Skip to main content

The Covenant

The cultural language of the bible can be partly deduced through the covenant that God made with Israel and their forefathers. I say partly because much of Israel's behavior was also heavily influenced by neighboring people groups within the land around them. This is why Israel at times practiced polytheism in place of the covenant that they had been given. The book of Exodus, Judges, and Hosea are great examples of this cultural back and forth that is prevalent in Israel's history.


Ruth, the widow/foreigner, is a great pair of eyes to use in order to witness the covenant they were given. In Ruth 1:19-22, scripture say to love the foreigner as your own and do them no wrong as you yourselves know what it is like to have been foreigners, Exodus 12:49, Exodus 22:21-24, Exodus 23:9, Leviticus 19:33-34 and Deuteronomy 10:18-19. Ruth 2:1-7,8-19; leave food behind for the poor or the foreigner in your land, Leviticus 23:22, and Ruth was both. If you take a deeper dive into the law it will become obvious that everything Boaz did for Ruth, including his marriage to her, was his act of obedience to covenant laws.


In the New Testament, Jesus sums up the Law for us with ease. In Luke 10:25-28, an expert in the law rises up to test Jesus by asking, “What must I do to inherit eternal life.” Jesus responds by saying, “what do you understand/perceive the law to say.” The man answers by saying that the law says to love God and to love others as you love yourself, to which Jesus replies, “Go, do this, and you will live.” The 10 commandments are a great summation of this aspect of the law. The first 4 of the 10 commandments are for how humans should interact with God so as to respect and Exalt Him. The next 6 commandments are the basics for how people should treat one another, and so the simplicity of the law is this, Love your God and your neighbor as you love yourself. This is the cultural attitude that Israel was meant to adopt from their sponsor, God.


The expert goes on to ask, Who is my neighbor?” and Jesus tells a story to answer this completely legitimate question. (Luke 10:29-37). A man is robbed and beaten near to death on his way to Jericho from Jerusalem. A priest passing by along the same road sees him and avoids him, so does a Levite traveling the same road. A Samaritan walking the same path sees the injured man and takes immediate action. He bandages his wounds, puts him on his donkey and brings him to an inn, and continues to care for him. He then pays the innkeeper a sum of money and says, please take care of him until I return, and whatever extra cost might be procured, I shall cover on that day I will return. Who is that man's neighbor? The one who showed mercy to the man was his neighbor. Luke 10:36-37. The person does not have to be your physical neighbor, and then Jesus says, “Go and do likewise.”  This is how God intended Israel to interact with others because of their relationship with Him.


The beauty of this is that the Law becomes the culture, and the culture becomes second nature to us as it is passed down through the generations. The issue is that all cultures are passed down in like manner, and when one is carrying two opposing cultures, they are forced to pick between one and commit or flip between them. The flipping does not seem to last as cultures tend to just blend into each other, which is seen in Israel's lives throughout the bible. At different times they adopted and or expressed different cultural behaviors. Human sacrifice, choosing a human king, worshiping other gods, as their neighbors had done, and taught them to do through their relationship. All this to say, know the law, so you know from which culture or relationship Israel is being inspired to move. The likely sources are God or man.


For me in the modern-day, I carry with me several cultures from which and through which I see the world. My Afro-American culture, my AirForce-Brat culture, My Black Jew culture (cult), my Christian culture, my economic class culture, and much more. At the end of the day, my relationship with God should be one in which all of these others are superseded.


P.S. I feel like I have been rambling tonight. I know what I was thinking, not sure how well I expressed it, haha. Anyways, thank you for reading this (thankful face emoji).



Comments

Post a Comment

Popular posts from this blog

Afro-American Zeitgeist

Photo by Ali Hajian on Unsplash The Afro-American Zeitgeist : A Summary of Unconscious Thoughts on Race (Part 1) July 30th, Passionless Bliss : "I am not afraid of death because death is invisible. If I can't see where it's going or what it is doing, is it doing anything at all? However, I am afraid of empty buildings because they confirm the reality of death's existence." Or, in simpler terms, Ignorance is bliss until reality hits. My dreams began by directly addressing my unwillingness to look into the deaths of African-Americans across the country. Despite my lack of knowledge, I became seriously opinionated about the nature of the incidents themselves, almost refusing to consider blackness as a factor. However, after the first dream, I began an investigation to prove blackness had nothing to do with these deaths. In the following paragraphs, I will take you through the sequence of dreams, which forced me to come to the conclusions, or at least my current stan...

Rocky Road, Vanilla Expectations

  February 16, 2022 In this dream, my family and I visited my grandparents in Alabama. When we arrived, my grandfather greeted us with a smile. Seeing him was like seeing home after a long trip. Shortly after our arrival, my dad and I began exploring the back room with a blacklight. My grandparent's house was haunted, and we were going to look for evidence of the supernatural. My father had a UV light, and I brought along flashlights, one for me and the other for him. We explored my grandparent's bedroom and bathroom as they had the most significant activity. The bedroom itself seemed quiet, but the master bathroom was not. Using the blacklight, we could see fingerprints all along the walls of the master bath, definitely not those of my grandparents. A growing sense of dread and anticipation filled the pit of my stomach. Concurrently, the door started to swing close behind us. Something sinister was making itself known. However, we managed to push through the door just before i...

Iron Egress: Beyond the Trans-Atlantic Slave Trade

  Photo by I.am_nah on Unsplash March 29th, 2022 Afro-Latina; in this dream, I only remember that I had been discussing this kind of ethnic heritage with someone, but I’m not sure of the context. During the conversation, I even remember seeing the visage of an Afro-Latina woman with honey-colored skin and a big curly afro. The dream changed tones quite dramatically from here when a disembodied voice said, “research the white slaves of Egypt, Asia, and other countries.” In the waking world, I decided to research the white slave trade in Egypt and found it fascinating indeed.  The articles I've read speak of the Circassian slaves of Egypt from Georgia and the Barbary slave trade that involved peoples from Ireland, the Netherlands, Italy, Iceland, Southwest Britain, and the Eastern Mediterranean. Both of these were said by some to have lasted hundreds of years. As I continued my search, I only found more information on human trafficking that I didn't know I didn't know. Among...