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B'resheet/Genesis 14:21 Give me the people and take the spoil for yourself
On the face of it, this doesn't seem like an unreasonable request. The
king of Sodom is offering Avraham all the money while relieving him of the
responsibility of providing for any of the people that he has rescued from
the five kings that had raided Sodom and the other local city-states.
Nechama Leibowitz: (1905-1997CE), born in Riga, graduate of the University of Berlin, made aliyah in 1931; professor at Tel Aviv University; taught Torah for over 50 years
Abravanel: Don Isaac Abravanel (1437-1508CE), Statesman and biblical commentator; born in Lisbon, died in Venice; wrote commentaries on the whole of the Hebrew Scriptures
Or Hahayyim: A Torah commentary written by Rabbi Hayyim ben Moshe Attar (1696-1743CE), a Morrocan rabbi and kabbalist who travelled in Italy enoucraging aliyah and settled in Israel in 1741; the commentary reads the whole Torah as an allegory for the relationship between G-d and the Jewish people
The Psalmist describes G-d as a rescuer of captives: "He leads out the prisoners into prosperity" (Psalm 68:6, NASB) and the prophet Isaiah speaks of the Messiah when he says, "The Spirit of the L-rd is upon me, because the L-rd has anointed me to bring good news to the afflicted; He has sent me to bind up the broken-hearted; to proclaim liberty to captives and freedom to prisoners" (Isaiah 61:1, NASB). The Hebrew Scriptures look to a time when G-d will intervene in the affairs of men to release people from bondage and captivity and bring them into freedom and comfort.
Yeshua Himself claimed the fulfillment of the Isaiah passage when He read
from the scroll in the synagogue at the start of His ministry: "The
Spirit of
Adonai: either the Hebrew word meaning 'My Master' or - more frequently - an allusion used to avoid pronouncing the Tetragrammaton, the so-called 'ineffable' name of G-d
More than that, as Avraham rejected the king of Sodom's offer, refusing to accept anything from him lest he should be able to say that he made Avraham rich, so Yeshua responded when challenged by the devil. After a period of fasting in the wilderness, Yeshua was tempted three times by the devil to take matters into His own hands. The last of these three trials took place when "the devil took Him to a very high mountain and showed Him all the kingdoms of the world and their glory, and he said to Him, 'All these things I will give you, if you fall down and worship me' (Matthew 4:8-9, NASB). Refusing the (false) offer to achieve His objectives by the wrong means - that is, by not submitting solely to the Father - Yeshua rebukes the devil and answers him from Scripture. In the same way, we should follow Yeshua's example and refuse any short-cuts or easy options that would take us out of the will of G-d; He has a plan for our lives and we must obey Him and stay within the limits He has set us.
Further Study: Jeremiah 39:18; 2 Corinthians 2:14; 1 Peter 3:18-22
Application: Are you tempted to take things into your own hands, take a short-cut or exploit forbidden information in order to speed things up or obtain a better position? Stand firm and resist the devil, for this is not G-d's way and order for you. "Resist the devil and he will flee from you!" (James 4:7, NASB).
© Jonathan Allen, 2007
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