commandments of men”, or “enactments”. In Hebrew, the takanot. The takanot, that’s the fifth principle of Pharisaism. Has anybody heard that word before, takanot? Is that familiar from anywhere? Yes? Okay. So, let’s all say it together, takanot!
Audience: Takanot!
Nehemia: Okay. So, takanot, these man-made laws, and these are actually called by the rabbis… there is another term for this, mitzvot derabanan, “commandments of our rabbis”. And the rabbis actually make a very clear distinction between laws that they derive from the Torah, albeit using their irrational method of interpretation, and laws that they derive simply by either tradition or by a Rabbinical enactment. And the truth is that sometimes they can’t distinguish between whether a certain law was established by tradition, by doing it over and over, or whether it was established by an actual rabbi sitting down and making a new enactment. And so really those are very related and similar categories. But there’s a very clear distinction between that and laws derived from the Torah even using their irrational methods of interpretation.
Now the classic example of takanot, or “commandments of our rabbis” is the washing of the hands. And because the Oral Law gives the rabbis the absolute authority to make these new enactments – they have a divine God-given right to make new enactments – because of that you make the blessing, “Blessed art thou Lord, King of the universe, who has sanctified us with His commandments, commanding us to wash the hands.” The rabbis know very well that God never commanded us to washthe hands, but what they mean by this is that God commanded you to obey the rabbis. By obeying the rabbis, you’re indirectly obeying God. And this is very interesting. What this means is every time you sit down to eat a meal and wash your hands, you’re actually proclaiming the God-given authority of the rabbis to make these enactments.
Now, how many people are thinking here, “I’m not going to do these Rabbinical enactments. They’re not from the Torah.” How many people are thinking that? Okay, we’ve got a good group of Pharisees here, most people are… How many people are thinking they’re not going to follow these man-made laws because they’re not from the Torah? Okay, that’s much better.
Now, this is what the Oral Law says to everyone who raised their hands. It says in the Midrash, which is part of the Oral Law, it says, “A person must not say, ‘I will not keep the commandment of the elders because they are not from the Torah.’” You must not say that. “The Almighty says to such a person,” now they’re literally putting words in God’s mouth, “The Almighty says to such a person, ‘No, My son! Rather all that they decree upon you, observe!’” And then it goes on, and now it quotes Deuteronomy 17:11, “As it is written, ‘According to the instruction which they teach you.’”
Now, you could look up in Deuteronomy 17, and it’s not talking about the Pharisees or rabbis. You won’t see them mentioned anywhere. What it’s actually talking about is the High Priest at the Temple and the prophetic judge. And what it talks about there is if there’s a difficult court case and the lower judges… remember Moses came along and he appointed lower judges, and lower judges below them, because he couldn’t handle judging every matter by himself.
So, what it’s describing in Deuteronomy 17 is if one of those lower judges comes along and says, “I don’t know what the law is here”, or “this is a difficult case, I don’t know what to do”, then he goes to the high judge at the Temple, or to the High Priest at the Temple. This is not talking about the Pharisees or the rabbis. And actually in various passages such as in Ezra chapter 2 verse 63, it talks about an actual case they had like this. And it says there that this had to be decided by the High Priest with the Urim and the Thummim, or in Hebrew the Urim and the Tummim, which was a prophetic device that the high judge would go and ask, “What is the answer?” He would ask from God; he wouldn’t just make it up, because God actually does have a say in how Scripture is interpreted.
But the rabbis apply this to themselves, because to them God has no say; only they have a say. And then it goes on in the Midrash… remember, God is speaking here, the Almighty. And it goes on there and it says, “Even I must obey their decree.” Even I, God, must obey the decrees of the rabbis. And by the way, it quotes a verse there from Job, which has nothing to do whatsoever with the authority of the rabbis, or God obeying them. But the principle here is that the rabbis are given absolute authority, not only to interpret Scripture but to make new enactments, and God Himself must obey those enactments according to the Oral Law.
Well, now that we understand Pharisaism, let’s get an overview. We see these five principles of Pharisaism, and the first principle is the concept of the two Torahs, the written Torah and the Oral Torah. Then we have the authority of the rabbis, the absolute authority of the rabbis to interpret Scripture. God has no say in it, only the rabbis do. Irrational or Midrashic interpretation; Scripture is a divine code and things can be taken out of context. Sanctified tradition, such as the kippah. And the takanot, or commandments of men, such as the washing of the hands.
