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B'Midbar/Numbers 14:27 Until when for this evil assembly, that causes complaint against Me?
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Rashi: Rabbi Shlomo Yitzchaki (1040-1105CE), French rabbi who wrote commentaries on the Torah, the Prophets and the Talmud, lived in Troyes where he founded a yeshiva in 1067; focuses on the plain meaning (p'shat) of the text, although sometimes quite cryptic in his brevity
is in the Hif'il - causative -
voice, so that it has the sense of causing or provoking complaint against
G-d. From this he deduces that the "evil assembly" must be the ten spies
who brought the bad report of the Land, so causing the people to disobey
G-d's orders to go up and enter the Land. On that basis, Rashi echoes the
words of Rabbi Hiyya that the minimum size of an assembly - in Jewish
thought, a minyan - is ten men (b. Megilah 23b). Although
'assembly' can be - and is, frequently - used for much larger groups, the
smallest group that can still be considered representative of the community
and be covered by the word 'assembly' is ten. In orthodoxy, the ten must
be men, since only men are considered obligated to the time-bound
commandments such as praying the prayer services; however, the other
streams of Judaism count women as equal partners in the assembly.
Sforno: Rabbi Ovadiah Sforno (1470-1550CE), Italian rabbi, philosopher and physician; born in Cesena, he went to Rome to study medicine; left in 1525 and after some years of travel, settled in Bologna where he founded a yeshiva which he conducted until his death
Can this be used as a key to understanding one of Yeshua's most enigmatic sayings? "One can say something against the Son of Man and be forgiven; but whoever keeps speaking against the Ruach HaKodesh will never be forgiven, neither in the olam hazeh or the olam haba" (Matthew 12:32, CJB). What can this possibly mean? If Yeshua is G-d and the Holy Spirit is G-d, how can speaking against G-d be forgiveable, but speaking against G-d not be forgiveable? Scholars have debated over the centuries what exactly this sin against the Holy Spirit might be and how one avoids committing it.
Yeshua says, "If you ask anything of the Father in My name, He will give it to you" (John 16:23, NRSV) and John writes, "If we confess our since, He who is faithful and just will forgive us our sins" (1 John 1:9, NRSV). This seems to clearly say that the action of repentance - turning away from sin and asking for forgiveness is a guaranteed process: if we turn to G-d and seek His forgiveness, we will be forgiven; period; full-stop. The Scripture is both clear and unambiguous, and deliberately so - G-d does not want there to be any doubt. So speaking against Father G-d, even speaking against Yeshua can all be forgiven once we realise our sin and repent of it; once we acknowledge what we have done or said, experience regret, make amends where possible and appropriate, and ask G-d to forgive us, He does - every time. But where does that repentance, that conviction of of sin come from in the first place? From our consciences, convicted by the Holy Spirit; that inner voice that tells as that we have done wrong. If we suppress that conviction, then we cannot repent and ask forgiveness, and without asking we do not receive - as simple as that!
Rav Sha'ul warns Timothy about "liars whose own consciences have been burned, as if with a red-hot branding iron" (1 Timothy 4:2, CJB). These are people who not only reject Yeshua, but have set their hearts against hearing the truth from G-d in any way; they have deliberately shut down the Ruach HaKodesh in their lives and so, for them, repentance and consequently forgiveness is impossible - not because G-d would not grant it, but because they will never ask. May none of us enter that state.
Further Study: Jeremiah 5:20-25; 2 Peter 3:8-9; Acts 3:18-21
Application: Do you find it impossible to go through the day without complaining about something? Things are just never quite right, never the way you would do them? Complaining is cyclic and often draws others into a spiral that we cannot escape without G-d's intervention. If that is you, then make today the day you cry out to G-d for repentance and the ability to see and receive His blessings.
© Jonathan Allen, 2007
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