Down The Rabbit Hole—Again

“I will never desert you, nor will I ever forsake you.” Hebrews 13:5 NASB

Forsake – This verse in Hebrews is really a modified quotation from a verse in Deuteronomy 31:6. The passage in Deuteronomy reads eemach lo yarpeka velo ya’azveka (He will not fail you, nor forsake you). The promise is very old. It was given to all those who were to enter the Land. It was given to all those who would enter the Land, represented in the ones who actually crossed the Jordan. It was given to all who would become part of Israel. Therefore, it is given to us.

The Hebrew word for “forsake” is ‘azav. ‘Azav has a strange etymology. It is derived from two roots, one which means “to leave, to abandon, to forsake” (cf. Genesis 44:22 and Genesis 2:24), and another which means “to restore or repair” (Nehemiah 3:8). In this first meaning, ‘azav can be quite a condemnation. Israel forsakes YHWH, a theme that occurs over and over in Scripture. But how can the same word also mean “to repair or restore”? Let’s consider the pictograph. Ayin-Zayin-Bet paints the scene “to experience being cut off from the house.” ‘azav means loss of family, security and covenant. To forsake is to be put at ultimate risk. But this has a double edge. A man must cut himself off from prior familial responsibilities and prior household safety when he attaches himself to his wife, his ‘ezer kenegdo. This act of forsaking establishes a new place of security, of covenant commitment. While it cuts one tie, it cements another. It is abandoning and restoring at one and the same time. So the Tanakh tells us that forsaking idolatry is, at the same time, restoring covenant with YHWH.

The translation of this promise into Greek yields further insight. The Greek word is a combination of three separate words: en meaning “a place,” kata meaning “down” – for emphasis – and leipo meaning “to leave behind.” Therefore, we get egkataleipo – left down in a place. The full sense is “to abandon by leaving behind in some place.” Now we can see that the verse really emphasizes the same idea twice because deserting and forsaking both mean abandoning in some place. God is very clear about this. He wants us to see how important His promise is so He doubles it up. He will never, ever quit on us, leave us down in the dumps, abandon us to some awful place. He is not going away, no matter what we might feel. From the time of Moses to the end of the New Testament, the promise is the same – you can count on Me! I am with you!

Yeshua uses this word on the cross. “Why have you forsaken me?” But Yeshua’s declaration points us toward a psalm of vindication, not a statement of abandonment. If God promises never to leave His people, why do we think He left His son? The antonym helps us see the strength of this promise. The opposite of “forsake” is “to hold fast, to seize and retain” (in the Greek – krateo). God is just not going to let go. Ever!

Topical Index: egkataleipo, ‘azav, forsake, abandon, cut off, Deuteronomy 31:6, Hebrews 13:5

 

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laurita hayes

In my darkest places, I KNEW I had to go forward: there was no going back – no turning tail and running. It was a strong sense that I would be forsaking everything that love represented, no matter how hopeless or crazy forward looked like. I had the sense that if I turned and ran, I would be forsaking love. So I stood in the disasters. I wonder if Yeshua on the cross knew, too, that as hopeless as it FELT and SEEMED to go forward through death – the very epitome of abandonment – it was the only way to stay where love really was? Sometimes (well, wouldn’t that actually be a lot of the time?) the march through the middle of awful could be the only way for love.

He will never abandon me (and never has), but I can and have abandoned Him a lot. I am alone only when I do so, though. I know if I look around and I am alone, I was the one who stepped out of the room.

I also like your point, Skip, that to have one thing MEANS to give up another. It makes sense that my hand is already full of sin. To create space for the good stuff, I have to abandon what I already have grabbed to fill in that hole. There is no such thing as a nice, comfy area in my life ready and waiting like a clean and furnished upper room for Him. Nature abhors a vacuum. It is a sure guarantee that the holes where love should be are all currently filled with substitutes. Um, that would be sin, of course. Time for me to initiate the act of abandonment of all I am currently ‘loving’ to make way for my true Love.

Thanks for a good mouthful of cud to meditate on all day! As usual, of course.

Donna R.

Amen! Amen! Hallelu YaH! I know this! 🙂

David R

Hello Skip,

Could you please clarify the following:

Yeshua uses this word on the cross. “Why have you forsaken me?” But Yeshua’s declaration points us toward a psalm of vindication, not a statement of abandonment. If God promises never to leave His people, why do we think He left His son?

I know the usual explanation is that Yeshua was forsaken because YHVH and sin are truly incompatible, and Yeshua took on the sin of humanity. This presents a word picture of being dressed in something YHVH viewed as totally gross or grotesque.
Thanks for your word studies and time.
David R

Seeker

Would the forsake utter by Yeshua not rather be referring to Do not forget that when I am dead to will need restoration to complete My purpose. Reason being up until this moment Yeshua had comfort in a direct link to YHVH. When in death nobody knows the manner in being revived. Just as a seed dies when the plant shoots out it normally needs the most support till it forms a strong stump… The work given to the apostles would need major support to achieve purpose as the resurrected new form of introducing Salvation to those in bondage as my self.

Also consider how those called first need separation and empowering before being tasked, as the empowering support structure we mostly fail by providing knowledge instead of prayers and supplications…
For me it may be this last prayer that was not heard correct. Devil sowing doubt instead of the followers hearing the last prayer and blessing of them as being empowered…

Melodie

I’ve been down that rabbit hole. More than once, too. I thank YHVH for rescue. 🙂