Thursday, November 20, 2008
Olivet Discourse
Roger Walkwitz, Founder of the Asia-Pacific Messianic Fellowship will be in Metro Manila On December 7, 2008. Catch him in this Second Matthew Study Series focusing on the Discourse of Yeshua in the Mount of Olives. Mount Zion Center have hosted the first entitled Sermon on the Mount last August and will continue to help in facilitating in coordination with APMF and Metro Strata Torah Community.
In the meantime, the Petah Tikvah Asia-Pacific Edition is now available. Just Contact Mount Zion Center or APMF to reserve copies.
Saturday, November 1, 2008
Wendy Lipton's Donation of Books
Dear Wendy,
Thank you very much for sharing your precious books to the Mount Zion Center library. Your passion towards the Land of Israel, your people, your Torah and your Messiah have reached even the farthest isles through your wonderful books that we will share with our people.
This Shabbat we will pray and toast for your good health, and for Hashem's abiding protection and Shalom!
Mount Zion Center Manila
Dear Mike, Jun & MZCI Family,
Shalom with love from Zion! By Abba's grace, HE has touched a "daughter of Zion", Wendy Lipton, an American Jew who made aliyah here in Jerusalem, to donate all her collection of books, preaching dvd's and musical tapes to our MZCI Library. Baruch haShem Adonai! You get all the best inventories, esp. Bibles and those "All about Israel." Wendy is a dear sister. She has accummulated a lot of books and preaching tapes throughout the years and her flat-mate, Shira, recommended to Wendy to just donate all her inventories to our library, to bless more readers in our land. Baruch haShem Adonai for causing a true-blooded "daughter of Zion" from Jerusalem - to be our third library donor! We always remember you in our Shabbat and personal prayers, esp. for Abba's anointing and favor upon your "HaYesod seminar". Blessings and love to our MZCI and Torah family!
Only by Abba's grace,
Ate Cez
Friday, October 31, 2008
Oldest Hebrew Inscription Unearthed
AP
Friday, October 31, 2008
HIRBET QEIYAFA, Israel — An Israeli archaeologist digging at a hilltop south of Jerusalem believes a ceramic shard found in the ruins of an ancient town bears the oldest Hebrew inscription ever discovered, a find that could provide an important glimpse into the culture and language of the Holy Land at the time of the Bible.
The five lines of faded characters written 3,000 years ago, and the ruins of the fortified settlement where they were found, are indications that a powerful Israelite kingdom existed at the time of the Old Testament's King David, says Yossi Garfinkel, the Hebrew University archaeologist in charge of the new dig at Hirbet Qeiyafa.
Other scholars are hesitant to embrace Garfinkel's interpretation of the finds, made public on Thursday.
The discoveries are already being wielded in a vigorous and ongoing argument over whether the Bible's account of events and geography is meant to be taken literally.
Hirbet Qeiyafa sits near the modern Israeli city of Beit Shemesh in the Judean foothills, an area that was once the frontier between the hill-dwelling Israelites and their enemies, the coastal Philistines.
The site overlooks the Elah Valley, said to be the scene of the slingshot showdown between David and the Philistine giant Goliath, and lies near the ruins of Goliath's hometown in the Philistine metropolis of Gath.
A teenage volunteer found the curved pottery shard, 6 inches by 6 inches (15 centimeters by 15 centimeters), in July near the stairs and stone washtub of an excavated home.
It was later discovered to bear five lines of characters known as proto-Canaanite, a precursor of the Hebrew alphabet.
Carbon-14 analysis of burnt olive pits found in the same layer of the site dated them to between 1,000 and 975 B.C., the same time as the Biblical golden age of David's rule in Jerusalem.
Scholars have identified other, smaller Hebrew fragments from the 10th century B.C., but the script, which Garfinkel suggests might be part of a letter, predates the next significant Hebrew inscription by between 100 and 200 years.
History's best-known Hebrew texts, the Dead Sea scrolls, were penned on parchment beginning 850 years later.
The shard is now kept in a university safe while philologists translate it, a task expected to take months.
But several words have already been tentatively identified, including ones meaning "judge," "slave" and "king."
The Israelites were not the only ones using proto-Canaanite characters, and other scholars suggest it is difficult — perhaps impossible — to conclude the text is Hebrew and not a related tongue spoken in the area at the time.
Garfinkel bases his identification on a three-letter verb from the inscription meaning "to do," a word he said existed only in Hebrew.
"That leads us to believe that this is Hebrew, and that this is the oldest Hebrew inscription that has been found," he said.
Other prominent Biblical archaeologists warned against jumping to conclusions.
Hebrew University archaeologist Amihai Mazar said the inscription was "very important," as it is the longest proto-Canaanite text ever found. But he suggested that calling the text Hebrew might be going too far.
"It's proto-Canaanite," he said. "The differentiation between the scripts, and between the languages themselves in that period, remains unclear."
Some scholars and archeologists argue that the Bible's account of David's time inflates his importance and that of his kingdom, and is essentially myth, perhaps rooted in a shred of fact.
