There is a verse every believer should tremble over. Not atheists. Not skeptics. Believers.
Yeshua says:
> “Many will say to Me in that day, ‘Lord, Lord…’
> And I will declare to them, ‘I never knew you; depart from Me, you workers of lawlessness.’”
These people were not outsiders. They called Him Lord. They performed miracles. They prophesied. They were convinced they were saved. Just like the ten virgins — all ten waiting for the Bridegroom, all ten carrying lamps, all ten believing they belonged to Him — yet only five were prepared.
This warning came from the same hillside where Yeshua said something else that has been misunderstood for centuries:
> “Do not think that I came to abolish the Law or the Prophets.
> I did not come to abolish but to fulfill.”
For many Christians, “fulfill” has been taught to mean “end,” “cancel,” or “render unnecessary.” But if that were true, Yeshua would be contradicting Himself in the same breath:
> “I did not come to abolish… but to abolish.”
That interpretation cannot stand. Not linguistically. Not contextually. Not theologically.
—
What Plēroō Actually Means — and Why It Matters
The Greek word translated “fulfill” is plēroō. It never means “abolish.” Not once in the entire New Testament. It means:
– to fill
– to bring to fullness
– to bring to its intended expression
– to complete in the sense of bringing to purpose, not bringing to an end
Try replacing “fulfill” with “end” in other verses where plēroō appears:
– “These things I speak… that your joy may be ended.”
– “Permit it now… to end all righteousness.”
– “How then would the Scriptures be ended?”
It collapses instantly.
The translation simply does not work.
But if “fulfill” means “bring to fullness,” every verse makes perfect sense.
—
What Yeshua Actually Fulfilled
Matthew uses plēroō almost exclusively for prophecies about the Messiah:
– “This happened to fulfill what was spoken by the prophet…”
– “Then was fulfilled what was spoken by Jeremiah…”
– “All this took place to fulfill…”
So when Yeshua says He came to “fulfill,” the most natural reading is:
> “I came to fulfill the prophecies written about Me.”
Not:
> “I came to fulfill the Torah so you don’t have to.”
The first fits Matthew’s usage.
The second is imported theology.
—
The Torah Was Never Temporary
Yeshua immediately reinforces the permanence of the Torah:
– Not one jot or tittle will pass away
– Until heaven and earth pass
– Whoever loosens even the least commandment is least in the kingdom
– Whoever keeps and teaches them is great
– Righteousness must exceed the Pharisees
– And then He intensifies the commandments (anger = murder, lust = adultery)
This is not the voice of a Messiah canceling the Father’s instruction.
This is the voice of the One who gave it, restoring it to its original intent.
And this aligns with the nature of the Torah itself.
If the Father wrote it with His own finger on stone, it was never meant to be temporary.
—
If Someone Rejects This, They Are Not Rejecting Me
This is important to say plainly:
> If someone disagrees with these observations, they are not rejecting my opinion — they are rejecting the words of Yeshua Himself.
He said He did not come to abolish.
He said the Torah stands until heaven and earth pass.
He said breaking even the least commandment makes one least in the kingdom.
He said lawlessness is what separates people from Him on Judgment Day.
These are His words, not mine.
—
Be a Berean — Don’t Take My Word for Anything
Paul praised the Bereans because they:
> “searched the Scriptures daily to see if these things were so.”
That is the call I want to leave with every reader.
– Don’t accept what I say because it sounds convincing.
– Don’t reject it because it challenges tradition.
– Search the Scriptures.
– Examine the Greek.
– Look at every place plēroō appears.
– Test every claim against the Word of God.
And if someone believes this understanding is wrong, then bring Scripture — not tradition, not denominational teaching, not inherited assumptions — Scripture.
If the Word of God contradicts what I’ve written, I will gladly change.
But if the Word of God contradicts what you’ve been taught, then you must decide whom you will follow.
—
The Final Word From the Hill
Yeshua’s warning echoes across the centuries:
> “I never knew you… you workers of lawlessness.”
Lawlessness — not obedience — is the danger.
Lawlessness — not Torah-keeping — is the deception.
Lawlessness — not faithfulness — is what separates people from Him.
The Messiah who fulfills prophecy does not abolish the Father’s instruction.
The One who writes Torah on hearts does not erase it from stone.
And the Judge who warns against lawlessness does not reward it.
The question is simple:
Will we believe Him?
