Yes, I enjoyed your letter, MorningStar. You certainly have an interesting background, which I suppose has given you a much broader perspective on topics such as this. Thanks again!
Meltzerboy - I hope you don’t mind if I brought this thread up, again. I’m sorry if I didn’t reply back but there’s something that I read which peaked my interest, tremendously - and one that I really never thought about nor did I know that there would be some twist to it. I’m coming to you with the question because I know you like to read about Jewish law, as much as I do - there is always something “new” around the bend, isn’t there?
Jonbhorton brought the subject up in his post - although it doesn’t have anything to do (or maybe it does) with the initial question, the topic nevertheless is a very good question, I hope this can be discussed, perhaps on a new thread to bring some understanding.
I have to write this comment to Jonbhorton, the question you asked was so very well asked -
Originally Posted by jonbhorton
The plain text says: don’t boil a kid in its mother’s milk. Pretty straightforward. I can see the moral thought behind it. It screams imitation, or semblance to, the pagan sacrificial cultures surrounding the people of Israel.
But then in Genesis 18, Abraham serves God meat and dairy. Two kinds of dairy were served actually. Milk and butter, along with a calf:
- What!?! He serves GOD meat and dairy?! How on earth is this reconciled?
When reading about the Patriarchs out of the bible (O.T) Adam, Enoch, Noah, and Abraham, and I’ve asked this question once before, I noticed while re-reading Genesis 18 it states, “4 Let a little water be brought, and then you may all wash your feet and rest under this tree.” and as I remember the passage, Abraham had “hurried” to meet them and bowed low to the ground. However, the emphasizes is on this part of scripture, “3 He said,
“If I have found favor in your eyes, my lord” - there another verse that (might) connect - Numbers 6:26 “
God will show you favor and give you peace”, favor or goodwill.
Synonyms: kindness, kindliness, love, Chesed, The Hebrew noun khesed or chesed (חסד) is the Hebrew word for “kindness.” It is also commonly translated as “loving-kindness,” or “love”. The only other verse that I found in the Old Testament, but it was Noah
who had found favor in the eyes of the LORD - was this a grace or “found favor” free from the law?
I really don’t want to leave some of the N.T passages out of this discussion but for the sake of understanding of that law in the Hebrew bible (the Tanakh) I asking to center around Abraham - and kosher laws. Where the laws on Kosher given at that time? and speaking about the Noahide code at that time?
When we read Genesis (and after the flood) God gives Noah, seven commandments - on what day was the laws (on Sinai) given? and where in the Noahide laws did the codification of meat and dairy product expanded on the separation between meat from dairy - in Abraham day? Also, what does Shavout mean in Hebrew? When Abraham said to God “Have I found favor” - was he describing the fact that he had walked blamelessly in the law or in some other way to have found favor - like Enoch and Noah? Why does there seem to be steps - before God appears to Abraham? Did the law exist before the giving of the Torah? Could certain laws carry through to Moses - and the finalization of the law, be divinely and blessed by God at Sinai, on Shavout?
Let me put it another way, obviously there was a law before Sinai - the Noahide commandments so was legal system present at the beginning and did it take form? The Noahide laws consist of seven commandments; six prohibitions relating to idolatry, blasphemy, sexual offenses, consuming flesh cut from the limb of a living animal; bloodshed and theft. In the garden, Adam was “Given” a commandment on what “Not” to eat - and I quote "Bereishit - Genesis - Chapter 2, 16. And the Lord God commanded man, saying, “Of every tree of the garden you may freely eat. 7. But of the Tree of Knowledge of good and evil you shall not eat of it, for on the day that you eat thereof, you shall surely die.”
So there was some prohibition on “what” Adam could and could not eat - so the separating actually begins in the garden, 29. And God said, “Behold, I have given you every seed bearing herb, which is upon the surface of the entire earth, and every tree that has seed bearing fruit; it will be yours for food. 30. And to all the beasts of the earth and to all the fowl of the heavens, and to everything that moves upon the earth, in which there is a living spirit, every green herb to eat,” and it was so."