Tuesday, June 9, 2026

The Men of Issachar, "had understanding of the times, to know what Israel ought to do."

 

In Scripture, amid the chronicles of kings, warriors, and divine interventions, a small group stands out not for their swords or shields, but for their wisdom. The men of Issachar, mentioned in 1 Chronicles 12:32 (ESV), are described as those who "had understanding of the times, to know what Israel ought to do." This verse, nestled in a list of David's mighty men, offers a profound archetype for strategic foresight, a quality that blends discernment, knowledge, and action under God's providence. As Christians navigating a world of rapid change, political upheaval, and moral ambiguity, we can draw deep spiritual lessons from these figures. They remind us that true leadership isn't always about brute strength but about aligning human insight with divine purpose.

This blog post explores the men of Issachar as a model for believers today. We'll exegete key phrases from the original Hebrew text, grounding our discussion in the English Standard Version (ESV) of the Bible. From there, we'll delve into the theological tensions of divine sovereignty and human responsibility, examine Biblical archetypes of foresight, and apply these truths to contemporary Christian life. In a time when ideas like moral relativism flood our media and ethical dilemmas arise in everyday decisions, becoming "men and women of Issachar" means understanding our times through the lens of God's unchanging Word. Let's journey together, exploring nuances, implications, and practical steps, to see how strategic foresight can transform our stewardship and witness.

David's Mighty Men and the Role of Issachar

To appreciate the men of Issachar, we must first set the scene in 1 Chronicles 12. This chapter recounts the gathering of warriors to David during his exile from Saul, a pivotal moment in Israel's unification. David, anointed but not yet enthroned, receives support from various tribes, seasoned soldiers equipped for battle. Verses 23-37 list these contributors: Judah with spears and shields, Simeon with valiant men, Levi with mighty warriors. Yet, amid this martial roster, the men of Issachar appear uniquely: "Of Issachar, men who had understanding of the times, to know what Israel ought to do, their chiefs were two hundred. All their kinsmen were at their command" (1 Chronicles 12:32, ESV).

The context is one of transition and crisis. Israel is fractured, with Saul's reign crumbling and David's rise imminent. God's hand is evident in assembling these allies, fulfilling His promise to establish David's kingdom (2 Samuel 7:8-16). The mighty men represent divine provision, but Issachar's contribution highlights a different facet: intellectual and spiritual acumen over physical prowess. While others bring weapons, Issachar offers counsel and insight into the "times" that inform action. This underscores a Biblical principle: victory often hinges on wisdom as much as strength (Proverbs 24:6, "for by wise guidance you can wage your war").

Now, let's exegete the key phrases from the original Hebrew, drawing directly from the Masoretic Text. The verse opens with וּמִבְּנֵי יִשָּׂשכָר (u-mibbeney yissakhar), "and from the sons of Issachar," identifying them tribally. Issachar, Jacob's ninth son, receives a blessing in Genesis 49:14-15 (ESV): "Issachar is a strong donkey, crouching between the sheepfolds. He saw that a resting place was good, and that the land was pleasant, so he bowed his shoulder to bear, and became a servant at forced labor." This prophecy hints at endurance and labor, but its obscurity, debated as portraying strength or submissiveness, sets the stage for Issachar's later role as discerning leaders.

The core description is יוֹדְעֵי בִינָה לָעִתִּים (yode'ey binah la'ittim), translated in the ESV as "men who had understanding of the times." Here, יוֹדְעֵי (yode'ey) is a participle from יָדַע (yada'), meaning "to know" in a relational, experiential sense, not mere facts, but intimate acquaintance (as in Genesis 4:1, where Adam "knew" Eve). This knowledge is active, implying discernment gained through observation and reflection. בִינָה (binah) denotes "understanding" or "discernment," often linked to wisdom in Proverbs (e.g., Proverbs 2:3, where it's part of seeking wisdom like treasure). It suggests skill in distinguishing, separating truth from falsehood, much like a craftsman discerns materials.

לָעִתִּים (la'ittim) refers to "the times," from עֵת ('et), meaning seasons or appointed moments (Ecclesiastes 3:1, "For everything there is a season, and a time for every matter under heaven"). This isn't chronological time (chronos) but kairos, opportune, significant moments in history. The men of Issachar grasped the socio-political, spiritual currents of their era: Saul's decline, David's anointing, tribal divisions. They understood not just what was happening, but why, rooted in God's covenant promises.

The phrase continues: לָדַעַת מַה־יַּעֲשֶׂה יִשְׂרָאֵל (lada'at mah-ya'aseh yisra'el), "to know what Israel ought to do." לָדַעַת (lada'at) echoes יָדַע (yada'), emphasizing purposeful knowledge. מַה־יַּעֲשֶׂה (mah-ya'aseh) from עָשָׂה ('asah), "to do" or "make," implies action, practical steps. יִשְׂרָאֵל (yisra'el) specifies the collective nation, highlighting communal responsibility. Thus, their understanding led to strategic advice: supporting David aligned with God's will (as 1 Chronicles 11:10-47 shows, such counsel strengthened his reign).

Exegetically, this verse reveals God's multifaceted provision. While physical warriors embody courage, Issachar models the wisdom of James 1:5, asking God for insight. In Hebrew thought, such discernment often ties to Torah study and fear of the Lord (Psalm 111:10). Implications abound: in crises, God raises diverse gifts. For us, it challenges complacency. Do we merely fight battles, or discern the times?

The Archetype of Strategic Foresight

The men of Issachar embody strategic foresight as a divine mandate, reflecting God's own omniscience (Isaiah 46:10, "declaring the end from the beginning"). Foresight isn't secular planning but stewarding insight for Kingdom purposes. In David's context, their value lay in interpreting events through God's lens, recognizing that Saul's era ended and David's began as the fulfillment of prophecy (1 Samuel 16:1-13).

Biblically, foresight appears in archetypes such as Joseph, who interpreted Pharaoh's dreams and planned for a famine (Genesis 41:33-36), saving nations through divine revelation. Nehemiah exemplified it by assessing the ruins of Jerusalem and mobilizing reconstruction (Nehemiah 2:11-18). Jesus taught it in parables: the tower builder estimating costs (Luke 14:28-30) warns against unprepared discipleship; the warring king (Luke 14:31-32) stresses resource assessment. These illustrate that foresight honors God's resources and avoids folly.

