Kindly keep me in your group/daily prayer's. I am trying to get immersed this coming day 1 (Sunday). It's been a real battle of proportions that you would need to see to believe. I've been barely able to get out of the house on Sabbath's. Pray for my safety family and thank you.
Photo credit: Esau Colloway
In Proverbs 30:1 Agur means gathered. Should we understand the author's name as "gathered" or "gatherer"? He is the son of Jakeh, which means blameless. Does this mean he follows a way of blamelessness, or his father is blameless, or his father is literally named Jakeh?
I suspect that the author of this chapter is King Hezekiah whom Proverbs 25:1 says commissioned the "gathering" of Solomon's proverbs in chapters 25-29 and that "Son of Jakeh" is an oblique way of saying "Son of David". Solomon was also a gatherer of knowledge and wisdom, so Agur could also be Solomon.
https://rumble.com/v2tkwec-who....-wrote-proverbs-30.h
Why is #palmsunday2024 over a month before the crucifixion, passover, and the resurrection, when the Bible says that it happened in the same week? Watch this entire video to see why: https://youtube.com/live/Qh8JXU4mgsc?feature=share #palmsunday
We know the Bible stories about Jacob and his family. Jacob acquired the birthright blessing from his brother Esau, then went away to find a wife, and when he came home many years later he had four wives, twelve sons, and a new name: Israel. That's the basic story, but do we understand the fine points? More importantly, do we understand the prophetic picture Jacob's story paints regarding God's Covenant Nation of Israel, the work of Israel's Messiah, and the redemption of all the nations? That's what our Elders discuss in this midrash about Jacob's life.
https://www.buzzsprout.com/229....2194/14703092-reunio
We know the Bible stories about Jacob and his family. Jacob acquired the birthright blessing from his brother Esau, then went away to find a wife, and when he came home many years later he had four wives, twelve sons, and a new name: Israel. That's the basic story, but do we understand the fine points? More importantly, do we understand the prophetic picture Jacob's story paints regarding God's Covenant Nation of Israel, the work of Israel's Messiah, and the redemption of all the nations? That's what our Elders discuss in this midrash about Jacob's life.
https://www.buzzsprout.com/229....2194/14703092-reunio
Proverbs 30:1
ESV - The words of Agur son of Jakeh. The oracle. The man declares, I am weary, O God; I am weary, O God, and worn out.
KJV - The words of Agur the son of Jakeh, even the prophecy: the man spake unto Ithiel, even unto Ithiel and Ucal.
This verse is a great illustration of some of the difficulties in translating the Bible. Should this word/phrase be translated literally or is it someone's name? Since Hebrew names were always derived from real words, it can be hard to tell.
Something I brought up with my in-person Bible study group, that I feel I should promote here with my online Bible study group (and I'll try to phrase it much the same way).
Without commenting: How many watch videos by 119 Ministries or TorahFamily (I am sure there are others, but these two I know for sure)?
What is the challenge they say at the end of each video? Test what they are saying. Go back and look at Scripture, don't just take their word for it.
Without commenting: How many of you do that?
If you aren't checking and testing the people that do tell you to verify them, are you testing and checking the people that don't tell you?
We need to validate everything that we hear with Scripture. There are many people out there that can tell a good story, make things sound like it is possible, say things with confidence, but couldn't be further from the truth.
Recently, I found myself being one of those people. We were playing a family game and I gave an answer to a question. I explained my reasoning. My family tells me once we find out I am wrong, that I said it with such confidence, they questioned their answers. I didn't realize I was doing this, but it is now something I have to watch for.
We should always be on the look out and check everything. Don't just take something on because it sounds good, or is presented by someone "smarter than you", or has a degree, or whatever.
This week's Torah reading is Tzav ("Command", #leviticus 6:8-8:36). Here are some related New Testament passages, articles, and videos.
https://www.americantorah.com/....2021/11/22/parsha-tz