Tag-Archive for » witnesses «

The Shema (3)

Sunday, June 27th, 2010 | Author: Skip Moen

And you shall love YHWH your God with all your heart, and with all your soul, and with all your might.  Deuteronomy 6:5

Your God – Not just any god.  Your God. eloheikha.  How did that happen?  Well, it had nothing to do with our decision.  “You will be my people and I will be your God.”  It was His choice.  He established the relationship, not us.  We belong to Him because we have been chosen, grafted in, adopted by Him.  Of course, there is a reason for this – but it is His reason, His purpose, not ours.  Once we were chosen, we were obligated.  “You will be my people,” doesn’t mean that we can determine how we will belong to this nation.  He determines how we will belong because He constituted us as His people.  Once we were lost.  Now we are found.  We are found within the congregation of Israel.  We are commanded to love this particular God (who happens to be the only God in spite of other claims of divinity).  The reason we are to love Him is because we belong to Him – and He belongs to us.

Heschel makes an interesting observation.  “In this world God is not God unless we are His witnesses.”[1] God is not restoring the world to its perfect original condition without us.  He is in cooperation with us.  We are partners with Him.  We have been invited to join the work party, to complete with Him the master plan of the redemption of everything.  He is our God because we are wedded to His work and His character.  Under these circumstances, the command to love Him is entirely reasonable and acceptable.  How could it be otherwise?  Under these circumstances, to act on His behalf in the work of restoration is to love Him.  Only those who put hand to the plow demonstrate that He is their God.  They love Him with every furrow, with every drop of sweat, with every callus, with every aching muscle.  There is work to do – His work – and loving Him is feeling the blade slicing through the good earth.

“Ultimately religion is not based on our awareness of God but on God’s interest in us.”[2] He declares us His people just as His Son declares us His friends.[3] Both have obligations.  Both are Hebrew tautologies.  Your God = His people.  To be known = friends.  People and friends = obligation to respond.

How will the world know that He is our God?  Not because we proclaim that we believe He exists.  The divine principle of first cause is not our God.  He is the God of the philosophers.  The heavenly overseer of higher ethics is not our God.  Our God is the God of Torah and if we are to be His witnesses (and He is to be our God), then we will live according to His demands – and not anything else.

Is He your God?

Topical Index:  your God, eloheikha, witnesses, Deuteronomy 6:5


[1] Abraham Heschel, Spiritual Audacity and Moral Grandeur, p. 163.

[2] Abraham Heschel, Spiritual Audacity and Moral Grandeur, p. xxii.

[3] John 15:15

Hebrew Evangelism

Tuesday, June 08th, 2010 | Author: Skip Moen

“You are my witnesses,” declares YHWH, “and My servant whom I have chosen, so that you may know and believe Me and understand that I am He.  Before Me there was no God formed, and there will be none after Me.” Isaiah 43:10

I Am He – Go ahead.  Ask your pastor, “What is the purpose of evangelism?”  What answers do you imagine you will receive?  “To win souls for Jesus.”  “To bring people into a saving knowledge of Jesus.”  “To save people so they can get to heaven.”  “To increase the size of the church.”  Whether the answers sound like recruitment or fire insurance, one thing is abundantly clear.  Evangelism in Christian circles is usually about being saved, and it usually requires accepting Jesus as your Savior.  Unfortunately, this doesn’t seem to be the direction of the prophets.

Isaiah’s great prophecy demands a closer look.  In this prophecy, God recognizes Israel as His witness and His servant.  What is the purpose of God’s election of Israel?  Ah, there it is – right in the middle of this verse – “so that you may know and believe Me and understand that I am He.”  Doesn’t that seem a bit strange to our ears?  Did God choose Israel so that Israel could understand that YHWH is God?  But we already know this, right?  Is that all there is to this – just to know there is a God?  Hardly!

Notice the pattern of evangelism here.  First, God chooses witnesses.  We don’t decide to become proclaimers of His majesty.  He chooses us.  He assigns us a purpose – His purpose, not ours.  What is that purpose?  To be witnesses to what He has done.  Yes, that’s right.  That’s all.  Just to observe, consider and report God’s mighty acts.  Right?  No, not right!  To be a witness is not simply to be an observer (that would be Greek).  To be a witness is to take the stand and vouch for the veracity of the observed event.  To be a witness is to speak out the truth.  To be a witness is to accept the responsibility of bearing true testimony when it matters (by the way, it’s remarkable that the root word has a homophone that means “again” or “repeated”).  “You are my witnesses” is a call to action, not observation.  It is a call to tell God’s story by recounting His interventions in the lives of men.

