I thought this baby picture of sweet tweener would be so perfect in this |
Wednesday, January 30, 2013
Introducing My Memories Scrapbook Suite...
I had such a nice surprise after Christmas -Liz Gardner from MyMemories scrapbooking contacted me and asked if I would review their software and host a give away on my site...and I said "yes"! It was such a wonderful blessing to be asked, and after a year with photoshop, I guess I thought I was up for learning another new software program...
But, Liz did say that there was so much more to the program, and was interested to see what I might be able to create with it...and I have been playing...please come back on Friday when I show some of the more graphic and artful ways this program can be used - and join in the comments for a chance to when a full version of this software!
Labels:
angel
Monday, January 28, 2013
Be Still...{Part 7 - Deepest Joy}
Does it seem strange that I am still living out my Advent (ure) leadings? The ones that started with Joy to the World and this verse:
I'm sure the world has moved on at a much faster pace than I...on to New Year's resolutions and maybe even having fallen from them already! I even have 4 of them myself - 4 that I was going to share, right after Advent...and still will...in this final week of January...
I think I have been living them, and they are resolves that are sticking - forming and transforming -
I wonder at what may have seemed a failure to my perfectionistic bent in years gone by...last year my One Word was "contemplate". A character trait He is still weaving deep within...perhaps that is why I continue on with the Advent(ure)? Because the point is that His Presence has come - to remain, to abide...to "be still" and KNOW that He IS God.
I kept this quote from the December meanderings:
“Rejoice, rejoice, Emmanuel shall come to thee O Israel“.The miracle of Christmas is more than proof of God’s existence.It’s the miracle we need: the experience of God’s presence.“…no good thing does He withhold…” Ps. 84:11
And the good things in life are not health but holiness, not the riches of this world but relationship with God, not our plans but His presence —He doesn’t withhold Jesus from us. And no matter where we are, we can always have as much of Jesus as we want.We can always have as much of God as we want.
Ann Voskamp
The definition of joy is immense...it was a question that began when I discovered that this use of joy is only in three verses of Scripture - Nehemiah 8:10, I Chronicles 16:27 and Ezra 6:16. Each of these passages has to do with a dedication of the house of God.
chedvah: spelled in Hebrew (with very brief definitions):
cheit - a (protecting) fence, an inner room
dalet - door
vav - a nail, peg (that holds or anchors)
hey - behold, breath of God
And so I now have my own definition of joy:
So, simply said, true joy comes by first, life, new life, God's life (cheit), protected by God's presence... then comes the door (dalet), the entrance to that life, through Jesus... And it is when our earthly life is "hooked" or nailed together with God (vav), that our lives are made solid and secure... and our lives are infused with His breath (hey), His Presence within our hearts, my heart and my life can become the fragrance of His breath to others.
True joy is when I become the temple of God. The joy of the Lord is when I become His temple, His Spirit residing within...and that is the source of my strength as well...His Presence in me...
The pessimists say life is hard and won’t get better. The optimists say life is good or will be soon. But the believers say our hope is in Jesus whether life is hard or life is good, releasing the right to predict the future, holding on to God who comes to be with us now. A Thought about Pessimism and Optimism - by Emily at Chatting at the Sky
Be Still... series:
Part 1 - Be Still
Part 2 - The Catalyst
Part 3 - Rumblings of the Silence Begin
Part 4 - Revelation Continues
Part 5 - A Nail that Holds and Anchors
Part 6 - Take a Breath, Breathe in God
Part 7 - Deepest Joy
Labels:
Advent-ure,
Hebrew word studies,
The Journey
Friday, January 25, 2013
Sneak Peek at a special day that happened this week...
I was so privileged to be the featured artist for Artsy Shark, an artist's business site, this week...I just had to share it with my friends here on the web! Here is how the article started, and you can click on over if you want to read the entire piece and see which images Carolyn Edlund (the founder of Artsy Shark website and Executive Director of the Arts Business Institute) found most appealing...
Featured Artist Cindy Fort
Posted on January 21, 2013 // 2 Comments
Enjoy the charming portfolio of Christian artist Cindy Fort, who shares her inspiration to help heal others. See more of her work by visiting her website.
I grew up being creative and having that creativity encouraged. I even won awards in art. But I laid creativity aside for sciences and math – the college prep track, of course. I eventually finished a Bachelor’s degree in Biblical Studies and received an MA in counseling with a Biblical emphasis. It was here, in the midst of helping clients recover their lives using therapeutic art, where I reconnected with my own artistic side. I believe creativity is a gift we all share from our Creator; a result of being formed in His Image. In expressing ourselves creatively, we are inspired and inspire others!