Contrastingly, the Tower of Babel (Genesis 11:1-9) shows misguided planning, human ambition defying God, leading to confusion. Issachar's foresight, however, aligns with providence. Their 200 chiefs (רָאשֵׁיהֶם מָאתַיִם, rasheyhem ma'tayim) suggest organized wisdom, with kinsmen following (וְכָל־אֲחֵיהֶם עַל־פִּיהֶם, ve-khol-'ahehem 'al-piyhem, "all their brothers at their mouth/command"). This communal aspect nuances individual discernment: foresight thrives in counsel (Proverbs 15:22).

Theologically, this archetype resolves the paradox of sovereignty and agency. God's immutable decree (Ephesians 1:11) encompasses all, yet humans plan responsibly. Compatibilism holds these in tension: Judas's betrayal was foreordained yet culpable (Luke 22:21-22). Molinism posits God's middle knowledge, knowing counterfactuals, to guide without coercing freedom. Open theism holds that God responds dynamically, but all affirm that human action matters.

For leaders, foresight means "planning in pencil" (Proverbs 19:21, "Many are the plans in the mind of a man, but it is the purpose of the Lord that will stand"). Edge cases: what if foresight fails? Consider Gideon, whose unconventional strategy (Judges 7) succeeded through divine override. Implications: over-reliance on human insight risks arrogance; under-reliance breeds passivity. Issachar teaches balance, understanding times, acting boldly, trust God.

Sovereignty, Freedom, and Stewardship as Theological Foundations

The tension between God's sovereignty and human foresight forms a core paradox. Scripture affirms God's control: "The king's heart is a stream of water in the hand of the Lord; he turns it wherever he will" (Proverbs 21:1, ESV). Yet, humans bear responsibility: "Go to the ant, O sluggard; consider her ways, and be wise" (Proverbs 6:6). Exegeting sovereignty, רִבּוֹנוּת (ribonut, though not a direct Hebrew term; cf. מֶלֶךְ, melek, kingly rule) in texts like Daniel 4:17 shows God ruling nations.

Human freedom, חֹפְשִׁי (chofshi), operates within divine bounds (Psalm 119:45). The antinomy, paradox, or reason?, invites faith: finite minds can't fully reconcile (Isaiah 55:8-9). Compatibilism integrates: Joseph's brothers' evil intent served God's good (Genesis 50:20). For foresight, this means plans are genuine yet subsumed in providence.

Stewardship, from οἰκονομία (oikonomia, NT Greek, but rooted in OT נָתַן, natan, to give), views leaders as agents (Imago Dei, Genesis 1:26-28). Agency theory highlights the principal-agent dynamics: God as the owner, humans as the managers. Misalignment? Prioritize divine goals (Matthew 6:33). Nuances: in business, this counters profit idolatry; in ministry, it fosters integrity.

Spiritual discernment enhances foresight. From διακρίνω (diakrino, to judge thoroughly), it's listening to the Spirit (Romans 8:14). Practices like Quaker silence or communal prayer align decisions with God. Case: Buurtzorg Nederland balances excellence and ethics through discernment principles, serving, trusting, and yielding sustainable outcomes.

Kingdom integration embeds faith in all spheres (Colossians 3:23). Pillars: integrity, servanthood. Implications for ethics: navigate relativism by Biblical absolutes (Exodus 20). Edge cases: mercy killing? Affirm life as sacred (Genesis 9:6). Racism? Love your neighbor (Leviticus 19:18).

Becoming Men and Women of Issachar Today

In our era, Issachar's archetype calls Christians to discern cultural tides. The media promotes moral relativism and the idea that truth is subjective. Counter with absolute truth (John 17:17). Medical ethics? Biblical sanctity of life informs euthanasia debates (Psalm 139:13-16). Social issues: apply "love your neighbor" (Mark 12:31) to racism, homelessness, AIDS, active compassion, not passive faith (James 2:14-17).

Practical steps: Study Scripture deeply (2 Timothy 2:15). Engage culture: recognize ideologies like secular humanism. Foster discernment communities, small groups exegeting times. Intergenerational: C.H.A.I.N. model (Calling, Honor, Alignment, Investment, Navigation) ensures continuity, as Moses mentored Joshua (Numbers 27:18-23).

Psychology of faith: move from improvidence (short-sighted) to providence (foresightful sustainability). Hope sustains (Hebrews 11:1). In business, integrate ethics: reject compromise for witness (1 Peter 2:12).

Challenges: the sacred-secular divide. Solution: all for God's glory (1 Corinthians 10:31). Six-phase planning: Purpose, SWOT, Goals, Action, Implementation, Adapt, open to Spirit.

Aligning Foresight with Eternal Purpose

The men of Issachar teach that strategic foresight is a gift for stewardship, not control. Exegeting their description reveals knowledge that leads to action under sovereignty. In tensions of freedom and decree, we plan diligently, trust profoundly. Today, let's become Issachar's heirs, discerning times, applying truth, changing worlds. As Proverbs 24:3-4 says, "By wisdom a house is built... by understanding it is established." May our foresight glorify the One who holds tomorrow.

Monday, June 8, 2026

Take Egypt out of Israel

 


There is a moment in every great story when the protagonist stands at a threshold, no longer who they were, not yet who they will become. The Book of Deuteronomy, Sefer Devarim (סֵפֶר דברים), occupies exactly that threshold in the life of Israel. Egypt is behind them. Canaan is before them. And standing at the border, with the land shimmering in the distance, Moses speaks.

The Hebrew name for this book, Devarim (דְּבָרִים), means simply “words” or “speakings.” It is drawn from the book’s very first verse: “These are the words that Moses spoke to all Israel beyond the Jordan” (Deuteronomy 1:1, ESV). But what words! The entirety of the book, with the exception of a closing song (שִׁירת הַאֲזִינוּ, the Shirat Ha'Azinu, Deuteronomy 32), a final blessing (Deuteronomy 33), and the death of Moses (Deuteronomy 34), is essentially one sustained address. Moses speaks and speaks and speaks, as though he knows he has little time, as though the border is both a door to the future and a seal on the past.

