Shabbat Bible Study for 26 August 2023

Shabbat Bible Study for August 26, 2023

©2023 Mark Pitrone and Fulfilling Torah Ministries

Shemoth 39:33-40:38, YeshaYahu 33:20-34:8, Tehellim 69, Gilyahna 15:1-8

Links for this week:

http://philologos.org/__eb-nis/three.htm 

http://tzion.org/Tree_Sefiroth.htm 

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Unicorn

Shemoth 39.33-43 – Last week we went beyond our portion to the end of ch.39 where we saw that Betzaleel and Aholiav had completed the work on the Mishkan and all its furnishings and brought them to Moshe for final QA and construction. We saw in vv.32, 42 and 43 that when Moshe saw the completed work, b’nei Yisrael had made everything exactly as he had instructed Betzaleel and Aholiav, who had supervised all the work b’nei Yisrael had done. We saw how Moshe had been shown the true Mishkan in heaven while he was 40 days in the mount in the presence of Yah in his throneroom (which explains how he could go 40 days without food or water – he was outside time and space while he was there, so there would be no passage of time or need to nourish his body). We saw that Yah had instructed Moshe individually by component what he wanted built according to the pattern he’d shown Moshe in the mount. Moshe would then give the instruction of what to build and how it was to look to Betzaleel and leave it to Ruach to guide Betzaleel and Aholiav in their respective tasks. And when it was all done in vv.42 and 43, Moshe looked at all of it and saw that Ruach had led those 2 men to successfully convey to each workman under his charge the way to complete the task perfectly, as they had done so. The expression ‘as Yah had instructed Moshe, so did they’ (vv.32 & 42) is repeated twice in the present tense, and then was reiterated in the past perfect tense, ‘as Yah had instructed Moshe, so they had done.’(v.43) 

We then saw that the rabbis explain that this is a point by point ‘atonement’ for the different ways they had transgressed the covenant with the golden calf (which is understandable in a metaphorical sense, but is ultimately ‘malarkey’, as death is the wages for sin (Rom.3.23), not just a perfect work in opposition to ‘missing the mark’, which is what is expected if one is to work his own way to justification and life eternal). 

Our personally “Fulfilling Torah perfectly” was never anyone’s way to eternal life, as many Xians denominations erroneously teach. Had it been, there would be no eternal life except Yah’s. Our way to eternal life is by the blood of Mashiyach, which paid the ransom for those held captive; us! That buys us back from the adversary to whom we’d sold ourselves and whom we could not repay, for his per sin price was one death.  All we could ever attain in this life was ‘blamelessness’. 

THAT is our model; not sinless perfection, but blamelessness before him. We are blameless when we confess our sin and turn from it to him. 

Remember Heb.10;

Only Yah Yeshua is sinless, the ‘last Adam’ [1Cor.15.45]. But because he paid the ransom to the adversary [he certainly did not pay it to himself, did he?], we can now be blameless without having to offer animals to satisfy haSatan’s blood lust. The blood was NOT to appease Yah, who knew from before the beginning that we would sin and thereby lose our inheritance to the adversary. 

Ch.40.1-16 – “B’yom Chodesh harishon, b’echad lachodesh – In the day of the first new moon, in the first day of the month” can only mean the biblical/’spiritual’ Rosh HaShana is the first day of the 1st month, not the first day of the 7th month, because Yah had commanded Moshe in 

So, the Mishkan was to be inaugurated, built, anointed and offered at on the 1st day of the 2nd year out of Egypt. In vv.1-16 we see the order that the service would have on the 1st Rosh HaShanah in the Wilderness. This was, by the way the ONLY Rosh HaShanah, they were intended to spend in the wilderness. The Wilderness Adventure was supposed to end when they came to Kadesh (Num.13), only a few weeks hence. 