Read more by clicking here - you will be going to the Artsy Shark website...
AND.....COME BY NEXT FRIDAY WHEN I WILL BE OPENING A SPECIAL GIVEAWAY OF A WONDERFUL DIGITAL PHOTO EDITING AND PROCESSING SOFTWARE PACKAGE (winner will be announced on Valentine's Day...and the winner will be making love gifts all year long!)
Be sure to go check out all the other inspiring creatives at Studio JRU's Sneak Peek here...
and Missional Women and Faith Filled Fridays here
and Paint Party Friday here
Labels:
features,
photoshop,
sneak peek Fridays
Monday, January 21, 2013
Be still...{Part 6 - take a breath, breathe in God}
Joy.
chedvah: spelled in Hebrew:
cheit - a (protecting) fence, an inner room
dalet - door
vav - a nail, peg (that holds or anchors)
hey - behold, breath of God
Hey (prounounced "hay") is the fifth letter of the Hebrew alphabet. Its meaning is "look" or "behold", and there is a lot to look at and behold in this letter!
Hey:
- represents the divine breath, revelation, and light (which is said to correspond to this letter). It represents the five senses and the "5 levels of the soul" in Hebrew tradition.
- represents God's Creative Power - "By the word of the LORD were the heavens made; and all the host of them by the breath of his mouth" (Psalm 33:6). It is said that the "breath of His mouth" refers to the sound of the letter Hey - the outbreathing of Spirit.
- is a picture of the presence of God within the human heart. (See item 4 below).
- is also be a picture of returning to God by means of the transforming power of the Spirit. (See 7 below)
All of this says to me, simply the mystery of "Christ in me", God living in me, His nature and divine power dwelling in my heart - proven by the very letters of God's chosen people's language! He created the world, created man, and re-created our hearts when we turned to Him...breathing His life into mine. Like Adam, He breathed new life into me...His breath in mine, every time I breathe, it is as if His breath is being inhaled, exhaled...truly:
Be Still... series:
Part 1 - Be Still
Part 2 - The Catalyst
Part 3 - Rumblings of the Silence Begin
Part 4 - Revelation Continues
Part 5 - A Nail that Holds and Anchors
Part 6 - Take a Breath, Breathe in God
Part 7 - Deepest Joy
You can stop reading now or continue down to get more research below...
*****************************************************************************
From the site "Hebrew for Christians" - click here
1. The Mystery of Hey - According to the Jewish mystics, Hey represents the divine breath, revelation, and light (the word "light" is mentioned five times on the first day of creation (Gen. 1:3-4), which is said to correspond to the letter Hey). Since the numerical value of Hey is five, this corresponds on a physical level to the five fingers, the five senses, and the five dimensions. On a spiritual level it corresponds to the five levels of soul:
"By the word of the LORD were the heavens made; and all the host of them by the breath of his mouth" (Psalm 33:6). In the Talmud (Menachot 29b) it is said that the "breath of His mouth" refers to the sound of the letter Hey - the outbreathing of Spirit. (More at the website).
3. Hey and the Divine Name
The Sacred Name, , includes two instances of the letter Hey.
4. Hey and the Divine Presence
According to one midrash, Yod left Aleph to become part of Dalet, thus forming Hey. Since Aleph represents God and Dalet represents broken humanity, Hey is a picture of the presence of God within the human heart. This function of Hey can be seen when (Abram) was renamed to (Abraham) and (Sarai) was renamed to (Sarah).
5. Prefixive Hey
Hey functions as the definite article in Hebrew, a sort of demonstrative that points to the object and makes it concrete and definite. Thus (ish), a man, becomes (ha-ish), the man.
6. Suffixive Hey
Adding a Hey at the end of a noun "feminizes" it or allows it to be "fruitful" and reproductive.
7. Hey and Teshuvah
Since Hey is formed from Dalet and Yod, it can also be a picture of returning to God by means of the transforming power of the Spirit. Dalet stands for brokenness, and Yod stands for a hand. Opening the door of the heart then is a picture of the Spirit of God indwelling the believer, and this image also coheres with the idea that part of Aleph (God) is joined with Dalet to form the Hey.
Hey:
- represents the divine breath, revelation, and light (which is said to correspond to this letter). It represents the five senses and the "5 levels of the soul" in Hebrew tradition.