What drives this speech? Why does Moses not simply bless the people and step aside? The answer lies in a deep spiritual concern that pulses through every chapter of Deuteronomy. The people have left Egypt. But has Egypt left the people? Moses is not merely handing off a legal code or reciting history. He is engaged in a project of profound inner transformation. He is trying to do what no military campaign, no pillar of fire, no dividing of waters could fully accomplish: he is trying to take Egypt out of Israel.

דֶּבֶר: The Power of the Spoken Word in Covenant

The root דבר (ד-ב-ר, davar) is one of the most theologically freighted words in the Hebrew Bible. It means “word,” “thing,” and “matter” all at once. A davar is not merely a sound in the air; in ancient Hebrew thought, the spoken word carries ontological weight. When God speaks, creation comes into existence (Genesis 1). When Moses speaks at the edge of the Jordan, he is doing something constitutive, not merely describing reality, but shaping it.

The covenant (בְּרִית, berit) is transacted in words. It is sealed in words. And it will be violated or honored in words of obedience or rebellion. The speech of Moses in Deuteronomy is itself a covenantal act. He is not simply reminding them of the law; he is performing the covenant before them, as though the speech itself, witnessed, heard, internalized, is a kind of binding.

This is why Deuteronomy contains its most famous single verse, the Shema: “שְׁמַע יִשְׂרָאֵל יְהוָה אֱלֹהֵינוּ יְהוָה אֶחָד”, “Hear, O Israel: the LORD our God, the LORD is one” (Deuteronomy 6:4, ESV). The imperative verb שְׁמַע (ש-מ-ע, shema), usually translated “hear,” is better understood as “listen and obey.” In Hebrew, truly hearing means truly responding. The opposite of shema is not “deafness” but “rebellion.” At the center of Deuteronomy’s spiritual vision is the conviction that the transformation of a people begins with the quality of their listening.

The Return of the Plagues: When דֶּבֶר and שְָחִין Come Home

The heart of what many scholars call the “curse section” or sanctions (Deuteronomy 28) is remarkable for its rhetorical strategy. Moses is describing what will happen if Israel violates the covenant. He speaks of דֶּבֶר (דבר, dever, “pestilence”), שְָחִין (שחין, shechin, “boils”), חֹשֶׁך (חשך, choshech, “darkness”). He speaks of confusion and blindness, of agricultural futility, of locusts devouring the harvest. The language is precise, deliberate, and, to any Israelite who heard the Exodus story, instantly recognizable.

These are the plagues. Not merely similar afflictions, these are the very plagues. Moses deliberately, surgically, is invoking the memory of Egypt. He is saying: What God did to the Egyptians, he will do to you, if you become what Egypt was.

The LORD will strike you with wasting disease and with fever, inflammation and fiery heat, and with drought and with blight and with mildew” (Deuteronomy 28:22, ESV). 
 
“The LORD will strike you with the boils [שְָחִין] of Egypt, and with tumors and scabs and itch, of which you cannot be healed” (Deuteronomy 28:27, ESV).

The LORD will strike you with madness and blindness and confusion of mind, and you shall grope at noonday, as the blind grope in darkness [חֹשֶׁך]” (Deuteronomy 28:28–29, ESV).

When Moses names shechin, the very word used for the boils in the Egyptian plague (Exodus 9:9–11), he is triggering what we might call holy deja vu. He is doing something pastoral and prophetic at once: linking the future to the past, making the Exodus not merely a memory but a mirror.

The theological move is stunning. In the first Exodus, the plagues passed over Israel. The Hebrew word פָָסַח (פסח, pasach) in Exodus 12:13, from which we get Pesach (Passover), means to “pass over” or “skip.” The angel of judgment passed over the homes of Israel. But Moses now warns: if Israel becomes Egypt, judgment will not skip their homes. The very geography of divine wrath will shift. You will no longer be liberated. You will be the enslaved. You will no longer be Israel. You will be Egypt.

 יְצִיאת מִצְרַיים: The Purpose of the Exodus Was Never Just to Escape

The phrase יְצִיאת מִצְרַיים (Yetziat Mitzrayim, “the going-out from Egypt”) is perhaps the most repeated phrase in the entire Hebrew Bible. It appears in liturgy, in law, in prophecy. It is the founding event, the moment that defines Israel’s identity before God. But what did it mean? What was its purpose?

A surface reading suggests freedom is the goal: liberation from bondage, escape from oppression. But Deuteronomy refuses that shallow interpretation. The going out from Egypt was not an end; it was a beginning. The purpose of Yetziat Mitzrayim was to create a counter-Egypt, a society that embodied everything Pharaoh’s kingdom denied. While Egypt was built on forced labor (עֲבֹדָה, avodah), Israel was to be built on voluntary service to God (also עֲבוֹדָה, avodah, but now meaning “worship”). The double meaning of that single word carries the entire theological program of the Exodus in its syllables: the same word that means “slavery” means “worship.” The liberation from Egypt was an invitation to redirect that total commitment, from Pharaoh to God.

Moses understands the danger of return. He says it plainly in Deuteronomy 28:68, that devastating verse toward the end of the curses: “And the LORD will bring you back in ships to Egypt, a journey that I promised that you should never make again; and there you shall offer yourselves for sale to your enemies as male and female slaves, but there will be no buyer” (Deuteronomy 28:68, ESV). There is something deeply sorrowful about this verse. Not only will they return to Egypt, but they will also return to slavery, and even Egypt will not want them.

But Moses adds a second, subtler fear alongside the fear of return. The fear of becoming Egypt. This is the more insidious danger, because it does not announce itself. A people can be physically free, geographically in the Promised Land, holding political sovereignty, and still be spiritually and culturally Egypt. They can build a society organized around the worship of power, the glorification of leaders, and the exploitation of the weak. They can, in other words, become Pharaoh.

