Posts By Minister Dr. Donald H. Garrett

Evangelize in All areas of Your Life

From Minister Virginia Garrett

“I charge thee therefore before Yah, and the Messiah Yeshua, who shall judge the quick and the dead at His appearing and His Kingdom;
Preach the word; be instant in season, out of season; reprove, rebuke, exhort with all long suffering and doctrine.
For the time will come when they will not endure sound doctrine; but after their own lusts shall they heap to themselves teachers, having itching ears;
And they shall turn away their ears from the truth, and shall be turned unto fables.
But watch thou in all things, endure afflictions, do the work of an evangelist, make full proof of thy ministry.”

2 Timothy

BE your brother’s keeper! Lead by word and actions. Don’t let your family, friends, co-workers,  or your neighbors fall! Every day strive to “Win One More Soul for Yah”!
He has done so much for YOU, share His Love and His Word with everyone!

Outreach Minister

Outreach Minister

Our Outreach Minister, Virginia Garrett, will be making posts periodically on this website and on Facebook now. We hope to see her utilizing this to the Glory of our Father, YaHVaH.

Behaalotecha in a Nutshell – Texts & Summaries –

6/8/23, 9:35 PM Behaalotecha in a Nutshell – Texts & Summaries – Parshah
https://www.chabad.org/parshah/article_cdo/aid/2181/print/true/jewish/Behaalotecha-in-a-Nutshell.htm 1/1


ב”ה
Behaalotecha in a Nutshell
Numbers 8:1–12:16


The name of the Parshah, “Behaalotecha,” means “When you raise” and it is found in Numbers 8:2.
Aaron is commanded to raise light in the lamps of the menorah, and the tribe of Levi is initiated into the service
in the Sanctuary.
A “Second Passover” is instituted in response to the petition “Why should we be deprived?” by a group of
Jews who were unable to bring the Passover offering in its appointed time because they were ritually impure.
G‑d instructs Moses on the procedures for Israel’s journeys and encampments in the desert, and the people
journey in formation from Mount Sinai, where they had been camped for nearly a year.
The people are dissatisfied with their “bread from heaven” (the manna), and demand that Moses supply them with
meat. Moses appoints 70 elders, to whom he imparts of his spirit, to assist him in the burden of governing the
people. Miriam speaks negatively of Moses, and is punished with leprosy; Moses prays for her healing, and the
entire community waits seven days for her recovery.
Learn: Behaalotecha in Depth
Browse: Behaalotecha Parshah Columnists
Prep: Devar Torah Q&A for Behaalotecha
Read: Haftarah in a Nutshell

 
 

 

Shavuoth confusion

There is a discrepancy among many religions today on which day to celebrate Shavuoth, the Festival of Weeks. One Scripture says only 7 weeks from Pesach (Passover), while the original statement in Leviticus 23:15-16 states that from Pesach it is the day after the 7th Sabbath. In other words, Shavuoth should ALWAYS be on the day we call Sunday. However, some organizations count only the 50 days from Pesach (which is also Scripture) rather than going to the day after the 7th Sabbath. This means that in 2023, some will be celebrating Shavuoth on Friday May 26, 2023 and Saturday May 27, 2023. While others start on the Sabbath, Saturday May 27, 2023 and a second day on Sunday May 28, 2023. This ministry will follow Scripture Leviticus 23:15-16 which plainly lists Shavuoth as a one day High Sabbath on the day after the 7th Sabbath, which is Sunday May 28, 2023. 

There is NO Scripture justification for a 2 day Shavuoth. It has been common practice here in the U.S. to add an extra day to the required Festivals (Feasts). Supposedly, this is to make sure they are celebrated the same day as in Israel; however, Israel is 6 to 9 hours (depending on Time Zone) ahead of time here in the U.S. This means we are already late and a second day does not solve this issue. Furthermore, there is not 2 days for the Sabbath, Yom Teruah, and Fast days here in the U.S. Why? Because it really is not necessary, just as it is not necessary to add a day for the Festivals (Feasts). We believe YaHVaH is very comfortable with ALL people showing Him reverence and worship on the days according to the Time Zone they live in. 