- represents God's Creative Power - "By the word of the LORD were the heavens made; and all the host of them by the breath of his mouth" (Psalm 33:6). It is said that the "breath of His mouth" refers to the sound of the letter Hey - the outbreathing of Spirit.
- is a picture of the presence of God within the human heart. (See item 4 below).
- is also be a picture of returning to God by means of the transforming power of the Spirit. (See 7 below)
All of this says to me, simply the mystery of "Christ in me", God living in me, His nature and divine power dwelling in my heart - proven by the very letters of God's chosen people's language! He created the world, created man, and re-created our hearts when we turned to Him...breathing His life into mine. Like Adam, He breathed new life into me...His breath in mine, every time I breathe, it is as if His breath is being inhaled, exhaled...truly:
'For in him we live and move and have our being.' Act 17:28
Be Still... series:
Part 1 - Be Still
Part 2 - The Catalyst
Part 3 - Rumblings of the Silence Begin
Part 4 - Revelation Continues
Part 5 - A Nail that Holds and Anchors
Part 6 - Take a Breath, Breathe in God
Part 7 - Deepest Joy
You can stop reading now or continue down to get more research below...
*****************************************************************************
From the site "Hebrew for Christians" - click here
1. The Mystery of Hey - According to the Jewish mystics, Hey represents the divine breath, revelation, and light (the word "light" is mentioned five times on the first day of creation (Gen. 1:3-4), which is said to correspond to the letter Hey). Since the numerical value of Hey is five, this corresponds on a physical level to the five fingers, the five senses, and the five dimensions. On a spiritual level it corresponds to the five levels of soul:
- Nefesh - instincts
- Ruach - emotions
- Neshamah - mind
- Chayah - bridge to transcendence
- Yechidah - oneness
"By the word of the LORD were the heavens made; and all the host of them by the breath of his mouth" (Psalm 33:6). In the Talmud (Menachot 29b) it is said that the "breath of His mouth" refers to the sound of the letter Hey - the outbreathing of Spirit. (More at the website).
3. Hey and the Divine Name
The Sacred Name, , includes two instances of the letter Hey.
4. Hey and the Divine Presence
According to one midrash, Yod left Aleph to become part of Dalet, thus forming Hey. Since Aleph represents God and Dalet represents broken humanity, Hey is a picture of the presence of God within the human heart. This function of Hey can be seen when (Abram) was renamed to (Abraham) and (Sarai) was renamed to (Sarah).
5. Prefixive Hey
Hey functions as the definite article in Hebrew, a sort of demonstrative that points to the object and makes it concrete and definite. Thus (ish), a man, becomes (ha-ish), the man.
6. Suffixive Hey
Adding a Hey at the end of a noun "feminizes" it or allows it to be "fruitful" and reproductive.
7. Hey and Teshuvah
Since Hey is formed from Dalet and Yod, it can also be a picture of returning to God by means of the transforming power of the Spirit. Dalet stands for brokenness, and Yod stands for a hand. Opening the door of the heart then is a picture of the Spirit of God indwelling the believer, and this image also coheres with the idea that part of Aleph (God) is joined with Dalet to form the Hey.
Labels:
Advent-ure,
Hebrew word studies,
The Journey
Saturday, January 19, 2013
Be Still...{Part 5 - a nail that holds and anchors}
Joy.
chedvah: spelled in Hebrew:
cheit
dalet
vav - a nail, peg (that holds or anchors)
Vav (pronounced "vahv") looks like a tent peg and actually means hook, as a connecting hook used when the tabernacle was assembled. The very first appearance of an idea, a principle, a word or even a letter holds significance in the original Biblical languages. In the case of "vav" its first appearance in scripture is in Genesis 1:1 - its placement implying the connection between spiritual and earthly matters and as such, the vav represents the connecting force of God, the divine "hook" that binds together heaven and earth.
And it is when our earthly life is "hooked" or nailed together with God, that our lives are made solid and secure...
That hook? How are we nailed together with God? Through nails that held heaven to an earthly cross - the physical embodiment of "vav" in the person of Jesus!
Be Still... series:
Part 1 - Be Still
Part 2 - The Catalyst
Part 3 - Rumblings of the Silence Begin
Part 4 - Revelation Continues
Part 5 - A Nail that Holds and Anchors
Part 6 - Take a Breath, Breathe in God
Part 7 - Deepest Joy
You can stop reading now or continue down to get more research...it is really worth reading section "6 - The Vav, Messiah, and New Creation!