 עֶבֶד and אֲדוֹנִים: The Egyptian Temptation of Power

What, precisely, does Egypt represent in the theological imagination of Deuteronomy? Many things, as we will see throughout this series. But at its core, Egypt represents a civilization organized around the absolute sovereignty of a single human being. In ancient Egypt, the Pharaoh was not merely a king; he was understood as a living god, the embodiment of cosmic order (מַאַת, Ma'at, the Egyptian principle of justice, truth, and harmony that Pharaoh alone could sustain). To obey Pharaoh was to participate in the maintenance of the universe.

This is a theology of power. And it is deeply seductive. When God exposes his power through the ten plagues, what is the Egyptians’ response? Exodus 11:3 tells us: “the man Moses was very great in the land of Egypt, in the sight of Pharaoh’s servants and in the sight of the people” (ESV). They did not worship the God of Israel; they admired Moses. They translated a divine drama into a human story. In the Egyptian framework, every great event must have a great man at its center.

And it was not only the Egyptians. The Israelites themselves, shaped by generations of Egyptian culture, had absorbed this framework. When Moses disappeared into the mountain, they did not wait patiently for God. They said: “As for this Moses, the man who brought us up out of the land of Egypt, we do not know what has become of him” (Exodus 32:1, ESV). Note the phrasing: this Moses, the man who brought us up. In their own telling, Moses was the agent of redemption, not God. This is the Egyptian instinct at work within the very people God had liberated.

The golden calf was not merely an act of idolatry. It was an act of homesickness, for a style of religion in which divine power has a visible, tangible, controllable form. In Egypt, the gods had faces. They had statues. They could be carried. The abstract, invisible, uncontainable God of Sinai was, for a people raised in Egypt, profoundly disorienting. The calf was an attempt to domesticate the divine, to bring God back within the Egyptian framework of cult and image.

The Autobiography of Absence: Moses Erases Moses

Here is where the Book of Deuteronomy becomes one of the most counterintuitive documents in all of ancient literature. Moses stands before the people and retells the story of Exodus, in which he is the central human actor. He performed the signs. He confronted Pharaoh. He stretched out his staff over the sea. He brought water from the rock. He climbed the mountain to receive the law.

And yet, in Deuteronomy, when Moses retells the story, he is not in it.

Consider Deuteronomy 8:14–16, where Moses warns Israel not to forget “the LORD your God, who brought you out of the land of Egypt, out of the house of slavery, who led you through the great and terrifying wilderness, with its fiery serpents and scorpions and thirsty ground where there was no water, who brought you water out of the flinty rock, who fed you in the wilderness with manna” (ESV). Not once is Moses mentioned. The subject of every verb is God.

This is not modesty. Modesty is a personal virtue. This is something more structural, more deliberate. This is a theological program. Moses is rewriting the grammar of redemption. He is insisting, against the Egyptian instinct of his audience, against the pagan reflex that places the great man at the center of every great drama, that the subject of history is God.

The Hebrew verb הוצִיא (הוציא, hotzi), the causative form of “to go out,” recurs throughout these retellings. “He who brought you out” (המוציאך, hamotzi'akha). The actor is always God. The verb is always divine. Moses becomes, grammatically, a bystander in his own biography.

Deuteronomy 26:8 makes the point even more explicitly in the liturgical confession that every Israelite farmer was to recite when bringing first fruits: “And the LORD brought us out of Egypt with a mighty hand and an outstretched arm, with great deeds of terror, with signs and wonders” (ESV). There is no mention of Moses. The haggadah of first fruits, this mini-narrative of redemption, is God’s story alone. Scholars have long noted that this verse forms the theological backbone of the Passover Haggadah, which similarly marginalizes Moses in its retelling of the Exodus (Henshke, 2007). But the Haggadah was not the innovator; Moses was. The Haggadah simply followed the precedent Moses himself established: to tell the story of the Exodus without centering the human hero.

The Hebrew word אֲנִי (אני, ani, “I”) is conspicuous by its absence in these retellings. Where we expect Moses to say “I did this,” we find only “God did this.” This absence is not accidental. It is the most important word Moses does not say.

 קֶבֶר: The Anti-Egyptian Death

Moses’ project of taking Egypt out of Israel does not end with his life. It extends profoundly into his death. Ancient Egyptian civilization was organized, in no small measure, around the defeat of death. Mummification, pyramids, elaborate burial rituals, the Book of the Dead, all of these were attempts to preserve the body, to monumentalize the leader, to ensure that the great man continued to shape the world even after his departure from it.

Moses does none of this.

His children do not inherit his power. There is no Mosaic dynasty. The principle of dynastic succession, so central to Egyptian political theology, where Pharaoh’s son was Pharaoh, is simply absent. Moses chooses Joshua, a man from another tribe, as his successor. Continuity of leadership is not biological; it is vocational and covenantal.

More striking still is what happens to Moses’ body. Deuteronomy 34:6 contains one of the most haunting sentences in the entire Bible: “and he buried him in the valley in the land of Moab opposite Beth-peor; but no one knows the place of his burial to this day” (ESV). The Hebrew קֶבֶר (קבר, kever, “grave”) is deliberately absent from human knowledge. The grave of Moses is hidden. The body of Moses is untouchable. There is no shrine, no pilgrimage site, no eternal monument. Moses is not permitted to become what Egyptian civilization made of its great leaders: an object of cult veneration.

The rabbis later pondered why God himself buried Moses (the verb in Deuteronomy 34:6 is third-person singular, often read as “He, God, buried him”). One answer offered in the tradition is precisely this: if humans knew where Moses was buried, they would build a temple there. They would turn the grave into a holy site. They would make Moses into an idol. God hides the grave to prevent the Egyptian impulse, the impulse to worship the powerful leader, from reasserting itself even after death.
Moses dies an anti-Egyptian death. In life, he erased himself from the story. In death, God erases the place of his body from history. The two acts together constitute the fullest possible repudiation of Egyptian political theology. The leader does not become a god. The leader does not become a monument. The leader becomes, in the most profound sense, a servant. Eved Adonai, “servant of the LORD” (Deuteronomy 34:5, ESV): this is the final epitaph Moses is given. Not a great warrior, not a divine king, not an immortal hero. Servant.

