Hopeless

“Hear, O Israel! The Lord is our God, the Lord is one! Deuteronomy 6:4 NASB

One – Paradigms, paradigms, paradigms. Everywhere we look, people operate according to paradigms. “Evidence” is a function of presupposed paradigmatic expectations. Once I have made up my mind about a worldview, I will find all the evidence I need to support it (and I will discount any “evidence” that doesn’t support it). Thomas Kuhn’s seminal work[1] and Ludwig Wittgenstein’s examination[2] forever changed our way of thinking about language, thought and reality.[3] With this in mind, consider the “evidence” in Chaim Bentorah’s book Hebrew Word Study.

“In Christianity we believe in one God but in three persons. Without the beth [the second letter of the Hebrew alphabet] this could not be expressed. The numerical value of the word bereshit [the first word of Genesis] or BYASYT when using the mispar katan (digit sum) you have . . . a total of 913. When you add 9 + 1 + 3 you have 13. Applying the principles of the Gematria you would look at the Hebrew word echad . . . and find that the numerical value of that word is . . . 13. The word echad is the word for one and expresses the idea of oneness. Thus the Bible starts off expressing not just God but that God is one. But the Gematria would not work if the Bible started with an Aleph but starting with the Beth we have Scripture not only starting off with God but the oneness of God. I should point out that this is even important from a Christian perspective as the word echad not only expresses one but expresses a unity in one, a joining together into one, like ten ball players are one team. God is one, but one in an echad or a unity of one in three persons.”[4]

Are you kidding me? When I read this I had only one immediate thought: hopeless! What Bentorah proposes is that Moses and his audience really never understood the meaning of the words Moses used. He had to wait until some rabbis thousands of years later invented an esoteric mathematics for examining the Hebrew text and then he had to wait another thousand years until the Christians invented the idea of the Trinity and then we all had to wait until we figured out how to anachronistically apply this esoteric exegesis to the first word of the Torah in order to claim it supports God in three persons. Hopeless!

His suggestion that echad means a unity of plurality is nonsense. It is still one team, not 10 teams. One is still one, not many. Saying that God is one made up of many is like saying one is really ten, or three. One is not three. It is one. That’s what echad means—ONE! Playing with the numbers doesn’t help.

What’s worse is that it all depends on number manipulation. Do you suppose that only the word echad has a number value of 13 or that only bereshit had a numerical value of 913? Does every Hebrew word with the numerical value 13 support the doctrine of the Trinity? Let’s see. 2 Kings 18:2 mentions a woman named Abi. The numerical value of Abi is 13 (Aleph-Bet-Yod). Therefore, this woman must be a unity and must be connected to bereshit, right? Perhaps God is a woman, or this woman is God. Or take ‘oyev (Aleph-Yod-Beth), the Hebrew word for “enemy.” It has a numerical value of 13. Therefore, it must be a unity and God must be an enemy. Need we continue?

The problem isn’t the numerical values of Hebrew letters. Hebrews used letters as their counting system. So did many other cultures. The problem is having a theory first and then going to find evidence to support it. El has the numerical value of 31. El is one of the most ancient words for “God.” The Hebrew word govb also has a numerical value of 31. It means “grasshopper.” Of course, that fits God.  God is a grasshopper, right?  And 31 is 3 and 1, so that means el and govb are also connected to 3 and 1 which equals 4, and 4 is the value of Dalet. Therefore, God and  grasshopper must be like doors since the Paleo-Hebrew of Dalet is a door.   Oh, I forgot.  31 is also the numerical value of lo, meaning “not.”  So I suppose this mean that God is also “not.”  I hope you can appreciate the nonsense involved here.

It is bad enough to stretch this into Kabbalah. It is ludicrous to stretch it into support for the Trinity. Paradigm thinking is just that—paradigm! If we decide that God is three in one, we will find it wherever we look. We will even make the evidence fit the doctrine. But that doesn’t make it true and it certainly does not mean that Moses disguised the Trinity in Gematria.

Let’s please, please stop being hopeless. What did the author mean? What did the words mean to the first audience? What were the cultural thought forms? Not how can we manipulate the structure to fit something we came up with thousands of years later.

If you want to believe all this craziness about Gematria, please be my guest.   But don’t tell me that God hid all these things in the text and you are the only one who really understands.