Now that we understand Pharisaism, what we need to do is go back to Matthew 15 and see if we can understand what’s happening. The Pharisees come along and say to Yeshua, “Your disciples are transgressing the tradition of the elders because they don’t wash their hands before they eat,” which is that ritual we saw before. What is exactly going on there? There in verse 3, Yeshua says to the Pharisees, “Why do you also transgress the commandment of God by your tradition?” So how do the Pharisees transgress the commandment of God by their tradition? How is the Pharisee tradition a transgression of the commandment of God? They’re adding to the Torah! Deuteronomy 4:2, Deuteronomy 12:32 and Proverbs 30 verse 6 forbid us to add to the Torah! And by adding these laws to the Torah, this commandment to wash the hands, it’s a transgression of the commandment of God.
Yeshua goes on in verse 6 and he says to the Pharisees, “Thus have you made the commandment of God of none effect by your tradition.” How did the Pharisees make the commandment of God of none effect? This is something that I see every day in modern day Israel. I see it all the time.
One of the things that most people are surprised at when they come to Israel for the first time is that most Jews in Israel do not observe the Sabbath. Most people, when they come to Israel, are shocked to see that, and if you ask the average Israeli, “Why don’t you keep the Sabbath?” He’ll respond and tell you, “It’s impossible to keep the Sabbath.” And I respond, “Okay. I’ve been keeping the Sabbath my whole life. Why is it impossible?” And he’ll tell you, “Well, if I keep the Sabbath, I have to do this and I have to do that, and I can’t do this and I can’t do that.” And every single thing he lists is something… these man-made traditions and laws that the Pharisees have foisted upon the nation, these heavy burdens they’ve loaded up upon the nation, and the average person can’t always distinguish between what has the Creator commanded us and what are these man-made laws that the Pharisees have commanded. And because of that, they just completely give up and say, “Okay, I just can’t do it.” They give up. And by requiring these man-made laws, the Pharisees have made the commandment of God of none effect. They’ve made it impossible to keep the Torah.
Now, I’ve been keeping the Sabbath my whole life, and I know from firsthand experience that it’s a pleasure to keep the Sabbath! The Sabbath is a delight! It’s only when you add all these man-made laws and rules and regulations, then it becomes impossible to keep and it becomes a burden. And this is how the Pharisees make the commandment of God of none effect. Well, what we can see here very clearly in Matthew 15 is Yeshua is warning his disciples not to follow the man-made laws of the Pharisees. You must not follow the man-made laws.
Mitzvat Anashim Melumada
He goes on in verse 7, this is a very interesting passage, and he says, “You hypocrites,” speaking to the Pharisees, “You hypocrites, well did Isaiah prophesy of you saying,” and now he quotes Isaiah 29 verse 13, “This people draws near into me with their mouth, and honors me with their lips; but their heart is far from me. But in vain do they worship me, teaching for doctrines the commandments of men.”
Well, now we know what he’s talking about, “teaching for doctrines the commandments of men”. That is Pharisaism with their Oral Law and their man-made authority to interpret Scripture even above that of God and their takanot and their sanctified traditions. That’s “teaching for doctrines the commandments of men”.
Now, when I first read this, I was very intrigued, for a different reason than you’re so intrigued by it. I was intrigued by this because Matthew 15:9 is actually a paraphrase of Isaiah 29:13. Isaiah 29:13 actually speaks about, in Hebrew, “mitzvat anashim melumada”, which is translated variously as, “a learned commandment of men” or “a commandment of men learned by rote” or some variation of that translation. And the reason I was so intrigued by this is that I knew that, throughout history, Karaite Jews, strictly Old Testament Tanakh-following Jews, have always quoted these verses from the moment that Pharisaism was invented, have always quoted Isaiah 29:13 in reference to the Pharisees. And I thought this was very interesting that Yeshua was applying the same exact verse to the Pharisees back in the 1st century.
