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Alright, thank you for coming
this morning. This is great. This is back to
almost, well I think it is back to normal. So praise God for
that, for coming to church in person, right? And Pastor, I
haven't seen him here this morning. Is he preaching this morning?
Does anyone know? Yeah, well Kieran was here, so
wonderful. Praise God. So let's get started
with prayer. Lord Jesus, we thank you so much
for this time to learn of you and your word and have some nice fellowship time
with each other again. And we just thank you for your
loving kindness to us in this COVID time and how all of us
have recovered so nicely from that illness. And we pray that
this would be it, Lord, that we'll soon be over it. Thank
you. In Jesus' name, amen. All right. We're going to get
started with Sunday School. I started this lesson two weeks
ago with an introduction, and we're just going to continue
with just a little bit, tiny bit more introduction before
we get going. Hopefully most of you watched it online. There
was quite a few views, I thought, on YouTube when I looked at it,
so that's nice. Thank you for doing that. The study is called Weightier
Matters and it's going to be a study of the Torah. As I mentioned last week, Jesus
started his teaching ministry with a discussion of the Torah
and its relation to the way the Pharisees had developed a practice
of following the Torah strictly. I call it the the legalistic
observance of Torah commands. So if you want to have a phrase
that discusses what Phariseeism is, legalistic observance of
Torah commands, that's not what we're going to be learning here
today because we know that that was a failed system and that's
what Jesus criticized it so passionately. that we've been learning about
in Matthew. But we'll continue and praise
God for His plan for us, instead of that plan, a beautiful plan
from the beginning. We'll talk about the Word of
God's unity and revealing that plan through time and God's promise
and how He's accomplished it. for us. So Jesus began his ministry at
the Sermon on the Mount talking about this issue and then he's
also now come to an end of his ministry and that's where we
got the term weightier matters because Matthew 23, 23 and 26
It's that passage where Jesus talks about, you know, you tithe
your spices, but you're neglecting the weightier matters of the
Torah. Justice, mercy, and faithfulness. So that's what we're going to
be exploring. Yeah, let's go on and kind of
like our theme verse for this study is Hosea 6.6. And I guess I'll continue with
helping people learn just a little tiny bit of Hebrew during the
study too. And the best way to do that is just to to say things
in Hebrew as we go along and you can learn pronunciation,
you know, and spelling and things like that. But the book of Hosea
is pronounced Hosea in Hebrew. So Hosea 6.6 in the ESV, For
I desire lovingkindness and not sacrifice, and the knowledge
of Elohim more than ascension offerings. Our first goal from this theme
verse then is to increase in our knowledge of Yahweh And our
second goal is to increase in the doing of the weightier matters,
which are at the top, justice, mercy, and faithfulness. So, why study the Torah? To increase
knowledge, right? There's a lot of other things
we could study. Anybody have an answer? Why would we increase
our knowledge there? Well, Jesus defined what weightier
matters means using that same definition, which is those aspects
of the Torah he thought were most important, which were justice,
mercy, and faithfulness. And I know those can be loosey-goosey
words that are hard to define. what we're going to do as we
go through. We're going to be as precise as we can and as appropriate
in interpreting Torah commands in terms of justice, mercy, and
faithfulness, and also in terms of the two greatest commandments.
