Friday, September 18, 2015

"A rock that traveled with Moses" by Stephen M. MillerImportant mainly because of the people in the conversation. for Thursday, 3 September 2015 - Bible blog of award-winning bestselling Christian author, Stephen M. Miller.

 "A rock that traveled with Moses" by Stephen M. MillerImportant mainly because of the people in the conversation. for Thursday, 3 September 2015 - Bible blog of award-winning bestselling Christian author, Stephen M. Miller.
 
"A rock that traveled with Moses" by Stephen M. Miller
 
MOSES WITH A ROCK TO GO. Moses hits a rock with a stick and water comes out. Some Jewish writers in ancient times – including Paul – read the Bible stories about this and seemed to conclude that the rock followed Moses in some odd way. Painting by James Tissot.
MOSES HAD A PET ROCK, some Bible readers could easily conclude.
Blame Paul.
He said that when Moses led the Exodus Jews through the desert badlands for 40 years, the people didn’t have to worry about water:
“They drank from the spiritual rock that traveled with them, and that rock was Christ” (1 Corinthians 10:4).
So, that’s where Jesus hung out for 40 years of the Old Testament?
Some Jews in Jesus’ century read the story and assumed a rock loaded with water traveled with Moses during the Exodus.
Another first-century document reports the Exodus story this way:
“For 40 years God rained bread from heaven for them, and he brought them quails from the sea, and a well of water following them” (Biblical Antiquities, 10.7).
Jews got the idea from a pair of stories about the Exodus.
Water Rock 1. Camped at a place called Rephidim, at the beginning of their long trip, the Jews complained they were thirsty, big time. “Moses struck the rock…and water gushed out” (Exodus 17:6).
Moses named the place Meribah, Hebrew for “argument.”
Water Rock 2. Later, camped at Kadesh oasis, possibly near modern-day Egypt’s border with Israel, the same thing happened. Thirsty people complained. Moses hit a rock. Water came out. Everyone called the source of water Meribah.
Paul, for some reason, added Jesus to the story. Bible experts say they wonder if Paul did that because Jesus called himself a stone, based on this prophecy:
“The stone that the builders rejected
has now become the cornerstone.
This is the Lord’s doing,
and it is wonderful to see” (Matthew 21:42).
What’s not clear is if Paul actually, truly, honestly believed that Jesus was a water rock that traveled with Moses and the Exodus Jews.
Most scholars don’t seem to put money on that bet. They are betting that Paul simply saw Jesus symbolized in the story – as the source of life, as reliable as the water God provided for his people.
For more about odd sayings of the Bible
New blog subscribers who win books this week
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