Certainty

For I know my transgressions, and my sin is ever before me. Psalm 51:3 NASB

I know – There are very few things we know for certain. We don’t know what will happen tomorrow. We don’t know if our relationships will last. We don’t know the weather. We don’t know even the apparently unalterable “laws” of nature. After all, miracles do happen. We don’t know the certainty of just about everything that really matters, not even if we will die (the “end” might just come before we get to the grave). But we do know one thing for sure. We know our transgressions. Pesa’a—those offenses, crimes, moments of disobedience, violations, breaches of relationship and promise, oh, yes, these we know! We might wish we could forget them. We might wish they had never happened. But the truth is much harsher. It is absolutely certain that we have offended God and others, and we know it only too well. David uses the verb yada’ for good reason. The full scope of our transgressions rarely makes itself manifest to us but when it does, oh, the humiliation of it all, the agony and despair. “I know my failures and they are many indeed.” Just recalling them causes me to grieve. Imagining a world (or a judgment) where all is revealed is more than I can take.

So there we have it. David exposes his sin to the world. In a song, no less, meant to be sung out loud. We might have chosen private poetry or a heart-wrenching entry in a journal. But this? Letting the world know that he is wretched, abusive, lecherous, uncaring, conspiratorial and vindictive? No, most of us could never do that! We would rather hide the truth and pretend that the real world is the world of our masked exterior.

But God will not have it—and in the end, neither will we. Why? Because our sin is “ever before” us. It refuses to be swept away. It haunts us with the specter that someone might discover our treachery. It continually reminds us that if people really knew the certainty that we know they could never, would never, love us. We don’t prefer the dark. We are forced into the cave of pretense because we fear the light. Humiliation is the greatest ally of the yetzer ha’ra.

So what can we do about this? Do we opt for David’s solution and sing our failures before our subjects and peers? Or do we take the Pauline approach and share our burden with another? One thing again is certain. “When I kept silent about my sin, my body wasted away through my groaning all day long. For day and night Your hand was heavy upon me; my vitality was drained away as with the fever heat of summer” (Psalm 32:3-4). In the end there is no such thing as secret sin. And now we know why the Hebrew word tzaraat cannot be translated as “leprosy.” This condition described in Leviticus is the outward manifestation of inner corruption. It may attach itself to walls, to clothes and finally to skin, but it is always about something wrong on the inside, the inside of a house, a person or a body. Sin shows itself, and in the ancient world of Hebrew thought, it shows itself in a visible condition. We know our transgressions, and because we know, something about our external world reveals what we know, observable by those who have eyes to see. What can we do about this? The Levitical solution is confession and purification. Without a priest, life is considerably more difficult today. But tzaraat will not go away by itself, so we better find a way. “I acknowledged my sin to You, and my iniquity I did not hide; I said, ‘I will confess my transgressions to the Lord’; and You forgave the guilt of my sin” (Psalm 32:5).

Topical Index: know, yada’, pesa’a tzaraat, Psalm 51:3, Psalm 32:3-5

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laurita hayes

This is wonderful. So very thoughtful and revealing, too. We cannot hide the stench of fracture. We all know the smell, for we all have it, too. All in the same boat, and going nowhere until we can start to figure out what to do with the shame of it all. Together. David could not live with shame. He was a man after God’s own heart because he could not hide his sin. He hated shame. Do we? Do we hate it enough to choose humility instead? Shame shows us the places that we are lacking vulnerability. All the places I want to hide are all the places I should be showing off. Shame is a liar of the first degree. Shame tells me over and over why I cannot afford connection IN THIS PLACE. Shame keeps me fractured. When I listen to shame, and obey what it says, I am going to continue to cut myself off from relationship in that place. All false religion employs shame to some degree; you are going to be trained to have a relationship with shame at some level. But righteousness is about honor. David was a man of honor. He did not agree with shame. He did not listen when shame told him to hide. Instead, he used shame to show him his sin, and then did the opposite. He restored his honor by exposing his dishonor. Repentance is righteousness. Repentance is honorable. Repentance restores us back to honor, and when we walk in honor, we are not ashamed. I am ashamed of my sin only as long as it is whipping me. When I turn around and win the fight over it, instead of doing what it tells me to do and RUN and HIDE, the results of that fight are a badge of honor. There is nothing shameful about winning! David strutted his win at the same time he exposed his previous loss. Notice that it became a PAST transgression by that exposure. He won the fight, which is the best insurance that he was not going to be tempted by it again. It was going to take a new lie next time, for he found his way back to the truth on that road, and that truth restored him back to freedom.

