Breaking Bad

Joshua made peace with them and made a covenant with them, to let them live; and the leaders of the congregation swore an oath to them.  Joshua 9:15  NASB

A covenant– We know the story, a tragic one.  God instructs Joshua to spare no one as the Israelites march into the Promised Land. God wants the slate to be wiped clean, for very good reasons.  But one group of residents, fearing their end is drawing near, disguised themselves as poor wanderers and elicit an oath from Joshua that guarantees their protection. The result is inevitable.  This group becomes the source of continual pagan influence within the culture of Israel, eventually leading to near civil war among the tribes (the book of Judges) and opening the pathway for the monarchy.  Absolutely nothing good comes from Joshua’s compassion!  Syncretism always leads to apostasy.

You might wonder why the ultra-orthodox community of Jewish believers is so stringently anti-social.  You might question how they can possibly have an ameliorating influence in the world if they are so set in their ways, so exclusive.  You need to remember the lesson from Joshua. Syncretism always leads to apostasy.

Consider this comment from Camille Paglia:

“Historiography’s most glaring error has been its assertion that Judeo-Christianity defeated paganism.  Paganism has survived in the thousand forms of sex, art, and now modern media. Christianity has made adjustment after adjustment, ingeniously absorbing its opposition (as during the Italian Renaissance) and diluting its dogma to change with changing times.  But a critical point has been reached.  With the rebirth of the gods in the massive idolatries of popular culture, with the eruption of sex and violence into every corner of the ubiquitous mass media, Judeo-Christianity is facing its most serious challenge since Europe’s confrontation with Islam in the Middle Ages. The latent paganism of western culture has burst forth again in all its daemonic vitality.”[1]

Now, we might take issue with her, claiming that Judeo-Christianity’s goal was never to defeat paganism.  We could wrap ourselves in the “get sinners to heaven” escapist theology.  We could decry religious syncretism, so obvious in the Roman Church.  But we can’t argue with her assessment of the modern age, can we?  We all feel it.  We are slipping closer and closer to Saturnalia as a daily debacle.  There’s hardly a television show or a movie that isn’t already celebrating this ancient festival.  The art and literature of the age is filled with Paglia’s description of pagan revival. And don’t think it just sex and violence.  The Greek culture collapsed because a small percentage of the population began to question its moral assumptions.  As the fabric of the law disintegrated, so did the culture.  Joshua’s error was compounded again and again in the history of the West.  The more the Church tried to suppress paganism, the more it was forced to accommodate it.  After all, no one wanted to be in some “exclusive” society.

Are you feeling alone in your pursuit of YHVH?  Have you lost friends and family?  Do people think you’re just too religious or you’ve fallen back “under the Law?”  The narrow path is terribly lonely. It cannot afford to compromise, and therefore, it walks away from the wide swath of paganism’s revival.  At least we think it does.  It might in interesting to ask yourself how much of that ancient lust for unconstrained freedom, unleashed consumption, and unjudged action is lurking down in the depths of your own inner swamp.  The wolf that wins is the one you feed.

Topical Index: paganism, Roman Church, Camille Paglia, covenant, Joshua 9:15

[1]Camille Paglia, Sexual Personae: Art and Decadence from Nefertiti to Emily Dickenson, p. 25.

Subscribe
Notify of
20 Comments
Inline Feedbacks
View all comments
I.M.

Today’s word stirred up so many thoughts, feelings, and questions. Maybe I will post several replies today, not to muddle things up and make them too long.
Yes, I feel alone in my pursuit of YHVH. In fact, I almost feel that loneliness defines me. I keep going, serving, choosing joy, but inside I just so wish I had someone to connect with, to pray with, to study with, to ask the myriads of questions I have, to celebrate and keep the biblical festivals and Shabbat with, etc. etc. When others work, I am alone (with YHVH of course…) and when they celebrate their holidays, I work or take the opportunity to study more, but alone.
I haven’t lost friends and family, but have lots of arguments (and long silences) with my husband even though I really try either not to say anything or to say things in a “nice” way. That which should unite us disconnects us. I have to confess though, that in the beginning of this journey I did bring up issues in a very emotional, even angry way because I was so confronted with these “new” truths, and felt so bad having believed so many lies and acting on them. The reason I haven’t lost friends and family is probably because even though I am not afraid of sharing my new discoveries concerning Torah, I’m terrified of even mentioning the idea that maybe Yeshua isn’t God. If I did, I would lose them and any ministry I do.
Some people definitely think I have fallen back “under the law”, and that I’m too black and white. I’m sorry, but I think Torah is pretty clear. It’s hard to work out how to apply some of it in today’s crazy Torahless world, so far removed from God’s initial intent, but there are very few gray areas, I think.
My hope is that one day things will change and people will join in this adventure of pursuing God without the many traditions of men, pagan or not, clinging to them. Your writings Skip (and some others’) help and encourage me to keep going despite the loneliness.
Nehemiah Gordon mentioned Joshua 1:6-7 in last week’s Torah Pearls. God commanded the Israelites to be strong and very courageous for two reasons: to take the land, and to “observe to do according to all the law which Moses My servant commanded you; do not turn from it to the right hand or to the left…” Torah learning and obedience take courage. DON’T GIVE UP, DON’T LOSE HOPE! PERSEVERE! (even when things don’t turn out the way you want…)