*****************************************************************************
Below is sections 4 and 6 of 'advanced information' about the letter "Vav" from the Hebrew for Christians website...click here to be taken to the site.
4. Vav is a picture of Man
Since Vav represents the number six, it has long been associated as the number of man in the Jewish tradition:
- Man was created on the sixth day
- Man works for six days - the realm of the chol and the mundane
- There are six millennia before the coming of the Mashiach
- The "beast" is identified as the "number of a man" - 666 (Rev 13:18)
6. The Vav, Messiah, and New Creation
When God first created the "generations" of the heavens and the earth, the word toldot (תולדות) is used (Gen. 2:4). This refers to created order before the sin and fall of Adam and Eve. After the fall of Adam, however, the word is spelled differently in the Hebrew text, with a missing letter Vav (i.e., as תלדות). Thereafter, each time the phrase, "these are the generations of" occurs in the Scriptures (a formulaic way of enumerating the generations of the heads of families), the word is spelled "defectively," with the missing Vav (ו). The Vav was "lost." However, when we come to Ruth 4:18 the phrase: 'These are the generations of Perez' is spelled with the missing Vav restored (i.e., as תולדות). In all of Scripture, the only two places where we see the restored spelling is in Genesis 2:4 and Ruth 4:18, which leads to the question as to what connection there might be between the creation of the heavens and the earth, the fall of mankind, and the creation of the family line of Perez?
The name "Perez" (פרץ) means "breach" (from paratz, meaning "to break through"). God was going to "break through" the families of mankind in order to restore creation back to its original intent. The letter Vav represents man, and the very first Vav in the Torah is associated with the "first and last man" as seen in Genesis 1:1:
The Restored Vav is a picture of the Mashiach who would descend from the "generations" of Perez. He would be the one to breach the gates of death on our behalf. Just as the original Vav was lost through the first Adam and his sin, so the Vav is restored the obedience of the "Second Adam," the Mashiach Yeshua.
Labels:
Advent-ure,
Hebrew word studies,
The Journey
Wednesday, January 16, 2013
Be still...{part 4 - revelation continues}
Joy.
chedvah: spelled in Hebrew:
chedvah
chedvah: spelled in Hebrew:
chedvah
The second letter, dalet...
dalet - door, pathway
dalet - door, pathway
The pictograph for Dalet looks something like a closed (hanging) tent door, whereas the classical Hebrew script (ketav Ashurit)
is constructed of two lines and a corner point (or overhang) called an
"ear." The bent shape of the dalet symbolizes a needy person who is bent
over.
Dalet (pronounced "Dah-let") - It is the fourth letter of the Hebrew alphabet, a sort of doorway to the first three letters, which represent The Father, Son, and Holy Spirit respectively. Dalet represents lowliness and the consciousness of possessing nothing of one's own. I cannot help but think of the description of Jesus in Philippians 2:6-8 as I consider this letter!
From another viewpoint, Dalet as a door, also symbolically represents the choice to open ourselves to the hope of our dreams or to remain closed off and alienated.
So, simply said, true joy comes by first, life, God's life (cheit), then comes the door, the entrance to that life, through Jesus...
Be Still... series:
Part 1 - Be Still
Part 2 - The Catalyst
Part 3 - Rumblings of the Silence Begin
Part 4 - Revelation Continues
Part 5 - A Nail that Holds and Anchors
Part 6 - Take a Breath, Breathe in God
Part 7 - Deepest Joy
You can stop reading now or continue down to get more research...
******************************************************************************
Who, being in very naturea God,One of the names Jesus calls Himself is "The Door" (John 10:7; 9)
did not consider equality with God something to be grasped,7but made himself nothing,taking the very natureb of a servant,being made in human likeness.8And being found in appearance as a man,he humbled himselfand became obedient to death—even death on a cross!
From another viewpoint, Dalet as a door, also symbolically represents the choice to open ourselves to the hope of our dreams or to remain closed off and alienated.
So, simply said, true joy comes by first, life, God's life (cheit), then comes the door, the entrance to that life, through Jesus...
and this is just the first two letters!!!
Be Still... series:
Part 1 - Be Still
Part 2 - The Catalyst
Part 3 - Rumblings of the Silence Begin
Part 4 - Revelation Continues
Part 5 - A Nail that Holds and Anchors
Part 6 - Take a Breath, Breathe in God
Part 7 - Deepest Joy
You can stop reading now or continue down to get more research...