The Calendar of Liberation

The anti-Egyptian program of Deuteronomy is not only embedded in the life and death of Moses. It is encoded into the rhythm of time itself. The Jewish calendar liturgically reenacts the three great movements of sacred history: the Exodus from Egypt (פָָסַח, Pesach), the wandering in the wilderness (סוּכּוֹת, Sukkot), and the revelation at Sinai (שָׁבוּעֹת, Shavuot). But something is notably absent from this calendar of memory.
There is no festival celebrating the conquest of Canaan.

This is not an oversight. The conquest was a military achievement of the highest order. It was, in terms of national history, as significant as anything that preceded it. And yet the calendar does not encode it as a moment of sacred celebration. We do not gather annually to reenact the crossing of the Jordan, the fall of Jericho, and the establishment of sovereignty in the land. The absence is, as in Moses’ autobiographical silence, itself a statement.

The Jewish calendar teaches Israel what to value by what it commemorates. Pesach commemorates the moment of liberation, the moment of helplessness transformed by divine power. Sukkot commemorates the wilderness, the fragility of human existence, the dependence on God’s provision. Shavuot commemorates the reception of Torah, the binding of Israel to God’s word. What these three share is a posture of receptivity. Israel was not the actor in any of them. Israel received freedom, received provision, received law.

Conquest is different. Conquest is an act of human power. And while that power was real and served God’s purposes, the calendar does not invite Israel to celebrate human power as a sacred value. Egypt celebrated human power. Egypt built monuments to human strength. Egypt worshiped the man who conquered. Deuteronomy’s spiritual vision insists on a different liturgical logic: celebrate liberation, not domination; celebrate dependence, not self-sufficiency; celebrate the giver of the land, not the conquerors of the land.

צֶדֶק and מִשְׁפָּט: The Opposite of Egypt Is Justice

If Egypt is power concentrated in the hands of the few and directed against the vulnerable, then the counter-Egypt that Deuteronomy envisions is a society organized around צֶדֶק (צדק, tzedek, “righteousness” or “justice”) and מִשְׁפָּט (משפט, mishpat, “justice” or “judgment”). These two words appear throughout Deuteronomy as the twin pillars of the society Moses is trying to build.

Deuteronomy is remarkable among ancient legal codes for its sustained concern for those without power. The stranger (גֵָּר, ger), the widow (אַלְמָנָה, almanah), the orphan (יָתוֹם, yatom), these three categories of the vulnerable appear together repeatedly throughout the book, as though Moses cannot stop reminding Israel of its obligations to those who have no patron, no advocate, no protector. The reason given is always the same: “you shall remember that you were a slave in Egypt” (Deuteronomy 16:12, ESV).

The memory of Egyptian slavery is not merely a historical fact to be recited. It is a moral imperative. Because you know what it felt like to be powerless, you must ensure that the powerless in your midst are protected. Because you know what it felt like to be a stranger in a foreign land, you must ensure that the stranger in your land is treated justly. The Exodus is not just the founding story of Israel; it is the ethical foundation of Israelite law. Egypt becomes, in this reading, not only a place to flee but a moral category to resist.

Moses says in Deuteronomy 16:20, in what is perhaps the most compressed statement of his entire political vision: צֶדֶק צֶדֶק תִּרְדֹּף (“Justice, justice you shall pursue”, ESV). The doubling of the word, צֶדֶק צֶדֶק (צֶדֶק צֶדֶק), tzedek tzedek, is not mere emphasis. In Hebrew rhetoric, doubling often signals urgency, totality, or the closing of loopholes. It is not enough to pursue justice in some circumstances, in obvious cases, when it is convenient. Justice, justice. Every time. In every direction. Even when it is costly. Even when the one wronged has no power to demand it.
Egypt is a world where tzedek belongs to the powerful, administered in whatever way preserves their dominance. Deuteronomy envisions a world where tzedek is pursued as an absolute value, belonging first to the powerless, because the powerful can generally take care of themselves.

The Long Work: Taking Egypt Out

David Ben Gurion famously said that it is easier to take the Jews out of exile than to take exile out of the Jews. The insight applies, more broadly, to every kind of liberation. External transformation is always faster than internal transformation. A border can be crossed in a day; the assumptions, reflexes, and cultural scripts that Egypt has inscribed in the soul take generations to rewire.

Moses knows this. The entire structure of his speech in Deuteronomy reflects this knowledge. He repeats himself. He circles back. He says the same things in different ways. He returns to the same fears, the same warnings, the same visions of catastrophe and blessing. This is not poor composition. This is pastoral wisdom. You do not transform people with a single brilliant argument. You transform them through repetition, through liturgy, through the slow accretion of habits, memories, and practices that gradually reconfigure what feels natural.

The most powerful tool Moses deploys is neither law nor a threat. It is memory. זָכוֹר (זכר, zakhor), “remember”: this is perhaps the most frequently repeated imperative in Deuteronomy. Remember that you were slaves. Remember what God did in Egypt. Remember the manna. Remember the water from the rock. Remember Sinai. Remember, remember, remember. Because the people who forget their liberation will, gradually, become their oppressors.

The word שָׁכַח (שכח, shakach, “to forget”) is the opposite of zakhor, and it is treated in Deuteronomy as a spiritual catastrophe. When Israel forgets God in their prosperity, “Beware lest you forget the LORD your God” (Deuteronomy 8:11, ESV), they do not simply lose historical information. They lose their identity. They become again what they were before: a people without a story, without a calling, without a moral anchor. Forgetting is the highway back to Egypt. Remembering is the road that leads away from it.

The great irony, and the great hope, of Deuteronomy is this: Moses himself is its chief instrument of memory. The man who erases himself from the story is the one who makes sure the story is never forgotten. The man who refuses to be the hero is the one who preserves the narrative. The man who dies without a known grave is the one whose words continue to shape a people thousands of years later.

In this sense, Moses succeeds. Not because Israel never became Egypt, they did, repeatedly, and the prophets thundered against it. But because the text was there. The speech was recorded. The devarim were written down. And every time Israel returned to those words, they were confronted again with the challenge Moses had given them at the edge of the Jordan: Will you be Israel, or will you be Egypt? Will you pursue justice or power? Will you worship God or the strong man? Will you remember, or will you forget?