Those commands, how we are oriented toward God in relation to that
command, and how we are oriented toward others in relation to
that command. So we'll talk about that today, later. But one reason
why we can increase our knowledge of Yahweh by studying the Torah
is because this study is for Christians. This study is, I'm
going to say, this study is for Christians who have grown up
in the church. Like me, if you grew up in the church, what area
of scripture do you have the least knowledge? Probably the Torah and the prophets. Jesus said in Matthew chapter
5, I haven't come to abolish the Torah and the prophets, but
to fill it up completely. And so if we want to increase
our knowledge, let's go to the place of Scripture where we have
the least knowledge. That makes the most sense to
me. So as we do that, what we're
going to do is we're going to look at it like an onion and
take off these levels. And we're going to start with
the easiest stuff and we're going to go a little deeper and a little
deeper and a little deeper. And I don't know if we'll have
time to do all this, but if we do, great, and if not, we'll
stop wherever we stop. But you'll notice that these
levels aren't divided by theology, and by that I mean a system of
theology. They're divided by a scriptural
emphasis. So, just to explain. So you have the two greatest
commandments. We talked about that two weeks ago, the first
lesson. Jesus described those. We all know what those are. And
then today we're going to start with the Ten Commandments with
the context as explained in Exodus. A little before, a little after
in Exodus chapter 20. Then we're going to talk about
what I call the plus seven from Exodus 34. And if you guys want
to write this down, you know, you could read ahead. That would
be great. And then we're going to talk about the specific aspect
of blood that's mentioned in Acts 15 and emphasized by the
early church. And then we're going to end with
the death penalty. And that would be an emphasis
in the Torah itself on what commandments were punished more severely than
others. I think that it's straightforward
and reasonable. When you look at our civil law
in the United States, which laws are more important than others?
It's the ones that are enforced. And which ones are enforced more
severely are the ones that are more important. So, if anybody
else has a great idea on how to look into the Torah and, based
on Scripture, sort of determine what are more weightier matters
than others, please let me know. So, let's go back here, and as
we look at this verse again, and its emphasis, I want to just start with the
Lord's Prayer again. Our Father in Heaven, hallowed
be Your name. Your kingdom come. Your will
be done. And that's really what we're thinking of here in studying
the Torah and answering the question, is the Torah relevant for us?
Because we can go back and we can read Exodus and just say,
that was for them, that was for them, that was for them. And
that's interesting, but a fairly boring way to read scripture,
right? Is how is the Torah relevant
for us? That's what our emphasis is going to be in this study.
And I think one way that the Torah is relevant for us is when
we pray. Your will be done on earth as it is in heaven. We're
asking God to help us to do Your will, help us to know Your will,
and then help us to do Your will. But what is God's will? First off, God's will is what's
revealed to us in Scripture. So that's primary in determining
what God's will is. Not some emotional feeling that
we get here or there, but what Scripture teaches us. And then
another interesting question that I'd like to ask and see
if anybody would volunteer to answer would be, I talked a little
bit about how Torah might be relevant for our present, but
is Torah relevant for our future? Does anyone want to offer a suggestion
as to how Torah might be relevant for our future? I admit these are hard questions
and I'm doing these hard questions on purpose because I grew up
in the church and I either was explicitly taught or implicitly
taught that the Torah was not relevant for my present and it
certainly wasn't relevant for my future. So I don't think I
was unique there. Right, right, yeah. So, let's go and read a passage
of scripture now from the prophets, and see if maybe we can get an
answer to that question, is Torah relevant for our future? We'll
start with the prophet Micah, and in Hebrew that's Micah. We're
going to read a passage from chapter 3 and going through about
halfway through chapter 4. We'll start here. This is from
the LEV. It's a literal English version
and it keeps some of the Hebrew names and transliterated Hebrew
for to make it easier to pronounce
things in Hebrew. And by the way, this version
of the Bible, literal English version, is free for distribution. I have it on a PDF if anybody
wants it. I have a flash drive. I'll give
it to you, and we can pass that around. It's a big PDF file,
so it won't attach to an email. Obviously, it's the whole Bible.
But it's completely free, and if you want it, you're welcome
to it. So just come up afterwards if you want. And I also copied
it onto this laptop here. So you guys could bring your
own little flash drive and copy it off of here if you'd like.
But we'll go to Micah 3.8 and start there. But as for me, I
am full of power by the Ruach of Yahweh. And remember, the
Ruach is spirit. and of judgment and of might
to declare to Yaakov his disobedience and to Yisrael his sin. Please
listen to this, you heads of the house of Yaakov and rulers
of the house of Yisrael, who abhor judgment and pervert all
equity. They build up Zion with blood
and Yerushalayim with unrighteousness. Her leaders judge for bribes,
and her priests teach for a price, and her prophets of it tell fortunes
for money. Yet they lean on Yahweh and say,
is not Yahweh among us? No disaster will come on us.
