Ra’ey
Deut.
11:26 - 16:17
These days, getting to
Beth Messiah is a real challenge. I’m
not referring to being tired in the morning or not feeling like coming to
services. I am referring to all of the construction in the area!
Many of the roads are being dug up and changed. While it may seem like
the roads are in disarray, the fact is that the day will soon come when it will
all be finished and the traffic will flow smoothly.
This week our Torah portion is about tearing down in order to build up.
The portion begins the section of Deuteronomy devoted to statues and judgments
which the Lord conveyed to Moses at
Mount Sinai
. Remember that the first three
chapters are devoted to a short history of the Jewish people so that they would
know and appreciate how they arrived at the present situation. Chapters 4-11
explain the attitude that one should have in serving the Lord and finally
chapters 12 to the end of the book are the stature and judgments that they
people are to live by in the land which they are about to enter.
Back in chapter six we learn that we are to be absolutely loyal to God.
When we declare the Shema - “Hear O Israel! The Lord our God the Lord is
One” we are saying that we are loyal to God; we will serve no other.
Chapter 12 helps us understand how we are to be loyal to God. The
beginning of this week’s portion emphasizes the monogamous relationship that
we are to have with God and it emphasizes that there is a specific place of
worship. We often take these
commands for granted because
it is obvious that there is to be no “real”
idolatry and that we have a “correct”
place of worship. However, in the days when these words were first
uttered, these truths were unique to the Jewish people.
Without realizing it, in our own culture today
it is becoming more and more unusual to worship without idolatry!. The
portion begins by commanding the Israelites to tear down pagan alters.
It is interesting to note that God is telling them not only to stay away
from foreign practices but also to be pro-active in destroying pagan worship
practices. What does this mean to us today? Obviously,
we are not called to destroy all places of worship that we find to be
offensive to the Word of God. However,
there are two ways in which we should “tear down” pagan alters. One way is
in our interaction with people who do not know the Messiah and entertain
religious practices that are wrong. Much
idolatry is found in the ideas that people hold rather than in actual statures
and alters. We need to be prepared to challenge “pagan “ ideas and concepts.
The second way we “tear down” pagan alters” is to ask ourselves the
question, “what do I need to
destroy in my own life that is offensive to God?”
I do think that any of us on this side of heaven can say that we are
always “idolatry free”. An idol
is something that controls us. Sometimes our careers, spouses, hobbies, and
other interests can become an idol if we are not careful.
When God called Jeremiah as a prophet, he was told that he would pluck up and to break down,
to destroy and to overthrow, To build and to plant (Jer. 1:10).
From time to time we all need to take a personal inventory of our lives
to see what needs to be rooted out. For some it is confession of sins; for
others it is a needful lifestyle change. In
1 Cor. 5:7 we read that we should clean out the old leaven and be a new lump. In
order to be what we really are in the Lord, we must first “tear down, destroy
and overthrow”. Then we can build and plant. Whether we are trying to tear
down “pagan alters” in our lives or in the lives of others, may God
give us wisdom and discernment in our journey. Shabbat shalom!