FROM THIS WEEK’S TORAH PORTION – SH’MYNY:

“And Naḏav and Avihu, the sons of Aharon, each took his fire holder and put fire in it, and put incense on it, and brought strange fire before YHWH, which He had not commanded them. And fire came out from YHWH and consumed them, and they died before YHWH.”

“Strange fire?” What was it that Nadav and Avihu did to incur the wrath of YHWH to such an extent that He took their lives? Quite simply, these two brothers conspired to do service to YHWH in their own way, according to their own desires, instead of in the way which He had commanded them.

Does this sound familiar? Too often, we who claim to be Torah-observant (or not) may be observant to a point (or not), yet we insist upon doing things just a little (or a lot) differently than the way in which the Most-High has prescribed them. When we do this, we prove ourselves to be rebellious against the commands of YHWH. How many times have we heard others say (or have said ourselves), ‘I know what the Torah says, but I say...’ or ‘that was true in Moshe’s day, but since Yeshua’s resurrection…?’ It is that ‘but’ which always gets us into trouble. When we reject the clear commands of the Torah and replace them with a ‘but,’ we are in rebellion against YHWH and become worthy of the same punishment that killed Nadav and Avihu. We claim the scriptures as our foundation, yet we refuse to do the expressed will of YHWH in the way He has clearly prescribed it. We do it our own way – as seems “right in our own eyes.”

How can we claim to be observant when we toss out dozens of chapters of the Torah in order to make it conform to our own favorite doctrines? What arrogance on our part! Why not just do what YHWH says to do, and leave it at that? Doesn’t He truly know best? Do we really think we know better than He? Would His own son think so?

image