Saying the Blessing

When you have eaten your fill, give thanks to YHWH your Elohim for the good land which He has given you. Deuteronomy 8:10

When – Maimonides’ list of the 613 mitzvot includes this verse.  It is mitzvot number 24, the blessing concerning meals.  In Judaism, it is called the birkat ha-mazon.  You can find several recitations on the internet.  There are several important things to notice about the birkat ha-mazon.  First, it is responsive.  The leader begins the blessing and all of the participants respond.  In other words, it is communal blessing, not an individual prayer. All who eat acknowledge the good things God provides for the sustenance of our lives.  Second, did you notice that this blessing comes after we have been filled and satisfied?  In another revision of God’s instructions, most Christian blessings come before the meal.  But this commandment specifically calls for a blessing after the meal.  The Hebrew text doesn’t actually contain the English “when.”  The Hebrew literally says, “And you shall eat and be satisfied  and you shall bless YHWH your Elohim . . .”  Of course, the idea is sequential.  First you eat, then you offer the blessing.

If this is the prescribed biblical pattern, why do Christians commonly offer a blessing before the meal?  The reason for this aberration is found in the object of the blessing.  This is the fundamental difference between the Hebraic worldview and the Christian worldview.  Deuteronomy 8:10 is an instruction to bless YHWH, not to bless the food!  Christian blessings typically emphasize the food, not the provider of the food.  We pray, “Lord, bless this food to the nourishment of our bodies and us to Your service.”  But we have missed the point.  It is in God’s nature to provide what is good for us.  We do not have to bless what God has already blessed.  If we are about to eat what He tells us is food for our bodies, things He has already provided for us, then why are we blessing it again?  Do we think God overlooked something?  Of course, we might try to bless what God does not consider food, but that is a futile and useless exercise, isn’t it?  You can’t make shrimp into food by asking God to bless what He tells you not to eat.  But let’s not argue about this.  Just ask yourself why Christianity changed the sequence.  Do you suppose it might be connected with denying the validity of Torah?

The Hebrew point of view recognizes God has already provided us with His blessing.  Therefore, we eat, enjoying what He has given.  And when we are filled and satisfied with His good provision, we do not bless what He has already blessed.  We thank Him!   Here the Hebrew word birkat can mean both bless and thank.  To bless God is to thank God.  This simple change implies a paradigm shift.  From the Hebraic perspective, the world is God’s good provision.  It was created fruitful and sufficient.  It does not need further human spiritual endorsement nor is there any need to ask God to re-establish His goodness in the world.  From a Hebraic perspective, God has done all that He needed to do to provide for us.  So, we thank Him rather than attempt to remind Him to give us one more “good” meal.   The world shifts under our table because eating is no longer about asking God to care for us.  It is about understanding that He already has cared for us!

Topical Index:  blessing, meal, birkat ha-mazon, Deuteronomy 8:10

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carl roberts

..give thanks to YHWH..

“There shall be eternal summer in the grateful heart.”

One of the simplest “Christian” prayers I can think of goes something like this: “G-d is great. G-d is good. Let us thank Him for our food. By His hands we all are fed. Give us LORD our daily bread.”
I don’t know, but it sounds rather providential to me, actually.
It identifies the character of G-d. It recognizes the Source of provision. (the unseen Hand-or Providence). It remembers something that occurs “daily”.
In the “Christian” Bible (lol!).. this verse is found: “Praise be to the Lord, who is our support day by day, even the God of our salvation. (Selah)” It seems to have the same theme as the prayer just quoted,- “Praise to the LORD.. (Who is our support?) and “day-by-day”, and “the G-d of our salvation”.
Yes, I pray before I eat. But as always the question is: why do I pray? For what reason? -Am I recognizing the Hand that feeds me? I will stop, pause, (Selah- very Jewish don’t you think?) and remember the name of the LORD my G-d. The problem occurs after I have eaten. “It is written” in Bible history. -What happened to the people after they were full? What happened to nine out of ten lepers “after” they were healed? Isn’t it amazing only one leper “returned” to Yeshua to thank Him for what He had done? Incredible.
Thank you dear brother for this wonderful reminder to pray (not only) before I eat- (a pause to reflect and remember where it all came from), (but also), to pray after I have eaten and am full. Hmm.. “to pray without ceasing?” And for today’s dessert.. Yeshua said.. “I have food to eat you do not even know about” (John 4.32)!.. Wow! – there’s even more? Maybe some of that “soul food” mentioned in Isaiah 55? Today, let us- “Eat that which is good.. and let your soul delight itself in fatness”..
Look.. Find.. Feast!! Today (and together)- let us give unto the LORD the glory due His Name!

Yolanda

Ten lepers came back as one.

Charles

Shalom Michpachah
Some ‘grin’ time
Check out Devarim Ate.Ate and see what the menu is…

Linda K. Morales

WOW! That great little prayer my parents taught me as a child wasn’t too far off after all!
“God is Great, God is Good, Let us thank Him for our food! Amen”

Rex George

Thank You Skip: This teaching has truly been an eye opener for me!
Your Servant in Christ Jesus
Rex George

Gayle

“O taste and see that the LORD is good: blessed is the man that trusteth in him.”
Psalm 34:8

Yolanda

Skip, is it any wonder the rest of the Torah is so confrontational to tradition? Bless you my teacher.

Drew

We pray, “Lord, bless this food to the nourishment of our bodies and us to Your service.” But we have missed the point. (This Skip is the under statement of a life time!)

We have missed oh so much indeed brother Skip! Just like the mainstream modifications of the “Mo’adim” including Shabbat (I am discussing the non-Biblical Christian replacements of course) …. The simple changes to even the basic meal blessings underscore the rift between “what is” versus “what is supposed to be”!

The “what is” views things in relation to “self” and not in relation to “His will”! When the foundational difference between these perspectives is called out to the light, the source of current conventional thoughts (encapsulated even within the simple meal prayer) is quite ominous.

There are plenty of reasons why the Hebraic perspective is battled against! I do say battled against and not simply misunderstood by mainline Christianity. The Hebraic way is the Biblical way …. traditions and conventions like to paint this way as being “Jewish” …. so as to be able to argue that it is not for us Gentiles. In the end however we are not battling the way of the Jews but we are battling the way of Yeshua!

You know partial blindness can easily keep us from walking a straight path!

Rader

I wonder if tradition of “blessing the food” before the meal comes from Yeshua praying before He broke the fishes and loaves.