Yah gives Moshe specific instructions on the order that was to be followed when they broke camp and pitched again. First, the Ark was placed and covered within the inner veil. The sanctified ark was not to be seen by the congregation – only the High Priest was to see it. Then the Table of Showbread was placed, then the Menorah was placed opposite the Table and then the Incense altar was placed before the ark on this side of the veil. Next the outer veil was placed where it was to be erected. Next, the Altar was placed near where the entrance to the court was to be and then the laver was placed between the altar and the outer veil and the water to fill the laver was placed nearby. Next, the court’s curtains were placed and the curtain that was the door of the court was placed. 

Then was given specific instructions on the order the anointing to take place. The Mishkan and it’s furnishings and utensils first, then the altar of burnt offering, then the laver were to be anointed to set them apart for the Aharonic priesthood to serve through. And the promise was given (v.15) that the Aharonic priesthood would be everlasting, or until the end of this ‘Generation’ or Creation. But this heaven and earth will pass and a New heaven and a New Earth will be created, where the Aharonic priesthood will cease to be, for there will be no sin or death there. Up to this point, the anointing of the Kohanim was personal, not for their progeny. But here they are promised the priesthood ‘forever’. Moshe now did what b’nei Yisrael had done in the making of the Mishkan, exactly as Yah had instructed him.

Moshe anointed it all, beginning with the Mishkan and all its utensils, then the altar of burnt offering and all its utensils, making the altar kodesh kadashim. Chumash has a good comment on this use of kodesh kadashim for the altar, as opposed to the Mishkan on pg.291. There was no place or thing on earth that was more kodesh than the spiritual space that was the Kodesh Kadashim, the one place on earth where Yah himself had deigned to place his Shekinah. That 10 cubit square area of the earth was translated into heaven itself for as long as Yah decided to rest there. He would move his presence in the pillar of cloud or fire and stop exactly where he wanted Moshe to place the ark and the construction of the Mishkan and tent of meeting would begin from there. Next he anointed the Laver’s basins and its stand to make them ‘holy’. 

Next he brought Aharon and his sons, Nadav, Avihu, Elazar and Ithamar to the entrance to the Ohel Moad, the Tent of Meeting, and immersed them in water (Stone’s Tanakh). He brought them to the Laver (this is an inference, since I can’t think of where else Moshe could immerse them in a mikvah at the Tent of Meeting, unless it was assembled in front of the Rock of Rephidim that provided their water, which would demand that at least the shore of that pool or creek would be within the court and that ain’t likely). Then he dressed Aharon in his High Priestly vestments and anointed him and them. Then he dressed the ‘boys’ in their service garments and anointed them. Q&C

Vv.17-38 – Then Moshe erected the Mishkan. The Chumash makes a good point, that Moshe could not have done the entire construction himself. [Share the prefatory note on vv.17-38 on pg.292] How could he have placed the Mishkan, by which I mean the innermost covering of the Tabernacle, on top of the 18-foot tall boards? This was something with which he needed a lot of help. But it also says that Moshe did the construction with no indication that anyone assisted him. The inference I take here is that Yah helped him, perhaps by holding the Mishkan up while Moshe but up the boards under it (which is how the peshat reads – he put up the Mishkan, THEN he erected the boards) or by carrying Moshe above the boards after he took hold of the Mishkan to stretch over the boards. One thing is certain – they didn’t have a crane out there to put the pieces together. Then he put the ohel, or tent, over top of the Mishkan and then the ohel’s cover over top of it from above. And they did this 42 times in the Wilderness Adventure. Moshe did these things ‘as Yah had commanded Moshe’, which means in the same manner as and at the time of the commandment. Thereafter, the priests built the Mishkan.

After he put up the Mishkan and the ohel moayd (tent of meeting), he took the tables of testimony, which he had kept in a wooden box in his own tent (Ramban) and placed them in the ark, then the Mercy seat on it and then the staves in the rings. Then he covered it from above. Then he took the ark into the Mishkan and put up the veil between the ark and the incense altar. Were these all miraculous performances of his duties? I think so. I think, and some of the rabbis think the same, that when Moshe went to obey Yah in all that he’d commanded him, Yah honored his faith by performing the task through him. Mo knew that HE couldn’t do any of this himself, but when he was faithful to obey, Yah was faithful to empower him to do it. It would be the same when it was time to break camp and move, when the priests put their shoulders to the staves to move the ark and other furnishings of the Mishkan (and perhaps the Mishkan itself) Yah carried it and them. Again “as Yah had commanded Moshe” means that Moshe did not hesitate to obey in any and every detail. 