Well, the answer is here, in the Hebrew, and if you can read this old Hebrew script, then you already know the answer. This is what it looks like transcribed into modern Hebrew print. And what Yeshua says there in Hebrew Matthew chapter 23 verses 2 to 3, Yeshua says, “Al kiseh Moshe yeshvu ha’pirushim ve’ha’chachamim: ve’ata kol asher yomar lachem shimru ve’assu u’be’takanotayhem u’ma’aseyhem al ta’assu she’hem omrim v’hem einam osim.”
So, there you have it. There you see, it’s very clear. This is what it would look like translated into English, there Yeshua says, “The Pharisees and sages sit upon the seat of Moses. Therefore, all that he says to you, diligently do, but according to their reforms and their precedents do not do, because they talk but they do not do.”
Now that’s a very subtle difference between what you saw in the Greek, a difference of one single word, or primarily one single word. In the Greek it said in Matthew, “all that they say” you must obey, all they say, “they” being the Pharisees. In the Hebrew he says, “you must obey all that he says”, “he” being Moses.
They Talk and They Do Not Do According to the Torah
So, the difference of this one single word fundamentally changes Yeshua’s message. What he’s saying now is, if their claim to authority is that they sit in the seat of Moses, so do as Moses says, obey Moses. They claim their authority is they are sitting in this ornate stone chair in the synagogue, they’re teaching with supposed authority, sitting in the seat of Moses, so obey Moses. Do what Moses says.
He goes on there, Yeshua, in Hebrew Matthew, and he says, “according to their reforms and their precedents do not do,” and the word I’ve translated here as “reforms”, in Hebrew is takanot. We’ve heard that word before, so let’s all repeat that word, takanot! So, takanot are these man-made laws, like the washing of the hands, and Yeshua’s warning his disciples not to do according to their takanot.
And I translated this before as “enactments”, a more precise dictionary definition of takanot is “reforms that change biblical law”. That’s how the word is defined more precisely in the Jastrow Dictionary, which is the standard dictionary of early Rabbinical Hebrew, late Second Temple Hebrew, “reforms that change biblical law”, and the classic example of one of these man-made laws, these takanot, is the commandment to wash our hands, of the rabbis, before you eat bread.
Well, now that we understand Matthew 23, we see that Yeshua is not telling you to obey the Pharisees, he’s telling you to obey Moses. We still have to go back to Matthew 15 and see what it says there in the Hebrew. If we started off with what was a contradiction in the Greek, we can’t just look at the Hebrew of one passage and not the other.
Not According to Their Takanot and Ma’asim
So now let’s look at Matthew 15 in the Hebrew, and there we read, Yeshua says to the Pharisees, “Why do you also transgress the commandment of God by your tradition?… you made the commandment of God of none effect by your tradition.” Can anyone guess what the Hebrew word behind “tradition” is? The word is takanot! So not only is there no contradiction in the Hebrew between Matthew 15 and Matthew 23, but in the Hebrew, there’s a consistent message throughout the entire book. There’s this consistent string that runs through the book that Yeshua’s warning his disciples not to follow the takanot of the Pharisees, these man-made laws of the Pharisees.
Yeshua goes on. He warns against the takanot of the Pharisees. He also warns against their precedents, not to do their precedents, and the Hebrew word for “precedents” is ma’asim. Ma’asim is a word we’ll look at in a moment, but these are two really important words, takanot and ma’asim. Because these are the two things that if you’re disciples of Yeshua that he’s warning you not to do, the takanot and ma’asim. So, let’s say those words together, takanot and ma’asim!
Alright, so what are these ma’asim? Ma’asim are “precedents.” The literal meaning is “actions” or “deeds”, and in the Greek it translates this as ergon, which in your English you have “works”, the works of the Pharisees. But what are the works of the actions or deeds of the Pharisees? In Pharisee terminology, ma’asim refers to “precedents”, or “acts or deeds that serve as precedents”. And what do they mean by that? Well, we’ve already seen that Pharisee law means to legislate every aspect of life, literally from the moment you wake up in the morning to the moment you go to sleep at night.
