As
a person with a Christian Biblical Heritage, the words of Jesus have
always been very important to me. But I didn’t know that the Hebrew words he
spoke were buried beneath many layers of English translations of Greek words from
ancient manuscripts of Matthew, Mark and Luke. I was reading Greek
words written by scribes translated by English translators, instead of the Hebrew
words of Jesus translated into English.
Yeshua,
the Jewish Jesus of history, was a very knowledgeable teacher of the Hebrew scrolls
of Jewish Scriptures. He used a style of teaching, in which he often “hinted
at” things recorded in those scrolls, gave a “commentary” about them,
and ended with ways to apply that information in life experiences.
Without
an awareness of “those hints,” however, we are unable to “hear his
teachings.” But, thanks to the hard work of many scholars from multiple disciplines
over the past 150 years, we can now “hear the teachings of Yeshua, the
Jewish Jesus of history” again.
A
scroll that was very important to Yeshua contained Psalm 34; he “hinted at”
sections of it many times. Below are verses 13 and 14.
Keep your
tongue from RAH evil,
and your
lips from speaking deceit MIRMAH.
Depart from
RAH evil and do TOV good;
seek SHALOM peace and pursue it.
“TOV”
is the Hebrew word translated “good” -- one of the most
important words in the English language. “Good” is part of a standard
we were taught as very young children – “good / bad.”
The meaning of “bad” is dependent upon the meaning of “good.”
It is a fact that people subconsciously move towards “good” and
away from “bad.” This is what “do good” meant
to Yeshua:
Think about, talk
about, and do things
that protect lives, preserve
lives, make lives more functional,
and increase the
quality of life.
●
If people did those “good” things, would life in America be better or worse?
●
Would life in your town be better or worse?
●
Would life in your family be better or worse?
●
Would your life be better or worse if just you did “good”?
WWJD?
He would do good.
Shalom,
Jim
Myers
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