******************************************************************************
The above definition is the highlights of the letter as I researched
it. What follows is the complete set of notes about the letter dalet
from this website: hebrew4christians.com...because,
I rarely click over on links, and if you have the inkling to read the
rest of the material, it will do for you what it did for me!
Dalet wasn't AS powerful as cheit for me, but the idea of the "door" and how that relates to Jesus has totally consumed me!
1. Mysteries of Dalet
Dalet represents lowliness and the consciousness of possessing nothing of one's own. As a door Dalet also symbolically represents the choice to open ourselves to the hope of our dreams or to remain closed off and alienated.
The corner point represents the concept of bitul or spiritual self-nullification. Practice of bitul leads to humility, the doorway to God's house, which is attained by the technique known as devekut, cleaving or clinging to God.
2. Dalet and the Pardes
Traditional Jewish sages identify four levels of interpretation of the Scriptures, called (pardes), an acronym formed from:
3. Dalet and the Torah
There are four letters to the Name of the LORD , just as there are four components of the text of Torah, including:
4. Dalet and the Names and Titles of God
God is called dayan ha'emet, the True Judge.
Yeshua the Mashiach is indeed the True Judge whom the Father has given all authority over the destinies of mankind.
5. Dalet and the Doorway from Judah
Yeshua the Mashiach, of course, was of the tribe of Judah. Interestingly, the name for the tribe (yehudah) contains every letter of the Sacred Name except for the letter Dalet, suggesting that the door to the LORD would come through Judah.
6. Dalet is a Picture of Humanity in need of Yeshua
The word for religion is (dat), which means the "door of the cross" using the ancient pictographs. The Father (Aleph) sent His Son (Bet) and by means of the Holy Spirit (Gimmel) who makes appeal to the poor and needy to receive the grace of the LORD God of Israel. As Yeshua said, "Behold, I stand at the door, and knock: if any man hear my voice, and open the door, I will come in to him, and will sup with him, and he with me" (Revelation 3:20).
Dalet wasn't AS powerful as cheit for me, but the idea of the "door" and how that relates to Jesus has totally consumed me!
1. Mysteries of Dalet
Dalet represents lowliness and the consciousness of possessing nothing of one's own. As a door Dalet also symbolically represents the choice to open ourselves to the hope of our dreams or to remain closed off and alienated.
The corner point represents the concept of bitul or spiritual self-nullification. Practice of bitul leads to humility, the doorway to God's house, which is attained by the technique known as devekut, cleaving or clinging to God.
2. Dalet and the Pardes
Traditional Jewish sages identify four levels of interpretation of the Scriptures, called (pardes), an acronym formed from:
- - P'shat (literal meaning based on historical intent of author)
- - Remez (hint, allusion, analogy, allegory)
- - D'rash (application, exposition)
- - Sod (mystery, "deep" meaning)
3. Dalet and the Torah
There are four letters to the Name of the LORD , just as there are four components of the text of Torah, including:
- - Otiyot (letters). The 22 medial and 5 final forms of the Hebrew consonants.
- - Nikudot (vowel marks). The vowel marks added to the text.
- - Tagin (crowns). The crowned letters for the so-called Sha'atnezgets letters: Shin, 'Ayin, Tet, Nun, Zayin, Gimmel and Tzade.
- - Ta'amim. Cantillation (or trope) marks used for chanting the Torah.
4. Dalet and the Names and Titles of God
God is called dayan ha'emet, the True Judge.
Yeshua the Mashiach is indeed the True Judge whom the Father has given all authority over the destinies of mankind.
5. Dalet and the Doorway from Judah
Yeshua the Mashiach, of course, was of the tribe of Judah. Interestingly, the name for the tribe (yehudah) contains every letter of the Sacred Name except for the letter Dalet, suggesting that the door to the LORD would come through Judah.
6. Dalet is a Picture of Humanity in need of Yeshua
The word for religion is (dat), which means the "door of the cross" using the ancient pictographs. The Father (Aleph) sent His Son (Bet) and by means of the Holy Spirit (Gimmel) who makes appeal to the poor and needy to receive the grace of the LORD God of Israel. As Yeshua said, "Behold, I stand at the door, and knock: if any man hear my voice, and open the door, I will come in to him, and will sup with him, and he with me" (Revelation 3:20).
Labels:
Advent-ure,
Hebrew word studies,
The Journey
Wednesday, January 9, 2013
Be still....{part 3 - rumblings of the silence begin}
Here, in the first letter, is when words and creativity begin to fail in conveying the kernel of eternity contained in these simple strokes...
