Deut. 32:1 -52; Hosea 14:2-10; Joel 2:15-27

Pullout of the Commentary by Michael Schneider,
israel today, Jerusalem:

This week’s portion is the last before the yearly reading cycle of the five books of Moses, the Torah, begins again. It is a one-chapter portion that speaks of the “Song of Moses.” The first Song of Moses was the “Song of the Sea” when the people of Israel miraculously crossed the Reed Sea.

Now in the last song of Moses we stand once again at the crossing of the Jordan. The first song begins with the 40-year journey through the desert. The Song of Moses is like a last will to his people before his death. Moses begins his song with: “Give ear, O heavens, … and let the earth hear.” Moses chose heaven and earth to be his witnesses! According to the Jewish sages, if they obeyed God’s Word heaven would bless them (by rain etc.) and the earth by the fruitfulness of their soil (harvest).

We should not forget that Moses is speaking to a new generation that was to enter the Promised Land and not the generation that left Egypt!

In the stanza in verse 7 we read: “Ask your father, and he will inform you; Your elders, and they will tell you.”

According to the promise we find in verses 10 and 11, God will cover you with His wings as an eagle and guard you as the apple of His eye.

Moses, before the Israelites even captured the Land, also spoke of bad times that would come, even an expulsion!

Moses called the Israelites a people of a perverse generation. They served God and the spirit of the world, they were double-minded. But the Lord will have compassion on His servants.

This also was foreseen: “It is I who put to death and give life; I have wounded and it is I who heal.”. The order here is interesting: God first will kill, but then He brings life. Life and healing are the end, not the opposite.

That Song of Moses in chapter 32 has eternal value because in the Last Days they will sing the Song of Moses.

We are in the days of repentance between Rosh Hashanah and Yom Kippur, we have a special reading from the prophets from Hosea 14 calling for return and repentance: “Shuva – Return, O Israel, to the LORD your God! For you have stumbled because of your iniquity.”

Shabbat Shalom and Gmar chatima tova!
(May your inscription [in the Book of Life … on Yom Kippur] be complete!)

Eric Martienssen

Since my secession from the Church in 2009, my Jewish Orthodox friends in Israel and I have been following the Fake News of Rome in articles and political Shabbat commentaries on GSI (God's Sabbath Int.). The former Pontiff destroyed the dwelling place of God, the temple in Jerusalem – fact! Was the New Testament and the Church just a world dominance inspired business idea of Rome? What is politics today? Enjoy your trip on GSI.