#TorahTruth, #YeshuaWordsMatter, #Matthew517, #PlerooMeaning, #FulfillNotAbolish, #LawAndProphets, #SermonOnTheMount, #BereanMindset, #SearchTheScriptures, #EndTimesWarning, #INeverKnewYou, #TenVirgins, #MessianicFaith, #BiblicalContext, #HebraicRoots,
Chavurat Derekh HaMashiach
Living the Journey, Sharing the WORD
recent posts
- “I Never Knew You”: Why Yeshua’s Most Terrifying Warning Demands We Rethink ‘Fulfill’ in Matthew 5:17
- Parashah Tetzaveh (Exodus 27:20–30:10):
- When Familiar Paths Lead to New Questions
- When the Script Hates You: Breaking Free from Tribal Thinking
- Closeness to God is not about feelings, it’s about obedience.
about
-
-
The portion opens with a command for the people to bring pure olive oil so the menorah may burn continually in the Mishkan. Light becomes the first theme: a symbol of God’s presence, Israel’s calling, and the priesthood’s responsibility to tend what God has entrusted. The people supply the oil, but the priests steward the flame. Holiness is always a partnership.
The narrative then moves into the garments of the High Priest, described with exquisite detail: the ephod woven with gold, blue, purple, and scarlet; the breastplate with twelve stones for the twelve tribes; the robe with bells and pomegranates; the golden plate engraved “Holy to Adonai.” These garments are not costumes but theology in fabric. They communicate identity, intercession, and representation. When Aaron enters the Holy Place, he carries the names of Israel over his heart and shoulders. Holiness is never solitary; it is communal.
Next comes the ordination of the priests, a seven‑day process involving washing, anointing, sacrifices, and consecration. The altar itself is sanctified so that it becomes “most holy.” The daily burnt offerings—morning and evening—establish a rhythm of continual devotion. God promises that through this rhythm, “I will dwell among the Israelites and be their God.” Holiness is not abstract; it is relational presence.
The portion concludes with instructions for the golden altar of incense, placed before the veil. Incense rises like prayer, a fragrant symbol of communion between heaven and earth. The priests are to tend it every morning and evening, echoing the menorah’s continual flame. Holiness is consistency—faithfulness in the unseen, the quiet, the daily.
The haftorah from Ezekiel mirrors Tetzaveh’s themes of priesthood, consecration, and God’s dwelling among His people. Ezekiel describes a future Temple and a renewed priesthood purified for service. The prophet emphasizes repentance, humility, and the heart’s alignment with God’s holiness. Where Exodus gives the blueprint for the first priesthood, Ezekiel gives the blueprint for restoration. Both point toward a God who desires to dwell with His people and shape them into a community of light.
The New Testament echoes Tetzaveh in profound ways:
– Yeshua as the High Priest (Hebrews 4–10): He embodies the priesthood perfectly, carrying our names before the Father not with stones but with His own life.
– Believers as a royal priesthood (1 Peter 2:9): The garments of glory and beauty become spiritual garments—identity, righteousness, and calling.
– The continual light (Matthew 5:14–16): Yeshua calls His followers the light of the world, echoing the menorah’s perpetual flame.
– Incense as prayer (Revelation 5:8; 8:3–4): The imagery of incense rising before God becomes the picture of the prayers of the saints.
Tetzaveh is not merely ancient ritual; it is a living pattern fulfilled in Messiah and continued in His people.
Living Tetzaveh in the 21st Century
The heart of Tetzaveh is not garments or incense but identity, devotion, and presence. In a world of distraction, noise, and fractured attention, this portion calls us back to intentional holiness.
A few threads that speak directly into modern life:
– Tending the flame: The menorah’s continual light challenges us to cultivate spiritual rhythms—prayer, Scripture, community—that keep the flame alive.
– Wearing our calling: The priestly garments remind us that identity is something we “put on” daily. Our choices, words, and presence communicate who we belong to.
– Carrying others on our hearts: Like the breastplate stones, we are called to intercede for our families, communities, and even those who oppose us.
– Consistency over intensity: The daily offerings and incense teach that holiness is built through steady, faithful devotion, not occasional spiritual highs.
– Creating space for God’s presence: The Mishkan was a portable sanctuary. Today, we create inner sanctuaries—quiet spaces where God’s voice can be heard.
Holiness is not perfection; it is alignment. It is choosing to live as people who carry the presence of God into every space we enter.
Ways to Apply Tetzaveh to Your Own Life
– Light a candle this week and let it remind you of the continual flame—God’s presence and your calling to shine.
– Pray for twelve people, symbolically carrying them on your heart as the High Priest carried the tribes.
– Create a daily rhythm, morning and evening, even if only a few minutes, to offer your day to God.
– Examine your “garments”—not clothing, but attitudes, habits, and words. Ask: What am I wearing spiritually?
– Practice quiet incense moments—short pauses where you breathe, pray, and let your heart rise before God.
These are not rituals for ritual’s sake; they are ways of embodying the truth that God still dwells with His people.
If this teaching stirred something in you—if it helped you see the priesthood, the presence of God, or your own calling in a new way—share it with someone who needs encouragement today. Leave a comment with your own reflections, and subscribe so you don’t miss the next step in this journey through Torah, the Prophets, and the B’rit Chadashah. Together we’re learning to carry the light, tend the flame, and walk as a kingdom of priests in a world hungry for hope. -
It’s interesting how people respond when someone begins exploring something unfamiliar.