Next, he placed the Table of Showbread on the north side of the Tent of Meeting, and set the Bread on it, “as Yah had commanded Moshe”. Next came the menorah on the south side of the Ohel Moad, which he dressed and lit, “as Yah had commanded Moshe”. Next was the incense altar against the veil and before the ark and the first offering of incense, I assume at the morning offering, and also “as Yah had commanded Moshe”. 

Then he put up the outer veil between the Tent of meeting and the court. Next he went to the open end of the court to anoint the altar of burnt offering, where he then offered the first burnt offering and meal offering, “As Yah had commanded Moshe”. Next he went to the Laver that was before the outer veil of the Ohel Moad and there Moshe, Aharon and all his sons washed their hands and feet both coming and going from the altar to the tent and from the tent to the altar, “As Yah had commanded Moshe.” They washed the defilement of the world off themselves before entering the Ohel Moad, and then washed the blood of the offering off before it could be defiled by the world they were re-entering.

In all of this, I am assuming that Aharon and his sons are watching as the instructions are being given by Yah and repeated and performed by Moshe. 7 times the phrase was repeated, “as Yah had commanded Moshe”. 7 is the number representing spiritual completion or perfection. There are 9 mentions of Moshe DOING his work, which = 32, 3 being the number of divine perfection, according to E.W. Bullinger’s book Number in Scripture, which you can see online at http://philologos.org/ewb-nis/three.htm. If you like number studies, this is probably the best book for it from the Messianic point of view. 9 is the number that represents finality in judgment, and as Bullinger says (under the entry for #9), 

“The gematria of the word “Dan,” which means a judge, is 54 (9×6).”

9×6 designates the final judgment of man, which may be why Dan is not mentioned in Rev.7; it isn’t yet time for man’s final judgment. That is 1000 years hence at the GWT of Rev.20.10ff.

The last mention of Moshe’s work on ch.40 is when he ‘completes’ it in v.33. That makes the 10th reference to Moshe’s work, and, according to Bullinger, 10 is one of the 4 perfect numbers (from the entry for #3),

Three is the first of four perfect numbers (see p. 23).

    * Three denotes divine perfection;

    * Seven denotes spiritual perfection;

    * Ten denotes ordinal perfection; and

    * Twelve denotes governmental perfection.  

10 denotes ‘ordinal’ perfection – ordinal meaning to put in order, or an authoritative decree. Remember the 10 commandments and the 10 sefiroth? 10 denotes perfect order. 

As Moshe had blessed the congregation and the work they had done in making all the stuff for the court and the Mishkan, so Yah now blessed chol Yisrael and the work that they and Moshe had done by resting his kavod on and within the Mishkan and the Tent of Meeting. His presence SO filled the Ohel Moad that even Moshe could not get inside it. Yah was VERY pleased with the Mishkan; so much so that either the cloud or the fire of his presence was ever on the Mishkan, except when it was time for Yisrael to move. Then it went before the people until the next camp, where it would stop and mark the site for the ark again. When encamped, the presence rested on and in the Mishkan for all the people of Israel to witness. Q&C

YeshaYahu 33:20-34:833.20-24 – This whole passage is directed at the Assyrian, the Anti-Mashiyach spirit. The words that the KJV translates as ‘city of our solemnities’ are the Hebrew words kir’yath moadenu, city of our appointed times or feasts. Our portion is millennial, as there is deliverance yet to be done and it is therefore NOT olam haba, and I think it is either Armageddon [very beginning of the Millennium] or the LAST Sukkoth of the Kingdom [very end of the Millennium] that we see in 

The great battle all through history has been Jacob vs. Esau, the tzadik vs. the rasha, the wicked, and this is no different. It doesn’t matter of what bloodline you are physically, but where your heart is and what it is after. If a physical Edomite desires the heart of Yah to be his own, he is tzedikah. If a physical Israelite is after his own lusts and cares nothing for the hart of Yah, he is rasha, of the spirit of Esau and an Edomite. There are a LOT of Edomites who rise to political power in Israel and the United States, not to mention the rest of the world. The predominant spirit of this world’s politics and economics is Edomite, while the predominant Spirit of the opposition to the wickedness of our politics and economics is truly of Yah. 

