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"my yoke is easy and my burden is light” (Matthew 11:30)?
What does it mean by yoke?
What does it mean by yoke?
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Draft Animal Power said:....most of the stuff I’ve read says that when you put a team together, you can’t split them up, swap them round or work them as a team with other animals.
Oxen in training site said:To create a strong connection between him and his future oxen, Berger bottle fed them himself, using a milk replacer.
This strong bond has, according to Burger, helped in the training process as it developed the animals’ trust in him.
An ox begins his training when he is one month old and he is put into a halter for the first time. What follows is a mixture of training in commands by his handler, socialization, exposure to implements and plow training with a driver.
Burger explained that the standard commands direct the animal without using force or violence—an ox can be told to “whoa” (stop), or “giddup” (go), which would be followed by a gentle tap with a goad.
Once you pair up animals, they become really tied to that pairing, to the extent that when one animal passes, the other animal is put down because it won’t work well with another mate.
~Oxen in training: yoked to sustainability | Voices of Central Pa
Hopefully, the below-mentioned commentary give you the answer."my yoke is easy and my burden is light” (Matthew 11:30)?
What does it mean by yoke?
"my yoke is easy and my burden is light” (Matthew 11:30)?
What does it mean by yoke?
The yoke was a symbol of servitude.
In rabbinic theology the yoke is a metaphor of great importance. It is the symbol of service and servitude, and in accordance with the principle that the Jew should be free from servitude to man in order to devote himself to the service of God, the "yoke of the kingdom of man" is contrasted with "the yoke of the kingdom of heaven." The doctrine is fully enacted in the statement of *Neḥunya b. ha-Kanah : "Whoever takes upon himself the yoke of the Torah, they remove from him the yoke of government and the yoke of worldly concerns, and whoever breaks off the yoke of the Torah, they place on him the yoke of government and the yoke of worldly concerns" (Avot 3:5).~Yoke
Great post!Interesting ^^
I got this from the Jewish Virtual library:
"The yoke was a symbol of servitude.
In rabbinic theology the yoke is a metaphor of great importance. It is the symbol of service and servitude, and in accordance with the principle that the Jew should be free from servitude to man in order to devote himself to the service of God, the "yoke of the kingdom of man" is contrasted with "the yoke of the kingdom of heaven." The doctrine is fully enacted in the statement of *Neḥunya b. ha-Kanah : "Whoever takes upon himself the yoke of the Torah, they remove from him the yoke of government and the yoke of worldly concerns, and whoever breaks off the yoke of the Torah, they place on him the yoke of government and the yoke of worldly concerns"
Like a lot of the Bible......it seems there's a lot to be gleaned from just one analogy.
It is the yoke of slavery, servitude, to our Lord. 2 Timothy 2:3-4 leader of an army, general, commander; get on board and be a Servant of Christ.Interesting ^^
I got this from the Jewish Virtual library:
Like a lot of the Bible......it seems there's a lot to be gleaned from just one analogy.