Sometimes the reaction is warm curiosity… and sometimes it’s sharp, almost reflexive resistance. I’ve seen both. I’ve lived both.
And I’ve noticed something over the years — not just in faith, but in politics, relationships, and everyday disagreements:
People don’t fight because they’re evil.
They fight because they’re afraid.
Afraid of being wrong.
Afraid of losing identity.
Afraid of stepping outside the comfort of what they’ve always been told.
When a belief is inherited rather than discovered, questioning it can feel like betrayal.
Not betrayal of God — betrayal of the group.
And once a group feels threatened, the labels come quickly.
Sometimes painfully quickly.
But here’s the part that fascinates me as a coach:
Most people aren’t reacting to you.
They’re reacting to the discomfort of unfamiliarity.
You can educate ignorance.
But willful certainty — the kind that refuses to look, refuses to ask, refuses to breathe — that’s something else entirely.
And yet… I don’t write this to criticize anyone.
I write it because I believe in something better.
Even in Bible college, I noticed something odd.
We studied the New Testament intensely — Greek, theology, church history — but almost never the Torah or Tanakh. The unspoken assumption was always the same:
“The Old Testament doesn’t apply anymore.”
So we learned the New Testament… without the Scriptures the New Testament quotes constantly.
We studied Paul… without the foundation Paul assumed every reader already knew.
We memorized verses… without the context that gave them meaning.
And the deeper I went, the more questions I had.
Questions that didn’t have satisfying answers because the framework itself was incomplete.
And here’s the part that finally clicked:
Every generation revises the faith through its own cultural glasses.
Not intentionally.
Not rebelliously.
Just… inevitably.
Each generation interprets Scripture through the world they know — their customs, assumptions, fears, politics, language, worldview. And every time that happens, the message shifts just a little.
A small drift here.
A softened edge there.
A redefined word.
A misunderstood metaphor.
A tradition added to “help” clarify something that was never confusing in the first place.
And after enough centuries, those tiny shifts accumulate into something massive.
You end up with doctrines that are not only different from the original message — they sometimes teach the exact opposite of what the first‑century believers meant.
We forget that their world was nothing like ours.
Their customs, rhythms of life, covenant identity, and relationship to Torah were woven into their daily existence.
So when we try to interpret first‑century instructions through twenty‑first‑century glasses, we will get it twisted.
We can’t help it.
And that’s the root of so many disagreements today.
Not because people are stubborn or malicious…
but because they’re reading an ancient text through modern eyes, modern assumptions, and modern traditions.
Yeshua said to take the log out of our own eye before pointing out the speck in someone else’s.
Not because we’re wrong about everything — but because we’re often unaware of the filters we’re using.
If we want clarity, we have to do something uncomfortable:
We have to step into the other person’s shoes.
We have to look through their eyes.
We have to empty the cup — not to forget what we’ve learned, but to make room for what we’ve never considered.
Bruce Lee said, “Absorb what is useful, discard what is not, add what is uniquely your own.”
Paul said something similar: “Test everything; hold fast to what is good.”
Different voices.
Same wisdom.
Learn it all.
But only keep what is edifying.
And when we approach Scripture — and each other — with that posture, the hostility fades.
The fear softens.
The conversation becomes possible again.
One of the most common reactions I hear from Christian friends is the accusation of legalism.
As if studying Torah means I’m suddenly trying to “earn” salvation.
But here’s the part they don’t realize:
I was saved long before I ever cared about Torah.
Decades before.
My relationship with Yeshua didn’t begin in a synagogue.
It began in the same place theirs did — in faith, in grace, in the transforming work of the Messiah.
What changed later wasn’t my salvation.
It was my understanding of what “redeemed” actually means.
For years I was taught, “We don’t need to do that anymore.”
And I believed it.
Not because I studied it out, but because I trusted the people who taught me — pastors, parents, leaders who were sincere and doing their best with what they were taught.
Most of us inherit our theology long before we ever examine it.
And that’s not a criticism.
It’s simply how humans work.
But here’s the quiet truth that eventually caught up with me:
If we never step outside our trained comfort zone, we stay trapped inside traditions that may have drifted far from their original meaning.
Yeshua warned about people who would say, “Lord, Lord,” and yet He would answer, “I never knew you.”
Not because they lacked passion…
but because they followed traditions that replaced relationship.
Peter warned that Paul’s writings would be twisted — not just by malicious people, but by the unstable, the confused, the well‑intentioned who inherited interpretations without ever questioning them.
And Paul himself praised the Bereans for doing the very thing many Christians are afraid to do:
Question what comes from the pulpit.
Search the Scriptures for yourself.
Test everything.
And here’s the part almost no one thinks about:
The Bereans weren’t checking Paul against the New Testament.