Therefore, Zion, for your sake, will be plowed like a field,
and Yerushalayim will become heaps of rubble, and the mountain
of the temple like the high places of a forest. By the way, the prophet Micah
wrote at the time, just before the destruction of the northern
kingdom of Israel by the Assyrian Empire. Now we go on to the next chapter.
But in the latter days it will happen that the mountain of the
temple of Yahweh will be established at the top of the mountains and
it will be exalted above the hills and peoples will stream
to it. Many nations will go and say,
come and let us go to the mountain of Yahweh and to the house of
Elohim, of Yaakov, and he will teach us of his ways, and we
will walk in his path. For the Torah will go out of
Zion and the word of Yahweh from Yerushalayim, and he will judge
between many peoples and will decide concerning strong nations
afar off. They will beat their swords into
plowshares and their spears into pruning hooks. Nation will not
lift up sword against nation, neither will they learn war anymore.
But they will sit every man under his vine and under his fig tree,
and no one will make them afraid. For the mouth of Yahweh, Sivaot,
has spoken. Indeed, all the nations may walk
in the name of their Elohim, and we will walk in the name
of Yahweh, our Elohim, forever and ever. So, a couple notes here. This
passage is referring to the Millennial Kingdom reign of our King Jesus
on Earth. And you'll notice that it says
here at the end of verse 2, for the Torah will go out of Zion,
which is Zion and refers to the mountain upon which Jerusalem
is built. And the word of Yahweh from Yerushalayim So, the Torah
is mentioned here prominently as being part of the Millennial
Kingdom. How much, and in what way, and
all of that, I mean, I don't know. I don't think anybody does,
but it'll be good to know of it. At the end here, we have this
name for God. I'll remind you from our Job
study. Yahweh Siva'ot has spoken. And this is again a reminder
of the circumstances upon which that Millennial Kingdom will
come to pass. Siva'ot is translated usually
in English as the Lord of Hosts. Yahweh Siva'ot, Lord of Hosts.
And what it means, Siva'ot means, is a military commander at the
forefront of his forces, leading them into battle. So Yahweh Sebaot
is this aspect of Yahweh as a warrior, conqueror. And we know that that's
how the Millennial Kingdom will come to pass. It's Jesus leading
the forces, angelic forces, of war against the evil on our planet. And it will usher in this Millennial
Kingdom where there'll be no war. And, you know, every man
under his vine and under his fig tree, and no one will make
them afraid. The mouth of Yahweh's Sabaoth has spoken. So this name
of Yahweh that's emphasized in verse 5, that gives me a segue
into our start. And that start in Torah study
is going to be in the Ten Commandments. So the first commandment is where
we talk about this name. Grant, question? the kingdom. So there's a constant
switch there because obviously in the Jewish mind there was
no church, it was just a continuation. So that switch takes place and
it turns out to be a little difficult. Yeah, you do have to understand
in the prophecy that there'll be a more immediate short-term
fulfillment, which oftentimes from our time perspective has
already been fulfilled, like the destruction that we talked
about at the beginning of this passage. And then there's the
future to us fulfillment, which hasn't happened yet, which is
what it's talking about, the Millennial Kingdom. And Grant's
right. I think that's an aspect of God's loving kindness, that
in these very harsh prophecies of imminent destruction and judgment,
God also brings in repeatedly hope. But the first commandment addresses
this issue of who is God. And we're going to go ahead and
get started. and in Exodus in our passage
and talk about this. So the Hebrew name for the book
of Exodus is Shemot. And Shemot means names in Hebrew. And the name of the book, names,
comes from the first verse in Hebrew. Exodus 1, 1 starts out,
now these are the names of the sons of Israel. So that's where
the name of the book comes from. Names. Shemot. We're going to
start with Exodus chapter 19 to get some back story and some
background before the Ten Commandments. And I'll start reading here in
Exodus 19.16. And I encourage you to follow
along in your King James or ESV or what version that you're using.