But if Garfinkel's claim is borne out, it would bolster the case for the Bible's accuracy by indicating the Israelites could record events as they happened, transmitting the history that was later written down in the Old Testament several hundred years later.
It also would mean that the settlement — a fortified town with a 30-foot-wide (10-meter-wide) monumental gate, a central fortress and a wall running 770 yards (700 meters) in circumference — was probably inhabited by Israelites.
The finds have not yet established who the residents were, says Aren Maier, a Bar Ilan University archaeologist who is digging at nearby Gath.
It will become more clear if, for example, evidence of the local diet is found, he said: Excavations have shown that Philistines ate dogs and pigs, while Israelites did not.
The nature of the ceramic shards found at the site suggest residents might have been neither Israelites nor Philistines but members of a third, forgotten people, he said.
If the inscription is Hebrew, it would indicate a connection to the Israelites and make the text "one of the most important texts, without a doubt, in the corpus of Hebrew inscriptions," Maier said.
But it has great importance whatever the language turns out to be, he added.
Saar Ganor, an Israel Antiquities Authority ranger, noticed the unusual scale of the walls while patrolling the area in 2003.
Three years later he interested Garfinkel, and after a preliminary dig they began work in earnest this summer. They have excavated only 4 percent of the six-acre settlement so far.
Archaeology has turned up only scant finds from David's time in the early 10th century B.C., leading some scholars to suggest his kingdom may have been little more than a small chiefdom or that he might not have existed at all.
Garfinkel believes building fortifications like those at Hirbet Qeiyafa could not have been a local initiative: The walls would have required moving 200,000 tons of stone, a task too big for the 500 or so people who lived there. Instead, it would have required an organized kingdom like the one the Bible says David ruled.
Modern Zionism has traditionally seen archaeology as a way of strengthening the Jewish claim to Israel and regarded David's kingdom as the glorious ancestor of the new Jewish state. So finding evidence of his rule has importance beyond its interest to scholars.
The dig is partially funded by Foundation Stone, a Jewish educational organization, which hopes to bring volunteers to work there as a way of teaching them a national and historical lesson.
"When I stand here, I understand that I'm on the front lines of the battle between the Israelites and the Philistines," said Rabbi Barnea Levi Selavan, the group's director. "I open my Bible and read about David and Goliath, and I understand that I'm in the Biblical context."
While the site could be useful to scholars, archaeologist Israel Finkelstein of Tel Aviv University urged adhering to the strict boundaries of science.
Finkelstein, who has not visited the dig but attended a presentation of the findings, warned against what he said was a "revival in the belief that what's written in the Bible is accurate like a newspaper."
That style of archaeology was favored by 19th century European diggers who trolled the Holy Land for physical traces of Biblical stories, their motivation and methods more romantic than scientific.
"This can be seen as part of this phenomenon," Finkelstein said.
Wednesday, October 22, 2008
Wednesday, October 15, 2008
USHPIZIN
Mount Zion Center
invites you to a film viewing
on Tuesday, October 22, 2008 @ 4 pm
The Penthouse, Sterten Place, 116 Maginhawa St.
Teachers Village, Diliman, Quezon City.
Make your reservation by
email: admin@mzci.org
mobile: 0922-8882013
click here to preview
Runtime: 1 hr 32 mins
Genre: Dramas
The Guests (Hebrew title: Ha-Ushpizin, האושפיזין) is a 2005 Israeli film directed by Gidi Dar.
Moshe and Mali Bellanga are an impoverished, childless, Hasidic couple in the Breslov community in Jerusalem. They cannot pay their bills, after Moshe is passed over for a stipend he expected, much less prepare for the upcoming Jewish holiday of Sukkot. Moshe admires a particularly beautiful etrog, or citron, one of the four species required for the holiday observance. They console themselves by recalling a saying of Rabbi Nachman of Breslov that difficult times are a test of faith. After some anguished prayer, they receive an unexpected gift that solves their financial problems on the eve of the holiday and Moshe buys the etrog for 1000 shekels (about U.S. $223 in 2004). But then they are visited by a pair of escaped convicts, one of whom knew Moshe in his earlier, non-religious life. The convicts become their guests (ushpizin) in the sukkah, creating many conflicts and straining Moshe and Mali's relationship.
Tuesday, October 14, 2008
The sukkah teaches us how to rejoice
SUKKOT
The Sukkah Teaches the Jews How to Rejoice
Between Yom Kippur and the "Season of our Joy", between "you shall chastise your souls" and "you shall rejoice before the Lord your God" --- when the spirit is on proper condition, it is possible to look after one's bodily needs. After the Jew has cleansed his soul with fasting and prayer he is entitled to celebrated his "Festival of the Ingathering" - a sound spirit and a sound body.
After the fast on Yom Kippur, the Almighty says to the Jews: ---Let bygones be bygones; henceforth we begin a new account. When one is cleansed of all sin, one can begin to enjoy life anew.