Christine Hall

Dear IM
I could have written this – it’s almost exactly my thoughts, actions and life! Your last words – DONT GIVE UP DONT LOSE HOPE! PERSEVERE! are heart felt for as I persevered (over 16 plus years) I have changed, grown and managed to (as much as possible and not without major eruptions at times) keep peace and love with my family (siblings) I don’t have children.
But it can be so lonely at times that one looks for a diversion …..then YHVH comes and in an inexplicable way……joy bubbles up and wipes the loneliness away….. it can be a word from study, a phone call from a fellow traveler or just a great conversation with a secular friend. As Skip has taught so well it’s all about living it.
One of my favorite poems is by Robert Frost ‘The Road Not Taken’
The last to sentences sums it up beautifully ‘ I took the one less travelled by, …..it has made all the difference’.
Shalom and blessings wherever you are in the world! To you and all the thought provoking bloggers on Skip’s site.
And of course blessings and thanks to you Skip…..you remind me metaphorically of a geoligist /archeologist.
Digging for truth and never knowing what might turn up and turn everything up side down.?
???????

I.M.

Thanks Christine. Being reminded again that you’re not the only one takes away some of the sting.

John Adam

I completely understand I.M.
I’m have very similar issues!

DAvid Hankins

I.M.
YOU are NOT alone! There are many of us that travel that narrow road. Shalom and Blessings.

Mary Cayley

Thank you so much for the encouragement not to give up. I am in a very similar situation. My husband is an unbeliever and I have no one to navigate this path with. You are definitely not alone! ?

Laurita Hayes

I think the new popular word for syncretism is “ecumenism”, and it has taken the religious world by storm. If we think that it will not affect us, we could not be more wrong. Ecumenism is heading our way in the form of “tolerance”, and is being written into all the laws on the planet.

I think the world is trying once again to ‘get along’ without God – in the name of God, mind you – just as long as all the ‘names’ are ‘equal’. Don’t believe me: just go read the UN charter and others. The laws are called “hate laws” and they are crafted so that if we say that any god is NOT EQUAL to all the other ones, it will be labeled a hate crime and we will be “terrorists” heading straight for Guantanamo. I believe Islam and others are just being used to raise our fears (like 9-11) to the point that we will agree with these laws (classic dialectic tactic), little thinking that we are signing our own death warrants. The storm is about to break over the new plain of Dura. Are we ready? Are we really ready?

I.M.

You might have to define your use of the word ecumenism. It means different things in different circles/churches.

Laurita Hayes

Of course it does; what I am referring to is how it is being used in a legal sense. Never mind how it is being sold to the unsuspecting public. These are the laws that have already been written to take us down – in the name of righteousness, of course.

Lucille Champion

Are we really ready? I ask myself often! Looking for the cleansing waters to refresh, clarify and restore my spirit back to God, not just any god… the God of Abraham. And yes, it’s the ‘single file’ version for me too. I am past the ‘aloneness’ of it all and embracing the communion with just HIM, the I AM, the Creator of All things. Hardest, most painful experience in my 67 yrs…

Now, it’s time to ferret out the residue of entangled paganism. Oh, yes, it’s still there. Entrenched and still tempting my thoughts, my actions. Like a siren it beacons my past to return in fullness plus. It’s the ‘condition of the battle’ I face everyday. To run from it signals the ‘enemy’ to chase me and finally tackle me… not a pretty picture! What to do? Know thy enemy. I look inward… what are those entrenched paradigms I can’t see within me?

This forum (blog) exposes them… thanks Skip! Paralyzed with fear, to learn.. to speak… to teach? Those are ‘hot coals’ for sure. I walk them everyday. And when I get past the first batch… there’s always a new one cropping up, smoking hot… prepared just for me. Expect them.

