Religious zealotry and fanaticism has no place among the
disciples of Yeshua outside of our "zeal for the Torah" and
"zeal for good deeds."
THIS WEEK'S TORAH PORTION:
Pinchas (פנחס | Phinehas)
Torah: Numbers 25:10-30:1
Haftarah: 1 Kings 18:46-19:21
Gospel: Mark 11:27-12:37
Religion is a Two-edged Sword
Religion is a two-edged sword. On the one hand, faith in
God, trust in Messiah and obedience to God's commandments is the narrow path
that leads to life. It brings peace, joy and purpose to existence. On the other
hand, religious convictions can become a source of strife, enmity and hatred
between people and nations.
Parashat Pinchas is named for Pinchas (Phinehas), the
zealous grandson of Aaron the priest who turned aside the LORD’s wrath by
publicly skewering two flagrant transgressors. The LORD rewarded Phinehas with
a “covenant of peace.” He became the progenitor of the priestly line.
The LORD said, “He was jealous with My jealousy among
them, so that I did not destroy the sons of Israel in My jealousy” (Numbers
25:11). The Hebrew word kin’ah (קנאה), which we ordinarily translate as
“jealousy,” also means “zeal,” a better translation in this context.
This explains why the Master had a disciple named “Simon
the Canaanite” in the King James Version of the Bible. The Greek text of
Matthew and Mark introduce one of Yeshua’s disciples as “Simon the Canaanean
(Καναναῖος).” Translators and scribes stumbled over the unusual word. Some
scribes mistakenly tried to correct it as “Simon man of Cana.” The King James
translators chose to translate it as “Simon the Canaanite.” Thanks to the
error, Simon has the embarrassing honor of being the only Gentile disciple
among the twelve—and a Canaanite at that!
Actually, the mysterious Greek word attempts to
transliterate of the Semitic kanana (קנאנא), which means “the Zealot.” The
anti-Roman, Jewish revolutionaries of first-century Judea called themselves Zealots.
Luke recognized the word and translated it as “Simon the Zealot.” In modern
vernacular, we would call him Simon the Terrorist.
Judea and Galilee were filled with political and
religious zealots who regularly resorted to violence to advance their purposes.
They emulated Phinehas, and used his story to justify terrorism.
Terrorists like the Zealots prove that zeal can be
misplaced. Paul is another example of misplaced zeal. Prior to his Damascus
road encounter, Paul pursued the believers with a Phinehas-like zeal. In his
epistle to the Philippians, he mentioned his history as a persecutor of the
believers as evidence of his “zeal” for God.
Rather than imitating Phinehas, we do far better to
emulate the Master who was zealous for His Father’s house (John 2:17) and for
His Father’s will. We should imitate the first-century Jewish believers who
were “zealous for the Torah” (Acts 21:20). We should be “zealous for good
deeds” (Titus 2:14), and zealous for Messiah and the kingdom. This means
ruthlessly rooting out from of our lives those things that lead us to sin and
cause us to stray.
-First Fruits of Zion
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