Transcript
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It feels like every day empires are
shaking and you know regimes that once
like just seemed immovable like solid
features of our world are feeling
fragile. You know I take you heard about
Venezuela. You know like many of you
I've been I've been hearing some crazy
stories about how the way that may have
all played out. Sonic booms and special
sonic sound weapons. I don't know if you
guys have heard that. I don't know the
details and it doesn't really matter,
you know, but what what happened there
is just another tectonic shift in the
global earthquake that seems that we
seem to be feeling the tremors of right
now. Iran, like Jeremy said, it's
tearing itself apart from within or it's
reviving itself from within. Um, you
know, new alignments and and and allies
are forming. And I'll be honest with
you, I don't pretend to know exactly why
each of these things is happening the
way it is. I don't know if anybody does.
I have my thoughts. I have my instincts,
but I don't know. But there's one thing
I believe with all my heart that through
all of this, with all of this, Hashem is
orchestrating redemption. And redemption
is not just something that happens to
the world, right? It's something that
happens within people, within each and
every one of us. Redemption is about
waking up and remembering who we are.
About learning to see reality, you know,
as Makarbach used to say, through
Messiah eyes, right? Through Messiah
eyes. It's it's about changing the way
we think. So anyways, very little shapes
the way we think more than the words we
use. The Torah teaches that reality
itself is shaped through speech, right?
And identity is anchored in names,
right?
chapter one, I think it's verse three,
and when the Torah says, "And God said,
let there be light and there was light,"
right? And when God says, "Let there be
the firmament," it it is uh God says his
speech, it is revealing that speech is
not a description of reality. It's a
tool of creation, right? The world is
spoken into being in in uh in Proverbs
chapter 18, death and life are in the
power of the tongue. This is not like
just metaphoric. There's really a
literal element to this. Words train the
mind. They set the boundaries of thought
and they determine what a person
believes is possible, what is
permissible, what is inevitable, right?
A person does not just, you know, think
and then speak. The act of speaking
locks thought into reality. That's why
the left is always trying to force terms
and verbs and words and pronouns. They
understand that, you know, that's why
the Torah repeatedly commands, "This
book of the Torah shall not depart from
your mouth." Because what what stays in
the mouth eventually governs the heart.
And what governs the heart determines
action. And that brings me to what I
really want to focus on here in in our
in our time together. I want to talk
about the power of words and the weight
they carry and how words shape reality
itself. Um, specifically names, the
names we accept or the names we
surrender because this week's Torah
portion and not only the Torah portion,
but the entire book, right, is called
Schmut names. And that alone has been
the discussion at Shabbat tables around
the world for generations because the
Torah could have named the book after
miracles or plagues or freedom, right?
or or redemption. But it doesn't. It
opens with names. These are the names of
the children of Israel who came from
Egypt is which is striking because we
already know these names from Genesis,
right? Nothing here is new. And yet,
Hashem repeats them anyways. As if to
tell us from the very first breath of
exile, Israel is a people of names, of
memory, of lineage, right? We're a
people of we're a people of identity.
And that right there is part of the
secret of Jewish eternity. The sages
teach us that no matter how low Israel
sank in Egypt, we are redeemed because
we did not change our names, our
language, or our dress because but but
but specifically names because names
tell us who we are. And just as
importantly, they tell us who we are
not. And when you read the Exodus story
carefully, something ironic emerges.
Pharaoh, the most powerful man in the
world, the ruler of empires, economies,
armies, the dude in the world, never
receives a name. Jeremy, ever think of
that? Not once. And that's not an
accident. Because in Tanakh, names are
never just labels. They express identity
and continuity. To be named is to be
bound into a story that doesn't end with
you. And that story pretty much ended
with him. Right? Namelessness
is eraser. It is the illusion. The power
alone grants eternity. And Pharaoh isn't
remembered as an ashama, right? He's not
remembered as a soul because he never
lived as one. He represents a system. He
represents a force. Survival of the
fittest. He represents raw power and
arrogance and identity is rooted in
power that the if you if you root
identity in power it's alone it doesn't
survive it doesn't survive time my name
is Ari and I live here on the edge of
the Judeian frontier and just as the
prophets the final prophecy is
manifesting as the righteous of the
nations are coming together with humble
hearts here in the land of Israel
fellowship and now I'm inviting you to
join us along with hundreds of Jewish
and Christian families from all around
the world to experience the beauty and
the holiness and the magnificence of our
fellowship. So click below so you can
taste the beauty and the holiness that
is happening on this mountain. Like I
said, what do I mean by power? The most
powerful survives survival of the
fittest. In the end, it collapses and
replaces itself and it disappears. But
identity rooted in covenant, in a breit,
identity anchored in names and memory
and divine purpose, that is what
endures. And that is why Israel is named
and that's why Pharaoh is not. Because
think about it, Pharaoh doesn't target
adult men. He targets babies. Because
killing adults stops resistance, but
killing infants severs continuity.
