Beit Simcha (“House of Joy”) Newsletter

 

P.O. Box 21632, Lehigh Valley, PA 18002   September 12, 2006 (Elul 19, 5766)   Issue 61    www.beitsimcha.com   610-289-2011


High Holiday Services

       “Wherever you are, when you hear the sound of the shofar, come to that place, to us. Our God will fight for us!” (Nehemiah 4:20). Services for Rosh Hashana (Yom Teruah, Day of Blowing of Shofars) are Fri, Sep  22, 7:30PM at Beth El Gibor and  Sep 23, 10AM at Beit Simcha. Our Yom Kippur (Day of Atonement) services are Sun, Oct 1, 7:30PM (Kol Nidre) at Beit Simcha and Mon, Oct 2, 11AM at Beth El Gibor, ending with a Neilah (Closing the Gates) service at 5PM at Beit Simcha before breaking the fast at sunset.  Call for directions to Beth El Gibor (the new congregation with Rabbi Mark Shulman presiding) or Beit Simcha, or click on the links on our web site.

    We will celebrate the Feast of Tabernacles in our sukkah on Shabbat, Oct 7, 10AM, which will also be a bat mitzvah for Joy Kofchock. Finally we celebrate Simchat Torah  (the joy of Torah) on Shabbat, Oct 14, 10AM. Mark your calendars and invite others! 

     L’shana tovah tikatevu! May you be inscribed for a good year!

 

Suitcases for Israel

Our first congregational tour of Israel departs on El Al, right after Sukkot, October 14.  It won’t just be a tour but a way to bless Israel—and you can participate.  It is just as Sha’ul (Paul) said in Romans 15:25: “now I am going to Yerushalayim with aid for God's people there.” Most of the travelers will be taking an extra suitcase along, full of blessings for the people of Israel, including the Joseph Project (which distributes humanitarian aid to the poor throughout the land), Revive Israel (which sponsors a school for Israeli youth and has just founded a new congregation in Jerusalem), Eddie and Jackie Santoro (who minister with the new congregation in Jerusalem), Marc Chopinsky (worship leader for the congregation Tents of Mercy on north of Haifa), and Lura and Eddie Beckford (who reach out to Russian Jews and Bedouin Arabs in Arad, near the Dead Sea).  If you would like to help us fill the suitcases, or contribute a check for any of these ministries, please contact Tracy Abush at 610-799-5358 or Tracyabush@aol.com.  See beitsimcha.com for details about needs.  We’ll bring pictures and stories from Eretz Yisrael at our Shabbat service on Oct 28.

 

Sue Samuel Coffeehouse

Sue and Brian Samuel will bring their Messianic music to Beit Simcha for a coffeehouse starting at 7PM, November 11.  Listen to Sue’s music at www.suesamuel.com and invite your friends to an evening of simcha.

 

MJAA Northeast Regional

A whole weekend of Messianic Jewish revival will take place on Nov 17-19, at the Hyatt Hotel on the Hudson River facing the NYC skyline. Paul Wilbur, David Chernoff, Jonathan Cahn, and others will proclaim the word.

 

L’Dor V’Dor

[What follows is an excerpt from the first of three sermons on family priorities.  You can find the whole series at beitsimcha.com/s_ser/s_ser.asp.]

 

Our sense of God’s purposes and destiny for us and for our children take root and bloom as we become aware of God’s workings in covenant down through the ages.  The Jewish people are intimately connected with the generations past and yet to be. That is because God wants us to remember him, l’dor v’dor, from generation to generation.

      In Exodus 3:15, “God said further to Moshe, "Say this to the people of Isra'el: 'Yud-Heh-Vav-Heh, the God of your fathers, the God of Avraham, the God of Yitz'chak and the God of Ya'akov, has sent me to you. 'This is my name forever; this is how I am to be remembered generation after generation.'” In this verse HaShem declares his name—which is why we call him HaShem, the Name. He also identifies himself as the God of Avraham, the God of Yitz'chak and the God of Ya'akov.  He is the God of our fathers, to be remembered from generation to generation, l’dor v’dor.

     We tend to stress over what is happening at the moment or last month or next month. “Man is like a breath; his days are like a fleeting shadow(Psalm 144:4).

HaShem is calling into being a kingdom of priests that endures from generation to generation. If we have His perspective, we might think and act differently.  V’eemru?

 

My sermon today again draws material from Keith Intrater’s book Covenant Relationships.  Keith now goes by his Jewish name, Asher, and ministers in Jerusalem with Dan Juster’s support.

God’s stated purpose in marriage, according to Malachi 2:15, is to bring about godly offspring.  Raising children who follow in the heritage of covenant faithfulness is immensely important.  Biblical covenants depend on transgenerational commitment.  HaShem wants to transfer His covenant promises from generation to generation. In Gen 17:7, HaShem declares to Abraham: “I am establishing my covenant between me and you, along with your descendants after you, generation after generation, as an everlasting covenant, to be God for you and for your descendants after you.  L’dor v’dor: when God makes a covenant with humanity, it is promise with benefits that is meant to last for more than a generation—indeed, God’s plan is that the promise will increase and multiply, as we are fruitful and multiply—passing the heritage of his covenant on to our children.