It didn’t exist yet.
They weren’t flipping to Romans or Galatians.
They weren’t comparing his teaching to a commentary or a doctrinal statement.
They opened the Tanakh — the only Scriptures that existed at the time — and asked:
“Does what Paul is saying line up with what God already revealed?”
That’s the Berean method.
And if our theology can’t be verified in the Tanakh, it can’t be Berean.
That realization changed everything for me.
When I transitioned from my Christian church into a Messianic congregation, I didn’t abandon one for the other.
I walked with both for a long time.
I learned from both.
I honored both.
And I discovered something beautiful:
You don’t have to reject where you came from to explore where God may be leading you next.
Sometimes a person reads something like this and feels a quiet tug inside.
A pause.
A moment where the automatic reaction loosens just enough for a new thought to slip in.
Maybe something like:
“What if the early believers really did live this way?”
“What if Torah wasn’t abolished but misunderstood?”
“What if I could explore this without leaving my current fellowship?”
And that moment — that gentle, private moment — is where genuine discovery begins.
Not with pressure.
Not with fear.
But with the courage to ask:
“Is this belief truly mine… or did someone hand it to me?”
If someone can sit with that question long enough, truth has a way of finding them.
If you’ve read this far, you probably know someone who could benefit from reading it too.
Share it, print it, pass it along — whatever helps spark honest, thoughtful conversation.
And if you disagree — sincerely, respectfully, even passionately — I welcome that.
I’m open to dialogue, especially with those who want to talk without hostility or fear.
And if you’d rather speak privately instead of in an open forum, just send me a message.
Sometimes the most meaningful breakthroughs happen in quiet spaces.
messianicfaith, #torahstudy, #firstcenturycontext, #bereanmindset, #spiritualgrowth, #redeemedlife, #yeshuafollowers, #unitynotdivision, #scripturetruth, #beyondtradition, #faithjourney, #graceandtruth, #awakeninghearts, #exploretheword, #walkinhisways -
You ever notice how some people reach for the harshest labels — racist, xenophobic, homophobic, transphobic, Nazi — almost before the conversation even begins?
It’s fascinating, really… the way a mind can grab a conclusion long before it ever touches a fact.
And when you watch closely, you can see something subtle happening beneath the surface.
It’s not that they’ve examined anything.
It’s that the conclusion was handed to them… and they accepted it without noticing the moment it slipped in.
There’s a kind of comfort in that.
A ready‑made certainty.
A pre‑packaged outrage.
A story that saves them from the discomfort of thinking for themselves.
And once a person is wrapped tightly enough in that story, they don’t need evidence.
They don’t want it.
Sometimes they can’t even see it.
Because evidence threatens the narrative.
And the narrative protects the identity.
And the identity protects the fear.
So they push away facts.
They push away nuance.
They push away people — not because of anything those people have done, but because the script requires an enemy.
And when someone needs an enemy, they’ll create one out of anyone who doesn’t chant the same slogans.
You can educate ignorance.
But willful stupidity — the kind that refuses to look, refuses to question, refuses to breathe — that’s something else entirely.
Now, I’m not saying this to shame anyone.
Shame never wakes a sleeping mind.
But sometimes… a person reads something like this and feels a small, quiet tug inside.
A pause.
A moment where the automatic reaction doesn’t fire quite as fast.
And in that pause, something new can happen.
A thought like:
“What if I’ve been repeating someone else’s script?”
“What if I’ve been reacting instead of understanding?”
“What if the person I was told to hate… isn’t who I was told they were?”
That’s where honesty begins.
Not with blame.
Not with defensiveness.
But with the courage to ask:
“Is this belief truly mine… or did someone hand it to me?”
And if someone can sit with that question — even briefly — the truth has a way of finding them.
I’m confident that if you’ve read this far, you probably know someone who could benefit from reading it too.
Feel free to pass it on, share it, print it, or use it as a conversation starter.
And if you disagree — sincerely, respectfully, even passionately — I welcome that.
I’m open to criticism, especially from the naysayers who want to talk it through without emotional lashing‑out.
Honest conversations are always welcome.
And if you’d rather speak privately instead of in an open forum, just send me a message.
Sometimes the most meaningful breakthroughs happen in quiet spaces.
tribalism, #criticalthinking, #coachinginsight, #emotionalintelligence, #truthseeking, #spiritualgrowth, #unitythroughunderstanding, #breakthecycle, #selfawareness, #hypnoticclarity, #dialogueoverdivision, #mindsetshift, #healingconversation, #transformconflict, #lightandshadow -
In fact when you don’t feel God, that’s when he’s strongest, it’s pure faith. That’s where God lives, not in how you feel.
Here it is, Brook — a full-length, polished, WordPress‑ready teaching article. It’s structured with clear headers, scannable sections, and a strong theological backbone. You can paste this directly into WordPress and it will read like a professional long‑form devotional/teaching post.
