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Shemot/Exodus 34:10 "Behold, I am making a covenant: before all your people I shall do wonders ..."
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The word
HaShem: literally, Hebrew for 'The Name' - an allusion used to avoid pronouncing the Tetragrammaton, the so-called 'ineffable' name of Gd
- a
Nif'il participle form, feminine plural - comes from the root verb
, which has a
consistent set of meanings such as "to be extraordinary", "to be wonderful,
marvellous" (Davidson). The participle, therefore, working
from "things being wonderful" is usually translated "wonders" or
"wonderful, great things" (e.g. Daniel 11:36). The text, then, records
Rashi goes perhaps the furthest, claiming that the word
The Rashbam: Rabbi Samuel ben Asher (1085-1174), a grandson of Rashi; lived in Northern France; worked from the plain meaning of the Hebrew text even when this contradicted established rabbinic interpretaton
Abraham Ibn Ezra: (1089-1167), born in Tudela, Spain; died in the South of France after wandering all around the shores of the Mediterranean and England; a philosopher, astronomer, doctor, poet and linguist; wrote a Hebrew grammar and a commentary on the Bible
is derived from
the different root -
- which means to
separate or distinguish. This enables him to translate the phrase as:
"before all your people I shall make distinctions", and point to Israel
being set apart from all the other nations.
1 Kings 18 records the confrontation between Elijah and the prophets of
Ba'al and Asherah on Mt. Carmel. Throughout the episode, the people show
resistance to Elijah's challenge. Elijah starts by asking the crowd of
witnesses who have gathered to see what happens, "'How long will you
hesitate between two opinions? If the L-rd is G-d, follow Him; but if
Ba'al, follow him.' But the people did not answer him a word" (1 Kings
18:21, NASB). The people might have seen lots of ritual before,
but were not interested in taking a position. Elijah's logic seemed
reasonable, but the people refused to commit themselves. The story is well
know, but pick up again immediately after the fire fell from heaven at
Elijah's request:
- and all the
people saw and they fell on the faces (v. 39). The Hebrew text tells us
something important about the way the people reacted: the first verb -
- is singular,
while the second verb
is plural. All
the people saw, as one, the fire fall; there was no getting away from that
- everyone present had seen it. But a typical crowd reaction followed:
some of the people hit the deck instantly, others took a little longer and
some - either curious or skeptical - didn't want to do it at all; they only
lowered themselves reluctantly to the ground when they saw that everyone
else already had and that they would stick out like a sore thumb if they
remained upright. Even in the face of an open miracle, there were those
who didn't want the consequences that would follow - having to acknowledge
and worship HaShem rather than Ba'al - and so tried to deny the miraculous
wonder that had been performed. Elijah's subsequent flight the next day
from Jezebel's threats shows that he too recognised that even miracles were
not enough to change the dominant nature of the culture of Israel.
Man has always had a tendency to downgrade G-d to fit his own expectations. From the very beginning, Eve's sin in the Garden of Eden came about because the enemy caused her to downplay G-d's words because of logic. Throughout history we can see the same scenario being played out again and again. The gifts of the Holy Spirit have been suppressed for centuries - apart from odd bubbles of life - because their operation wasn't in line with the expectations of the church, be that clergy or laity. They remain suppressed by a significant block of churches, the cessationalists, who are forced to downgrade the words of Yeshua and Rav Sha'ul in order to support their claim that the gifts were only intended for the apostolic age and have now been withdrawn because the "perfect" has come (1 Corinthians 13:10) in the form of the New Covenant scriptures. Many believers live stunted spiritual lives because their expectations of the way G-d works have been shaped and constrained by the traditions of the church since the time of the Enlightenment, when reason triumphed over faith and the supernatural was declared impossible because G-d was bound just as much by the physical laws of nature as man is. It is no coincidence that such disbelief in the supernatural is also often found hand-in-glove with replacement theology, which denies that G-d's covenant with Israel continues or that Israel is to play any other part in the eschatalogical outworking of the ages.
Charles Haddon Spurgeon, the mighty preacher of Victorian England, was involved - in the closing years of his life and ministry - in what became known as the Downgrade Controversy. In 1887-88 Spurgeon was increasingly concerned about the advance of Higher Criticism and other liberal attacks upon the veracity and authenticity of the Bible, in particular upon its inspiration. He saw that many educated people were moving over to the prevailing scholarship which saw the Scriptures as nothing more than the writings of man and not inspired by G-d - if indeed there was a G-d at all - and that this position was being taught to the next generation of ministers in training. After a series of articles in his magazine Sword and Trowel and bruising but private correspondence with the council of his denomination, Spurgeon felt that he had no alternative but to resign from the Baptist Union. He could no longer, in spite of many years of close personal friendship in some cases, fellowship with those who denied the inspiration and truth of the gospel or, by remaining quiet within the Union, condone their teaching. The leaders of the Union and lecturers in the Union colleges had downgraded their vision of G-d to match the circumstances and experience of their lives, rather than focusing on the truth of G-d's word and lifting their lives to conform with that truth.
In our lives today we too face the same challenges. Rival attractions vie for our attention and favour, be that Amazon, Facebook or simply radio and television. There is a constant torrent of material in every public arena that seeks to deny G-d, to encourage us to be more materialistic and buy more stuff, and to downgrade what faith we have to what society considers reasonable. But the same G-d who provided for our people in the wilderness, sent the fire on Mt. Carmel and - most importantly - raised Yeshua from the dead, is still active and working in His world to call men into relationship with Himself and enlist them as workers in His vineyard. Whom will you believe - the god of this age (the Devil) or the G-d who made the whole universe and has cut His covenant with us?
Further Study: Joshua 24:14-15; 2 Corinthians 4:16-18
Application: If you think about it, have you allowed the world to shrink your ideas about G-d? Has He become tame to you because the world says that you shouldn't expect any more? Why not turn to G-d today and ask Him about a small miracle to set you back on track again?
© Jonathan Allen, 2009
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