Yet they say, “God has no grandchildren.”  What does that mean?  Each generation must reconfirm the covenants with God. So the covenant HaShem made with Abraham, he reconfirmed with Isaac, and then with Jacob. And they are remembered for receiving the covenant with HaShem, bearing fruit and multiplying.

 

      HaSatan is the adversary of the seed of the promise. If he could ruin the children of the covenant, he would foil God’s plan for the earth. Generation after generation, HaSatan attacks the children of the covenant. Pharaoh ordered the massacre of the male babies—yet Moshe was raised in Pharaoh’s own house! Herod ordered the massacre of male babies in Bethlehem—yet Yeshua escaped to Egypt!  In modern times, the Holocaust, abortion, drug abuse, suicide bombers and rockets hitting civilians are aimed at destroying the inheritors of the everlasting covenant.

HaSatan is cruel and wicked, but his schemes will all ultimately fail, because HaShem’s covenants will endure to a thousand generations!

 

God made a covenant with King David. David wanted to build a house for God.  HaShem promised that David’s temple would be built. In the Spirit, the temple was established at the moment that God made that promise with David. When Solomon built the temple, he was keeping the covenant of his father. It was the greatest thing that Shlomo did.  He fulfilled his calling and destiny, fulfilling the covenant promise of his father.

We gain revelation about our calling and ministry in the Lord if we respect and honor our parents.  When I was a young man, I had negative attitudes towards my father. The Lord gave me a dream about my Dad. When I woke up, the Ruach made it clear that He wanted me to honor my father, on his birthday, by telling him what I respected about him.  When I did, I came to appreciate the heritage that my father has passed on to me: his faithfulness to the wife of his youth, providing for his children, his honesty.  Once I appreciated my Dad’s character traits, the Lord could develop them as strengths in me.

 

Through covenant, God redeems families.  Through covenant, God also creates new, spiritual families.  David illustrates this reality in his relationship with Mephibosheth—son of Jonathan, the son of King Saul.  He was crippled in his feet and lived in obscurity. When Jonathan and David made their covenant, they promised to be loyal to each other’s children. After Jonathan’s death, David searched to find if one of Jonathan’s children was still alive.  In 2 Samuel 9:7, David says to Mephibosheth: “Don’t be afraid, for I will surely show you kindness for the sake of your father Jonathan. I will restore to you all the land that belonged to your grandfather Saul, and you will always eat at my table.” David directed special attention toward Mephibosheth “for your father’s sake.”  David wanted to be faithful to his covenant promise. So David treated Mephibosheth as he would his own son, expanding the heritage of a covenant relationship to the next generation: l’dor v’dor.

In Yochanan (John) 19:26-27, Yeshua established a new spiritual family.  When Yeshua saw his mother and the talmid whom he loved standing there, he said to his mother, "Mother, this is your son." Then he said to the talmid, "This is your mother." And from that time, the talmid took her into his own home.”

Though Yeshua was stripped, beaten and hanging on a cross to die, he provided for his family, and the next generation.  Though Miriam had other children—indeed Yeshua’s brother Yaakov eventually became the head of the congregation of believers in Jerusalem—Yeshua declared that Yochanan was her son. Though Yochanan had his own mother in Capernaum, Yeshua asked him to provide for his family. Thus Yochanan his beloved talmid would become the goel or kinsman-redeemer for Miriam.

By establishing covenant relationship between Miriam and Yochanan, Yeshua created a new spiritual family—the nucleus of the new family of God.

That’s why Paul could say that Gentiles, who had been “foreigners and strangers from the covenants of promise,” are now “the family of God.”  Ephesians 2:12, 19. That’s why we call the members of Beit Simcha our mishpochah—the Hebrew word for family. HaShem has made us one family.  We have been adopted as God’s children, and have become one family, through the New Covenant of Messiah Yeshua.

Asher describes his relationships with the children of his special covenant brothers, including Paul Wilbur and Eitan Shiskoff. Eitan’s older son is David.  David was a student in the believers’ high school where Asher was principal, in Maryland. Asher remembered David as a particularly spiritual, well-behaved, and intelligent young man.  In the pages of his book, Asher speaks of a kinship with David, knowing that their lives are to be bound up in a united purpose for a long time in the future. The book was published in 1989, 17 years ago. Today, David partners with Asher in the ministry of Revive Israel, in Jerusalem. I look forward to meeting them when we visit Jerusalem in October.

Even more, I desire to walk in their footsteps, with our children. That’s why I am delighted that Adam is playing the bass for our worship team. That’s why I am looking forward to Joy’s bat mitzvah—a week before our trip to Israel! That’s why we will devote much of this afternoon’s annual congregational meeting to discussing our vision for our children in the congregation, seeking practical ways to be more  effective  in passing on a heritage to them: l’dor v’dor.

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