Congregation Beth Ha'Mashiach
(House of the Messiah) - Worshipping ADONAI
& His Messiah, Yeshua Ha'Mashiach
Living & teaching as our
Messiah taught us to Live
Messianic
Congregation serving Northeast Atlanta Georgia (Gwinnett, Barrow, Dekalb,
Rockdale, Walton)
Phone 770
554-2867 - email:
rabbi@cbhm.org
Shelach - שלח : “Send thou” Torah : Numbers 13:1–15:41 Haftarah : Joshua 2:1–24 Gospel : John 7, 8
Thought for the Week:
(An excerpt from Torah Club)
The world looks on us as fools, wasting our time with religion. On some
occasions, we may feel as if our efforts to serve God have been utterly in vain.
It might seem as if we have wasted our time and energy in pursuit of His
Kingdom. But in the Torah, we learn that which is wasted on the God is not a
waste at all, but a sacred service received on the altar of heaven.
Commentary:
Even if I am being poured out…
(Based on Torah Club)
In Numbers 15:1–12, the Torah teaches about the wine libations which the
priesthood was to pour out over God’s altar. No one drank of the wine libations.
They were completely poured out. To some, it might have seemed like a waste.
Paul compared his own life to a wine libation poured out over the altar on
two different occasions. He first did so in his early letter to the Philippians;
the other instance is in one of his last letters, 2 Timothy.
To the Philippians, Paul compares his life to a drink offering in that he has
poured out his efforts upon the Philippians without any assurance of success.
Some would measure his efforts spent on them to be a ‘waste,’ but Paul sees it
as a gesture of worship “upon the sacrifice and service” of faith.
But even if I am being poured out as a drink offering upon the sacrifice
and service of your faith, I rejoice and share my joy with you all. You too,
I urge you, rejoice in the same way and share your joy with me. (Philippians
2:17-18)
Years later, near the end of his life, Paul wrote to Timothy. He knew that he
would not survive the murderous intrigues of the court of Nero, and he again
compared his life to a drink offering being poured out over the altar. He knew
that he was going to die a martyr’s death. But in his perspective, it was a
noble end in as much as it was a martyrdom for the sake of the Kingdom. In the
same way that the wine of a libation was ‘wasted’ on the altar is not wasted at
all, but rendered up as a holy service to God, so too Paul regarded his own life
as spent on the service of God. Though it may seem ‘wasted’ to others, to Paul
it was a holy service.
For I am already being poured out as a drink offering, and the time of my
departure has come. (2 Timothy 4:6)
Yeshua Himself, on taking the cup of His last seder meal, makes allusion to
the drink offering ritual saying, “This cup which is poured out for you is the
new covenant in My blood.” (Luke 22:20) In Mark He says His blood is “poured out
for many,” (Mark 14:24) and in Matthew He adds that it is poured out “for
forgiveness of sins.” (Matthew 26:28)
The Master’s blood which was poured out on the ground like water and like a
drink offering upon the altar. It was not a waste.