I am acutely aware that anything my spirit infused flesh can create is only a whisper, a shadow, of what the reality is...
A pause, a cessation of human effort in astonished wonder, is not just the only response that feels right; it is the only response possible...
Now I am beginning to grasp the magnitude of the pause written in Hebrew poetry; the Selah that used to mystify me in the Psalms...now I know/understand/comprehend/and have apprehended why the Spirit-inspired writers and to insert the word, which to some extent means "let's pause, and think about what was just said".
Joy.
chedvah: spelled in Hebrew:
cheit - a (protecting) fence, an inner room
3. Chet and the Doorway of Life
The word (chai) is short for chayim (life), and the letter Chet can be seen to resemble a doorway where the blood of the lamb was daubed during the first Passover (Exodus 12:7):
There are many necklaces that spell the Hebrew word (chai). In fact, the word itself somewhat resembles a lamb, and from this we can say that the “Lamb gives life” when applied to the “doorway of our heart.”
Cheit (The "ch" has the light scraping sound as the "ch" in bach. The "eit" rhymes with "mate") Chet is sometimes transliterated as “h” which is why you sometimes see the word "Chanukah" spelled as "Hanukkah" in English.
Cheit is considered the letter of life. It also is symbolic of grace and wisdom and new beginnings. Its ancient pictograph resembles a fence, and can be thought of a fence that protects that which is within it...a fence that protects the life within...
So, the word "joy" begins with life, a new life - given by God, complete and whole, full of grace and wisdom. And not only is there life, but that life is "fenced in", protected...by implication, it is God's Presence that protects and sustains that life...
Be Still... series:
Part 1 - Be Still
Part 2 - The Catalyst
Part 3 - Rumblings of the Silence Begin
Part 4 - Revelation Continues
Part 5 - A Nail that Holds and Anchors
Part 6 - Take a Breath, Breathe in God
Part 7 - Deepest Joy
You can stop reading now or continue down to get more research...
******************************************************************************
Cheit is considered the letter of life. It also is symbolic of grace and wisdom and new beginnings. Its ancient pictograph resembles a fence, and can be thought of a fence that protects that which is within it...a fence that protects the life within...
So, the word "joy" begins with life, a new life - given by God, complete and whole, full of grace and wisdom. And not only is there life, but that life is "fenced in", protected...by implication, it is God's Presence that protects and sustains that life...
Be Still... series:
Part 1 - Be Still
Part 2 - The Catalyst
Part 3 - Rumblings of the Silence Begin
Part 4 - Revelation Continues
Part 5 - A Nail that Holds and Anchors
Part 6 - Take a Breath, Breathe in God
Part 7 - Deepest Joy
You can stop reading now or continue down to get more research...
******************************************************************************
The above definition is the highlights of the letter as I researched it. What follows is the complete set of notes about the letter chevdah from this website: hebrew4christians.com...because, I rarely click over on links, and if you have the inkling to read the rest of the material, it will do for you what it did for me!
1. The Mystery of Chet
According to the Jewish mystics, Chet is the letter of life, since (chayim - life) and (chayah - living) both begin with this letter. True life comes from (chasidut - devotion). Chet (8) is also the number of grace, (chen) and the number of wisdom (chokhmah).
The letter Chet is the eighth letter of the Aleph-Bet, having the numeric value of eight. The pictograph for Chet looks like a wall or fence, whereas the classical Hebrew script is constructed of the preceding two letters, Vav and Zayin joined at the top with a thin connecting line.
Since Vav represents people or others, and Zayin represents time, Chet is a picture of spending time in community, (chavurah).
Chet also is the letter of light, since the Vav represents the yashar light that descends from God and Zayin represents the chozer light that ascends or returns to God. Therefore, some of the Jewish mystics consider Chet to be the doorway of light from heaven.
2. The Gematria of Chet
Since Chet is formed from Vav (6) and Zayin (7), one gematria value would be thirteen, the same value as (ahavah - love). It is also the value for (echad - one). Putting these ideas together, we can see that love unifies us in true fellowship, just as the Mashiach Yeshua taught us:
“...that they may be one, even as we are one: in them, and thou in me, that they may be made perfect in one...” (John 17:22-23)
1. The Mystery of Chet
According to the Jewish mystics, Chet is the letter of life, since (chayim - life) and (chayah - living) both begin with this letter. True life comes from (chasidut - devotion). Chet (8) is also the number of grace, (chen) and the number of wisdom (chokhmah).
