Sunday, August 16, 2020

March 5 - The Meaning of "Holy" 

Hebrews 7:26 – "Such a high priest meets our need – one who is holy, blameless, pure, set apart from sinners, exalted above the heavens."

There are several words traditionally translated in several different translations of the Bible, whose meanings have always been elusive to me.  They are words that are only used in a religious sense, and have been bandied about, as if all commonsense folk surely knew what they meant.  The word "holy" is one of them, and there are several more that are covered in a different discussion.  Words can be argued about, but meanings carry weight.  So I want to know the full meaning of a word when I read it.  If we don't know the meaning of an English word, we find it in the dictionary to get its definition.  The word "redundant" is a good example of a common word, whose meaning is not what many people believe.  It does not mean "simply repetitive", as it even sounds (even though it can imply repetition).  It's meaning connotes something being not necessary, excessive (which is why repetition is included, since repetition is not always necessary to get one's point across).     

When I found out many years ago, that the Greek word for holy (hagios) meant "different" or "set apart, (for special use)", I started reading that definition into the scriptures as I would read the word "holy".  That definition made perfect sense to me.  In general, one could say that fine china is holy; it is only used on special dining occasions.  Or perhaps that antique tea set.  Or those dress shoes that one only wears to weddings and funerals.  Or those rubber boots one needs for working muddy jobs on the farm.  The list could go on and on.  "Hagios" connotes being "different for God's purposes".  

However, in the title verse above,  the former definition doesn't fit.  If it did, one would be saying "set apart" twice in this verse.  The Greek word here is "hosios", which means "in agreement with divine truth, and therefore deserving respect".  Jesus, our high priest, always walked in agreement with God's truth.  He even said that he IS truth (John 14:6).  Since he never sinned, he is worthy of the highest respect.  Another way of putting it might be that Jesus is the ultimate example of human godliness.  A short definition might be "pious", but then again, that word is also vague and rarely used in modern-day English.  

Strong's Greek concordance records the usage of "hosios" only eight times in the New Testament.  If there are short words or phrases, for which I could substitute for "holy", and understand their meanings properly, I will try it.  And whatever works for you in understanding God, and us, as "holy", please employ it in your reading and thinking.

Sunday, August 9, 2020

February 03 – Inherent Morality

Gen 26:5 – "....because Abraham obeyed me and kept my requirements, my commands, my decrees, and my laws."

           The account of Abraham's life in Genesis is significant for one main reason: He believed God's promises to him; therefore, God counted that faith as righteousness before Him (in other words, being in right-standing before God). The odd thing is that, from Genesis 12 through Genesis 25, we read of God telling Abraham to actually do only a few things. The following is a complete list of those things.                                                                                                                                                                       In Genesis 12, God tells Abraham to leave his country, his people and his father's household to go to a land that God would show him. Abraham obeyed and then wandered around for awhile in Canaan (which was the land that God had promised to give his descendants).                                                        In Genesis 13, God tells Abraham to "walk through the length and breadth of the land, for I am giving it to you." So, he moved his tents and dwelt for awhile in Hebron. We get a glimpse of this obedience to God's specific command.                                                                                                                  In Genesis 15, God makes a covenant with Abraham, confirming that he will have a son, even though he and wife Sarah were old, and Sarah was barren. God tells Abraham to bring him a heifer, a goat, and a ram – each three years old – along with a dove and a young pigeon. Abraham obliges, and we are painted the spooky scene of dreadful darkness, birds of prey, a smoking firepot, and some further details from God about Abraham's descendants. No further commands                                                        In Genesis 17, God speaks to Abraham again with a vague command: "Walk before me and be blameless.....you must keep my covenant, you and your descendants after you, for the generations to come....this is my covenant with you....: Every male among you shall be circumcised." On that very day, Abraham had all males in his household circumcised. Later in the chapter, God tells Abraham to call Sarah's yet-to-be-born son, Isaac. When Isaac is born, he is given the same name. Abraham was obedient in those two very specific commands.                                                                                                        In Genesis 21, God tells Abraham to listen to Sarah who wanted to send Hagar and Ishmael away from the household for good. Abraham obeys, and consents, even though he was distressed about it.                                                                                                                                                                                   In Genesis 22, we have the great story of God telling Abraham to sacrifice his son, even though God had told him, that the descendants who would eventually inherit Canaan, would come from Isaac. Abraham obeys to the point of almost murdering his son, when God steps in and stops the test. This is the last direct command that God had given to Abraham. To summarize then, there are seven specific commands from God and one vague command. The latter is what needs some explaining.

              This takes us to the main scripture of today’s devotion. What were the requirements, commands, decrees, and laws that Abraham kept? We are given a hint of an answer to those questions in Genesis 18:19. Abraham is given an indirect response by God to the angels with them. “For I have chosen him, so that he will direct his children and his household after him to keep the way of Yahweh, by doing what is right and just, so that Yahweh will bring about for Abraham what he has promised him.” Doing what is right and just?? Is it possible that God has placed within all humans an inherent sense of morality, in other words, a moral law? A law that contains an innate sense of right and wrong related to lying, stealing, adultery, murder, and the like? Before the account of Abraham’s life, we only see a few specific references to God’s commands: 1) no eating of the tree of the knowledge of good and evil (chapter three); 2) the murder of Abel (chapter four); and 3) no eating of raw meat and no murder as commanded to Noah right after the flood (chapter 9). Other than those things, there are only two references of evil to the end of Abraham's life: Gen. 6:5, and Gen. 18:20f, the story of Sodom and Gomorrah's demise from “grievous” sin. Gen 6:5 states “Yahweh saw how great man’s wickedness had become on the earth, and that every inclination of the thoughts of his heart was only evil all the time.” This is re-iterated after the flood in Gen. 8:21 – “…even though every inclination of [man’s] heart is evil from childhood…” Then Gen. 19:5, 6 states “ '....where are the men who came to you tonight? Bring them out to us so that we can have sex with them.' Lot went out...and said, 'No, don't do this wicked thing.' “ Notwithstanding that last specific reference, and after the few references mentioned, can we know what were the requirements, commands, decrees, and laws to be kept by Abraham?                          Romans 2:14 unlocks the key to this mystery. “Indeed, when Gentiles, who do not have the [Mosaic] law, do by nature things required by the law, they are a law for themselves, even though they do not have the [written] law, since they show that the requirements of the law are written on their hearts, their consciences also bearing witness, and their thoughts accusing and/or defending them.” This verse packs a punch! This verse states outright, that the written law (given by Moses) was a stating of those requirements that were already inherent in man. Further in this chapter, Paul makes the argument that because of the Jews' inability to keep the very laws in which they prided themselves, that the Gentiles blaspheme God's name because of them. Was this blasphemy only an apparent mockery of the Jew's hypocrisy, or did it also contain an inherent knowledge of the common sense of right behavior, which was inside everyone, no matter in what culture they found themselves?                                                        Of course, another thought emerges, since God supernaturally spoke, and appeared, to Abraham at different times: Did God specifically tell Abraham what the moral law entailed? We will never know this side of heaven. It doesn't even matter, because we all have been given the moral law, an inate sense of right and wrong.