For example, the Pharisees command their disciples which shoe to put on first in the morning. So, what does a Pharisee do when he comes to a new situation where the Oral Law doesn’t tell him what to do? For example, if he lives in a country where you don’t have shoelaces, and he doesn’t know which shoe to put on first in the morning because he doesn’t know which one to tie first because there are no laces.So, what he does is he combs the Oral Law looking for instruction, and he combs tradition and man-made laws, and if he can’t find any instruction on which shoe to put on first in the morning, if there are no laces, then he goes and he looks at the precedents of one of his rabbis. Meaning, he looks and he says, “We know that such and such a rabbi, on such and such an occasion put on his right shoe first even though he didn’t have laces,” and that becomes a precedent, that then establishes what the proper norm, the proper standard of behavior is. The assumption is this rabbi could not be sinning, and if he put on his right shoe first, even though it didn’t have laces, that’s the proper standard for behavior.
And what Yeshua is saying is, don’t look to the precedents of the Pharisees as the proper standard of behavior. Don’t do according to their precedents. Do as Moses says, not according to their takanot and their ma’asim.
Let’s look quickly at an example of a precedent. This is a precedent brought in the Talmud, and it says, “A ma’aseh”, ma’aseh is the singular for ma’asim, so a precedent. “A precedent in which Rabban Gamaliel” you probably thought it was pronounced “Gama-liel”, the correct Hebrew pronunciation is “Gamliel”. And Gamaliel, as you all know, was the Pharisaical teacher of Shaul of Tarsus, of Paul. However, this is Gamaliel’s grandson, Gamaliel II. So, “A precedent in which Rabban Gamaliel II and the elders were traveling in a ship, when a gentile made a ramp on which to descend, and Rabban Gamaliel and the elders descended by it.” Okay, so what on earth is this talking about? The Pharisees start off with the principle that if somebody built something for you on the Sabbath, you may not use that. If they build a ramp for you on the Sabbath, you may not use that ramp. And so, then they asked the question, what if the ramp is built on the Sabbath, but it’s not specifically for me? May I use that ramp? And the Oral Law doesn’t tell them what to do, so they go, and they say, “Okay, we remember that one time Rabban Gamaliel II descended on such a ramp, and that tells us that this was the proper behavior, and that such a thing is permissible.” In other words, the behavior of the rabbi in a specific circumstance becomes the standard by which one should behave in the future.
And what Yeshua is warning his disciples is, don’t do according to their takanot, and don’t do according to their ma’asim. Their claim to authority is that they sit in the seat of Moses, so do as he says. Do as Moses says.
Now, what about this statement, “because they talk but they do not do”? When I first read this, my question was, “What do they talk and what don’t they do?” When we read this in the Greek, it’s very clear that it’s saying they’re hypocrites, but now in the Hebrew, we have a whole new context. He’s not saying to obey the Pharisees even though they don’t do what they say themselves, he’s saying obey Moses. So, what’s this, “they talk and they do not do”? What are they talking and what aren’t they doing?
And then in 2 Kings 17 verse 34, it summarizes the ways of the Samaritans and it says, “Until this very day they do according to their former ways, according to their statutes and their judgments” this how it reads in the Hebrew, “they do not fear Yehovah, and they do not do.” And then in the Hebrew, the words “they do not do” is isolated in such a way that it emphasizes those words. And then it completes the sentence, and it says, “according to the Torah and commandments that Yehovah commanded the children of Jacob.” So, what don’t the Samaritans do? They don’t do according to the Torah.
Now, after I had read Matthew 23 and then I reread this passage, I realized in Hebrew this sounds very similar. There’s a similar style here, and it seems to me that Yeshua was echoing the words of 2 Kings 17:34 about the Samaritans. And I think what he was saying is that just as the Samaritans of old do according to their statutes and their judgments, and they do not do according to the Torah, so too the Pharisees of his own era, do according to their takanot and their ma’
So again, what we see up till now is that in the Greek, Jesus is coming along and changing Torah, saying “obey the Pharisees”, whereas in the Hebrew he’s actually upholding Torah. Now, in light of that, how do we explain this passage, Matthew 5?
Do Not Swear by Anything Falsely
Matthew 5, six times Yeshua says in the Greek… he says, “You have heard it said, but I say.” And what it really sounds like when you read this in English is that Yeshua, or in the Greek, Jesus, is coming along and changing entire Torah commandments, adding, taking away, modifying. So, what’s going on? Did he uphold Torah or did he not uphold Torah? And this is especially a very difficult textual question, because in that very same passage, in verse 17, he says he’s not come to do away with “one jot or one tittle”! So how can he then turn around and a few verses later start changing things saying, “you have heard it said, but I say”?
