Saturday, January 29, 2022

Bible Geek Word Nerd - Creator

God the Creator

29 January 2022

Earlier we posted about beginnings…and we focused on the Hebrew word RESHITH (רֵאשִׁ֖ית) which means “beginning” or “chief”. It is derived from the word ROSH (רֹאשׁ) which means “head”. That word, of course, is used for everything from that anatomical structure that holds your brain to the first part of the year. ROSH HA-SHANAH (רֹאשׁ הַשָׁנָה) means “head of the year”.
 
Keeping with this theme of beginnings, let’s look today at another word that makes its debut in Genesis’s first sentence: BARA (בָּרָא). It is the verb used for “to create”, which is its primary definition. It can also be translated as “cut down” (Ezekiel 23:47). The Hebrew Bible features it more than 50 times, from Genesis to Ecclesiastes, most often as “create” and almost exclusively a verb attributed to G-d Himself alone.
 
“Remember your CREATOR in the days of your youth, before the days of trouble come and the years approach when you will say, ‘I find no pleasure in them’…” Ecclesiastes 12:1
 
“For this is what the LORD says—He who CREATED the heavens, he is God; He who fashioned and made the earth, He founded it; He did not CREATE it to be empty, but formed it to be inhabited — He says: ‘I am the LORD, and there is no other.’” Isaiah
 
When the Scriptures refer to human activity in making, the word BARA is never used; Hebrew has other words to describe that. We can make (ASAH). We can build (BANAH). We can erect (QUM). We (and the Avengers) can assemble (QAHAL or ASAPH). We can repair (BADAQ) and renew (CHADASH). But only the Living G-d can create (BARA) in an “ex nihilo” way.
 

Thursday, January 27, 2022

Bible Geek Word Nerd - nerdy on words

 27 January 2022

I am no expert on Biblical languages (Biblical languages respond: “You can say that again…but say please say it in English because your Hebrew and Greek are awful.”). English is my first language, and I have a smattering of Spanish (enough to fool a native speaker for perhaps two lines of a dialog. But Hebrew and Greek? Um… I did not begin anything resembling study until very late in life. As of now, there are many, many, many, MANY things about grammar, parsing tags, prefixes and suffixes, verb tenses, and even just root words that I do not know and probably will never learn. 
 
I would not thrive as a translator (see above about parsing tags et al.), even if I had gotten an early start. It is arduous work. I respect them for their expertise and diligence, whether they labor for the NRSV, NIV, NLT, KJV, NKJV, NASB, HCSB, or any of the other alphabet soup (or should I write ALEPH BETH?) options available to readers of the English language (crikey, there is an abundance of English versions available to us). I wouldn’t say I like every translation equally, though, and some of that disaffection is what led me to begin studying the original languages.
 
True story: I love words. I love definitions and shades of meaning and hints and connotations. I love to explore the ranges of meanings in words of all shapes and sizes. This is particularly true of the words G-d has inspired in His Holy Writ. This little Facebook page is really just an excuse to spout off my wonder at the complexity and beauty of the words in the Text (mostly Hebrew because there are many more words in the Hebrew Bible than in the New Testament).
 
This is not my first post to this page, but today is a new beginning. Candidly, it is a new beginning every day, and His mercies are new every morning, as the prophet tells us. So on this new beginning day – January 27th, Holocaust Memorial Day – we will reflect on the very first words in the Hebrew Bible, which are centered around RESHITH (רֵאשִׁ֖ית), which means “a beginning”.
 
בְּרֵאשִׁ֖ית בָּרָ֣א אֱלֹהִ֑ים אֵ֥ת הַשָּׁמַ֖יִם וְאֵ֥ת הָאָֽרֶץ
 
“BA-RESHITH BARA ELOHIM ETH HA-SHAMAYIM WA-ETH HA-ARETS”

In English, they are some of the most beautiful words in the entire length of the Text: “In the beginning, G-d created the heavens and the earth…”
 
Everything rests on this fundamental Truth. All starts with G-d, without whom nothing could begin. He is the uncaused first cause. The first mover. The Big Banger of the Big Bang. And future posts are resting on that presupposition: I write as a true believer that G-d began this whole revolving mystery of our world and our universe. And I write and read in wonder at that High Truth.
 
Will I continue making mistakes and getting messy (hat tip to Valerie Frizzle)? Undoubtedly. Is my theology or doctrine on firm footing? Maybe, but sometimes not. Will I be stealing ideas from smarter, more educated, more competent people than I? Maybe (a-hem, Bible Project, Ray Vander Laan, Jerusalem Perspective, Marvin Wilson, NT Wright, EP Sanders, Lois Tverberg, Ann Spangler, Craig Evans, David Stern, David Flusser, and too many others to name – all of whom comprise the shoulders on which I stand and the brains from which I will steal). Am I occasionally rude and often sarcastic? Yes, for sure. But maybe this will be fun. And maybe everyone will learn a thing or two. Care to join me in the Rabbit Hole?

Tuesday, January 18, 2022

Bible Geek Word Nerd - the Shoah

 18 January 2022

The Hebrew word today is a particularly important one for January 2022. Eighty years ago, on the 20th of January, Nazi leaders, comprising both government and SS ghouls, met at a villa in the Berlin suburb of Wannsee to plan for the Final Solution to the Reich’s “Jewish question”. Cold-blooded reptilian efficiency, like all of Nazi plans, the conference took all of 90 minutes to decide how to continue what they were already doing with ruthless dispatch. More than six million Jews were murdered, along with 11 million Roma, Slavs, Serbs, and others deemed unfit to live in the brave new world envisioned by the Nazis.
 
The Hebrew word is “SHO” (שׁוֹא), from which we get “SHOAH”. The word is found many times in the Hebrew Bible, in various forms, from the Book of Job, to the Psalms, to the Prophets. Like most Hebrew words, it has a range of meanings in English: desolation, destroy, destruction, storm, devastation, and wasteness. A selection of its uses in the NIV translation:
 
Psalm 35: “May ruin (SHO) overtake them by surprise”
Proverbs 3: “Have no fear of sudden disaster or of the ruin (SHO) that overtakes the wicked”
Isaiah 47: “Disaster will come upon you, and you will not know how to conjure it away. A calamity will fall upon you that you cannot ward off with a ransom; a catastrophe (SHO) you cannot foresee will suddenly come upon you.”
 
Zephaniah 1:15: “That day will be a day of wrath, a day of distress and anguish, a day of trouble (SHO) and ruin (SHO), a day of darkness and gloom, a day of clouds and blackness”
There are many ways to honor the fallen from World War 2. We Americans commemorate Pearl Harbor Day, D-Day, and VE & VJ Days. Given that some 20 million were exterminated by the Nazis in Death Camps and other pogroms, including more than 6 million Jews, perhaps a “SHOAH Day” would be worth bringing to our consciousness: January 20th.
 
If you are a DC local, you can take in the world premiere of Fauquier Community Theatre’s production of Harry Kantrovich's “Shoah”, from January 21 to February 6. Go to FCTstage.org for more information. For further edification, navigate out to: