Biblical Basics

Are you new to the Bible? Would you like to understand it better? If so, tune into these programs which serve to help the new believer in the Messiah.

Latest Podcasts in Biblical Basics

Dr Hollisa Alewine – Footsteps of Messiah Part 60 (What You Don’t Know)

Dr Hollisa Alewine – Footsteps of Messiah Part 60 (What You Don’t Know)

Perhaps a better title would be Who you don’t know.

Can hurt you.

With Passover approaching, our Footsteps of Messiah text of the Song of Songs becomes ever more relevant. It is providing us with more than just prophetic understanding of our time, but even with practical advice that we’d expect more from Proverbs than the love song of the ages found in the Song of Songs. In fact, it is customary to read the Song of Songs during Pesach.

Mark Call – Parsha “Vayikra” teaching from Shabbat Shalom Mesa

Mark Call – Parsha “Vayikra” teaching from Shabbat Shalom Mesa

Parsha "Vayikra" (Leviticus chapters 1 through 5) -- because it's the first in the Book -- thus shares the name, and is certainly one of those challenges that, let's fact it, much of "xtianity" would prefer to ignore. And it starts of with a bunch of 'sacrifices,'...

Dr Hollisa Alewine – Footsteps of Messiah Part 59 (Living on Credit)

Our Footsteps of Messiah series has focused on the prophecies contained in the Song of Songs. Once we reach the fourth chapter of the Song, some of the prophecies are repeated, yet we can glean more in-depth understanding with the first chapters already established. In Chapter Four, we read:

How beautiful you are, my darling, how beautiful you are! Your eyes are like doves behind your veil; your hair is like a flock of goats that have descended from Mount Gilead. Your teeth are like a flock of newly shorn sheep which have come up from their washing, all of which bear twins, and not one among them has lost her young.

In a previous lesson, we looked at “Mount Gilead” as a wordplay with “mountain of rolling (continual) witness.” There is a literal mountain range in Gilead, but there was Mount Sinai, where the Israelites responded to the covenant invitation with “We will do, and we will hear.” From the heights of spiritual ecstasy at Mount Sinai, the Israelites descended “like a flock of goats” to become a light and witness to the nations. Goats are often symbolic of sacrifice for atonement. Indeed, Israel has suffered sacrifice to hold onto their covenant agreement at Sinai, reflecting the suffering of Messiah for the sake of the nations.

Next, the prophecy refers to Israel as “a flock of newly shorn sheep which have come up from their washing.” Sheep are often symbolic of the innocent, compliant, and easily led. The sages point to the “washing” as the journey through the Reed Sea in their escape from Pharaoh. A second washing was the three-day preparation of washing for the visitation at Mount Sinai. The first washing at the Reed Sea is of particular interest since it explains in more detail the apostles’ doctrines of mercy, grace, and torah. While there has been a long history of poor understanding and applications of the relationship among them, the foundations are in the Exodus from Egypt.

The twelve tribes of Israel grew in their Egyptian captivity. With courage, the midwives salvaged the “young” of the sheep, protecting them from Pharaoh’s death squads.

“Your teeth are like a flock of newly shorn sheep which have come up from their washing, all of which bear twins, and not one among them has lost her young [???????? H7909].”

??????? shakkul; from H7921; bereaved:—barren, bereaved (robbed) of children.

There was not a long list of commandments for the flock of Israel to keep while they were being saved.

Listen to Moses’ warning about the plagues.
Circumcise.
Slaughter a lamb, apply the blood to the doorposts, and eat it.
Leave Egypt.
Follow the pillar of cloud.

That’s pretty much it. There were no 613 commandments, or even the Big Ten. Not even the Shema or “love your neighbor.” These were simple, demonstrated acts of faith. The details of the 2, the 10, and the 613 would come later in the wilderness.

There is a play-on word with “all of which bear twins.”

?????? tâ?am; a primitive root; to be complete; but used only as denominative from H8380, to be (causatively, make) twinned, i.e. (figuratively) duplicate or (architectural) jointed:—coupled (together), bear twins.

Ta’am is sometimes translated as “perfect.” The flock may be seen as not only complete, but perfect as in upright, with moral integrity:

“Now when Abram was ninety-nine years old, the LORD appeared to Abram and said to him, “I am God Almighty; walk before Me, and be blameless. [???????]” (Ge 17:1)

The children of Abraham would also be counted like their father, upright. It didn’t mean without sin or mistakes; it meant walk and work on the revealed things each day. The Midrash Rabbah presents a homily concerning “all of them are perfect, ta’am which have come up from their washing.” They point out that in spite of being herded and guarded between the Presence of Adonai Himself and the Angel, the Israelites came up from the Reed Sea unharmed by the intense holiness that was experienced between them. Although not yet walking in the commandments, nor had they even agreed to, the Israelites were already walking by faith. They were on the path, leaving death behind, yet obedience lay before them, a journey to prepare them to go up into the Land of their inheritance.

Now Is The Time with Rabbi Steve Berkson | Are You Saved? | Part 5

Now Is The Time with Rabbi Steve Berkson | Are You Saved? | Part 5

Rabbi Steve Berkson focuses on the topic of “Who Shall be Saved?”, as he takes us to the Gospel of Matthew, chapter 13. There we find the parable Yeshua taught about “The Wheat and the Tares” – which was meant to describe two types of people within the congregation of...

Mark Call – Parsha “Pekudei” teaching from Shabbat Shalom Mesa

Mark Call – Parsha “Pekudei” teaching from Shabbat Shalom Mesa

Parsha "Pekudei" (Exodus 38:21 through the End of the Book) is the last Torah portion in the Book of Exodus. It does sound quite a bit like something we've heard before, not even that long ago (and there's no doubt a point there...) and seems to have some OTHER...

“Come out of her, My people” Show ~ Mark Call weekly

“Come out of her, My people” Show ~ Mark Call weekly

There are no less than three separate places in the Gospels where Yahushua tells us that, eventually, things that are hidden will be revealed. Certainly that is beginning to happen now, at least on SOME very big issues. The quotation in Matthew 10 not only warns that...

Now Is The Time with Rabbi Steve Berkson | Are You Saved? | Part 4

Now Is The Time with Rabbi Steve Berkson | Are You Saved? | Part 4

Has the One who chose a group of people from among a group of people and set them apart unto Himself rejected those people? Has now another group of people replaced them? Weren’t there promises made according to The Covenant that was made with Abraham, Isaac and...

Dr Hollisa Alewine – Footsteps of Messiah Part 58 (Footsteps in a Holiness Sandwich)

Our Footsteps of Messiah series has focused on the prophecies contained in the Song of Songs. Once we reach the fourth chapter of the Song, some of the prophecies are repeated, yet we can glean more in-depth understanding with the first chapters already established. In Chapter Four, we read:

How beautiful you are, my darling, how beautiful you are! Your eyes are like doves behind your veil; your hair is like a flock of goats that have descended from Mount Gilead. Your teeth are like a flock of newly shorn sheep which have come up from their washing, all of which bear twins, and not one among them has lost her young.

In a previous lesson, we looked at “Mount Gilead” as a wordplay with “mountain of rolling (continual) witness.” There is a literal mountain range in Gilead, but there was Mount Sinai, where the Israelites responded to the covenant invitation with “We will do, and we will hear.” From the heights of spiritual ecstasy at Mount Sinai, the Israelites descended “like a flock of goats” to become a light and witness to the nations. Goats are often symbolic of sacrifice for atonement. Indeed, Israel has suffered sacrifice to hold onto their covenant agreement at Sinai, reflecting the suffering of Messiah for the sake of the nations.

Next, the prophecy refers to Israel as “a flock of newly shorn sheep which have come up from their washing.” Sheep are often symbolic of the innocent, compliant, and easily led. The sages point to the “washing” as the journey through the Reed Sea in their escape from Pharaoh. A second washing was the three-day preparation of washing for the visitation at Mount Sinai. The first washing at the Reed Sea is of particular interest since it explains in more detail the apostles’ doctrines of mercy, grace, and torah. While there has been a long history of poor understanding and applications of the relationship among them, the foundations are in the Exodus from Egypt.

The twelve tribes of Israel grew in their Egyptian captivity. With courage, the midwives salvaged the “young” of the sheep, protecting them from Pharaoh’s death squads.

“Your teeth are like a flock of newly shorn sheep which have come up from their washing, all of which bear twins, and not one among them has lost her young [???????? H7909].”

??????? shakkul; from H7921; bereaved:—barren, bereaved (robbed) of children.

There was not a long list of commandments for the flock of Israel to keep while they were being saved.

Listen to Moses’ warning about the plagues.
Circumcise.
Slaughter a lamb, apply the blood to the doorposts, and eat it.
Leave Egypt.
Follow the pillar of cloud.

That’s pretty much it. There were no 613 commandments, or even the Big Ten. Not even the Shema or “love your neighbor.” These were simple, demonstrated acts of faith. The details of the 2, the 10, and the 613 would come later in the wilderness.

There is a play-on word with “all of which bear twins.”

?????? tâ?am; a primitive root; to be complete; but used only as denominative from H8380, to be (causatively, make) twinned, i.e. (figuratively) duplicate or (architectural) jointed:—coupled (together), bear twins.

Ta’am is sometimes translated as “perfect.” The flock may be seen as not only complete, but perfect as in upright, with moral integrity:

“Now when Abram was ninety-nine years old, the LORD appeared to Abram and said to him, “I am God Almighty; walk before Me, and be blameless. [???????]” (Ge 17:1)

The children of Abraham would also be counted like their father, upright. It didn’t mean without sin or mistakes; it meant walk and work on the revealed things each day. The Midrash Rabbah presents a homily concerning “all of them are perfect, ta’am which have come up from their washing.” They point out that in spite of being herded and guarded between the Presence of Adonai Himself and the Angel, the Israelites came up from the Reed Sea unharmed by the intense holiness that was experienced between them. Although not yet walking in the commandments, nor had they even agreed to, the Israelites were already walking by faith. They were on the path, leaving death behind, yet obedience lay before them, a journey to prepare them to go up into the Land of their inheritance.

Mark Call – Parsha “Vayakhel” teaching from Shabbat Shalom Mesa

Mark Call – Parsha “Vayakhel” teaching from Shabbat Shalom Mesa

This Torah portion begins, and is named for, the SECOND use of the word "Vayakhel" in Scripture. Except, this time it's Moses that "gathers together" ALL of the assembly, not as a mob, but to hear, and do, what Yahuah commands. Parsha Vayakhel (Exodus 35:1-38:20)...

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