But the Jew may not celebrate his "Season of Joy" in the same manner that other people celebrate their festivals, with banquets in fancy hotels, carousals in the night clubs. --Such celebrations are too coarse, too fraught with sensuality. They can lead the Jew from the straight path. His soul, which he has just purified with fasting and prayer, may again become defiled. Such a "Season of Joy" is inconsistent with Yom Kippur.
Seven days you shall dwell in huts. In small sukkot - with a modest roof of twigs and foliage, through whichyou shall be able to see the sky and through which the sky shall be able to look in upon you -- there shall you celebrate your "Festival of the Ingathering", your season of joy.
Go forth from your permanent dwelling and live in a temporary one. Refined spirits do not feel at home in spacious houses. Purified spirits can not tolerate excess and gaudiness. Why, then, confine them between thick walls among expensive furnishings?
Moreover, high living leads to overweening pride and narrowness of heart. Lest you come to believe that the wealth you have amassed is all yours and can never be taken away from you and that therefore you have no obligation to aid the needy, mark well that your whole life is but a temporary dwelling, but which endures but seven days...
The pursuit of strictly selfish happiness --- the satisfaction of only one's desires, blunt man's feelings and turns him into a wild beast. He no longer has any interest in the welfare of his brother, his friend or his neighbor. He also becomes alienated from his society and his people, becomes supercilious, acknowledging acquaintance with no one. Such a life is not a Jewish life, not the manner of life God wishes us to live.
S. Ansky, in his great dramatic work, "The Dybuk", relates the following:
"A wealthy Hassid once came to his Rabbi for advice. Despite his great wealth, this man was a miser. The Rabbi led him to a window facing the street and said to him, 'Tell me, whom do you see there?' The chassid gave the name of everyone he saw through the window.
"Then the Rabbi led him to a mirror and asked him whom he saw there. The Hassid replied that he saw no one but himself."
" 'You see my child,'said the Rabbi, 'this is made of the same glass as the window, save that it is coated with some silver -- and already you see no one but yourself.' "
Links to eternity: Jewish holidays and festivals; homiletical essays by Harris L Selig (pp 89-91)
y'ladim nagila
l'sukatenu baoreach
Yeshua Hamashiach
baruch haba!
Sunday, October 12, 2008
Sukkot Eve Invite
Wednesday, October 1, 2008
Yom Teruah
Isaac bound by Abraham it seemed this sacrifice would be
But God looked on the faith of Abraham
A ram’s horn caught meant Isaac would be free!
Sound the shofar from the highest hill
Wake up people – no more standing still!
See the harvest nurtured by scarred hands.
Soon our God and King will reap the harvest from the land!
Hear O Israel – the Lord our God the Lord is One
And at this turning of another year, may we turn to see His Son!
See! Yeshua waits for you! He longs to gather you in!
Oh hear the shofar calling out to you
that you might know the ransom paid for sin.
You who know Yeshua – don’t be silent anymore.
Sound the shofar to a dying world –
Be ready for the coming of the Lord!
Words & Music by Steve & Sue McConnell
Ó 1998 Steve & Sue McConnell, All Rights Reserved
Sung by Mount Zion Center Music Team
joan lamaroza - keyboards
isi miranda - violin
gabino montillo III - vocals
daniel omega - vocals
michael omega - vocals
yossi baylon - vocals
ireen baylon - vocals
michael basilio - shofar
Tuesday, September 30, 2008
Helmut & Erika Loeffler
P.O. Box 37194, Jerusalem 91371, Israel
heloeffl@netvision.net.il ; http://www.mzci.org
Tel: +972-77-962-1089 Mobile: +972-54-583-1049
יום ראשון 28 ספטמבר 2008
From Jerusalem, the city of the Great King, we greet you and all who are assembled today for this special Mount Zion Center Erev Rosh HaShanah celebration!
The Feast of Rosh Hashannah or the Feast of Trumpets as it is called in the Torah is a very special Feast of Adonai. Much of the importance of this Feast is placed on ‘Repentance’ as it is the first of the “Ten Days of Awe” in preparation for “Yom Kippur” or the “Day of Atonement”.
In the Mishnah or more precisely in the Talmud tractate on Rosh Hashanah it states that three books of account are opened on Rosh Hashanah, wherein the fate of the wicked, the righteous, and those of an intermediate class are recorded. The names of the righteous are immediately inscribed in the book of life, and they are sealed "to live." The middle class are allowed a respite of ten days, until Yom Kippur, to repent and become righteous; the wicked are "blotted out of the book of the living."
Aren’t we glad that Yeshua’s sacrifice at the cross made a way for each of us to be among the “righteous” and thus inscribed in the book of life and sealed to live! Thank God, we are either “in” or “out”…there is nothing we can do ourselves to be written in the book of life. Yeshua did it all! Hallelujah!
What can we learn from scripture about the Feast of Trumpets?
In 1. Kings 8 we read that Solomon completed the House of the Lord and then inaugurated it on the “Feast” in the month of Ethanim or Tishri which is the 7th month. The “Feast” consists of three parts, Trumpets, Kippur and Tabernacles. The preparation for the inauguration must have really been something! It says, King Solomon slaughtered so many animals, they “could not be told nor numbered for multitude”. This must have been the greatest blood-flow in history! A busy time but also full of excitement and joy.