The Speech That Never Ends

Deuteronomy ends with Moses dead and Joshua leading the people across the Jordan. The speech is over. The song has been sung. The blessing has been given. But in a real sense, the speech of Moses never ends, because it was written down, and because it was meant to be read, year after year, generation after generation, as a living challenge to every Israelite community that came after.

Each generation of readers encounters Deuteronomy not as antiquity but as contemporaneity, as a word addressed to them, in their moment, at their own threshold between the Egypt behind them and the Canaan before them. The plagues Moses describes are not only historical. The warning he sounds is not only political. The call to take Egypt out of Israel is, at its deepest level, a spiritual invitation: to examine what within us has been shaped by a culture of domination, of personality worship, of power for its own sake, and to choose differently.

זָכוֹר. Remember. You were a slave in Egypt. And from that memory, build something worthy of your freedom.

That is the last speech of Moses. That is the book of Deuteronomy. That is, perhaps, the oldest and most enduring challenge in the literature of human civilization: not merely to be free, but to be worthy of freedom. Not merely to escape what oppressed you, but to refuse to become it. The work of Yetziat Mitzrayim never ends. Egypt is always nearby. And the call to walk away from it, again and again, is the call of every generation.

Sunday, June 7, 2026

Faith That Waits and Wrestles

 

There are moments when the world feels unrecognizable. Violence floods the headlines. Courts twist the truth. The innocent suffer while the corrupt seem to flourish. And somewhere in the middle of the chaos, a question rises from the gut: If God is powerful and loving, why does He allow this?

We often feel pressure to answer that question quickly and neatly. We recite doctrines about God's mysterious providence or the fallenness of the world. Those truths matter deeply. But they can sometimes feel miles away from the raw ache in a person's chest. What we rarely admit is that we have asked the same question ourselves, in the dark, in the sleepless hours, in the moments when faith felt like a thin shell over a sea of doubt.

Yet the prophets show us another way. Habakkuk, the ancient prophet of Judah, did not silence his confusion. He brought it directly to the Lord raw, unfiltered, and achingly honest. And what he discovered in that place of holy wrestling was not the absence of God but the deepening of faith. His book stands as one of the most honest dialogues in all of Scripture: a man who questions God and discovers that God is not threatened by the question.

To understand Habakkuk is to understand that authentic faith is not fragile. It can bear the weight of hard questions. It can endure the tension between what we confess and what we see. And sometimes, it is precisely in the wrestling that faith grows most durable.

The Man Who Embraced: Understanding Habakkuk's Name

Before we enter the text of Habakkuk 1:2, it is worth pausing at the prophet's name. The name Habakkuk comes from the Hebrew root חָבַק (ḥāḇaq), which means to embrace, to clasp, or to cling. It is the same verb used in 2 Kings 4:16 when the Shunammite woman clutches her son, and in Song of Solomon 2:6 for the lover's embrace. His very name is a posture: someone who holds on.

This is deeply fitting. Habakkuk is not the prophet who runs from God when the world goes dark. He is the prophet who clings to God all the more fiercely in the darkness. He wrestles, yes, but he wrestles while holding on. That distinction, as we will see, is everything.

He ministered during one of the most spiritually turbulent periods in Judah's history. The great revival of King Josiah had faded. After Josiah's death in 609 B.C., his successors led the nation back into moral corruption and injustice. Habakkuk witnessed the collapse of everything the revival had built. He had seen what Judah could be at its best, and now he watched it descend into its worst. His questions were not the questions of someone who had never known God. They were the questions of someone who had known God deeply and could not reconcile that knowledge with what he now saw.

The Cry of Habakkuk 1:2

Habakkuk 1:2 reads in the English Standard Version: "O LORD, how long shall I cry for help, and you will not hear? Or cry to you, 'Violence!' and you will not save?"

Every word here is intentional. To fully feel the force of this cry, we must look at the Hebrew beneath it.

 עַד־אָנָה, "How Long?"

The opening phrase of Habakkuk's lament is עַד־אָנָה (ʿad-ānāh), literally "until when?" It is an idiom of anguished waiting found throughout the Psalms and the prophets. Psalm 13:1 opens identically: "How long, O LORD? Will you forget me forever?" The phrase does not express passive resignation. It expresses the desperate urgency of someone who has been waiting so long that they have reached the edge of endurance.

This is not a theological doubt. It is a covenantal lament, a cry rooted in the conviction that God has made promises and that those promises have seemed painfully silent. The very act of crying "how long?" presupposes that God is there, that He is listening, and that His delay is itself a mystery worth confronting.

 שִׁוַּעְתִּי, "I Cry for Help"

The verb שִׁוַּעְתִּי (šiwwaʿtî) is the Piel first-person perfect of שָׁוַע (šāwaʿ), meaning to cry for help with urgency and intensity. This is not a polite petition. It is a desperate shout, the kind of cry a drowning man makes. The Piel stem intensifies the action, suggesting that Habakkuk has not merely mentioned his distress to God but has been crying out with all the force of his being.

The perfect tense here is important. It suggests a repeated, ongoing action that is already underway. Habakkuk is not presenting a fresh complaint. He has been crying out, over and over, and the silence has persisted. This is the anguish not of a first prayer unanswered, but of sustained, faithful intercession that has met only heaven's quiet.

3. וְלֹא תִשְׁמָע "And You Will Not Hear"

The phrase וְלֹא תִשְׁמָע (wĕlōʾ ṯišmāʿ) translates literally as "and you do not hear" or "and you will not hear." The verb שָׁמַע (šāmaʿ) in Hebrew is far richer than the English word "hear." It carries connotations of attentive listening, of hearing with the intent to respond. When God "hears" in the Old Testament, He almost always acts. So Habakkuk's accusation is really this: "You are not listening with the ear that responds. You are hearing my words but not answering my need."

There is great theological courage in this statement. Habakkuk does not soften it. He does not say "it feels like you are not listening." He says, in effect, "You are not listening the way I know you can." This is the boldness of a man who knows the God he is addressing, and who believes that the God he knows is capable of more than what he is seeing.