The letter Chet is the eighth letter of the Aleph-Bet, having the numeric value of eight. The pictograph for Chet looks like a wall or fence, whereas the classical Hebrew script is constructed of the preceding two letters, Vav and Zayin joined at the top with a thin connecting line.
Since Vav represents people or others, and Zayin represents time, Chet is a picture of spending time in community, (chavurah).
Chet also is the letter of light, since the Vav represents the yashar light that descends from God and Zayin represents the chozer light that ascends or returns to God. Therefore, some of the Jewish mystics consider Chet to be the doorway of light from heaven.
2. The Gematria of Chet
Since Chet is formed from Vav (6) and Zayin (7), one gematria value would be thirteen, the same value as (ahavah - love). It is also the value for (echad - one). Putting these ideas together, we can see that love unifies us in true fellowship, just as the Mashiach Yeshua taught us:
“...that they may be one, even as we are one: in them, and thou in me, that they may be made perfect in one...” (John 17:22-23)
3. Chet and the Doorway of Life
The word (chai) is short for chayim (life), and the letter Chet can be seen to resemble a doorway where the blood of the lamb was daubed during the first Passover (Exodus 12:7):
There are many necklaces that spell the Hebrew word (chai). In fact, the word itself somewhat resembles a lamb, and from this we can say that the “Lamb gives life” when applied to the “doorway of our heart.”
So shall they be life unto thy soul, and grace to thy neck. Proverbs 3:22
4. Chet is the Number of New Beginnings
Since Chet represents the number 8, we can see how it represents grace, (chen) and the concept of new beginnings:
- There were 8 souls saved during the great flood of Noah
- The covenant of circumcision, occurs on the 8th day of a boy’s life, marking the beginning of of his life
- The LORD reaffirmed His covenant to Abraham 8 times
- David was the 8th son of Jesse
- Sukkot is an 8 day festival that anticipate the Olam Habah - the world to come
- Jesus was resurrected on the 1st day of the week, which if we understand the preceding seven days to constitute a complete cycle, is the eighth day.
5. Chet is the Letter of Discipleship to Jesus
Since
we learned that Vav (6) represents man and Zayin (7) represents the
Crowned Man who wields the sword of the Holy Spirit (i.e., Jesus the
King of the Jews), we can see that Chet is a picture of discipleship to
Jesus:
Since
Chet is formed from the Vav and Zayin connected by a “yoke,” we can see
that this letter pictures our relationship to the Lord Jesus as He
leads and teaches us on the pathway of life.
A yoke is a connection between two things so that they move and work together. Since the sum of the letters Vav and Zayin equals the value for love (), we can see that the essential nature of this “moving and working together” is that of loving the LORD and one another, just as our Mashiach teaches us.
Labels:
Advent-ure,
Hebrew word studies,
The Journey
Tuesday, January 8, 2013
Be still....{part 2 - the catalyst}
I had been writing the "Advent(ure)" series before Christmas, using the lyrics of the Christmas carol "Joy to the World" as inspiration. The idea was to use each line of the first verse and chorus as prompts...
Looking back, I think that maybe the Lord was planning this little advent(ure) just for me? I can sense His knowing smile at this very moment (!)...if you and I could literally see His eyes, they would be twinkling...
Well - back to the month of December...
I love word studies and delving into the original languages, so I THOUGHT I would research the fullness of the word "joy" in this verse:
In the King James Version, this exact word translated "joy" is found in only two other places, I Chronicles 16:27 and Ezra 6:16. Each of these passages has to do with a dedication of the house of God. In Chronicles, it is embedded in the midst of David's prophetic worship as he brings the Ark of the Lord into the city of Zion once and for all. In Ezra, the people are celebrating the dedication of the rebuilt temple, and finally, in Nehemiah - the people are celebrating the feast of Passover in their rebuilt city for the first time in over 70 years.
Are you getting the idea there is something special about this word?
I know now that He was nudging me along, keeping this pouring out of revelation a surprise for me...
If you go to the online dictionary at Mirriam Webster, you will find this definition of joy:
and this is a good definition, but is it God's? Hebrew is a language of pictures, sometimes difficult to translate into English in a succinct way...and each letter in the Hebrew alphabet carries a meaning all its own, and when the letters come together to form words, each of those individual meanings weave together in a unique and incredible blend...and such is the word translated "joy":
...Our family has been watching Star Trek: The Next Generation series on DVD recently (all the way through mind you, but I wouldn't categorize us as "Trekkies" ♥). In one episode, Data has been listening to poetry from a certain race of beings in which long periods of "stillness", sometimes days, are woven in as part of the poem. The time, empty of any words at all, is included to give the hearer an opportunity to reflect upon and contemplate the meaning of the words just read AND the period of time that is empty of words. Data invites his friend, Geordi, to contemplate "the emptiness" with him...
in the next few days I will be attempting to share - the largeness of what this Hebrew word holds....
