Tackling a Tough One (part 2)

Therefore let us leave the elementary doctrine of Christ and go on to maturity, not laying again a foundation of repentance from dead works and of faith toward God,  Hebrew 6:1  ESV

Dead works – Are you ready to move on toward maturity?  If you are, then you will have to come to terms with your “dead works.”  Too often these words are taken as a declaration that “dead works” means the law, and therefore it is no longer in effect.  Because we import a “law vs. grace” mentality, we read “dead works” as if it means “trying to be saved by earning righteousness,” and that is verboten ever since Martin Luther.   But no Jew would have understood these words in that way.  The law doesn’t bring death.  It brings life!  The Torah tells me how I am to live after I have peace with God through His grace.  Every Jew knows that hen (grace) is the basis of our relationship with YHWH.  Torah is simply how we become God’s feet and hands in this world.  Paul argues as much in Romans.  Only those who continued to claim that Gentiles had to become Jews (by certain actions for proselytes) in order to worship YHWH are subject to this criticism.  Paul’s argument in Galatians definitively overturns the claim that we must become Jewish before we can enter into the covenant of God.  But that does not set aside the Torah.  It simply demonstrates that the Torah is not about salvation.  It is about life after grace.

Then what does it mean to say, “not laying again a foundation of repentance from dead works”?  Certainly we understand the idea of not going back again and again to the first step of repentance.  While followers need to repent of sins as they align their lives with Yeshua’s call, this is not the same as that first step of repentance, the step that puts us on the road toward conformity with the Son.  John makes this clear in his first letter.  But what is the connection to “dead works”? Ellingworth’s comment is instructive.  “The context requires [themelion  . . . metanoias . . .] to mean ‘a foundation which consists of repentance . . ,’ not, as more commonly, ‘a foundation on which repentance etc. are built.’  The list contains nothing distinctively Christian, and of course nothing exclusively Jewish; such a sharp dichotomy is alien to a Jewish Christian writing mainly to readers in the same tradition.”[1]  The list follows in verse 2 and includes hand washing, laying on of hands, resurrection of the dead and eternal punishment.  Our text should read “not laying again a foundation which consists of repentance . . .”  But repentance from what?

“Dead works” is an expression found only in Hebrews.  Ellingworth notes that the parallel with pistis (faith in the living God) “requires the stronger meaning ‘works which lead to death.’”[2]  The contrast in this verse is not between works (law) and grace but rather between human behaviors that lead to death versus those that lead to life.  Paul makes a point of this in Galatians 5, but the echo goes back to Moses in Deuteronomy 30:19 (“I have set before you today life and death . . . Now choose life”).  And if this is the echo of the author, then he clearly cannot mean the Torah is no longer valid.  Moses’ entire exhortation is built on the premise that Torah is life!  It is important to note that the author of Hebrews never develops this theme.  He simply assumes that the reader will hear the echo of Moses and know what is required. That assumption must guide our reading as well.

If you subscribe to the Christian idea of replacement theology (that God has, in the new dispensation, replaced Israel and the law with the church and the message of grace), then you are likely to read this as an indictment of Torah.  You will think of Torah as “dead works.”  But the perspective of Paul and the author of Hebrews must cause us to reject this false dichotomy.  For every follower of the Way in the first century, Torah is still the living, guiding instruction necessary for fulfilling the purposes of God on earth.  To abandon Torah is to abandon faith in YHWH.  Many significant scholars today are realizing that the prior teaching of the Church regarding replacement theology is mistaken.  And we can confidently assert that no one reading this letter in the first century would have believed that the Church replaced Israel as God’s elect or that grace set aside Torah.

So, we can move on.  What do we leave behind?  A continual recitation of the first step of repentance.  We don’t need to repeat God’s first call, His first prompting, over and over.  We have experienced grace.  Move on.  How do we move on?  By abandoning those actions that lead to death.  We leave behind those behaviors that do not produce life.  We don’t go back to the things that once condemned us.  We choose life!  How do we know what aligns us with life as opposed to death?  Go read Moses!



[1] Paul Ellingworth, The Epistle to the Hebrews, NIGTC, 1993, p. 313.

[2] Paul Ellingworth, The Epistle to the Hebrews, NIGTC, 1993, p. 314.

Topical Index:  dead works, nekra erga, Moses, Deuteronomy 30:19, Hebrews 6:1



[1] Paul Ellingworth, The Epistle to the Hebrews, NIGTC, 1993, p. 313.

[2] Paul Ellingworth, The Epistle to the Hebrews, NIGTC, 1993, p. 314.

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robert lafoy

Hi Skip,

Passages like this speak strongly to me, and I would suppose it’s because I’ve spent my entire career (that word doesn’t look right this morning) in the building trades.

I don’t recollect many instances of people “polishing” the foundation their building stands on, it just sort of lays there supporting what’s built on it, mostly hidden. You’re correct, although relatively obscure, it continues to “bear up” the house built on it. It’s importance cannot be over stated.

I suppose that wisdom would discern that the only time the foundation is examined carefully is (1) prior to building, and (2) when there are cracks in the walls.

YHWH bless you and keep you……

Judi Baldwin

Reading this “Today’s Word” is yet more confirmation in my mind that G-d has chosen you to help so many others understand some of the more complex passages of Scripture…especially those that have been altered over the years through inaccurate (intentional or not) translations.
Thank you for so consistently pointing us in the right direction.
Bless you for being so obedient to G-d’s calling.

Christopher

Recent discussions in Torah study have shown us that we need to have these types of teachings/understandings down pat. New people…fresh out of denominational church…will get stuck on verses like the ones Skip has highlighted, along with Galatians and Ephesians, etc.

Skip is one of my favorite weapons in my arsenal of truth dividers that equip me with the ammo I need to help newcomers to Torah study in their journey. A great teacher once said. “If you know Paul better than you Moses, you don’t know what Paul knew.” Amen.

This one was right on time. Thanks Skip o/

Aleichem shalom,
Chris

Lewis

Like Robert, I spent a lot of time in the building trades. Foundations are not very pretty affairs but must be square and level, in a word they must be TRUE. The foundation has to support every load bearing point, whether on the perimeter or in the interior. Another thing to keep in mind is that just like the foundation everything else that goes into any structure must also obey ALL of the laws of physics. Framing, plumbing, electrical, HVAC – all of these things must obey all of the laws of physics that apply to them, or they won’t work. There have been many tragedies caused by people who were ignorant of, or negligent in following these laws.
I am grateful that Yeshua has opened my eyes to our desperate need to follow all of His laws, just as He demonstrated for us (Mathew 5:17-19). He demonstrated these for us, because they are His own code of conduct. He followed these laws before He made the world and He will have the whole world follow them when He returns (Zechariah 14:16-19)