C
CharlesYTK
Guest
Daniel Langcaster of "First Fuits of Zion" tells a story about that little song, Yankee Doodle. "Yankee doodle went to town, riding on a pony, stuck a feather in his hat and called it macaroni."
"Did you ever wonder why when he stuck the feather in his hat he called it Macaroni?" "It doesn't make sense!" he says "What does feathers have to do with turning your hat into pasta?"
He goes on to explain that during the revolutionary war, the American troops were pretty rag-tag and looking bad. They stopped at a certain farm house for provisions and a young women there saw their sorry state and knowing they were going up to battle the proud British with their fine and dapper uniforms with plumes in their hats, she plucked a chicken and stuck feathers in their hats so that they would look more respectable. In the venacular of English spoken in those days "Macaroni" meant "A Dapper way of dressing" "To be neatly attired" I think it would be like saying "He looked real Gucci" having stylish clothes like those designed by Gucci.
So now the song when we hear it is no longer about pasta at all, it is about looking well dressed for the task at hand.
Now we go a bit deeper and in another direction, and I will make this part short. Many people read the New Testament, the words of Yeshua (Jesus) and of the apostles without knowing what the words really mean. And they come away either confused, or not understanding the real point. For example "to have an evil eye" means to be stingy. Read that teaching now in Math 6 and see how it fits with the passages around it. Or the expression "It is easier for a camel to go though the eye of a needle." It would be impossible. But if we understand that in Aramaic the word for Camel also means "A large rope" then it makes more sense.
Now we get to the conclusion of the matter, the pay dirt. Everything Yeshua taught is a principle of Torah. Paul's teachings are based in Torah. Unless we have read the words of the New Testament is light of Torah, we have not understood it's message. Paul was a Torah observant Jew to his very dying day. Messiah came to bring new light to Torah (not to destroy it or set it aside) , to free the words of God from religion and to bring it back to be read like a love letter between God and man, making it a heart matter.
Do you know that Jesus teaches almost exclusively from Deuterotomy and Psalms and Isaiah? Unless we read the New testament in its correct Jewish context, we come away with all sorts of twisted doctrines and beliefs. I encourage you to do some study in this area. It will add such revelation to the word of God and you will see a Messiah that is much different come out of the pages of the scriptures than the one presented in the pulpits. Context is everything. This is especially true of words written in the first century in the Jewish culture and which tell us Who God is, and what He wants from us, and what He has given to us.
"Did you ever wonder why when he stuck the feather in his hat he called it Macaroni?" "It doesn't make sense!" he says "What does feathers have to do with turning your hat into pasta?"
He goes on to explain that during the revolutionary war, the American troops were pretty rag-tag and looking bad. They stopped at a certain farm house for provisions and a young women there saw their sorry state and knowing they were going up to battle the proud British with their fine and dapper uniforms with plumes in their hats, she plucked a chicken and stuck feathers in their hats so that they would look more respectable. In the venacular of English spoken in those days "Macaroni" meant "A Dapper way of dressing" "To be neatly attired" I think it would be like saying "He looked real Gucci" having stylish clothes like those designed by Gucci.
So now the song when we hear it is no longer about pasta at all, it is about looking well dressed for the task at hand.
Now we go a bit deeper and in another direction, and I will make this part short. Many people read the New Testament, the words of Yeshua (Jesus) and of the apostles without knowing what the words really mean. And they come away either confused, or not understanding the real point. For example "to have an evil eye" means to be stingy. Read that teaching now in Math 6 and see how it fits with the passages around it. Or the expression "It is easier for a camel to go though the eye of a needle." It would be impossible. But if we understand that in Aramaic the word for Camel also means "A large rope" then it makes more sense.
Now we get to the conclusion of the matter, the pay dirt. Everything Yeshua taught is a principle of Torah. Paul's teachings are based in Torah. Unless we have read the words of the New Testament is light of Torah, we have not understood it's message. Paul was a Torah observant Jew to his very dying day. Messiah came to bring new light to Torah (not to destroy it or set it aside) , to free the words of God from religion and to bring it back to be read like a love letter between God and man, making it a heart matter.
Do you know that Jesus teaches almost exclusively from Deuterotomy and Psalms and Isaiah? Unless we read the New testament in its correct Jewish context, we come away with all sorts of twisted doctrines and beliefs. I encourage you to do some study in this area. It will add such revelation to the word of God and you will see a Messiah that is much different come out of the pages of the scriptures than the one presented in the pulpits. Context is everything. This is especially true of words written in the first century in the Jewish culture and which tell us Who God is, and what He wants from us, and what He has given to us.