I'm going to read in the LAV and as and I'm going to try not
to read too fast so that we can Contrast it to translations as
we read through and that gives us a deeper understanding of
the word Exodus 1916 so it came about on the third day when it
was morning that there were thunder and lightning flashes And a heavy
cloud upon the mountain and a voice of an exceedingly loud shofar
So that all the people who were in the camp trembled. And Moshe
brought the people out of the camp to meet Elohim. And they
stood at the foot of the mountain. Now Mount Sinai was all in smoke
because Yahweh descended upon it in fire. And its smoke ascended
like the smoke of a furnace. And the whole mountain quaked
violently. When the voice of the shofar sounded long and grew
louder, Moshe spoke, and Elohim answered him with thunder. Yahweh
came down on Mount Sinai to the top of the mountain, and Yahweh
called Moshe to the top of the mountain, and Moshe went up.
And Yahweh spoke to Moshe, go down, warn the people so that
they do not break through to Yahweh to gaze, and many of them
perish. And the next several verses,
there's a little back and forth between Yahweh and Moses. Yahweh's telling Moses to warn
the people and the priests not to approach irreverently and
too close to what's going on. And Moshe's telling God, yes,
we've taken care of that, you told us that, and we've warned
the people. And God's saying, no, go warn them again. And so
Moses goes back down, warns them again. And interestingly though,
God asks Moses to bring Aaron back with him. So Moses goes
down, warns the people again, and he brings Aaron back with
him, back up the mountain. So then now we continue. the first commandment then, the
beginning of Exodus 20. And Elohim spoke all these words,
saying, now this is, remember, to Moses and Aaron, I am Yahweh,
your Elohim, who brought you out of the land of Mitsrayim,
which is Egypt, out of the house of slavery. You shall have no
other Elohim before me. This commandment is God declaring the truth of who
He is, using His personal name, and declaring Himself as God,
and declaring Himself as your God. So, as we go through these commandments,
what I thought that would be interesting to do is to use a
grid, and I'm going to call it a contemplative grid, because
it's going to help us think through, in a deeper way, how these commandments
would apply to us. And what we're going to do is,
on the left, we have the orientations of self to Yahweh and self to
others. And that comes from Jesus' two
greatest commandments. To love God with all of your
mind and all of your strength. And then the second commandment,
which is to love your neighbor as yourself. So we have those
two orientations. And then we also have what Jesus
said were the weightier matters of the Torah. And those are at
the top, justice, and mercy, and faithfulness. So we're going
to take these commandments, and we're going to break them down
and think of them in these terms to help us not to just blow through
scripture as some interesting narrative, but really apply to
our lives where we can and should And so this first one, I think
it'll be really fun and helpful to break up into groups and actually
discuss it. And this classroom is situated
so that it's really actually perfectly situated. So we have
three columns, and then we'll have two in each column, so there'll
be six groups and We'll divide this left-hand side here. You
know we'll just divide down the middle So we'll have one group
on the front one group in the back. We'll do that same So what
I'd like each group to do according to this chart so right up here
Tom's group will be thinking about how this first commandment
relates to our self-to-Yahweh relationship, and specifically
how that relates to faithfulness. And then the group behind will
do the self-to-others aspect, and how that relates to faithfulness
in this commandment. Okay, so you guys, in your groups,
do you want to write this down real quick? Write down what group
that you're going to be in. Write down what orientation you're
going to be discussing. Self to Yahweh or self to others.