And for heaven’s sake… take no offense… Yeshua tells us in plain understandable language. Take no offense! Thank you Laurita… your post helped focus my wandering thoughts!

Mark Parry

T.W. sadnes me. It has been a long slow process for me to let go of my idealistic views of life and the dramas of faith and free will . My faith has not waiverd in fact I have grown to respect God’s great patience and comittment to man’s volition. What we do with our freedom is sickening sometimes. Frolicking in the cesspool are we?. I just noted the similarity of the word idol to the root word in idealistic. God have mercy. He gets such bad press for our rebellion and indulgences and the resultant suffering we inflict on ourseves and others for our rebellion. Man will do almost anything to resist taking responsibility for our sin.

Mark Parry

By the way Skip this one hits the nail on the head. The clear and obvious and growing failure of Christianity is “adjustment after adjustment, ingeniously absorbing its opposition.” Let’s open a coffee bar in the Narthex that will win them over….

Mark Parry

“If my people, who are called by my name, will humble themselves and pray and seek my face and turn from their wicked ways, then I will hear from heaven, and I will forgive their sin and will heal their land.” 2Chronicles 2;4 niv

Rich Pease

When ever is the power of God defeated by man?
Two men walking on the road to Emmaus certainly believed
it happened. But “the man” who walked with them told them
the truth.
“How foolish are you and how slow of heart to believe all that
the prophets have spoken! Did not the Christ have to suffer
these things and then enter his glory?” LK 24:25
God is and always will be in control.
“Don’t be afraid; just believe.” MK 5:36

Jerry and Lisa

Yeshua Messiah is our example. He is the way. So, any way that he is, we can be. And that should be our quest. That can be our reality! Not only in our conduct but also in our psychological and emotional well-being. It is possible!

Was Yeshua Messiah ever lonely because he didn’t compromise? I don’t think he was too much, if at all. He may have been relatively alone at times, or even somewhat all the time, in the sense that no one always understood him in every way or entirely agreed with him or exactly lived liked he did. But “lonely” generally implies being sad because one has no friends or company.

Yeshua was in the world, but he was not of the world. He did not compromise, and yet, somewhere it is written, he had “joy above all his brethren”. And so can we, too! Somehow, we can live a life without compromise and not be emotionally lonely. We may lose some degree of intimacy and connection with family and friends, or we may lose connection entirely with some, but we don’t have to feel sad for ourselves because we are somewhat alone, disconnected from others to some degree or another, or even entirely from some people with whom we’d like to be connected.

Oh, we should well feel sad about disconnection, but more so for others who choose to disconnect themselves from us, or from whom we must disconnect ourselves that we would not succumb to having fellowship with darkness.

Messiah was sad for Israel whom he tried to gather to himself, like a mother hen would gather her chicks under her wings, but they would not be gathered, and so he wept over them. Or sad for Mary and Martha who seemed to have lost trust in him because he didn’t do as they expected him to when he didn’t come to them right away as they requested when their brother and Messiah’s friend, Lazurus, became sick and ended up dying. They became angry with him, and so Yeshua wept for them because they did not realize he was more than they had thought, that he was the resurrection and the life.

First of all, Yeshua was not given to emotional loneliness, because he and the Father were always one. He always had the fullness of the Ruach HaKodesh dwelling in him and so he was never separated from the Father and the Father’s love for him as His very own son in whom He was well pleased (until maybe in a sense when he became sin on our behalf during his crucifixion, when Yeshua asked why the Father had been forsaken him, though even that might not have been entirely his reality, for we know scripture says that even if we make our bed in sheol, YHVH is with us).

But also, Yeshua not only had an unhindered fellowship with the Father, he also had his biological family, and many friends, disciples, and followers with whom he had some degree of connection (again, until the end when he was forsaken by many, but that was only such a brief time). There were many people who did, at least largely, understand him, agree with him, and progressively conform their lives to his ways of living, who liked him, loved him, supported him, and were in fellowship with him. Many already were receptive to him and of like soul when he came on the scene, and many others eventually became receptive to him because of his influence on them, and they eventually came into a common understanding, agreement, lifestyle, and fellowship with him.

Now, of course, he was one of a kind, and nobody shared all his understanding of things, knew all he knew, or even lived entirely the same as he lived, and he may have somewhat experienced that as a disconnection. So, there certainly was a good chance that he felt like he was walking this earth alone sometimes, and maybe had moments of feeling a little lonely.