—
Closeness to God Isn’t About Feelings — It’s About Obedience
In modern Christianity, we’ve unintentionally trained people to measure their closeness to God by how they feel. If worship gives them goosebumps, they assume God is near. If prayer feels dry, they assume God is distant. If emotions run high, they call it “anointed.” If emotions run low, they call it “spiritually attacked.”
But Scripture paints a very different picture.
Closeness to God has never been measured by emotional intensity.
It has always been measured by obedience.
Feelings are a gift.
Obedience is a covenant.
And the sooner we understand the difference, the stronger and steadier our walk becomes.
—
1. Feelings Are Unreliable — Obedience Is Unshakeable
Human emotion is one of the most inconsistent forces in our lives. It changes with:
– stress
– sleep
– hormones
– weather
– memories
– hunger
– circumstances
– spiritual warfare
If your relationship with God rises and falls with your emotional state, you’ll live on a roller coaster of doubt and instability.
But obedience — choosing God’s way even when you don’t feel anything — is the foundation of spiritual maturity.
Jesus never said,
“Feel close to Me.”
He said,
“If you love Me, keep My commandments.”
Love is not proven by emotion.
Love is proven by alignment.
—
2. When You Don’t Feel God, Your Faith Is at Its Purest
There is a kind of faith that is loud, emotional, and full of spiritual fireworks.
And then there is a kind of faith that is quiet, steady, and invisible to everyone but God.
The second kind is the one that moves mountains.
When you pray and feel nothing — but you pray anyway…
When you worship and feel nothing — but you lift your hands anyway…
When you obey and feel nothing — but you obey anyway…
That is pure faith.
Not faith supported by emotion.
Not faith supported by atmosphere.
Not faith supported by goosebumps or music or mood.
Just faith.
And that is the faith God honors most.
—
3. God Is Most Present When You Are Most Dependent
We often assume God is closest when we feel Him.
But biblically, God is often closest when we don’t.
Why?
Because when you can’t feel Him, you stop relying on emotion and start relying on truth.
You stop leaning on sensation and start leaning on Scripture.
You stop depending on spiritual highs and start depending on His character.
God is not hiding.
He is training.
He is teaching you to walk by faith, not by sight — and not by feelings either.
—
4. God Doesn’t Live in Your Feelings — He Lives in Your Alignment
Feelings are the weather.
Obedience is the climate.
Weather changes daily.
Climate shapes the environment.
Your emotional weather may shift from day to day, but your spiritual climate is formed by your choices:
– choosing forgiveness
– choosing purity
– choosing humility
– choosing prayer
– choosing Scripture
– choosing righteousness
– choosing surrender
This is where God dwells — not in the rise and fall of your emotions, but in the steady direction of your life.
—
5. The Enemy Attacks Feelings Because He Cannot Touch Obedience
Satan cannot stop a believer who obeys God regardless of how they feel.
He can stir emotions.
He can whisper lies.
He can create confusion.
He can amplify insecurity.
He can distort perception.
But he cannot override your will.
He cannot force disobedience.
So he attacks the one area he can influence — your feelings — hoping you’ll interpret emotional silence as spiritual abandonment.
But emotional silence is not spiritual abandonment.
It is spiritual refinement.
—
6. The Most Mature Believers Walk With God Even in Emotional Darkness
Every spiritual giant in Scripture experienced seasons where they felt nothing:
– David
– Elijah
– Job
– Jeremiah
– Paul
– even Jesus in Gethsemane
Their greatness wasn’t in their feelings.
It was in their obedience.
They kept walking.
They kept trusting.
They kept surrendering.
They kept choosing God.
Not because they felt Him —
but because they knew Him.
—
7. The Freedom of a Faith That Doesn’t Depend on Emotion
When you stop chasing the feeling of God and start walking in the will of God, something incredible happens:
Your faith becomes stable.
Your walk becomes steady.
Your identity becomes rooted.
Your worship becomes deeper.
Your obedience becomes joyful.
Your relationship becomes real.
You stop asking,
“Do I feel God today?”
And you start declaring,
“I will follow God today.”
That shift changes everything.
—
Final Thought: God Is Closest When You Choose Him Without Feeling Him
The absence of emotion is not the absence of God.
Sometimes God withdraws the feeling of His presence so you can learn to trust the fact of His presence.
He is not testing your emotions.
He is strengthening your faith.
And the faith that pleases God most is the faith that obeys Him even in silence.
#FaithOverFeelings, #ObedienceToGod, #WalkByFaith, #SpiritualMaturity, #ChristianTeaching, #BiblicalTruth, #GodIsFaithful, #TrustGod, #ChristianLiving, #FaithJourney, #JesusFollower, #ChristianEncouragement, #DailyObedience, #FaithNotFeelings, #GodIsNear, #ChristianBlog, #WordPressChristian, #DevotionalLife, #SeekGod, #SpiritualGrowth, -
Shabbat Shalom,For most of my Christian life, I heard a familiar refrain:
“Jesus brought a new teaching.”