The sound of the blowing the shofar on the Feast of Trumpets reminds us of:
· The sound of a King's coronation
· The wailing of a Jewish heart
· A spiritual wake-up call for Jews to repent
· Abraham's great faith in God.
Solomon acknowledged God as the ‘Ruler’ over Israel and the whole world. Solomon desired that all the people would be forgiven implying that they first would repent.
Now that the temple was completed, all Israel must have been excited and full of joy from that first day of the month, the “Day of blowing the Shofar” to the last day of Tabernacles, “Simcha Torah”.
For us believers in Yeshua, it is a truly exciting time also; because the preparations are ongoing for Israel’s coronation of the soon coming King; it’s accepting Him and repenting for having rejected Him for so long. Even the natural city of Jerusalem is being built up; everywhere we see new building rising like mushrooms from the ground; a new rail is being readied throughout the city to transport all the people who will come to honor the King in His city, Jerusalem.
Shana Tova V'Chatima Tova.
Revs. Helmut & Erika Loeffler
Mount Zion Center
Manila / Jerusalem
Wednesday, September 24, 2008
Rosh Hashana Invite
Our teacher who will lecture on the topic of the Feast is Michael Millier. He is from California, United States and born again in 1978 while serving as an Active Duty Marine in Okinawa, Japan. He has a Bachelor of Science Degree in World Missions from Toccoa Falls College in the U.S. and later received a Masters of Arts Degree in Hebrew Bible Translation from Jerusalem University College in Israel. While in Jerusalem, Michael and his family worshipped and served with Jewish believers in Jesus in Kehillat Ro’eh Yisra’el (Shepherd of Israel Congregation). He moved with his family to the Philippines since 2004.
UPDATES
Please Register early. We are limited to only 50 participants. We encourage everyone who has a shofar to bring them and join in the blowing during the service.
The fee that will be charged per person will cover for the dinner that will be served. The menu consists of rosh hashana rice, beef kebab, israeli salad, felafel & pita bread, honey cake, apples & honey, and wine & challah.
There is an error in the contact number published. Our landline is 436-8398 instead of 4628398.
Monday, September 15, 2008
Roger Walkwitz
Thursday, August 21, 2008
Wednesday, July 30, 2008
Hayesod
Session will be every Monday and Thursday, 1 pm to 3:30 pm, starting August 4, 2008. Venue is at the Mount Zion Center in Teachers Village, Quezon City.
Program Overview
An introduction to the Land, the People, and the Scriptures of Israel.
Lesson 2: The Unified Word of God
Removing the disconnect between the Hebrew Scriptures (OT) and Apostolic Scriptures (NT ).
Lesson 3: The Scriptures of Israel
Introduction to the Torah. The Law has not been canceled.
Lesson 4: The Messiah and the Torah
Yeshua’s Torah theology.
Lesson 5: Messiah, the Living Torah
The Word made flesh.
Lesson 6: Our Identity in Messiah
Avoiding legalism and finding one’s identity in Messiah alone.
Lesson 7: The Covenant Connection
The history, significance and implications of the biblical covenants.
Lesson 8: A Covenant Comparison
Comparing the biblical covenants and seeing their continuity with one another.
Lesson 9: Paul, the Mystery Man
Getting to Know Paul.
Lesson 10: Paul, the Misunderstood Man
A fresh look at Paul’s letters which challenges conventional stereo-types and misinterpretations.
Lesson 11: The Torah Community:
Living out the whole of Scripture in a community context. A recipe for emerging fellowships.
Lesson 12: The Seasons of Our Joy
Keeping God’s calendar, meeting His appointed times and celebrating the biblical festivals.
Lesson 13: Divine Permission
The place of the non-Jew in the celebration of Torah and the commonwealth of Israel.
Lesson 14: Celebrating Our Inheritance
Return to the Land, the People and Scriptures of Israel. Encouraging Jewish and Gentile believers both to “Take Hold” of their biblical heritage
Sunday, June 15, 2008
You are the Salt of the Earth
R Yaakov Kamenetsky, The Stone Ed. The Chumash p.552
During the second day of creation, God created a division between the heavenly waters above the firmament and the earthly waters below (Genesis 1:7). The Midrash records that the earthly waters protested that they, too, wished to be close to God. To comfort them, God made a covenant that the water would have a share in the temple service, for salt, which comes from the sea, would be placed on sacrificial parts that go on the Altar, and fresh water would be poured on the Altar every Sukkot.
If the salt was assuaged the wounded feelings of the lower waters as it were, then why wasn't water poured on the altar with every offering? The answer maybe found in how salt is taken from the sea. The water is boiled off or allowed to evaporate, leaving the salt behind. Thus, even the "lower water" rises to heaven in the form of condensation. The only component that is "condemned to remain" in the lower world is its salt, and in this verse God declared that it, too, is needed for His service. This is a lesson to all people in their everyday lives. A Jew can and should find spirituality not in the obviously holy and heavenly pursuits, but even in his seemingly mundane activities.