P.S. about that priest. Barbara pointed out yesterday that Yeshua picked right up where Caiphas left off. We DO have one, and “He ever liveth to make intercession for us”,so that “we can come boldly unto the throne of grace”. Halleluah!

bp Wade

And i was reminded of it by Pieter….Pieter! Where are you?

Suzanne

Skip, I appreciate what you said about Tzara’at. Every year when we read that parashah, I find myself thinking that tzara’at was such a blessing to the people. If you were beginning to wander away, tzara’at would show up in your housing first and you would have opportunity to deal with it. If ignored it would show up in the clothing and eventually on the skin. What a blessing — all that warning before getting to the inner man and so obvious that one had to “choose” to ignore it. Ah, the blessing of living under the cloud.
Do you think David had that concept in mind also? I suspect that it was part of his paradigm and he didn’t even have to think about it — he just knew that his tzara’at was at the doorpost and now getting on his clothes. Time to act before it manifest on the skin (figuratively speaking). I wonder if that isn’t the way that shame is supposed to work for us? Maybe if we didn’t turn it upside down when feeling it, we would see the benefit and the inherent blessing.

Patty

I have done the Pauline approach in counseling and with friends. And continue to do this. Beautiful to do and so helpful. And recently, I have done the public thing. I was able to do this for several reasons, but I didn’t have to do it. At least not in my mind, but I wanted to do this. It was terrifying, but it has been the most freeing thing I have ever done. When Jesus said the truth will set you free, maybe this wasn’t what He had in mind, but I gotta say the load has been a lot lighter since.

laurita hayes

Patty, what is the Pauline approach? I haven’t heard of it and am interested.

bp Wade

I have been absolutely thinking the same thing. Do tell….

Michael C

This Tzara’at is a new one for me. Very interesting. I can see, if I understand correctly, how what is inside manifests itself progressively to the outside of us and ultimately leaves its mark and stench, if you will, all around us. I am certainly aware of that occurrence in my own life.

I can see from this why Rabbi’s could and would diagnose physical illnesses as originating from people’s specific actions. No meds needed, simply repentance and obedience were needed. Makes me want to rethink Yeshua’s healing people. How did Lazurus change his life after Yeshua brought him back? How was the blind man’s life different after his miracle? I’m amazed we don’t have a story about those events.

carl roberts

You Know What?

Blessed Assurance

~ As for me, I KNOW that my Redeemer lives, and at the last He will take His stand on the earth. [and] even after my skin is destroyed, yet from my flesh I shall see God;…~ (Job 19.25)

David, king of Israel knew and He said, [calmly, confidently] “While the child was still alive, I fasted and wept; for I said, ‘Who knows, the LORD may be gracious to me, that the child may live.’ “But now he has died; why should I fast? Can I bring him back again? ‑I will go to him one day, but he will not return to me.” (2 Samuel 12.23)

~ These things I have written to you who believe in the Name of the Son of God, so that you may KNOW that you have eternal life. [and] This is the confidence which we have before Him, that, if we ask anything according to His will, He hears us.… (1 John 5.13,14) No less than 18 times John says, “we know.” Confident assurance? I would say so!

~This hope [this confident expectation] we have as an anchor of the soul, a hope [an assurance] both sure and steadfast and one which enters within the veil, where Jesus has entered as a forerunner for us, having become our High Priest forever according to the order of Melchizedek.” (Hebrews 6:17-20) John also said….”And everyone who has this hope fixed on Him purifies himself, just as He is pure.”

The Love Test

How do we KNOW we have passed from Death unto Life? “because we love the brethren.” (1 John 3.14)

“Commanded” to love? ~ And this commandment we have from Him, that the one who loves God should love his brother also ~ (1 John 4.21)

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=mj-pZQ_XjyU