In our portion, the threat is from the Anti-Mashiyach, Gog uMagog spirit that is and has always been in rebellion against Yah. But even though the VAST majority of the earth’s population will come up against the King and the camp of the saints, there will be nothing to fear, for Yah himself will fight for us once again, while sustaining all our needs (v.21).

Please picture or look at the tree of Sephiroth at http://tzion.org/Tree_Sefiroth.htm.  In v.22 we see the center of the tree; Chesed, Gevurah and Tifereth. Elohim, our Judge, is Gevurah, righteousness and justice. Yah, our Lawgiver, is Chesed, merciful and gracious. Yah Elohenu is our Tzadik and King, our MelechTzadik, the perfect melding of the two extremes, the narrow Way and the strait Gate. He, Yah Yeshua Moshienu, will deliver us.

Vv.23-24 explain in what MANNER Yah Elohenu will deliver us. The wicked will bring all kinds of devices against us, but we are equipped to deal with it by the gracious provision of Yah. When it says ‘thy tacklings are loosed’ it means they are unable to bring their devices to bear against the King and his subjects. ‘Loosed’ = loss of organization, disbursed. They had all these marvelous toys to use against us and no matter how hard they try, their stuff won’t work, much like Hamas’ missiles and tunnels. The lame in this passage are us, the citizens of J’lem and the camp of the saints who have no weapons to fight with and are completely unprepared for battle with this large, predatory army. Our trust is in Yah Tsidkenu, Yeshua Malchenu, and we, who were thought to be sheep for slaughter, will go out and take the predators as prey after the King is through with them. Q&C

34.1-8 – YeshaYahu addresses his intended audience in v.1 – the nations of the whole earth. He is warning them of what is going to happen to them if they persist in coming against HIS land of Israel and his people whom he has placed there [are you listening, Hamas?]. This is not to say that every inhabitant of the land are his people, but that his people are there and even those Edomites that live among them in His land will receive his protection, as the Egyptians who spread the blood of the lamb on their doorposts were passed over by the Angel of Death. Mere association with the people of Yah confers blessings, as in

Same principle; different application. These who associate with the people of Yah will be held accountable for what they know to do but don’t do – like trusting Yah for deliverance to life eternal. 

In vv.2-3, we see that this is specifically about Armageddon, because after the final Gog uMagog rebellion at the end of the Kingdom, there won’t be time for the bodies to putrefy before the GWT judgment begins. But the clean-up after Armageddon, which is a partial, intermediate fulfillment of the original Gog uMagog prophecy, will take quite some time;

There won’t be that much time after the Millennium. Besides, the fire from heaven will consume their bodies. Perhaps there is stuff among them that will be useful in the New Earth? I don’t see why, but only Yah knows. But this describes Armageddon’s immediate aftermath, I think.

V.4 speaks at least of nukes going off, but may be describing the dissolution of Creation. If it is nukes, they are intended for J’lem and the ‘invader’, the returning Mashiyach. If today’s news has anything to do with this prophecy (and I think it does, at least as a partial fulfillment) Iran will be sending nuke armed missiles at J’lem and Zion and they will fall JU-U-u-ust a BIT short – like in the middle of Edom – Bozrah (v.6). That might even look like the stars of heaven falling, eh? Bozrah was a center of the sheep and goat trade, like Chicago became America’s beef packing center in the late 19th and early 20th C, so the idea of blood everywhere fits, as well. The King, meanwhile, will protect his own from the rads, if that’s what this is, but the land that receives the nukes becomes, humanly speaking, uninhabitable. I think that this is where the giant bug originated in that 1960s cult-classic song (it’s on youtube), The Cockroach that Ate Cincinnati. 