And then also write down which of the three weightier matters. So that back corner, that back
corner is self, others, and justice. Okay, does everyone You're the
self, others, and justice back there. Okay, and now what I'm
going to do, now that you have written down what your assignment
is, let's go back to the verse and put that back up. Okay, so
this is the verse and the commandment that you're going to be thinking
about in terms of the assignment that each group has. Okay? Pick a spokesman, because what
we'll really like to do at the end is we would like to have
a spokesman stand up and kind of discuss. You're going to have ten minutes. So, yeah. Okay. Okay, time to wrap up. We want to have time to hear
from each group. Testing. Alright. Yeah, thanks. How about you guys go first? Yeah. Alright. It looks like Justice decided
to go first. The Justice group. Justice, in
relation to the self to Yahweh relationship. Okay, so first,
we were trying to figure out if verse 2 kind of is attached to the command
and we read a footnote in Dan's Bible and it said that that statement
by Yahweh in verse 2 is kind of an introduction to get their
attention and remind them of what he's done for all the commands. So it's kind of a, you know,
look at me, I own you, I delivered you, listen to all these commands
now. So it doesn't necessarily really
go just with command one. It seems like it's for all. So
that took up a bunch of our time to figure that out. I should
have explained this too though, but in the Hebrew Bible there
is a number designation for each one of these commands. And the
first two verses are included in that first commandment number
designation in the Hebrew Bible. That's why I included it here. So the justice, one way you could
look at this is the justice aspect is that because Yahweh owns Israel,
in this case, owns us, he delivered us, right? Because he bought
and owns them and us, he is the one that gets to set the standard
of justice. And so in our relationship to
him, He's done his part, sort of, to rescue us, purchase us
completely. Our part is to look to him as
the standard for justice and follow that. Well said. Early came up and asked about
the process of what we're doing here, too. And we had talked
a little bit about this. And I'll just share what he said
from your group, because I thought it was really excellent. He looked
at it in the aspect of, Now that I have done this for
you in rescuing you out of slavery, a horrible, unjust situation,
and rescued you out of slavery, out of my loving kindness, how
unjust would it be for you to turn your back on me now? I'm
your God, I'm who rescued you, and I'm expecting Your honor,
your obedience, I'm expecting relationship with you. And for
you to turn your back on me would be very unjust to me as God. So I thought that was a really,
really nice way to look at it. But let's go on to the next group,
which would be self and others orientation in regards to justice. Back corner there. All right,
so I acknowledged to my group I was a little late in getting
here, but somehow I was nominated a spokesperson, so I'm probably
going to fumble a little bit here, so I may pass. Got it. Got it. Thank you. I think that's
one of the, like, the 11th commandment of group meetings, right? All
right. It's in there somewhere. So I
guess in trying to put the pieces together that we talked about
and thinking about what Gordy and his group just shared, there
is authority being established here in these first three verses.
And for the folks living back at that time, they had seen how
God brought them out, establishing that authority. He is ultimately
the just authority. And as we think about how we
as Christians have been brought out of sin and slaves to sin,
we recognize the same thing in God in a different way. And then
as that relates to others, King Shihai pointed out the fact that
what's common here in the world is this idea of fairness. And
I think for us our challenge is understanding and sharing
what true justice is and where that ultimately belongs in the
person of God, and overriding this idea of fairness, which,
as Grant mentioned, is obliterated in our society today, and it
can just be so wishy-washy in what's fair and what's not fair.
And so I think that's a key point in terms of true justice, who
it is, and our job is to point others to the author of true
justice. Yeah, very key. Boy, that is so applicable to
our modern environment, political environment, isn't it? Who decides
what's just, right? So interesting comments. That's really good. Next would
be the front here in the middle, would be the self Yahweh orientation
in regards to mercy in this commandment. So in our group, we talked about the mercy that God had for us,
or for Israel, as he brought them out of the land of Egypt
and slavery, he was merciful upon them. Even though they weren't
100% following God's rules then, but he was merciful in bringing
them out of that slavery. So therefore, because of that
mercy he showed to us, we should have no other God. Right. Yeah. And just in a very real
sense, God acted for them first. He rescued them from slavery
first. Just like with us, he rescued us from sin first when
we repented. So yeah. All right. And then in the back middle then,
this idea of mercy in the self-others orientation. Yes, so when our
group talked about it, we really felt that it starts with His
mercy for us. And really, we touched on that
a lot. But then because of His mercy,
I mean, obviously in the context here, we see He saved them from
slavery in Egypt. But then also as believers today,
He's also saved us from our sins here. And so what that creates
then in our relationships with others is we need to then display
God's mercy to others so that He can reach them as well. And
that was what we really felt was important about specifically
what we saw in the second verse there. Right, yeah. And then
also maybe remembering, too, that if God was merciful first
and then explained his expectations after, that might be a better
approach for us, too, in ministering to the hurt and wounded people
of the world, wounded by sin, to show mercy first. And God has expectations, of
course, for a repentant, a believer who is following Jesus. But just
to remember, a lot of mercy first. Alright, let's do the front here. The self to Yahweh orientation
in regards to faithfulness in the First Commandment. Well, this one seems like fairly
straightforward. If you have no other gods before
Yahweh, you're faithful to God. So that's kind of the first thing.