The salt of the covenant as an allegory finds company in Yeshua's parable of the salt and the light.
Commentary on Matthew 5:13-16
Torah Club Volume 4 The News of the Messiah, First Fruits of Zion
Yeshua calls His disciples the salt of the earth. Just like salt adds the flavor to food, we are to add the flavor to the earth. A little bit of salt can make an otherwise bitter taste palatable. We disciples are to be the force for good and righteousness that balances the bitterness and ugliness of the world and all that is evil and wrong and wicked. Salt is used as a preservative. We are to be that which preserves the world; that which repairs the world.In the same way He tells us that we are the light of the world. One little lamp can dispel a lot of darkness. Just as a lamp on a stand gives light to the whole room, so too we are to be the force that dispels the darkness from the earth.
In Judaism, the concept of preserving the world (like salt) and illuminating the darkness (like light) is expressed as tikun olam, fixing the world. As disciples of Yeshua we are to be busy fixing the world, preserving and repairing a broken and hurting world.
But He also warned us not to let our lamp be concealed under a bowl. If we do, our light will be useless. He warned us not to lose our salty flavor. If we do, we will be useless. Consider the following comment from the Talmud. The Sages asked Rabbi Yehoshua, “When salt becomes unsavory, how can it be made salty?” He replied, “With the afterbirth of a mule.” They asked, “And does a mule have an afterbirth?” He replied, “And can salt become unsavory?” (Berakhot 8b)
Rabbi Yehoshua cannot resist taking a little poke at the Gospel. Mules don’t reproduce. They are sterile and have no afterbirth. In the same way it is impossible for salt to lose its saltiness. Rabbi Yehoshua pokes a little fun at our expense, but his point is that salt cannot lose its salinity. His point is also Yeshua’s point. Salt cannot lose its saltiness... but we can! In our job as disciples, that is as salt of the earth, it is possible, even likely, that we will lose the essence of character that makes us salty. What good would unsalty salt be? When we lose our saltiness, we are worthless to the kingdom, no longer good for anything. So how do we stay salty? What is our saltiness?
In the two analogies, salt and light correspond. Being the salt of the earth is equivalent to being the light of the world. So too, losing our saltiness is equivalent to hiding our light under a bowl. What is the saltiness? What is the light? How can we be salty? How can we give light to everyone in the house?
The answer is in verse 16 where He says, ”in the same way, let your light shine before men, that they may see your good deeds and praise your Father in heaven.
Could it really be so simple? Our saltiness (that we are in danger of losing and therefore being worthless to the kingdom) and our light (that we are in danger of concealing and therefore being worthless to the kingdom) are our good deeds, our mitzvot (commandments).
Salt = Disciples
Saltiness = Obedience to the commandments
Lamp = Disciples
Light = Obedience to the commandmentsIn Judaism the term “good deeds” is always idiomatic for the commandments of Torah. If we keep the commandments, we will keep our saltiness; if we keep the commandments, our light will shine before men.
Monday, June 9, 2008
Shavuot and Pentecost
THE RUACH AND THE TORAH
Pentecost is Jewish by Danny Litvin
The similarities between the events surrounding the giving of the Torah and the giving of the Ruach HaKodesh are quite astounding. Look at a few examples in the passages below:
A COMMON SCENE
Exodus 19:16, "On the morning of the third day there was thunder and lightning, with thick cloud over the mountain, and very loud trumpet blast. Everyone in the camp trembled...(18) Mount Sinai was covered in smoke, because the Lord descended on it in fire...(19) and the sound of the trumpet grew louder and louder."The parallels are many: the time of day, the type of sound that was heard, the reaction of the people, the fire representing the presence of God, and the location -- the focal point for the Jewish people. The tribes that surrounded Mount Sinai when they heard from God. Once Israelites were in the Land, the Temple Mount - God's chosen dwelling place - was seen as the umbilical cord that joined earth to heaven. In addition to this, there is the tradition that both both events took place on the same day. All of this can be seen as God drawing the attention of His redeemed people (and all who would subsequently read about these events) to the much deeper theological parallels between the two events.
Acts 2:2, "Suddenly a sound like the blowing of a violent wind came from heaven and filled the whole house where they were sitting...(3) They saw what seemed to be tongues of fire that came to rest on each of them...(6) When they heard this sound, a crowd came together in bewilderment...(15) It's only nine in the morning!"
MIRACLES OF SHAVUOT
Torah Club Volume Four, First Fruits of Zion
According to the Midrash, the giving of the Torah at Mount Sinai was accompanied by additional wonders, two of which are significant to our reading of Acts 2.
On the occasion of the Giving of Torah, the Children of Israel not only heard the Lord's voice, but actually saw the sound waves as they emerged from the Lord's mouth. They visualized them as fiery substance. Each commandment that left the Lord's mouth traveled around the entire camp and then came back to every Jew individually. (Weissman, Moshe. 1995. Shemos. pg 182 citing Midrash Chazit.)The second miracle the Midrash preserves is the voice of God speaking in every language known to man. In Rabbinic lore, there are 70 mother languages.