חָמָס, "Violence!"

The single word חָמָס (ḥāmās) is one of the most morally loaded terms in the Hebrew Bible. It appears over sixty times in the Old Testament and denotes violence that is wrongful, illegal, or morally outrageous, the kind of force used to crush the innocent. The word carries within it the sense of violation: something sacred has been torn apart.

When Habakkuk cries out חָמָס, he is not just naming a social problem. He is naming a covenantal crisis. God had promised that justice would characterize the life of His people. The law of Moses was given to protect the vulnerable, to restrain the powerful, and to ensure that the weak would not be crushed by the strong. What Habakkuk sees is the systematic inversion of that covenant. The Torah has become powerless (Habakkuk 1:4). Justice no longer goes forth. The wicked surround the righteous. And so he cries the single, searing word: חָמָס. Violence. Outrage. Covenant-breaking.

It is worth pausing here to note that the same word חָמָס appears in Genesis 6:11, the very verse that described the wickedness of the world before the flood: "Now the earth was corrupt in God's sight, and the earth was filled with חָמָס" (ESV: violence). By using this word, Habakkuk is invoking the memory of a world that had fallen to its lowest point. He is saying, "We are there again."

The Wrestling Precedent of Jacob at the Jabbok

To understand what Habakkuk is doing in his lament, it helps to look further back in Israel's story, all the way to the night at the ford of the Jabbok, when Jacob wrestled with a mysterious figure until the breaking of the day.

Genesis 32:24–28 in the ESV reads: "And Jacob was left alone. And a man wrestled with him until the breaking of the day. When the man saw that he did not prevail against Jacob, he touched his hip socket, and Jacob's hip was put out of joint as he wrestled with him. Then he said, 'Let me go, for the day has broken.' But Jacob said, 'I will not let you go unless you bless me.' And he said to him, 'What is your name?' And he said, 'Jacob.' Then he said, 'Your name shall no longer be called Jacob, but Israel, for you have striven with God and with men, and have prevailed.'"

The Hebrew verb at the center of this narrative is אָבַק (ʾāḇaq), which means to wrestle, to grapple, or to become entangled. Some scholars have noted a possible wordplay between the name יַבֹּק (Yabbōq, Jabbok) and the verb אָבַק (ʾāḇaq), the place and the action sharing a similar sound. The wrestling and the location become one.

What is remarkable about Jacob's struggle is the nature of his opponent. He is wrestling with God, or at minimum with a divine representative, and he will not release his grip. Even when his hip is dislocated, even when the pain becomes overwhelming, Jacob refuses to let go. His famous declaration, "I will not let you go unless you bless me," is one of the most audacious statements in Scripture.

Notice that Jacob does not win in any conventional sense. His hip is wrenched. He walks with a limp for the rest of his life. And yet God calls his wrestling a form of prevailing (שָׂרִיתָ, sāritā). The word comes from the root שָׂרָה (sārāh), meaning to contend, to persist, to strive. It is this striving, this refusing to release God even in pain, that God honors and rewards.

And then comes the name: יִשְׂרָאֵל (Yiśrāʾēl), Israel. The name itself encodes the theology: one who strives with God, who wrestles with God, who contends with the divine and does not let go. This becomes the identity not just of a man but of an entire people. Israel is, by name, a wrestling people. A nation constituted by its willingness to struggle honestly with the Almighty.

The prophets who followed, including Habakkuk, stood within that wrestling tradition. When Habakkuk refuses to silence his questions, when he plants himself on the watchtower and says "I will watch to see what He will say to me" (Habakkuk 2:1), he is doing exactly what Jacob did at the Jabbok. He is holding on. He is striving. He is refusing to release God until he receives something, not an answer that satisfies every intellectual concern, but a Word that sustains the soul.

Hosea's Commentary on the Wrestling

Centuries after Jacob, the prophet Hosea returned to the memory of the Jabbok to speak of Israel's relationship with God. In Hosea 12:3–4, the ESV reads: "In the womb he took his brother by the heel, and in his manhood he strove with God. He strove with the angel and prevailed; he wept and sought his favor."

The detail that Hosea adds here is stunning: "he wept and sought his favor." The wrestling was not merely physical or theological. It was deeply emotional. Jacob wept. This is not the image of a stoic debater demanding answers. It is the image of a man undone by his encounter with the living God, weeping, clinging, asking to be blessed. And Hosea holds this up as the model for Israel to follow: strive with God, weep before Him, seek His favor.

This is the tradition Habakkuk inherits. His cry in Habakkuk 1:2 is not rebellion. It is a form of weeping at the ford of the Jabbok. He is refusing to let go of God in the darkness, demanding not merely an explanation but a blessing, a word from God that will carry him through the inexplicable.

Standing Watch is the Posture of Waiting Faith

After crying out in anguish in chapter one, Habakkuk takes up a remarkable posture in Habakkuk 2:1: "I will take my stand at my watchpost and station myself on the tower, and look out to see what he will say to me, and what I will answer concerning my complaint" (ESV).

The Hebrew for "watchpost" is מִשְׁמֶרֶת (mišmeret), from the root שָׁמַר (šāmar), meaning to watch, to keep, to guard. The same root appears in Genesis 2:15, where God commands the man to "keep" the garden. A watchman was someone entrusted with a vigil, standing in a high place, alert, expectant, willing to wait as long as necessary for what would come.

Habakkuk's decision to stand watch is an act of faith that follows his act of wrestling. He has asked the hard question. He has refused to pretend the violence is not violent. Now, having brought his complaint honestly before God, he chooses to wait, not passively, not cynically, but with the active expectancy of a soldier on watch. He positions himself to receive the word of God.

This is the rhythm of wrestle and wait that marks the life of mature faith. Jacob wrestled through the night and then waited to receive the new name at dawn. Habakkuk questioned through the darkness and then stood ready to hear the divine response. Both refused to abandon their post.