Why did the KJV translate r’aym as unicorn? I found a reasonable explanation in that source of ALL objective truth – Wikipedia (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Unicorn

The translators of the Authorized King James Version of the Bible (1611) followed the Greek Septuagint (monokeros) and the Latin Vulgate (unicornis)[14] and employed unicorn to translate re’em, providing a recognizable animal that was proverbial for its un-tamable nature.

It is the untamable nature of Edom/Assyria that we need to see here. Gog uMagog cannot be tamed, and the best representatives of that spirit in today’s world are the radical Moslemists. Yah is going to ‘tame’ them in the day of his vengeance and year of recompenses for the ‘Controversy of Zion’. In today’s world, I see that controversy manifesting in the Israel/Philistine ‘Peace Process’, or what I like to call “The Roadmap to Hell.” If Israel’s Edomite government keeps betraying the Elohim of Avraham, Yitzhak and Ya’acov, it may provide the impetus for a large group of orthodox and Messianic Jews to secede from Israel and create a State of Zion in the hills of Yesha. Such a State would never be recognized by the other Edomite nations or their organization on Rockefeller donated land in Manhattan, the United Nations. That SECESSION could also be called “The Controversy of Zion”. Q&C

Tehellim 69.1-8 – This psalm applies to the saints in tribulation, but, being a Messianic psalm, is also a prophecy that found fulfillment in the life and the death of Yeshua. It opens with the word hoshieni, save or deliver me. This is the singular form of the people’s cry to Yeshua as he entered the city through the Sheep Gate on the Shabbat before Pesach in his last year of purely physical life. They were calling out “Hoshienu”, “Save US! Baruch haba b’Shem Yah!”

The Iudaioi, which is the greek word that gets translated ‘Jews’ in English bibles, the political leaders of the religion and NOT the average person of Israel, recognized the cry as a call for personal deliverance to King Mashiyach, and they wanted Yeshua to rebuke them;

Son of David is an appellation of the King Mashiyach. The people were looking for King Mashiyach to come and deliver them from Roman oppression. They knew who Yeshua could be, but most failed to realize that Mashiyach, the Son of Yoseph, the suffering servant of Is.53, had to come first to deliver them from their spiritual bondage to sin, though some understood,

In both of these instances, the speaker could be thinking of Miriam’s husband, but they were, nonetheless, prophesying of his ‘True Identity’. I think Philip knew, by Ruach’s witness to his heart, who Messiah Yeshua was from the very start. 

Vv.1-6 can be applied to David and Yeshua, and v.5 refers to the speaker’s sin, so that cannot be Mashiyach, but most of the rest is of dual application. Pretty much from v.7 on this psalm is all about Mashiyach, but couched in terms that also apply to tribulation saints. 

Sinking in deep mire and being in deep water in v.2 (and 14) reference exile in the nations, where I can find no solid ground on which to stand. I can only cry out for help. Hoshieni! In v.3, I am at the end of my strength, on the verge of death, while awaiting Yah’s deliverance. V.4b is a reference to Mashiyach ben Yoseph, who paid a debt he didn’t owe, restoring what he didn’t take. In everyday life, it’s like usury, tribute or taxes. David prays that none who are after Yah’s heart will stumble due to his sin. I pray the same for everyone listening to me, that my sins would not be a cause for any to stumble. 

It was for Yah’s sake in v.7 that Mashiyach ben Yoseph (Yeshua) bore the reproach and paid the debt for what others did. He took the judgment of Elohim on himself so that Yah could be righteous in his mercy and grace to usward. Yeshua became like a stranger to his Yehudi brethren [v.8], as is seen in Matt.21.15, above, and in Jn.7, his mothers other sons refused him

Ephraim was estranged from Yah and Yehudah due to our sins, and Yeshua made our return possible by his death on the tree. Q&C