Well let’s look at one passage here, one passage that particularly caught my eye. This is Matthew 5:33 to 37. It says there in the Greek, “Again, you have heard that it was said to the people long ago, ‘Do not break your oath, but keep the oaths you have made to the Lord.’ But I tell you, do not swear at all”! And here, very explicitly, Jesus is saying in the Greek not to swear at all. It’s an absolute prohibition if you’re a disciple of Jesus to swear, to make any kind of oath.
Now, you should be getting a little bit nervous here right now because Jesus has forbidden you to swear under any circumstances, and if you swear, you’re from the evil one, according to the Greek Jesus. But let’s see what it says in the Hebrew. In Hebrew Matthew 5, we read, “You have further heard what was said by the ancients, ‘you shall not swear falsely by my name,’” that’s a direct quote word for word from Leviticus 19:12. “But you must pay your vow to Yehovah,” which is a paraphrase of Deuteronomy 23:21.
And then he goes on and he says, “But I say to you, that you must not swear by anything falsely,” falsely is what he says in the Hebrew. So, in the Hebrew, he is not prohibiting vows, he’s prohibiting false vows. “Not by the earth, which is His footstool,” meaning you must not say, “I swear by the earth” and be lying; you have to be telling the truth if you swear by the earth. “Nor by Jerusalem, which is His footstool, nor by your head because you cannot make one hair white or black. But let your yes be yes and your no, no. Anything added to this is evil.” And we’ll get back to, “anything added to this is evil” in a minute.
But in verse 37, he starts off saying, “let your yes be yes and your no, no.” Now he’s not talking about making vows here, he’s talking about making false vows. So, when he says, “let your yes be yes”, what he means in this new context is if you say, “I swear by Jerusalem! Yes, I will do such and such,” that better be a true yes, that better not be a false yes. And if you say, “No! I swear by the throne of God, I will do such and such,” that better be a no, you better not be lying there.
Now, why would he need to tell us not to make false vows? Or why would he need to tell you not to make false vows? Isn’t it obvious that you shouldn’t make false vows? That’s pretty obvious. But what happened, apparently, is in that period some Pharisees came along and they said, “Okay, well it says in Leviticus 19:12, ‘you shall not swear falsely by My name’, so if I don’t use the name, I’m allowed to swear falsely.” That’s what the Pharisees were teaching in this period, that you’re allowed to swear falsely as long as you don’t use the name. Because it says, “by My name”, and anyway, they don’t use the name so they can swear falsely all day long.
What Yeshua is saying is, “No! When it says in Scripture ‘not to swear falsely by My name’, it doesn’t mean you can swear falsely by other things.” Yes, as a keeper of Torah, you’re supposed to be swearing by the name of the Creator, that’s what we read in Deuteronomy. But if you’re going to swear by other things, that doesn’t mean you’re allowed to lie! The principle behind this commandment is not toswear falsely. Even if you don’t use the name, you’re not supposed to swear falsely. And I think that’s obvious to anybody who uses common sense and looks at this in its context that this is not a permission to vow falsely or to swear falsely. Simply, the way that an Israelite should be swearing is by the name, and if you’re swearing by the name, you must not swear falsely.
And all Yeshua is doing here is, he is bringing out the underlying Torah principle, saying, “No, what you Pharisees are doing, opening up these loopholes, saying ‘I’m allowed to swear falsely’, that’s not the point of the commandment. You’re over-literalizing it. You’re taking the words and disembodying them from the context and from the meaning behind what it’s saying. You’re only taking the words and not the spirit of what it’s really saying.” Which is the contextual meaning that anyone with common sense would understand.
Now, there’s no doubt that 2,000 years ago, when Yeshua said this, he would have been accused by the Pharisees of adding to the Torah, because they said it does say, “by My name”, and if you tell me I can’t swear falsely by Jerusalem, where does it say that in Scripture? Now, to anyone who uses their common sense, to the simple Israelite shepherd or farmer who comes and hears “you shall not swear falsely by My name”, it’s obvious that you can’t swear falsely by other things as well. That’s obvious.