When God's Answer Deepens the Mystery

God does answer Habakkuk. But the answer raises new questions. In Habakkuk 1:5–6, the Lord declares that He is raising up the Babylonians (here called the Chaldeans, כַּשְׂדִּים, kaśdim) as His instrument of judgment against Judah. This answer is more troubling than the original silence. The Babylonians were brutal, ruthless, and utterly unconcerned with the God of Israel. How could the holy God use a people more wicked than His own as a rod of correction?

Habakkuk's second complaint (Habakkuk 1:13) goes to the very character of God: "You who are of purer eyes than to see evil and cannot look at wrong, why do you idly look at traitors and remain silent when the wicked swallows up the man more righteous than he?" (ESV). This is not rebellion. It is a man who knows God's character so well that he cannot reconcile it with God's apparent actions.

God's ultimate answer is not a full explanation. It is a call to a deeper form of trust: "Behold, his soul is puffed up; it is not upright within him, but the righteous shall live by his faith" (Habakkuk 2:4, ESV). The Hebrew word אֱמוּנָה (ʾĕmûnāh) is often translated "faith" here, but it carries a full range of meanings: faithfulness, steadiness, reliability, and trustworthiness. The righteous person lives not by resolving every theological difficulty but by a deep, covenantal faithfulness that persists even when understanding fails.

This is the verse that would echo through centuries and continents: quoted by Paul in Romans 1:17 and Galatians 3:11, and at the heart of the Reformation's rediscovery of justification by faith. But in its original context, it is not primarily an abstract theological proposition. It is a lifeline thrown to a prophet who has wrestled and waited and found the honest acknowledgment that God's purposes are beyond full comprehension, and yet is called to live faithfully within that mystery.

The Prayer of the Maimed: Habakkuk's Final Song

Like Jacob, who limped away from the Jabbok with a dislocated hip but a new name, Habakkuk does not emerge from his wrestling unchanged. The book closes with one of the most striking passages of confession in the entire Old Testament. Habakkuk 3:17–19 in the ESV reads:

"Though the fig tree should not blossom, nor fruit be on the vines, the produce of the olive fail and the fields yield no food, the flock be cut off from the fold and there be no herd in the stalls, yet I will rejoice in the LORD; I will take joy in the God of my salvation. GOD, the Lord, is my strength; he makes my feet like the deer's; he makes me tread on my high places."

Notice the form of this declaration. It is not a testimony of answered prayer. The fig tree has not blossomed. The vines have not produced fruit. The fields are barren. The flocks are gone. Nothing in his circumstances has changed. And yet, this tiny, enormous word, yet. אַךְ (ʾaḵ), in Hebrew: nevertheless, only, surely. It is a word that refuses to be swallowed by circumstances.

Habakkuk rejoices not because his questions have been answered but because he has met the God who inhabits the questions. He has stood at the watchtower. He has wrestled. He has wept. And in that place, something deeper than explanation has taken root: a trust in the character of God that does not require the resolution of every mystery.

The final image, God making Habakkuk's feet "like the deer's" to tread on the high places, echoes Psalm 18:33 and 2 Samuel 22:34. The deer navigates impossible terrain with sure-footed grace. Habakkuk, who began in the valley of lament, ends on the heights. Not because the valley disappeared, but because God gave him the feet to climb.

What Wrestling Faith Looks Like Today

The tradition of wrestling faith is not merely a historical curiosity. It is a living invitation. What does it mean to carry Habakkuk's legacy into the present moment?

First, it means refusing to sanitize our prayers. When the world looks dark, and God seems silent, authentic faith does not manufacture cheerfulness it does not feel. It cries שִׁוַּעְתִּי, I have been crying out. It names the חָמָס, the violence, the injustice, the outrage, and brings it honestly before the throne. God has never been disturbed by honest prayer. The Psalms of lament, the cries of the prophets, the anguish of Job, all of these stand as testimony that God welcomes the honest wrestling of His people.

Second, it means standing watch after the wrestling. Jacob's night at the Jabbok ended at dawn with a new name. Habakkuk's lament was followed by the watchtower of expectancy. The wrestle does not license us to walk away from God; it calls us deeper into the posture of waiting. Prayer is not only bringing petitions; it is also standing alert for the Word that God gives in His time.

Third, it means accepting that not all answers will satisfy our desire for resolution. Jacob limped. Habakkuk watched the Babylonians come. The righteous do not always see vindication in their lifetimes. But they live by אֱמוּנָה, by a faithfulness that outlasts comprehension. They cling. They hold on. They are, in the deepest sense, people who embrace God even in the darkness, people whose names might as well be Habakkuk.

Fourth, it means allowing the wrestling to deepen rather than diminish worship. The most remarkable thing about Habakkuk 3 is not simply that the prophet persists in faith, it is that he persists in joy. He has not merely survived his wrestling; he has been transformed by it. His doxology is more costly, more tested, and therefore more unshakeable than any joy that had never walked through the valley of lament.

The Name God Gives the Wrestler

There is a thread that runs from the ford of the Jabbok to the watchtower of Habakkuk to the courtyard where Jesus prayed "not my will but yours" in the darkness before the cross. It is the thread of faith that does not demand exemption from anguish but enters the anguish and refuses to release God in the middle of it.

When Jacob emerged from the night at the Jabbok, he had a new name: יִשְׂרָאֵל, one who strives with God. The name was not a badge of having won the argument. It was the mark of a man who had been willing to hold on through the night, to refuse the easy release of walking away, to stay in the struggle until the blessing came.

Habakkuk, whose name means "one who embraces," lived the same vocation. He embraced the questions. He embraced the silence. He embraced the terrifying answer that came back. And at the end, standing on the heights with the feet of a deer, he embraced the God who had allowed all of it, who had not explained it fully, but who had never once let go of His servant's hand.

When you find yourself in the kind of moment that calls up the cry עַד־אָנָה, "How long, O LORD?", know that you are not outside the covenant. You are inside it, standing in a long lineage of wrestlers and watchmen who brought their confusion before the living God and found Him not afraid of the question.

Bring your חָמָס before Him. Stand at your watchpost. Do not let go until He blesses you. Faith that wrestles and waits is not weak faith. It is the faith that has learned to cling, and in the clinging, to be held.

The Men of Issachar, "had understanding of the times, to know what Israel ought to do."

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