Sometimes, it was framed as a new law, a new covenant ethic, or a new way of living that replaced the “old” ways of Moses.
It sounded right because everyone around me said it.
It felt right because it was all I knew.
But it wasn’t what the Scriptures actually say.
When I finally slowed down, set aside inherited assumptions, and read the Gospels with fresh eyes, something startling happened:
Yeshua wasn’t replacing Torah — He was teaching it. Intensifying it. Restoring it. Living it.
This isn’t fringe. It’s not a theological trick. It’s simply what the text says when we stop forcing it to say something else.
Let’s walk through it.
—
1. Yeshua’s Mission Statement: Not Abolish, but Fulfill
If Yeshua came to replace Torah, He forgot to tell us.
His own words are uncomfortably clear:
> “Do not think that I came to abolish the Law or the Prophets.
> I did not come to abolish but to fulfill.”
> — Matthew 5:17
He anticipates the misunderstanding — “Do not think…” — because He knew people would think it.
Then He reinforces it:
– Not one stroke passes from the Torah until heaven and earth pass
– Whoever keeps and teaches the commandments is called great
– Whoever loosens them is called least
This is not the language of replacement.
This is the language of continuity.
—
2. “You Have Heard… But I Say…” Is Not a New Law
Matthew 5 is often treated as Yeshua’s “new Torah,” as if He’s rewriting Moses.
But that’s not what’s happening.
He’s confronting:
– Pharisaic loopholes
– Surface‑level obedience
– Traditions that obscured the heart of the commandments
He’s not contradicting Moses — He’s contradicting misinterpretations of Moses.
Every example He gives is already rooted in Torah:
– Anger → murder
– Lust → adultery
– Oaths → truthfulness
– Retaliation → proportional justice
– Love of neighbor → love of enemy (already implied in Exodus 23)
He’s not lowering the bar.
He’s not raising the bar.
He’s restoring the bar to where it always was.
—
3. Matthew 7: The Warning Against Torah‑lessness
At the end of the Sermon on the Mount, Yeshua gives one of the most sobering warnings in Scripture:
> “Depart from Me, you workers of lawlessness.”
> — Matthew 7:23
The Greek word is anomia — literally Torah‑lessness.
He’s not rebuking people for failing to follow a new Christian ethic.
He’s rebuking people who claim His name while ignoring God’s commandments.
This is the same message Moses preached.
The same message the prophets preached.
The same message Yeshua preached.
—
4. Matthew 17: The Transfiguration and the Voice of Continuity
On the mountain, Moses (Torah) and Elijah (Prophets) appear with Yeshua.
This is not an accident.
This is a visual sermon.
The Father speaks:
> “This is My beloved Son… listen to Him.”
Not because He replaces Moses,
but because He is the living voice of the same God who spoke to Moses.
The scene is not about discontinuity.
It’s about unity — Torah, Prophets, and Messiah standing together.
—
5. Matthew 23: Yeshua Tells His Disciples to Obey Moses
This chapter is often skipped, but it’s one of the clearest statements Yeshua ever makes:
> “The scribes and Pharisees sit in Moses’ seat.
> Therefore, do what they tell you…”
> — Matthew 23:2–3
He affirms the authority of Moses’ teaching.
He rejects the hypocrisy of the teachers.
If Yeshua intended to cancel Torah, this command makes no sense.
—
6. So Where Did the “New Teaching” Idea Come From?
Not from Yeshua.
Not from the apostles.
Not from Scripture.
It came from:
– Post‑Temple Christianity
– Gentile leadership unfamiliar with Torah
– Anti‑Jewish sentiment in the early church
– Theologies built centuries after the apostles
– A desire to distance Christianity from Judaism
By the time Augustine and later Reformers shaped Western theology, the idea of Yeshua replacing Torah was already baked in.
But it wasn’t what He taught.
It wasn’t what Paul taught.
It wasn’t what the early Jewish believers practiced.
—
7. Yeshua Didn’t Bring a New Law — He Brought the Heart of the Law
The prophets long foretold a day when God would:
– Write Torah on the heart (Jeremiah 31)
– Put His Spirit within us to walk in His statutes (Ezekiel 36)
– Restore Israel to covenant faithfulness
Yeshua didn’t cancel that vision.
He embodied it.
He lived Torah perfectly.
He taught Torah faithfully.
He empowered His disciples to walk in it by the Spirit.
The “newness” He brought wasn’t a new set of rules.
It was a new heart — the ability to obey from the inside out.