The Torah says, "And all the people saw the voices." Note that it does not say "the voice," but "the voices"; wherefore Rabbi Yochanan said that God's voice, as it was uttered, split into seventy voices, in seventy languages, so that all the nations should understand. (Shemot Rabbah 5:9 quoting Exodus 20:18)Whether or not these traditions preserve actual historical memories of the Mount Sinai experience is not important. It is important to remember that the disciples and followers of Yeshua were all well aware that of the Shavuot Legends. They knew the stories of the giving of the Torah on Shavuot. They knew the story of the words of fire resting on each individual on Shavuot. They knew the story of God's voices speaking to all mankind in every language on Shavuot. Therefore, the miracles and signs and wonders that came upon them in Acts, chapter two, carried deep significance. The tongues of fire and the speaking in every tongue were both directly allusions to the Mount Sinai experience and the receiving of the Torah. God was underscoring a connection between His Holy Spirit and His Holy Torah!
Rabbi Yochanan said: "What is meant by the verse, 'The Lord announced the word, and great was the company of those who proclaimed it.'? - Every single word that went forth from the Omnipotent was split up into seventy languages." (Shabbat 88b quoting Psalm 68:11)
The School of Rabbi Ishmael taught the meaning of the verse: "and like a hammer that breaks a rock in pieces," just as hammer is divided into many sparks, so too every single word that went forth from the Holy One, blessed be He, split up into seventy languages (Shabbat 88b quoting Jeremiah 23:29)
The Spirit and the Torah
Shavuot draws a line of connection between Exodus 19 and Acts chapter 2. The Festival superimposes the giving of the spirit in Jerusalem over the giving of the Torah at Sinai. The two events are forever inseparably linked. The Torah and the Holy Spirit are substantially of the same essence. (Read Jeremiah 31:31 and Ezekiel 36:27)
According to these prophets, the Holy Spirit was given in order to place the Torah within the believer's heart. Thus, the spirit within us and the Torah of God must agree. Both are from the same God, and God is One. The spirit and Torah work in concert to direct the believer's life.
Sunday, June 8, 2008
Why Milk Foods are Eaten on Shavuot
SHAVUOT
|
Various reasons are given for eating milk foods on Shavuot. "Ramo" (Rabbi Moses Isserles) said (494) It is everywhere the custom to eat milk foods the first day of Shavuot. "Shalah" added that it is customary to eat milk foods along with baked food made with honey, for the Torah is likened to milk and honey in the verse: Honey and Milk are beneath your tongue.
"Mishnah Berurah" says, in the name of a great sage, that the custom originated when the Jews descended from Mount Sinai after receiving the Torah and returned home, where only milk food was readily available, since meat food required too much preparation according to the law.
According to "Siftei Zaddikim", when the angels argued that the Jews were not worthy to received the Torah, God replied that they were even less worthy, for when they visited Abraham on earth, they mixed meat and milk. At this, the angels fell silent. Thanks to the question of milk and meat, therefore, the angels were refuted and the Torah was given to the Jews. Therefore, we eat milk foods on Shavuot, to show that we keep the law of milk and meat.
It is also the custom to eat three-cornered kreplach on Shavuot, because of the three-fold nature of the day, as the Talmud says: The Galilean preached before Rabbi Hisda: Blessed be the Almighty who gave a threefold Torah (Torah, Prophets, Ketuvim), to a threefold people(Priests, Levites, Israelites) to the third child Moses (Afted Aaron and Miriam) on the third day (of abstinence) in the third month (Sivan).
Saturday, June 7, 2008
Operation Peace of the Galilee
Israel became part of my consciousness, mostly because it's a regular fare in the prime-time news during my growing up years. This was more pronounced in June 1982 when Israel launched Operation Peace of the Galilee as a response to the assassination attempt against Israel's ambassador to the United Kingdom, Shlomo Argov, by one of the Palestinian Terror Organization.
Once more Israel is hogging the headlines this June as the war-rhetorics gets heated up between Israel and Iran.
From the Autobiography of Former Prime Minister Ariel Sharon, we can have a glimpse of another fateful month of June for the beleaguered State.
That Friday, June 4, while I was visiting and talking in Bucharest, the Israeli cabinet met to decide what action should be taken in response to the shooting of Shlomo Argov... But the Argov shooting was merely the match that ignited the fuse. The real casus belli was the chain of terrorist attach(290 of them now) and the continuing buildup of long-range artillery in southern Lebanon - all of which had taken place during the eleven-month-long supposed cease-fire.
...At midday the cabinet approved the airstrikes unanimously. Shortly afterward the attacks were driven home against two military targets in the Beirut suburbs and nine others in the south. By five-thirty that afternoon, PLO artillery shells and rockets began to fall on the Galilee towns and villages. The terrorists had unambiguously declared their decision.
Tuesday, June 3, 2008
"Duchifat" (דוכיפת), Israel's New National bird
The Hoopoe, or "Duchifat" (דוכיפת) was chosen as the national bird of the State of Israel in May 2008 in conjunction with the country's 60th anniversary.