Vv.9-13 – We’ve seen (v.9a) Yeshua’s zeal for Yah’s house in Matthew 21.12-13. The reproach of men who reproach Yah often fall on us all, doesn’t it? We experience 9b in everyday life, whether we know it or not, because an unbelieving ‘someone’ we know is thinking of how we think we are ‘holier than they’, even though we know our own sinfulness much better than they do. It is their consciousness of their sin that we expose to them, by our lifestyle that is so very different from theirs, not so much what we say to them directly. We don’t really have to point out their sin in words – our witness to the truth of the Word in our lives riles them enough. I am accused of condemning people all the time, when I seldom say anything about it to them, because I am unashamed to live according to his Word and to use it as my standard for life. We are reproached for weeping, we are reproached for fasting, we are reproached for our sorrow over our sin. But I do not pray to those who reproach me. My supplications are to Yah Elohai who loves me, and bore my reproach on the tree. 

The ‘acceptable time’ comes from ratsown ayth,which is based on the roots ratsah, meaning to satisfy a debt, and ad, meaning duration or perpetuity. This acceptable time was when my debt was satisfied in perpetuity – when Yeshua suffered and died in my place, when the mercy of Yah met the truth of Elohim in the person of Messiah Yeshua. 

Let not mercy and truth forsake thee: bind them about thy neck; write them upon the table of thine heart: (Proverbs 3:3)

That mire in v.2 is what I am delivered from in v.14. Notice that this is not a request for deliverance. It is an imperative, “Deliver me … Let me not …”. There is full assurance that Yah Elohenu SHALL do it. We have that assurance by his promises to us as Avraham’s seed.

Vv.14-15 prompt me to say, “Keep me in your Torah and your Torah in my mind and heart in the midst of exile and persecution, that I may be found a child of promise.” 

Vv.16-19a should be our cry to Yah to deliver the promise to us. Vv.19b-28 should be our supplication to Elohim to tribulate those who tribulate us. Please notice again that there are few requests being made, but imperatives being voiced based on promises Yah Elohenu has made. “LOOK at what they are doing to YOUR CHILDREN and give them their come-up-ances.” 

In v.21 we see what Ruach revealed to the authors of the besoroth as applying to Mashiyach. (cf.Mk.15.23 and Lk.23.36)

The reference is to the bitter water given to the wife of the jealous husband (Num.5.10-31), one of the reproaches Yeshua bore in our stead. The table becoming a snare shows that their bellies have become their gods, and their eyes being darkened they are unable to see their spiritual condition – they think they do Elohim a favor by persecuting us. We saw v.25-26 delivered in our Haftarah today because they pile onto those whom Yah is chastening.

By adding iniquity to their iniquity, Yah gives them over to it and effectively blots their names out of the Book of Life. I think this is saying that EVERY name is written into the book of life from conception, but that by their conscious, volitional choices to walk in their own ways and to despise him and his promises, they cause him to blot their names out of it. I think this is the manner in which those who are too young to know or unable, for whatever reason, to make a volitional choice are given life eternal. Elohim has to REMOVE them from the book of life. This was David’s main concern in 

Vv.29-36 – David says that our songs of praise on our hearts are more desirous to Yah than bulls and goats on the altar. The sacrifices on the altar must have been a source of pride to those who offered them, because David says that the realization of vv.29-31 make the humble glad. I think humble (v.32) speaks to those of humble means as well as hearts, for Yah hears the poor and those in exile (prisoners – v.33).

Vv.34-36 tell us that when Elohim saves Zion and builds the cities that the enemy has laid waste, the creation itself will praise him for his elect have been delivered to dwell therein. This is NOT being fulfilled right now, for as quickly as the ‘good’ build the wastes of Zion, the wicked destroy them. As ‘good’ as it may be that Israel has been established as a political entity, it is the work of men, and is NOT the ultimate fulfillment of Yah’s promise to build the waste cities. 

In this, as well as other things, I agree with the Chabadniks of the early-middle 20th Century. Mashiyach will accomplish this upon his coming to the Mount of Olives one Yom Kippur very soon. I also agree with them that once the nation was established we needed to support it. I DON’T think we need to subsidize it, but we need to treat it at least as well as we do any other nation of the earth. We must support it’s right to defend itself against the attacks of its enemies, the neighborhood bullies, and allow it the means to do so. Q&C

Gilyahna 15.1-80 – Tehellim 69.24 is fulfilled in our passage today and its continuation in ch.16.