But to the Pharisees that’s not so obvious, because to them Scripture is divine code. And Yeshua wanted to make it very clear that he’s not adding to Torah, he’s just bringing out the underlying Torah principle, and that’s why he ends his statement saying, “anything added to this is evil”. He wouldn’t add anything to the Torah because that would be evil. And this is simply a paraphrase of Deuteronomy chapter 4 verse 2, “do not add anything to the Torah or take away”, and Yeshua is simply reiterating this basic Torah principle.
Now, what we have in the Greek Matthew, like it or not, is an abolition of vows. Jesus is coming along and abolishing vows. You’re forbidden to swear by anything, that’s a fact, that’s what he says there. In the Hebrew Matthew on the other hand, we have an abolition of false vows. That’s a very different message, isn’t it? A very different statement. He’s not abolishing vows; he’s abolishing false vows.
And really, what we see is the Greek Iesous as he’s called in the Greek, the Greek Jesus, is abolishing entire Torah commandments, “Don’t worry about adding to the Torah, obey whatever the Pharisees tell you to do. And don’t worry about vowing in the name of the Creator, don’t vow at all, that’s what I’m telling you to do. Don’t swear at all.” Whereas we’ve now uncovered a Hebrew Yeshua, the words of Yeshua as he’s portrayed in the Hebrew, and there, he’s upholding Torah. He’s saying, “Their claim to authority is they sit in the seat of Moses. Do what Moses says, do as he says. And they’re telling you that you can jump through these loopholes and swear falsely? No, that’s not the point of the commandment. The point of the commandment is to not to swear falsely at all.”
Blind Chairs
Let’s look at Hebrew Matthew chapter 23 verses 16 and on, and there Yeshua is speaking to the Pharisees throughout Matthew 23, and there he says to the Pharisees, “Woe to you, you blind chairs.” You could look in the Greek and you’ll see it says, “Woe to you, you blind guides.” In the Hebrew he says, “you blind chairs”. Remember, Matthew 23 verse 2, he said, “they sit in the seat of Moses”, and now he’s calling them “the blind chairs”. “Yeah, you’re sitting in that seat, but you’re blind chairs.”
“Woe to you, you blind chairs, who say that he who swears by the sanctuary is not obligated.” Does that sound familiar? “Swear by the sanctuary is not obligated.” In other words, if you say, “I swear bythe Temple of Jerusalem”, you’re allowed to lie because you haven’t used the name. “Who say that he who swears by the sanctuary is not obligated but he who vows by anything that is sanctified to the sanctuary building is obligated to pay.” Meaning, if you make a vow to bring something to the Temple, then you have to pay it. Well, that’s very convenient, isn’t it?
“Mad men and blind men! Which is greater, the sanctuary or the thing which is sanctified to the sanctuary? And you say he who vows by the altar is not obligated but he who vows to bring a sacrifice must give it.” Meaning if you say, “I swear by the altar in Jerusalem”, then you’re allowed to lie because you haven’t used the name. But if you swear to bring a sheep to the altar, then you have to give it because some of the priests were Pharisees, and the Pharisees have got to eat, so it’s a simple economic consideration. “Which is greater, the sacrifice or the altar? The sanctuary or the sacrifice?”
And this next verse, verse 20, is really, I think, the decisive verse. There he says, “He who swears by the altar swears by it and by all that is in it.” So here he’s actually upholding vows. Now, what happened to “if you make a vow by anything, you’re from the evil one”? That’s not here at all, that’s not reflected at all. He’s saying, “If you make a vow, you must keep that vow, you must not swear falsely.”
Now, the reason this is so significant is because in the Greek, in the very same verse in Greek Matthew, he says, “Therefore, he who swears by the altar swears by it and by everything on it.” In other words, in the Greek he’s saying the exact same thing as he’s saying in the Hebrew on this particular verse – upholding vows. Meaning that in Matthew 23:16 to 20, both in the Greek and the Hebrew, Yeshua is saying no to false vows, yes to true vows. Well, what happened to anybody who swears is from Satan? That’s not being reflected here even in the Greek!
Thank you Shane Diltz for this essential teaching of the difference between the unclean and the clean. Without teaching this – YHWH considers the priests to have done violence to His law. Ezekiel 22:26
Thank you to Joseph for his teaching, I have watched the video. I have so many questions…!
I realize how we were only taught only 1% of what we are to know in all of the churches that are under the sway of the Roman catholic system,
I am still not sure what takes place between 2033 and 2044, can someone please shine some light on this ?