SIVAN 23
Clarity
“The command of יהוה is CLEAR, enlightening the
eyes …” (Ps 19:8, emphasis mine)
I remember so well, while my husband and I were still part of the
westernized church system, how most congregants felt that the Old Testament, especially
Torah, was too confusing, and that it was just as well that all of that “law”
had been done away with. For many years,
I believed what I was told, until I reached the place where it was more
confusing to believe what was being preached from the pulpit, than what I was
reading and studying for myself.
Something that is clear is something that is transparent, easily
divulged, and has no smoky or blurred edges to it. And is this not an accurate description of
the Torah of our Elohim? The only time I
have found any distortion to the
instructions that are found within Torah is when I try to make it say something
that it does not, in other words,
trying to make Torah fit my wants and
desires, instead of me submitting to the dictates of Elohim. And I can give you an example: I was raised on shellfish – especially crab
and lobster – and I love it. For years,
I tried to make the excuse that the dietary laws did not specifically mention
crab and lobster, yet, who was I kidding (see Lev 11). Neither crab nor lobster has fins or scales,
and are considered unclean. Boom. (see
Lev 11:10-12)
When we are travelling to a destination that we have never been to
before, it helps to have a precise and clear set of instructions on how to get
there. We rest assured in the fact that
we do know where we are going,
because of the instructions that we have been given. We can clearly “see” where we are going. Again, is this not a definition of Torah? However, we must first recognize our ‘night
blindness’ before we can fully appreciate the light that Torah brings.
For the command is a lamp, And the Torah a light, And reproofs of
discipline a way of life …” (Pro 6:23)
“Open my eyes, that I might see Wonders from Your Torah.” (Ps 119:18)
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