President Shimon Peres announced the Hoopoe as Israel's new national bird. The Hoopoe won an election held by the Society for the Protection of Nature in Israel, which concluded after months of voting. 155,000 people participated in the nationwide election.
Stirred up some Hoopoe's nest in the Media
Reuters headlined the news: Israel names biblically banned Hoopoe national bird. "It may not be kosher, but the Hoopoe was chosen on Thursday as Israel's national bird" it continues.
Meanwhile, Jerusalem Post banners: Dirty, treif, but fit for a king, the hoopoe is our national bird.
"It's not a very hygienic bird. It smells very bad," Jonathan Meyrav, a bird expert at Kibbutz Lahav in the Negev and quoted by the Post, said with a laugh. "It wasn't my personal favorite - but the people have spoken."
Hoopoe in the Torah
The Book of Leviticus groups the Hoopoe with birds such as the eagle, vulture and pelican that are "abhorrent, not to be eaten".
Ramban, in his commentary on Parashat Shemini (Leviticus 11), explains that all the animals and birds that claw and catch their prey in this way possess the terrible trait of brutality (and we are what we eat...). Therefore the Torah wished to distance His people from these categories of animal life as a source of food lest our hearts acquire such a brutal nature.
In the Linear English Chumash (S.S.&R. Publishers) we find each of the described unclean birds with names we can recognize:
The nesher is translated as the "great vulture"; the peres as the "bearded vulture"; the da'ah as the kite; the ayah as the falcon; the orev as the raven; the bat haya'anah as the ostrich; the tachmas as the night hawk; the shachaf as the sea mew (seagull); the netz as the hawk; the kos as the "little owl"; the shalach as the cormorant; the yanshuf as the "great owl"; the tinshemet as the "horned owl"; the ka'at as the pelican; the racham as the "carrion vulture"; the chasida as the stork; the anafa as the heron; the duchifat as the hoopoe; and the atalef as the bat.
Hoopoes in the Rabbinic Writings
The duchifat is called nagar tura, carpenter of the mountain, by Targum Onkelos because of its characteristics, as our Rabbis explained in Tractate Gittin (68b):
The Gemara there discusses King Solomon's dilemma. He wished to build the Holy Temple but was restricted from using cutting tools to cut the large stones from the quarries into smaller building blocks. The Gemara relates how Solomon encountered the demon Ashmedai (Asmodeus), who told him of the shamir, a small worm that possessed the unique ability to cut stone. Ashmedai further said that the only creature that might bring him the shamir was the tarnegol habar, the wild rooster or wild cock (as translated by the ArtScroll Schottenstein Edition of the Shas.)
The key element of this description is that the wild rooster or duchifat utilizes its clawing ability to pick up the shamir.
Hoopoe in the Encyclopedia Judaica
We find here another aspect of this bird that makes it unfit for kosher consumption (Vol. 8:970):
"HOOPOE (Heb. duchifat; AV 'lapwing'), bird included in the Pentateuch among the unclean birds (Lev. 11:19; Deut. 14:18). The hoopoe was confused by Karaites with the chicken, for which reason they prohibited the eating of the latter (see Ibn Ezra on Lev. 11:19), even though the two are in fact distinguished from each other by many characteristics. Because of its crest, which is no more than an erectile tuft of feathers, the hoopoe is called 'the wild cock' in the Talmud (Git. 68b). Smaller than a dove, it feeds on insects, and is distinguished by its beautifully colored plumage. Its flesh exudes an offensive smell which is particularly strong near its nest and repels anyone trying to approach it. This perhaps was the reason certain legends associated with it, such as that it guards treasures in its nest, and was entrusted with transporting the shamir, the miraculous worm that split the stones of the Temple, the use of an iron tool for the purpose having been prohibited (Deut. 27:5; Hul. 63a)."
Thus we see that the duchifat is indeed considered a bird of prey, and as such we can begin to understand the reason that the Torah prohibited it to us.
Hoopoes in World Literature
* Once a man, Tereus was transformed into the form of a Hoopoe in Greek mythology. The character featured prominently in Aristophanes' Birds.
* In Islam, the Hoopoe is associated with King Solomon who spoke with animals, (in Arabic the Prophet Suleyman) and he tells him of the Queen of Sheba and her magnificent land. Quran 27:20-28.
* In classical Chinese poetry, the Hoopoe is depicted as a celestial messenger often bearing news of the spring.
* A hoopoe figures centrally in The Conference of the Birds, one of the central works of Sufi literature.
Monday, June 2, 2008
Jerusalem Day
The following is an account of Uzi Narkiss, the officer of Central Command during the Six Day War that liberated the Old City. The excerpt is from his book The Liberation of Jerusalem (London 1983) and compiled in the book The Jerusalem Anthology in honor of the three-thousandth anniversary of the city in 1996.
A spectacle of legend.