Right? This isn't military strategy.
This is eraser of a nation. Eraser
through casting Israelite babies into
the Nile. Right? The Egypt's gods.
They're literally offering up the
children of the Israelites to their god.
No burial, no name, no memory. Right?
But Pharaoh, Pharaoh is not trying to
defeat Israel. He's trying to make sure
they were never here. Which brings us to
today because the war against Israel has
never fundamentally changed. The
battlefield is still names. The weapon
is still language. And the goal is still
eraser. And that is why I'm so careful,
and some might even say stubborn about
words. Please raise your hand at least
in your heart if you've been out to our
farm and breathed in the air of the
wilderness of Ze
if you've if ah good for you Jeremy
you've been here raise your hand if
you've been here and walked walked the
mountains where David composed the
psalms while hiding from King Saul see a
lot of hands going up raise your hands
if you've been out here the mountains of
Judea I really hope the day comes when
every single hand goes up because what
happens here is hard to explain it's not
an idea and it's not a teaching it's an
experience experience. And for those of
you who have been out here, at least if
you've been out here one of my personal
guests, well, you you may know something
about me. What am I even talking about?
If you remember this fellowship, you
know this about me, which is that I'm
really a stickler about words like
almost comically, right? People arrive
at the farm and they're warm and they're
friendly and they're excited and they're
inspired and they want to connect and
they say to me, "So, where are you
from?" And I answer very simply, "Jude."
And most often they pause and they look
confused and I mean they hear my
English. So I clarify, I was born in
Texas, but I'm not from Texas. I'm a
Judeian because I'm from Judea. I was
only born in Texas because of the
destruction of the temple and the exile
of the Jewish people around the world.
And I say it that fast and I usually say
it with a smile, but the truth is it's
not a joke because where are you from is
not small talk. It's a question of
identity. And identity lives in
language. It becomes even clearer with
names. If someone introduces himself as
Stephen, Jeremy, you've seen this a
thousand times, especially if they're a
Jew, I'll almost I'll ask instinctively,
"What's your Hebrew name?" And they'll
say something like Yoseph Mosha
or whatever. And I'll respond
authentically, not theatrically. Your
name is Yoseph Mosheim
and you go by Stephen. And then I ask
very simply, do you mind if I just call
you Yseph Mosha? And almost every time
they say, "No, for sure you could call
me that. That's great." I say, "You
know, names in Judea, you get you use
your Judea name." And they're not
offended at all. At the beginning, it
sort of takes getting used to. But as
our time together goes on, I'm telling
you, I can tell almost always they begin
to love it because true names, real
names, awaken something that has gone
dormant. Something on a very deep level,
the soul recognizes its true name. They
reconnect a person to a story that
didn't begin with them and won't end
with them. A Hebrew name is not
nostalgia, right? It's a claim. This
isn't I'm not trying to be difficult and
it's not about being ideological even.
It's about
refusing Pharaoh's project. That's why I
don't say West Bank. That term was was
invented to sever Judea and Samaria from
Jewish memory. I don't say Palestine or
Palestinians. And that is a Roman name
imposed to erase Israel from its land.
And it's a fictitious nation that never
existed and was created in order to
disconnect our people from our heritage.
I don't say I'm from Judea as if it were
a stop along the way. I was born I was
born in Texas. But again, I'm Jude. I'm
from from Judea. I'm from Judah the same
way that Morai Morai the Jew, we always
say this was from the tribe of Benjamin.
So why was he called Mordeai?
Morai the Judeian because he was exiled
from Judea. Because words are not
neutral. They carry history. They carry
claims. And they either carry truth or
they carry Pharaoh's story. And every
generation is asked the same question
Egypt asked. Will you remember your name
or will you let someone else rename you?
Redemption does not begin with miracles.
It begins with memory. Right? Elishm is
these are the names. As long as we know
our names, as long as we speak them,
protect them, and refuse to surrender
them, Pharaoh has already lost. Because
a people who remember who they are,
well, we can't be erased.