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Dear brothers and sisters in our Lord Jesus, part of the growing repentance remnant:
I love this message from Sara Schecter on the meaning of Numbers 6: 24-26:
Every Friday night, Jewish parents across the world place their hands on their children’s heads and recite three short verses.
יְבָרֶכְךָ יְהֹוָה וְיִשְׁמְרֶךָ׃
Hashem bless you and protect you!
Numbers 6:24
יָאֵר יְהֹוָה פָּנָיו אֵלֶיךָ וִיחֻנֶּךָּ׃
Hashem deal kindly and graciously with you!
Numbers 6:25
יִשָּׂא יְהֹוָה פָּנָיו אֵלֶיךָ וְיָשֵׂם לְךָ שָׁלוֹם׃
Hashem bestow His favor upon you and grant you peace!
Numbers 6:26
The words have not changed in three thousand years. They were first spoken by Aaron and his sons in the Sinai desert, to a nation of former slaves who had never before felt blessed.
They were recited by the priests in the Temple in Jerusalem, and continue to be recited in synagogues worldwide during the repetition of the silent amidah prayer. They are the words of Birkat Kohanim, the priestly blessing.
This text is remarkably short. Three words in the first line, five in the second, seven in the third. The Sages noticed the pattern and saw in it a message: the blessings grow in length because they grow in depth. The first line blesses us with material protection. The second asks for God’s grace and favor. But the third line is something else entirely. “May God bestow favor (Literally, “lift up His face”) upon you and grant you peace!”(Numbers 6:26)
What does it mean for God to lift His face upon us?
Rabbi Jonathan Sacks tells a story about a crowd standing on a hill watching a great ship pass in the distance. A young boy stands among them, waving frantically. One of the men turns to him and asks why he’s bothering. The ship is far away. There are dozens of people on the hill. “What makes you think the captain can even see you?”
“Because,” the boy says, “the captain is my father. He will be looking for me among the crowd.”
That is what the third blessing means. There are over eight billion people on this earth. Why should any one of us matter? What makes a single human life more than a face in a crowd? The answer of the Torah is simple, and it changes everything: God is our Father. He is not merely watching the crowd. He is looking for us.
This is why, the Sages noted, every word of the priestly blessing is in the singular. Not “may God bless you all,” but “may God bless you.” Not “may God protect the nation,” but “may God protect you.” The blessing does not address a collective. It addresses each person standing there, one soul at a time.
The implications reach further than they might first appear. Rabbi Sacks argues that most of what drives human conflict, ambition, and violence comes from a single source: the desperate need to prove that we matter. Power, wealth, domination, cruelty — so much of what darkens human history is the behavior of people who are not sure they matter unless others are forced to notice them. I will make you fear me. I will make you need me. I will make the world acknowledge that I am here. These are the strategies of a person who does not believe that God is looking for him.
Faith changes the calculation entirely. If I believe that God knows my name, that He created me with intention, that the soul He gave me is pure, then I have nothing left to prove. I do not need to dominate anyone. I do not need to diminish anyone. I am already seen.
The boy on the hill does not need the whole crowd to notice him. He is waving at his father.
That is the peace promised in the final line of the blessing. Not the peace of treaties or ceasefires or quiet neighborhoods, but something deeper: the inner stillness that comes from knowing you are known. When a person carries that knowledge, he can stop fighting the world for recognition. He can begin, instead, to give it.
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Please pray and support NDR and Pastor Boaz in Kenya. Here is his email to me today: "Good morning brother
Our hope is in the Lord even when things are so had we can't go out protesters all over no walking freely in Nairobi.
Please keep us in your prayers
My children can't go to school "
Please mark your donation " Pastor Boaz" and we will get the donation to him. Receive the blessings the LORD will give, donating as the Lord leads. Even small donations are a huge blessing. As you PRAY and donate you join the repentance battle for souls and righteousness. As King David noted in 1 Samuel 30:24 " he who stays by the supplies will share alike in the battle."
Proverbs 19:17 He who has pity on the poor lends to the Lord, and that which he has given He will repay to him.
Thanks to you, we are waking up His Bride with His Gift of repentance, bringing freedom to MANY. Thank you !
Pastor Jeff Daly
National Day of Repentance
Box 246
Middletown CA. 95461
pastorjeff@repentday.com
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