However, my point is, he was able to be in the world, but not of it, to be uncompromising, all the while ALSO being able to have fellowship to some extent, as well, at least with the Father, if not with others. The difference for most of us as compared to Yeshua, however, is that he was able to be in the thick of things with those who were of the world, in the kingdom of darkness, as well as with his family, friends and followers who were not “as far along” in the faith and the ways of righteousness as he, without giving in to any inclination to compromise and be evil in any way to have more of a sense of connection with them, AND without having to become a recluse in order to not compromise himself in unrighteousness. He successfully dealt with temptation, without becoming lustful, whether “lust of the eye, the flesh, or the boastful pride of life”, without being enticed and drawn away into sin. He was able to be surrounded by people in the darkness or even just in compromise, without having fellowship with that darkness or compromise. He abided in the light even in the midst of sinners, even in the midst of the rebellious, the wayward, the weak, and the immature.

Again, he did not have to make himself a recluse in order to be uncompromising. He not only had a Comforter, so as to not be overtaken by sorrow and grief due to some level of disconnection or another from others, he had a Helper who empowered him to always be willing and to work for the good pleasure of the Father by abiding in the truth, in the love of the Father, and in the ways of righteousness, all the while aggressively advancing the kingdom of Elohim in the earth through his words and deeds, and that even with aggressive opposition at times..

So, yes, Yeshua Messiah is our example! He is the way! Any way that he is, we can be! And that should be our quest! That can be our reality! Not only in our conduct, but also in our psychological and emotional well-being! It is possible!

Good FEAST DAYS to one and all!

Michael Stanley

J&L Welcome back to Skip’s table (some say fable, others say libel). Your fortnight fast from daily feasting with us had me worried you had choked on a bone of contention and were no longer among the few in our pew.

And on a more serious note and in the spirit of Teshuvah and Yom Kippur I ask you both to please forgive me for my Lashron Hara in my year long quarrel with you. I was wrong in both my judgement and in judging you. I am sorry. I will not (to) repeat this sin. May you be blessed by YHWH in the new year and may your names be inscribed in the Book of Life for good (Gmar Chatimah Tova).

PS while I am not aware of any others on this site that I have offended by my words or deeds I am aware that my mouth is big and my words have been many. So if I sinned against you or you feel I did please forgive me and may we all be inscribed, circumcised and prized by Yeshua, our High Priest, Prophet and King.

Jerry and Lisa

Thank you Michael. That was good of you. It’s just that sometimes there are other more pressing matters. Anyways, I forgive you. Shalom blessings.

Daniel Mook

Michael Stanley, you crack me up AND spur me on to holiness! What a blessed combination.

Cloud9

Thanks for sharing this Jerry and Lisa. Your post highlights my feelings as well. More than a conqueror through Christ who strengthens me comes to mind. Years ago I read a book entitled Lifestyle Evangelism. One of the unforgettable statements was that Paul was able to identify without becoming identical… Prior to this I found myself in what I refer to as Scripture Wars … the place where knowledge puffs up rather than love building up. Today I’m reminded that God so love the world so that anyone …

The statement from the book was connected to 1 Corinthians 9:19-23

For though I am free from all men, I have made myself a slave to everyone, so that I may win more [for Christ]. To the Jews I became as a Jew, so that I might win Jews [for Christ]; to men under the Law, [I became] as one under the Law, though not being under the Law myself, so that I might win those who are under the Law. To those who are without (outside) the Law, [I became] as one without the Law, though [I am] not without the law of God, but under the law of Christ, so that I might win those who are without law. To the weak I became [as the] weak, to win the weak. I have become all things to all men, so that I may by all means [in any and every way] save some [by leading them to faith in Jesus Christ]. And I do all this for the sake of the gospel, so that I may share in its blessings along with you.

Larry Reed

Good word. The word that comes to mind to me is “allowance“. That which we allow into our lives. Probably similar to leaven. “ a little”
leaven , leavens the whole lump!
Speaking personally here, having come out of the gay lifestyle, after 20 years in Egypt, there are many in my Christian family that tell me I am silly, that I should just be who I am. Well, truth be told, I am moving toward being who I am, in Christ. I’m being transformed from one degree of glory to another as I gaze upon his face, not perfectly, not completely but from one degree to another ! And that’s actually how it happens in reverse. I make allowances and slowly but surely I move further and further away from glory. I am swimming upstream here….. from my vantage point I can really understand what is happening in the body of Christ. Having a form of godliness, but impotent ! You dilute and dilute and what do you have left. On the other hand, the Bible says that they that know their God, shall be strong and do exploits ! Daniel 11:32b. Also, Proverbs 4:18 . “The path of the just is like a shining light…..”.