And then we just talked about not having other idols and kind
of what that means and how you spend your time and energies
and stuff. And then I guess also, this has kind of been touched
on with other groups, but talking about how in the chart the arrow
goes both ways. So there is the verse, I brought
you out of Egypt. That's God being faithful to
the Israelites. And then the flip side of that
is you be faithful to me as well. Yeah, that's good. Remembering,
too, the promise that was given at the very beginning after the
first sin to Adam and Eve. God is faithful, and this is
a part of His plan, and He's moving forward with it out of
His faithfulness. Right, that's good. And then
the back corner. Self to others So I'll just quick
throw out some random thoughts and ideas that that came to mind
for our group and in regards to faithfulness And our example
of faithfulness to others around us Probably an extreme Testimony
of faithfulness to others would be obviously over the years Christian
martyrs who've you know given their life to the end claiming
Christ even in modern times right now And then, you know, being
so faithful to Christ that they're willing to sacrifice their human
temporary life for that. But even in our culture, modern
contemporary culture, just being marginalized, that is a testimony
of our faithfulness and not shifting who we believe in or what we
believe in and just for, you know, just to be accommodating
to someone else. And then that idea of sharing
God with other gods. You know, we don't have that
ancient concept of gods competing against gods. You know, trying
to think back in Egypt of how powerful of a testimony that
was to the Israelites to be let out of the land of Egypt in comparison
to what we're dealing with in our everyday life. It's a little
different, but maybe in regards to a church trying to accommodate
other doctrines, other beliefs, or other sins and saying, well,
this can be accepting, that would be sharing God with our world. And I think that's a challenge
for our church and also individuals. I want to be friends with these
people still, so I'm going to change my faithfulness to God
in this relationship to these people to still continue a friendship. And they know that, too, by how
we interact with them. Also, too, we thought of just
the concept of kind of self-serving worship. I'm going to worship
God in my own way without other people, whether it's just getting
away from relationships to worship God because it's just too challenging,
maybe. That's not the faithfulness God
is expecting of us to Him. It involves other people and
other sinners. That was really good. I'm glad
you mentioned martyrdom, because that relates really closely to
this First Commandment. Why did the martyrs suffer and
die? Well, they were holding to the
true Yahweh as He explains Himself in Scripture, who He is. They
were protesting the development of a different God. We think
of the Protestant martyrs. The system of Roman Catholicism
that had built up over the Middle Ages developed the system of
some other God. That was what the Reformation
was all about. Go back to Scripture. Who does God tell us He is in
Scripture and what He did for us? Go ahead, Grant. Right, right. Yeah, yeah. All right, well that's
the end of this. Yeah, go ahead. Yeah, yeah, yeah. Yeah, and that's walking the
fine line is what studying the Torah is going to be all about,
right? And what Jesus was referring
to when he mentioned the way to your matters. You know, you
can emphasize some things more than others, and boy, you can
get way off into really erroneous teaching when you start emphasizing
wrong things, right? So, thank you for coming this
morning, and we'll continue with the study for many more weeks.
Weightier Matters of the Torah
Series Weightier Matters
| Sermon ID | 91221174245256 |
| Duration | 45:40 |
| Date | |
| Category | Sunday School |
| Bible Text | Exodus 20 |
| Language | English |
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