I saw another sign. The last sign was in 12.3

Sign and wonder in these verses are translated from the same greek word, semeion. A sign or a wonder is an event or thing that is outside the normal, miraculous. There are 3 semeion that occur in the book of Revelation, and here they all are. In all the other 4 instances of the word’s use in Revelation (13.13 & 14, 16.14 and 19.20) it refers to someone who performs wonders or miracles, not describing the miracles themselves. The first 2 were not miracles of Yah in my opinion. This one is; 7 of Yah’s messengers with 7 vials filled with the plagues of his wrath. This is the sign of signs. Perhaps this is the one Yeshua spoke of in answer to the talmidim’s question in Mat.24.30.

Perhaps the sign of his coming is the wrath of Yah being poured out by the messengers and the cloud of witnesses he brings with him. If this is the case, the ‘Days of Awe’ will be very awesome, indeed. The AENT has a different translation on the word ‘victory’ in v.3. AENT says “‘innocent’ over the Beast”. This implies the ‘guilt’ of those who were marked or bowed before the image or used his number. (See note on AENT pg.692) Now, consider the implications of using the economic system of the Beast in the days of tribulation, as only those who were ‘innocent’ are standing on the sea of glass mingled with fire and singing the song of Moshe and of the Lamb. They are also playing harps. In Psalm137.1-2 we see this

Don McLean wrote a dirge to verse 1 for his 1st album. The implication is that they are depressed and cannot sing. Their captors want them to sing a song of Zion, but they cannot sing a joyful song in their exile. That’s why we hung our harps on the boughs of trees. It reminds me of the first scene of “Blazing Saddles”, except without the comic racism. (‘Black Bart’ singing a Cole Porter number from Anything Goes makes me scream with laughter at the ridiculosity, which is the point of the whole movie – the ridiculosity of racism.) 

That the saints playing the harps sing 2 songs, the song of Moshe [SoM] and the song of the Lamb, links the 2 inexorably in my mind. The song of Moshe is the song they sang upon reaching the Midianite shore of the Red Sea and watched as Paroh and his armies were stranded in miry clay as the waters of the sea came crashing down around to drown them (SoM = Ex.15.1ff). Egypt had forced Israel to make bricks and also the slime for mortar while forcing them to drown all their males in the river. They were paid in kind. Truly, who shall not fear Yah Elohenu after he delivers his people from the whole earth’s oppression? I think this may be the song of Zion the Babylonians wanted to hear Israel sing, intending to mock them. We will sing it in exultation on the sea of glass. It also reminds me of the Renewed Covenant in Jer.31, especially v.34.

The 7 messengers are saints themselves, judging by their apparel – linen, clean and white. In Tanakh, Yah is in linen and girt with gold

That is none other than Yeshua as he appears in Rev.19, and his Bride is clothed in HIS righteousness, so the 7 messengers could be saints – or angels. One of the 4 living creatures (to not confuse folks with the beast designation) gave the 7 messengers each a golden vial full of the plagues of Yah’s wrath. Now consider for a minute that this is Yah’s wrath, not Elohim’s. Yah is the RIGHT side of the Almighty, the merciful, gracious and loving Father, not the true and righteous justice of the Spirit of Elohim. Remember that when the brimstone rained down on Sodom and Gomorrah, the sulphur fumes knocked the inhabitants out in a matter of a minute or 2, so that even in his righteous judgment, Yah was merciful. His mercy will be manifest in the duration of the plagues – 10 days, I think – the days of awe. 

In our Torah for today we saw that when the glory of Yah filled the Tent of Meeting even Moshe could not enter. It’s the same with the Temple in the heavens at this time. No man can enter. Does this include Yeshua? If so, he has his marching orders. He is astride his steed, his clouds of angels and witnesses are gathered and ready and he is awaiting the fulfillment of the plagues on the earth. Q&C

End of Shabbat Bible Study

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