Anyway, most of the religions are celebrating a day of Shavuoth on the Sabbath, except for those who know it is always to be on a Sunday. This means the reading of Nasso’ is being delayed until June 3, 2023, though we believe it should be this Sabbath, May 27, 2023.  

Woe to (Some of) the Pharisees

This is from First Fruits of Zion. Everything written is their view and may or may not be the belief of Odon Obadyah Ministries.

 

Yeshua’s criticism of the Pharisees must be understood in concert with the Pharisees’ own self-critique; they were not really a gang of hypocrites.

While teaching in the Temple courts in the last days before He suffered, our Master warned His disciples about the pride, pretense, and hypocrisy of the scribes, Torah teachers, Pharisees, and religious leaders:

In His teaching He was saying: “Beware of the scribes who like to walk around in long robes, and like respectful greetings in the market places, and chief seats in the synagogues and places of honor at banquets, who devour widows’ houses, and for appearance’s sake offer long prayers; these will receive greater condemnation.” (Mark 12:38-40)

He criticized their love of honor and desire for prestige. They flaunted their religious apparel and loved to be greeted with respect in the markets. They took the seats of honor in the synagogues and at meals. They made long prayers to demonstrate their piety while neglecting the Torah’s weighty obligations, such as charity for the care of orphans and widows. Because they taught the Torah and presented themselves as holy men, they “will receive greater condemnation.” James, the brother of the Master, alluded to Yeshua’s warning when he wrote, “Let not many of you become teachers, my brethren, knowing that as such we will incur a stricter judgment” (James 3:1).

In Matthew 23:13-37, Yeshua pronounced seven “woes” upon the Pharisees. A parallel passage appears in Luke 11:39-54. The denouncements will convince most gospel readers unfamiliar with first-century Judaism that all Pharisees and rabbis were fairly awful human beings.

Increasing numbers of historians and Bible scholars have recently conceded that our Master did not condemn the Pharisees as a whole. Yeshua and His early disciples followed a form of Pharisaism. His theology, hermeneutic, parables, argumentation, conclusions, and even His dinner invitations were, for the most part, Pharisaic in origin.

How then do we understand the rancor with which Yeshua attacked the Pharisees in the Gospels? Yeshua’s scathing rebukes represent an internal criticism. Notice that He never offered similar rebukes to the Sadducees or the Herodians (even though they were far more wicked than the Pharisees). Neither did He condemn the Essenes, even though He did not endorse their theology or their withdrawal from the rest of the Jewish people. Because Yeshua’s own theology and practice ran so close to the Pharisees, the Pharisees fell under His immediate concern. In religious dialogue, we experience the fiercest conflict with those most similar to ourselves.

The writings of the Pharisees freely admit to the presence of rank hypocrisy and pretentiousness among some members of their sect. David Stern compiled and translated a fusion of passages from both Talmuds to illustrate this point. This internal criticism was written by disciples of the Pharisees themselves:

There are seven kinds of Pharisees: the “shoulder” Pharisee, who ostentatiously carried his good deeds on his shoulder so all can see them; the “wait-a-moment” Pharisee, who wants you to wait while he performs a mitzvah; the bruised Pharisee, who runs into a wall while looking at the ground to avoid seeing a woman; the “reckoning” Pharisee, who commits a sin, then does a good deed and balances the one against the other; the “pestle” Pharisee, whose head is bowed in false humility, like a pestle in a mortar; the Pharisee who asks, “What is my duty, so that I may do it?” as if he thought he had fulfilled every obligation already; the Pharisee from fear of the consequences if he doesn’t perform the commandments; and the Pharisee from love.

According to the Pharisees’ own evaluation, seven out of eight types of Pharisees were of an ignoble character. The Master’s criticism of the Pharisees should be understood in concert with the Pharisees’ own self-critique:

One should expose hypocrites to prevent the profanation of the Name. (Talmud)

Hypocrites will not stand before God. (Talmud)