As truthful storytellers, we become His servants.  It isn’t possible to be His servants unless we have the right story to tell, and in this case, that story is the story of Israel.  Why are we commanded to tell this story?  Not so that we will remember, but so that we may know (yada’) and believe (‘aman) and understand (biyn) that I am He.  Faithful witnesses recount truthful stories and in the process enter into ultimate, purposeful knowing, stable, reliable establishing and careful considering of this one overarching reality:  YHWH is the only God.  There is no other god.  There never has been any other god.  There never will be any other god.  All creation witnesses to this fact – and so do we.  YHWH is God.

This is not a statement about God’s existence.  We do not provide an apologetic for “God exists.”  That is trivially irrelevant.  What matters is that YHWH is the only God.  The God of Israel, YHWH, is the only God, and we, His children, are witnesses to this truth.  We do not witness to the existence of a supreme God.  We witness to the truth of this God, YHWH of Israel.  What He says, what He does, who He is – this is what matters more than anything else in life.  Unless we know this God, YHWH, we have no god at all.

But this isn’t the end of the story either.  The purpose of faithful storytelling is not for us.  It is for them – as we shall see.

Topical Index:  I am He, witnesses, apologetics, Isaiah 43:10

The Crucial Difference

Monday, April 06th, 2009 | Author: Skip Moen

But take the utmost care and watch yourselves scrupulously, so that you do not forget the things that you saw with your own eyes and so that they do not fade from your heart as long as you live.  Deuteronomy 4:9

Eyes – Abraham Herschel said it.  “The essence of Jewish religious thinking does not lie in entertaining a concept of God but in the ability to articulate a memory of moments of illumination by His presence.  Israel is not a people of definers but a people of witnesses.”  Read it again, please.  There is no greater difference between the Greek-Western worldview and the Hebrew-Eastern Semitic worldview than Herschel’s insightful summary.  The West is the world of the mind.  We have a God of the mind; a God of concepts like omnipotence, omniscience and salvation.  Our theologies are systematic, rational exercises which attempt to catalog, categorize and define God within the blueprints of our mental constructs.  We are people of the book, in the worst sense of the term, waiting for rational explanation through more and more detail.  The Greek world knows only one unlimited entity in the universe – thought.  What exists is only what we can ultimately understand.

Herschel points to the West’s intellectual bankruptcy.  God does not come to us in nicely defined, rationally explained, thought categories.  God does not fit Himself into our theological text books.  The Hebrew God breaks all the rules.  He is near, yet transcendent; clothed in human form, yet holy; more terrifying than can be imagined, yet compassionate; invisible, yet revealed; judging, yet merciful, sovereign, yet humble.  No matter where you look, God breaks the molds.  The incarnation is only the paradigm example of an indefinable God. 

Herschel notes that the Jews are a people of witnesses.  That means that their history is the history of God’s selective choice, using Israel for His purposes through a long line of divine-human encounters.  The theology of Judaism is the story, not the definitions.  It is the story of God revealing Himself to a people, chosen by Him.  In this story, the most important thing is the accurate retelling from one generation to the next because this is the story of who God is and it is the only story that we have.  Doctrine is not nearly as important as encounter.  In Jewish thought, the encounter of God with His people is not something that resides only in the past.  It is anchored there, but it extends itself to everyone who comes after the encounter who is also a part of the called people.  We, as Christians, share in this story – the story of all creation.  We are grafted into the community and the continuity of Israel.  This is critically important because it means that God’s personal illumination in His presence with Israel is also our personal illumination.  The story belongs to us.  Therefore, we also take on the necessity of accurately remembering and transmitting this unique encounter to the next generation. 

God’s encounter with Israel is the whole of the Scriptures.  It includes both the Old and the New Testaments.  When Peter proclaimed that the prophecy of Joel was being fulfilled, he drew us into the circle of the story-tellers.  So, the history of Israel is now our history. 

That raises a question for every one of us who claims to follow the Messiah.  Do we know the story?  I don’t mean, “Are we familiar with it?”  I don’t mean, “Do you recognize some of the parts from our childhood Sunday school days?”  I mean, “Do we know the story?”  And, of course, in Hebrew “to know” is to absorb it into the actions of my life. 

So, do you know the story?  Or is your God just a conglomerate of definitions?

Topical Index:  Judaism, Greek worldview, story, witnesses, definitions, eyes, Deuteronomy 4:9