...and so I invite you into these moments of stillness that I have found myself in; stillness fashioned by God in His poemia - the poem He is writing in me and that I am becoming (Ephesians 2:10) - just as you are, too...
Be Still... series:
Part 1 - Be Still
Part 2 - The Catalyst
Part 3 - Rumblings of the Silence Begin
Part 4 - Revelation Continues
Part 5 - A Nail that Holds and Anchors
Part 6 - Take a Breath, Breathe in God
Part 7 - Deepest Joy
Looking back, I think that maybe the Lord was planning this little advent(ure) just for me? I can sense His knowing smile at this very moment (!)...if you and I could literally see His eyes, they would be twinkling...
Well - back to the month of December...
I love word studies and delving into the original languages, so I THOUGHT I would research the fullness of the word "joy" in this verse:
...the joy of the LORD is your strength...
Nehemiah 8:10
Are you getting the idea there is something special about this word?
I know now that He was nudging me along, keeping this pouring out of revelation a surprise for me...
If you go to the online dictionary at Mirriam Webster, you will find this definition of joy:
1 : a feeling of great pleasure or happiness that comes from success, good fortune, or a sense of well-being : GLADNESSto behold>
2 : something that gives joy joy
and this is a good definition, but is it God's? Hebrew is a language of pictures, sometimes difficult to translate into English in a succinct way...and each letter in the Hebrew alphabet carries a meaning all its own, and when the letters come together to form words, each of those individual meanings weave together in a unique and incredible blend...and such is the word translated "joy":
Joy.
"chedvah."
spelled in Hebrew:
spelled in Hebrew:
cheit
dalet
vav
hey
...Our family has been watching Star Trek: The Next Generation series on DVD recently (all the way through mind you, but I wouldn't categorize us as "Trekkies" ♥). In one episode, Data has been listening to poetry from a certain race of beings in which long periods of "stillness", sometimes days, are woven in as part of the poem. The time, empty of any words at all, is included to give the hearer an opportunity to reflect upon and contemplate the meaning of the words just read AND the period of time that is empty of words. Data invites his friend, Geordi, to contemplate "the emptiness" with him...
in the next few days I will be attempting to share - the largeness of what this Hebrew word holds....
...and so I invite you into these moments of stillness that I have found myself in; stillness fashioned by God in His poemia - the poem He is writing in me and that I am becoming (Ephesians 2:10) - just as you are, too...
Be Still... series:
Part 1 - Be Still
Part 2 - The Catalyst
Part 3 - Rumblings of the Silence Begin
Part 4 - Revelation Continues
Part 5 - A Nail that Holds and Anchors
Part 6 - Take a Breath, Breathe in God
Part 7 - Deepest Joy
Labels:
Advent-ure,
Hebrew word studies,
The Journey
Monday, January 7, 2013
Be still...{part 1}
photo credit - I ♥ tumblr |
I knew each day that I needed to work on posting -
every time I moved to do so, I just...
didn't.
Couldn't?
I have/had words/thoughts/ideas - to share -
in my heart...
but I couldn't get them to move through my being onto paper - virtual or otherwise!
- Was I experiencing a creative block? Perhaps...
- Was life full? y.e.s. ...
- Was I immersed in family? Absolutely wonderfully!
- Was I distracted? Only as much as I wanted to be...perhaps call it "focused inattention..."?
- Were there family hardships? Ahhh, yes, but only those that are a natural part of any life - as we said "good-bye" to a favorite uncle...
I was absolutely.stunningly.irrevocably.deeply.completely - arrested by God.
Life continues to move along, even as my inward being has come to a full s.t.o.p. Oh, there are still ideas/thoughts/words; plans for 2013...the days are still being ordered so that we can make the most of them {Ephesians 5:16}...
and all are fading and faint clamorings behind me -
before me: new depths of His wonder.
There are places in Scripture that a person can read and understand, can comprehend...
yet are only apprehended once that truth has been experienced...
I pray that out of his glorious riches
he may strengthen you with power
through his Spirit
in your inner being...
Ephesians 3:16
Have you had such an experience?
Be Still... series:
Labels:
Advent-ure,
Hebrew word studies,
The Journey
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