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Ha,azinu

Posted by Miriyam Burger on September 24, 2012 at 8:15 PM

 

 

 

Ha'azinu

For the week of September 29, 2012 / 13 Tishri 5773

Torah: Devarim / Deuteronomy 32:1-52

Haftarah: 2 Samuel 22:1-51

 

Forgiveness

For the Lord will vindicate his people and have compassion on his servants, when he sees that their power is gone and there is none remaining, bond or free. (Devarim / Deuteronomy 32:36; ESV)

 

We are currently in the time period traditionally called yamim noraim (English: the Days of Awe), which is between Rosh Hashanah (English: New Year) and Yom Kippur (English: Day of Atonement). It is during this time that we are encouraged to seek out those whom we have wronged to ask their forgiveness. What a wonderful tradition! While this is something we should be doing every day, if you don't normally consciously take stock of life like this, what better time is there than right now to make right any relational brokenness you may have?

 

Years ago I read the book "The Gift of the Jews" by Thomas Cahill, which claims that the greatest contribution the Jewish people brought to the world is the concept of linear time in contrast to cyclical time, which had been prevalent among most ancient cultures. But I wonder if an even greater gift is the concept of forgiveness.

 

Forgiveness is one of the most profound, but painful, human experiences. There are all sorts of easy versions of it, since most of the wrongs done to us are minor. But when a wrong costs us dearly, it's another matter. Maybe you have never thought of wrongs costing something, but that is actually the best way to understand what forgiveness is all about.

 

When we are wronged, it is as if someone stole something from us. If I step on someone's toe and cause them pain, I rob them of the physical comfort they were enjoying up to that point. If you cause a car accident, you may not only steal someone's physical well-being and create significant financial problems for them, you may also take from them the once in a lifetime opportunity they expected at their destination.

 

Some things can be paid for by the offending party such as car repairs and medical bills, but only forgiveness covers those things that can't be paid for. That means that the offended party assumes the cost of the wrong. When we forgive, we give up our right to exact payment from the offending party, whether it is monetary or not. Non-monetary payments are often in the form of emotional and relational aggression such as blame and bitterness, which produce nothing constructive, but only serve to imprison the offending party in some way. The irony is that it is often the person withholding forgiveness who finds themselves imprisoned by their own bitterness.

 

Some may think that it is inappropriate to forgive someone who hasn't asked for forgiveness. While lack of regret for a wrong is an issue when courts deal with crimes against society, we are well advised to forgive any and all who have wronged us personally, including those who have passed away. Forgiveness doesn't always mean that the wrongdoer will not face any consequences for their actions. It simply removes the relational debt that would be otherwise owed to the offended party. In fact genuine forgiveness often allows the most appropriate consequences to result without the complication of personal hurt getting in the way.

 

Some may think that this kind of forgiveness is far more Christian than Jewish. I assert that the only way that anything can be truly Christian is that it must be authentically Jewish first. While the depths of the richness of forgiveness are only discovered through what the Messiah has done for us by dying for our sins, what he has done for us can only be properly understood in the context of the God of Israel's covenant love as revealed in the Hebrew Scriptures. God's relationship with his people was never based on human performance, but on his love and grace. So during these Days of Awe, besides seeking forgiveness from those we have wronged, let us also forgive from our hearts all those who have wronged us, whether they seek us out or not.

 

Here are two videos that vividly express a biblical view of forgiveness. The first is a recent release by artist Matthew West and is based on a true story. The second video is the story upon which the song is based.

 

http://youtu.be/oIbCpy0CQEo

 

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1 Comment

Reply Miriyam Burger
8:34 AM on September 24, 2012 
If a gentile prophet had uttered this Song [of Moses, i.e. Deuteronomy 32], he would have earned the faith of all who heard it, for it has been fulfilled up to now without exception. Surely, therefore, we should look forward to the [final] fulfillment of the word of God through His prophet Moses. (Ramban)


This week's Torah portion: Ha'azinu
Ha'azinu - האזינו : "Give ear"
Torah : Deuteronomy 32:1-52
Haftarah : 2 Samuel 22:1-22:51
Gospel : John 20:26-21:25



The Song of Moses and of the Lamb

Deuteronomy 32 contains ?The Song of Moses,? a fiery oracle predicting the LORD?s wrath on Israel and on the nations. On Israel because of her apostasy; on the nations because of their mistreatment of Israel. At times the reader is left uncertain of whether the song is speaking of Israel or of the nations that have harried her. Nevertheless, the image of God at war, toppling the false gods set up against Him, now chastising His people, now avenging them, spending His arrows, slaking them with blood, sharpening His sword, and satiating it with flesh are vivid poetic images. The climactic drama depicting directly intervening in human events and calling the nations into account lends the song an almost apocalyptic character. It is a song about the eschaton.

Indeed, the book of Revelation draws a great deal of its energy from the Song of Moses.

A major concern of the Revelation is borrowed directly from the Song of Moses?the coming time of vengeance when God?s people will be vindicated. The book of Revelation longs for that coming day when God will directly intervene in human events and unleash His vengeance on the ungodly nations that have martyred His people. At one point in the Revelation, we hear an angel declare, ?Fear God, and give Him glory, because the hour of His judgment has come!? (Revelation 14:7) As God?s wrath pours out upon the nations?even while the smoke still ascends from fallen Babylon?we are granted an image of the martyred standing before the throne of God, singing the Song of Moses and proclaiming God as ?King of the Nations.?

And they sang the song of Moses, the bond-servant of God, and the song of the Lamb, saying, ?Great and marvelous are Your works, O Lord God, the Almighty; Righteous and true are Your ways, King of the nations!? (Revelation 15:3)
Surprisingly, in Revelation 15:3, the song of Moses is referred to as the ?Song of the Lamb.? Deuteronomy 32 is called ?the Song of the Lamb.? One would not ordinarily associate the gentle, lamblike aspect of Messiah with the fierce and violent energy of the Song of Moses, yet in Revelation, the Lamb is also a Lion. Messiah is the agent of this final redemption. ?Here is the perseverance of the saints who keep the commandments of God and their faith in Yeshua.? (Revelation 14:12)