Tag-Archive for » fear of the Lord «

Fuller Fear

Tuesday, July 10th, 2012 | Author:

The fear of the LORD is the beginning of knowledge.  Proverbs 1:7  NASB

Fear – Last year (October 2, 2011) we examined Moses Luzzatto’s insight into the meaning of yirat adonai (YHWH).  Ira Stone commented on Luzzatto’s examination.  It’s worth reading again:

“It should by now be clear that the term yirat Ha-Shem [yirat adonai] cannot simply be translated as “fear of God.”  Rather, yirat ha-Shem is wisdom as expressed in worship . . . Nor is it any better understood simply as awe, a tactic that contemporary English speakers often take.  Instead, I understand yirat ha-Shem as the overwhelming weight we take on when we recognize the infinite nature of our responsibility for others; ahavah is the infinite potential for joy we experience by our choices to implement the yetzer ha-tov.   . . . our relationship to God is a living rather than a thinking relationship.  It is not speculation on the being of God, or even on how we can speculate about God, that claims the attention of Jewish intellectual effort.  Rather, it is living in the mode of God as we have experienced it in both our personal and communal histories.”[1]

Today’s Word spends a lot of time and effort thinking about God.  In that respect, even though Today’s Word takes a decidedly Hebraic approach to exegesis, it is no different than the work of Christian theology.  Christian theology is, by definition, thinking about God.  It is the work of analyzing the text, drawing rational conclusions, postulating theories about the nature and character of God and His demands on His creation.  I have often pointed out that there is no declared Jewish systematic theology.  You might have thought that this is because the Hebraic world operates on some other logic, that it stems from a completely different paradigm.  While that it true for the Hebraic idea of how the world works and what God demands of us, both Greek and Hebrew thought share the same logical framework.  This means that Luzzatto’s insight is even more crucial for it is far too easy to simply slide over into an Hebraic mentality without grasping that Man from a biblical perspective is not what he thinks but what he does.  The fundamental reason that there is no Jewish systematic theology is not because Jews do not have a well-articulated rational framework for understanding God, but rather because Judaism is ultimately about living in the experience of God.  In fact, a summary picture of the Bible is that it is first and foremost a book about how to live under God’s direction.  How to think about God is a far-distant second.

Once we grasp this incredible shift, we realize that Torah is a way of life, a voluntarily-adopted code of conduct that embraces every aspect of ordinary human living.   Crucial to this view of Torah is the biblical truth that I am responsible!  I am responsible to God, to others and, finally, to myself.  In very practical terms, the fear of God is the infinite weight of our responsibility for others.  No man comes into the world without this weight, although many have tried to avoid it or deflect it.  But the biblical Man knows that carrying the weight of responsibility for others is the fear of the Lord.  And it doesn’t really matter what you think about it.  It only matters that you do something about it!

Topical Index:  fear of the Lord, yirat adonai, responsibility, logic, systematic theology, Proverbs 1:7

 


[1] Ira Stone commentary to Moses Luzzatto, Mesillat Yesharim, pp. 10-11.

The Fear of the Lord

Sunday, October 02nd, 2011 | Author:

And he said to the man, “One is the fear of the Lord, that is wisdom . .”  Job 28:28  Rabbinic Midrash translation

One is – What is yirat adonai?  What does “the fear of the Lord” mean in your life?  If the fear of the Lord is the foundation of all His instructions to us, then what does this look like?  That question was crucial for the rabbis.  They found part of the answer in an alternate meaning in this verse from Job.  Instead of translating the opening word of the statement as “Behold” (the Hebrew word hen), they suggested that this first word is similar to the Greek word for “one.”  With this translation, the Talmudic tractate Sanhedrin suggests that all wisdom is one, that is, all wisdom is found in yirat adonaiThe study of philosophy or science or ethics or the arts does not lead to wisdom unless it leads to God.

Ira Stone makes this observation based on the midrash.  “It should by now be clear that the term yirat Ha-Shem cannot simply be translated as “fear of God.”  Rather, yirat ha-Shem is wisdom as expressed in worship . . . Nor is it any better understood simply as awe, a tactic that contemporary English speakers often take.  Instead, I understand yirat ha-Shem as the overwhelming weight we take on when we recognize the infinite nature of our responsibility for others; ahavah is the infinite potential for joy we experience by our choices to implement the yetzer ha-tov.   . . . our relationship to God is a living rather than a thinking relationship.  It is not speculation on the being of God, or even on how we can speculate about God, that claims the attention of Jewish intellectual effort.  Rather, it is living in the mode of God as we have experienced it in both our personal and communal histories.”[1]

What is the fear of the Lord?  It is you discovering the burden-bearing claim of others as God’s way of exhibiting love.  What is the fear of the Lord?  It is you carrying another’s cross, putting your life at risk for another, standing in the other’s place for good or ill.  What is the fear of the Lord?  It is your awareness of another’s need even if unexpressed.  What is the fear of the Lord?  It is Yeshua dying for you.

Wisdom is relational.  It isn’t found in textbooks or confessions or rituals.  It is found in personal and communal interaction, and in particular, the interaction of choosing shalom for another.  The fear of the Lord is painted in loving-my-neighbor colors.  To recognize a need and to have the ability to do something about that need but instead choose to walk away is to blaspheme His name and His image in us.  The weight of a wounded world falls on our shoulders and we are called to carry it, not alone but nevertheless to the best of our abilities.  Then our lives become worship as Yeshua’s life was worship.  That is the fear of the Lord.

Topical Index:  fear of the Lord, yirat ha-Shem, yirat adonai, hen, behold, one, Job 28:28

 


[1] Ira Stone, Mesillat Yesharim, pp. 10-11.