We ran toward Motta Gur, standing on the Mount, where the flag of Israel flew. We were joined first by Moshe Stempel, Motta's deputy, and then by Rabbi Goren. We embraced and the Rabbi prostrated himself and genuflected toward the Holy of Holies. In a resonant voice he recited the ancient Prayer to Battle(Deut 20:3-4):
Hear, O Israel, ye approach this day into battle against your enemies; let not your hearts faint, fear not, and do not tremble, neither ye be terrified because of them; for the Lord your God is He that goeth with you, to fight for you against your enemies, to save you!
We made our excited way through the streets to the Mugrabi's Gate, along a dim alley, turned right down a slight of steps, impatiently faced another right turn - and there it was. The Western Wall. I quivered with memory. Tall and awesome and glorious, with the same ferns creeping between the great stones, some of them inscribed.
Silently I bowed my head. In the narrow space were paratroopers, begrimed, fatigued, overburdened with weapons. And they wept. They were not wailing at the Western Wall, not lamenting in the fashion familiar during the Wall's millenia of being. These were tears of joy, of love, of passion, of an undreamed first reunion with the ancient monument to devotion and to prayer. They clung to its stones, kissed them, these rough, battle-weary paratroopers, their lips framing the Shema. Returned, it seemed to the temple...
But more exalted, prouder than all of them, was Rabbi Goren. Wrapped in a tallit, blowing the ram's horn, and roaring like a lion: "Blessed be the Lord God, Comforter of Zion and Builder of Jerusalem, Amen! Suddenly he saw me, embraced me, and planted a ringing kiss on my cheek, a signal to everyone to hug and kiss and join hands. The Rabbi, like one who had waited all his life for this moment, intoned the Kaddish, the El moleh Rahamin (O God, full of mercy...) in memory of those who had fallen in the name of the Lord to liberate the Temple, the Temple Mount and Jerusalem the City of the Lord: "May they find their peace in Heaven... and let us say Amen."
The restrained weeping become sobs, full throated, an uncurbed emotional outburst. Sorrow, fervor, happiness, and pain combined to produce this mass of grieving and joyous men, their cheeks wet, their voices unsteady. Again the shofar, was blown: tekiya (a short but unbroken sound), followed by the shevarim(a short but tremolo sound). And Rabbi Goren intoned, like a herald: "This year. at this hour, in Jerusalem!" (le-shana hazot, be-shaa hazot, beYerushalayim)
Until that moment I had thought I was immune to anything. Even the stones responded. "We shall stand at attention and salute! Attention!" I shouted. "And sing Hatikvah, came the choke voice of Haim Bar-Lev. We started to sing. To our voices were added those of the paratroopers, hoarse and distinct. Sobbing, and singing, it was as though, through the Hatikvas, we could unburden our hearts of their fullness and our spirits of their emotion.
We spent ten minutes in front of the Western Wall and at 10:55 were on our way back to the basement of Binyanei Ha'ooma. There was plenty of work to be done. The Old City had not yet been cleared of snipers, and the West Bank had not yet been taken.
Meanwhile, we learned, the Jerusalem Brigade had at the last minute made an improvised entry into the Old City through the Dung Gate. Amos, the G-Branch officer, having heard the 55th Brigade's announcement that Augusta Victoria had been taken, realized that the paratroops would immediately break into the Old City and determined that Zahal's Jerusalem Brigade, which for nineteen years had defended the divided city, must participate in that historic entry. Two companies of the battalion which took Abu-Tor were assembled at the Mount Zion and moved along the Walls to the Silwan stream to enter through the Dung Gate. They reached the Temple Mount shortly after 10 A.M. and from there turned westwards...
At Binyanei Ha'ooma an Order-of-the-Day was born:
"We are standing on you threshhold, Jerusalem. Today we entered your gates. Jerusalem, City of David and Solomon, is in our hands.
This morning, in the shadow of the Western Wall, we sang Hatikva, we mourned our dead, fallen in the battle for the city.
Troops of the Command, brave fighters, devoted warriors, this day and your valor shall be in our hearts forever.
- Major General Uzi Narkiss
Friday, May 30, 2008
ICEJ Philippines 10th Year Anniversary
1. Maxie Goloy 2. Chuck King with the choir and dancers
3. The ICEJ Board 3. His Excellency Zvi Vapni
ICEJ Philippines celebrating its 10th year Anniversary. Mount Zion Founder and President Rev. Helmut Loeffler actively served as Vice-president of ICEJ Phils until 2001.
The evening was extra special as ICEJ Jerusalem Musical Director Chuck King led in the songs and worship, but the biggest surprise of the evening was the Ambassadors wife, Limor Aviner, obliging to join in the dance.
Saturday, May 24, 2008
Greetings from Jerusalem
Greetings from Rev. Helmut Loeffler
on the occasion of
Israel's 60th National Day
God Bless Israel
Araneta Coliseum
Cubao, Quezon City
May 5, 2008
Hakol Patuach
"Everything is Possible"
Music @ Lyrics by Naomi Shemer
Performed last May 13, 2008
"Israel @ 60"
Rockwell Tent, Rockwell Center
Makati City