Topical Index: Gematria, Genesis 1:1, Deuteronomy 6:4, echad, Chaim Bentorah

 

[1] Thomas S. Kuhn, The Structure of Scientific Revolutions

[2] Ludwig Wittgenstein, Philosophical Investigations

[3] Benjamin Lee Whorf, Language, Thought and Reality

[4] Chaim Bentorah, Hebrew Word Study, p. 33.

 

I am in Peru now, for the next 8 days, starting the same project with teenage girls that began in El Salvador around the topic of Guardian Angel.  Please pray about this if you can.  There is much abuse and hopelessness for these girls and they need to know that this is not what God intended.

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Kees Brakshoofden

YHWH bless you and these girls!

laurita hayes

I am praying too. What else do they need?

Donna R.

Eyes be opened.

Derek S

Well at least I know now where the Kabbalah get’s their ‘trinity’. Any debate I’ve heard between a Jew vs Christian on YouTube when the topic of the trinity comes up the Christian will quickly point out, “Well you guys have a 13 in 1!”. I’ve often thought when I hear that, where is that seen in the text? Now i know.

Praying for you Skip: Safe trip, to see His hand working, for His words to be spoken through your mouth and for eyes to be opened. Also for His love, presence and peace to be felt by all that you speak with.

Robin Jeep

Amein and amen!

Tanya Predoehl

I have concerns about the use of what we call Paleo Hebrew as well. Because there’s no “Rosetta Stone” how do we know that these supposed pictures have standardized meanings? It seems so subjective.

Michael C

Interesting enough that not petitioning the gleanings as doctrine isn’t devastating. Just very, very interesting and even “inspiring” at times.

Suzanne

Praying: that your travels will be blessed, and for the ground, the seed and the fruit. Godspeed.

carl roberts

Back to the Basics (Part 1)

~ Study to show thyself approved unto God, a workman that does not need to be ashamed, – rightly dividing the word of truth ~ (2 Timothy 2.15)

~ Sanctify them by the truth; Your word [true or false?] is truth ~ (John 17.17)

~ Your word is a lamp unto my feet and a light unto my path ~ (Psalm 119.105)

What are we to study?

Hear, O Israel, [for} ~ faith comes by hearing and hearing by the word of God ~ (Romans 10.17) Another name that is given to the Bible we read is: “the word of God.” Our Bible, and it is our Bible, is a history and a mystery rolled into one. It is our “Him-Book.”

Without this inspired [God-breathed] Book of books, faith (that which pleases God, btw- Hebrews 11.6) would be impossible. Our Bible, just like our brain, is divided into two halves, the Old Testament (or Covenant) and the New(er) Testament or Covenant.

It begins, as most books should, “in the beginning!” (imagine that.) This book tells us where we came from –and? – it ALL began with God speaking.

God spoke EVERYTHING into existence. As we read, we see the words: “God said..” “Let there be..” – and the result was? “it was so.” Or, “and it came to pass.” Interesting! In the beginning, God said “amen!” and the result was? “amen!” – !WoW!

As we read further in this Book of books, -not the “book of the month!” but the Book of the ages, we discover more of, not only the creation of man, but God’s interaction, interplay and intervention in the course of all human history. We see and understand, God is intricately and intimately involved in the everyday details of every life. Need we “name names?” Adam? Abraham? Noah? Moses? David? –Solomon? – and on and on it goes.

What we see here is a pattern. God is One, yes, and God is ONE who speaks with man. God also has chosen a people., a people whom He has chosen as His own. This nation has a name and it is Israel. The Jews are, and forever will be, God’s chosen people.

At the end of the first half of this “love story,” the Jews go into captivity and for a period of four hundred years, the God who speaks is silent. End of Part 1.

bpW

Everyone has a place in revealing the sacredness of Scripture. This is a really great read, in two parts, on how numbers undergird Scripture (using the KJV, sorry). It’s fascinating to me, and i share it because it amazes me and blesses me.

Part 1
http://www.cuttingedge.org/news/n1362.cfm

Part 2
http://www.cuttingedge.org/news/n1363.cfm

cbcb

I thought the the title should be : the unbearable bereshitr

cbcb

I thought the the title could be : the “unbearable bereshit” 🙂