—
8. The Gospel Is Not the Abolition of Torah — It’s the Fulfillment of It
When we strip away the layers of tradition, the picture becomes beautifully simple:
– Yeshua didn’t replace Moses
– He didn’t rewrite the commandments
– He didn’t create a new religion
– He didn’t abolish the covenant
– He didn’t introduce a new ethic
He brought us back to the heart of what God always intended.
The Kingdom He preached is the same Kingdom Moses described.
The righteousness He taught is the same righteousness the prophets called for.
The obedience He modeled is the same obedience God has always desired.
The Messiah didn’t come to erase the story.
He came to finish it.
—
A Final Word
If you’ve ever felt the tension between what you were taught and what you’re now seeing in Scripture, you’re not alone. Many of us were handed a version of Yeshua that didn’t match the text.
But when we let Him speak for Himself — in His own Jewish context, with His own words, in the world He lived in — the picture becomes clear:
He is the Torah‑faithful Messiah.
Not the founder of a new religion.
Not the author of a new law.
But the living Word who calls us back to the ancient paths.
And that is very good news.
TorahPursuant, #YeshuaMessiah, #TorahAndGospel, #AncientPaths, #KingdomTeaching, #HebraicRoots, #MessianicFaith, #ReturnToTorah, #BiblicalTruth, #ScriptureContext, #Matthew5, #Matthew7, #Matthew17, #Matthew23, #TorahFulfilled, #CovenantFaithfulness, #WalkAsHeWalked, #ObeyHisCommands, #FaithAndObedience, #RestoringTheRoots, #MessiahInContext, -
I came across a post today that really captured something important.
I don’t know the author personally, and I can’t speak for his full theology, but the message itself was solid and worth echoing.
There’s a lot of noise out there about who the “remnant” is.
Labels, denominations, movements, claims.
But Scripture gives a simple, consistent picture:
– Those who keep the commandments of Elohim
– Those who hold the testimony of Messiah
– Those who endure opposition because of both
Not legalism.
Not lawlessness.
Not performance.
Not pride.
Just covenant faithfulness empowered by grace.
Grace doesn’t replace obedience — it enables it.
We don’t keep Torah to earn salvation.
We keep Torah because we are saved, and we’re grateful enough to walk in the instructions of the One who rescued us.
The remnant isn’t a club.
It’s not a denomination.
It’s not a brand.
It’s a life.
A life shaped by Messiah’s example, aligned with the Father’s commandments, and strengthened by the Spirit to stand when compromise is easy.
If this resonates with you, take a moment to reflect:
– Am I walking in His ways?
– Am I holding tight to Messiah’s testimony?
– Am I willing to stand firm even when it costs something?
And if you see a place where your steps have drifted, talk to the Father.
Ask Him to realign your mind, renew your heart, and steady your walk.
And if you know someone who might be encouraged or challenged by this, pass it along.
#TorahAndGrace, #CovenantFaithfulness, #MessiahCentered, #KeepHisCommandments, #TestimonyOfYeshua, #RemnantLife, #WalkInObedience, #FaithInAction, #TorahWalk, #MessianicFaith, #NarrowPathLiving, #SetApartLife, -
Parashah T’rumah continues to unfold the mystery of a God who chooses to dwell among His people, and Part 1 already showed us how HaShem invited Israel into partnership by asking for contributions from willing hearts. The materials—gold, silver, bronze, blue, purple, scarlet, fine linen, acacia wood—were not random supplies but symbols of creation, covenant, and kingship. The Ark, the Table, and the Menorah revealed a pattern of Presence, Provision, and Light, teaching Israel that the Mishkan was never a construction project but a relational one. With that foundation, the narrative now moves deeper into the inner life of the sanctuary, where the veil woven with blue, purple, and scarlet threads hangs like a living boundary between the Holy Place and the Holy of Holies. Cheruvim are embroidered into it, echoing Eden, reminding Israel that holiness is both protected and invited.
The Holy Place itself becomes a rhythm of worship—light from the Menorah, bread on the Table, incense rising like prayer—showing Israel that fellowship with HaShem is meant to be continual, not occasional. Even the courtyard, with its white linen and bronze foundations, becomes a communal space where purity, refinement, and access meet. It is a national invitation to draw near, not a private sanctuary for priests alone.
This same heartbeat echoes in the Haftarah, where Shlomo begins building the Temple with cedar, gold, and precise measurements, continuing the pattern of a God who desires to dwell with His people. HaShem’s promise to Shlomo—“If you walk in My statutes, I will dwell among Israel”—reminds us that the dwelling place is always relational before it is architectural.
The B’rit Chadashah then lifts the veil even further, revealing that the Mishkan and Temple were shadows pointing toward Messiah.
John tells us that the Word became flesh and tabernacled among us, making Yeshua the living Mishkan, the Presence of HaShem walking in human form.
Hebrews explains that the earthly sanctuary is a copy of the heavenly one, and that Messiah ministers in the true Holy Place, opening access through a torn veil.
