What is our real motivation for following God? Do we really want to be His people, or is there some hidden motive - a motive we might even hide from ourselves?
http://thebarkingfox.com/2022/....01/15/faith-without-
Great teaching ideas in this post…
https://hirnhomeschoolers.com/....teaching-the-way-my-
In the year that King Uzziah died I saw the Lord sitting upon a throne, high and lifted up; and the train of his robe filled the temple.
Isaiah 6:1
God wears a priestly robe with a ritual hem akin to the bells and pomegranates of Aaron or the tzitziyot of every Israelite. Not literally, of course. He doesn't have a physical body on which to hang a physical robe.
The seraphim cover their faces and feet in God's presence. I wonder if they consider themselves unclean by comparison. God's presence is frequently marked by fire and lightning with smoke and deep darkness. He can be kind and gentle, but his full presence is unimaginably dangerous.
And YHVH said to Moses, "Behold, I am coming to you in a thick cloud, that the people may hear when I speak with you, and may also believe you forever."…
#exodus 19:9 #yitro
Dramatic miracles are rarely just for the benefit of the one receiving them, but for those who are watching. God didn't need to come to Moses in a thunderous cloud on a mountain top. He could have whispered to him in his tent. God wanted the people to know that every word Moses spoke to them in the wilderness was from God, not from his own imagination. They were unable to hear God with their own hearts, so God set Moses as an intermediary, but what good is an intermediary if the people won't listen to him either?
I put together a list of Apostolic scriptures to read and study with parsha #yitro (Exodus 18:1-20:23), plus commentary and videos: http://www.americantorah.com/2....021/01/24/parsha-yit
#biblestudy