Paul reminds us that we ourselves have become the Temple of God, continuing the same pattern from Sinai to Jerusalem to Messiah to us.
The story of T’rumah is not about ancient blueprints; it is about a God who builds His dwelling in stages—first in a tent, then in a Temple, then in Messiah, and now in His people.
The takeaway is simple and profound: HaShem never asked for perfection, only participation. He invited Israel to bring what they had, willingly and joyfully, and He shaped it into a dwelling place for His glory.
Today, the same invitation stands. We build sanctuaries wherever we stand—when we offer our time, gifts, and resources freely; when we create space for HaShem in our daily rhythms; when Messiah’s light, provision, and intercession shape our choices; when our lives become reminders that HaShem dwells with His people.
Whether in a van, a home, a workplace, or a quiet morning with coffee and Scripture, every space can become Mishkan space when we welcome His Presence. If this reflection on T’rumah has encouraged you or opened the Scriptures in a fresh way, I’d love for you to share it with someone who loves Torah, like and subscribe to the blog so you don’t miss the next portion, and help spread these teachings so others can walk more closely with HaShem.
-
Jesus is not pagan. But it’s also not a direct translation of Yeshua. It’s the English form that developed from the Greek Iēsous (Ἰησοῦς), which itself is the standard Greek rendering of the Hebrew name Yeshua. Greek didn’t have a ‘sh’ sound, so Yeshua became Iēsous, and later Latin made it Iesus. English eventually standardized it as Jesus. That’s linguistic evolution, not paganism.”
The name Jesus isn’t pagan at all. It’s simply the English form that came from the Greek Iēsous. Greek had no ‘sh’ sound, so Yeshua was adapted into the closest phonetic structure they had. Over time, Iēsous → Iesus → Jesus. That’s not pagan influence—it’s just how languages work.
The idea that ‘Jesus’ comes from Zeus isn’t supported by any linguistic or historical evidence. The Greek for Zeus is Zeus (Ζεύς). The Greek for Yeshua is Iēsous (Ἰησοῦς). Different letters, different sounds, different roots. The English name ‘Jesus’ is simply the later English spelling of that Greek form.
– Hebrew: Yeshua (ישוע)
– Greek (no “sh” sound): Iēsous (Ἰησοῦς)
– Latin: Iesus
– Early English: Iesu / Jhesu
– Modern English: JesusNothing pagan in that chain—just phonetics and spelling shifts.
-
A Teaching on Yesha‘yahu (Isaiah) 41:4 — “I, Adonai, am the first; and I am the same with those who are last.”
This verse appears in a section where Adonai is confronting the nations and their idols. The surrounding context is full of courtroom language — HaShem calling the nations to present their case, to explain their power, to justify their existence. In the middle of that challenge, He asks the question no idol can answer:
“Whose work is this? Who has brought it about?”
The answer is not philosophical. It’s not abstract. It’s not a theological puzzle. It’s personal.
“He who called the generations from the beginning…”
This is HaShem reminding Israel — and the world — that history is not random. Generations don’t just appear. Empires don’t rise by accident. Covenants don’t drift into existence. Every generation is called, summoned, brought forth by the One who stands outside of time yet moves within it.
And then comes the declaration that anchors the entire passage:
“I, Adonai, am the first; and I am the same with those who are last.”
This is not merely a statement about chronology. It’s about constancy.
He is the first — the initiator, the One who begins the story.He is with the last — not merely present, but unchanged, unthreatened, unaltered by the passing of ages.
He is the same — His character does not evolve, His promises do not weaken, His covenant does not expire.
In Hebrew thought, this is not philosophical speculation. It’s covenant reassurance. Israel is being told:
“Your story is safe because the One who started it is the One who finishes it.”
And for those who follow Yeshua, this verse resonates even deeper. Yeshua repeatedly identifies Himself with this divine identity — not replacing the Father, but revealing the same eternal nature:
– “Before Avraham was, I AM.”
– “I am the Alef and the Tav.”
– “I am with you always, even to the end of the age.”
The same God who called the generations from the beginning is the One who stepped into time, walked among us, and calls us still.
This is not a distant deity. This is the God who initiates, sustains, and completes.
This is the God who knows the first generation and the last — and every wandering, wounded, hopeful soul in between.
A Gentle Invitation
If this verse stirs something in you — a longing for the One who began your story and still holds its ending — lean toward Him. Turn your face toward HaShem through Yeshua, the One who reveals the Father’s heart with perfect clarity.
And if someone comes to mind who might need this reminder of God’s constancy, pass it along. Let it be a quiet blessing in their day.
#Isaiah41, #YeshaYahu, #CJB, #MessianicFaith, #BiblicalReflection, #AdonaiIsFirst, #FaithAndCovenant, #ScriptureStudy, #HebrewRoots, #MessianicTeaching, #BibleVerseOfTheDay, #EternalGod,