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(It is our policy not to divulge either the names or locations of those who write us, unless requested by the writer. Hebrew Roots reserves the right to condense letters to save space. Every effort will be made to retain the essence of the communication. Responses to the letters may be for clarification, or for the general edification of our readership and are not necessarily directed toward the person writing the letter.)
~ ~ ~
Dear Mr. and Mrs. Wheelock,
I am writing to request that I be
placed on your list of recipients, of your wonderful publication,
"Hebrew Roots." Ive only actually read three
issues of Hebrew Roots. But what I read in them was very eye
opening, it cleared up more than a few misconceptions I was
struggling with.
This confusion is very wide spread,
more than I realized, until I had the great fortune to read
Hebrew Roots. I was particularly elated to read in "A View
from Beit Shalom," July/August, 1996, a passage from that
column, where Ill quote you as saying: "One rather
troubling aspect of entering into this venture is to learn how
very hurt so many people are from their past church experiences.
Some are bitter, some are angry, some have taken up with
doctrines that promote hostility towards other groups of
people."
I was ecstatic when I read that because
it described so well my situation as Christianity was concerned
two years ago. I feel we dont have any business in
following secular Christianity anymore. Thats what me and a
few others call contemporary Christianity. Why bother even going
to established churches in quest of salvation? The truth is that
its not going to be found within their walls. Keep up the
good work. Thank you for your time and attention.
Respectfully
Yours,
FE
Shalom Aleichem FE,
Thank you for your thoughtful letter.
What all of us need to understand is that no church organization
can deliver salvation to us. Salvation can only come from a
personal relationship with our Savior, Yeshua HaMashiach, and the
forgiveness of our sins through His shed blood.
Sometimes, when we as individuals begin
to follow more closely the instruction book of God (the Torah),
we find ourselves at odds with the leadership, or fellow members
of the churches we have been attending. At times, the only
recourse is to separate. However; "If it be possible,
as much as depends on you, live peaceably with all men."
(Rom.12:18)
God is working with many different
people, in many different churches, and in many different ways.
When did He first start working with you? Probably when you were
still attending one of those Contemporary Christian
Churches. Chances are, He is also working with many others
in those same congregations, but they may not be as far along in
their understanding as you presently are, so they may seem to you
to be lost in the fluffy world of feel-good religion.
One of the main things that 1 have
learned over the years, is that 1 never, ever, knew as much as I
thought I knew. I look back a few years and say to myself;
"How could I have ever believed that?" I am sure that
in the future there will be things that I hold true and dear to
my heart at this very moment of which I will say the very same
thing again. Then, when we all arrive in the fullness of the
Kingdom of God, we will look back at the apex of our human
understand and say; "We were such babes."
Though attending your old congregations
may not be possible for you at this stage of your life, please
remember this: If and when you do attend, you can be a light that
God uses to reach out to them, to help them see an even better
way of life than the one they are currently following. To do this
requires a spirit of love and not one of condemnation.
May God richly bless you in your
spiritual walk.
May the peace
of God
be with you
always,
DEW
~ ~ ~
Hi Mr. Wheelock,
Thanks for the tapes. They are great. I
am learning a lot.
In your tape "Jacobs Appointed Times," you said
it was in the fall when Jacob left Laban. Gen. 31:19 says Laban
had gone to shear his sheep. I want to ask, when did they shear
their sheep? Was it in the spring? Would they have sheared their
sheep in the fall with winter coming on? It looks like to me they
would have sheared the sheep in the spring time, to get off the
winter coat.
It looks like to me it could be the
week of Unleavened Bread, Laban overtook Jacob in seven days,
Gen. 31:23.
What do you think?
Let me know if you have time.
WG
Shalom Aleichem WG,
I think you are absolutely correct in
your reading of the Genesis story about when Jacob left
Labans land. it is always quite amazing to me to realize
how often we overlook little details that are placed there to
give us dues as to what is going on.
At first your letter left me with a
dilemma. if that was not the time in Jacobs life that
represented Rosh HaShanah, (the Feast of Trumpets) then
what was? interestingly enough, the answer came as I was
preparing one of the tapes offered last time; the one entitled:
Love Song of the Messiah.
In the Song of Songs, the bride does a
dance for her Husband coiled the Dance of Mahanaim. This puzzled
me until I looked up Mahanaim in the concordance and found that
it was often used as a place of safety and security. This is the
very place where Jacob stopped when he first reentered the
promised land. it is also the city to which King David fled when
he had to leave Jerusalem due to the rebellion of Absalom.
"So Jacob went on his way,
and the angels of God met him. When Jacob saw them, he said,
This is Gods camp. And he called the name of
that place Mahanaim." (Gen. 32:1-2)
The word Mahanaim means
"double camp, or two camps." According to Jewish
tradition, at this time the company of angels that had been with
Jacob, while he was in Labans land, left him and a new
group joined him as he entered back into the land of Canaan. I
believe this pictures the great resurrection of the saints that
will take place on Rosh HaShanah, when we will be taken
to a place of safety and security for our wedding to Yeshua
HaMashiach.
Thanks for your input. I especially
appreciate the fact that you gave me this needed information in a
loving way, not condemning my mistake. We pray that others can
learn and benefit from your example. it certainly makes for a
more peaceful Bride.
May the peace
of God
be with you
always,
DEW
~ ~ ~
Dear Mr. & Mrs. Wheelock,
We hope your Newsletter will continue.
Also, that you continue learning -- growing in knowledge and
truth to inform Gods children.
We too, have been slowly learning and
observing Yeshuas lifestyle into our way of worship of Him.
The Holy days also, indeed need to be correct.
Thanks for your hard work, this last
newsletter was the best so far.
Your friends,
J & IP
Shalom Aleichem J & IP,
Thank you for your kind letter.
Certainly it is important that we all continue to grow in
grace and knowledge, but it is even more important to grow
in love. However, along the way we all make mistakes. Sometimes
those mistakes are much better teachers than getting everything
right all the time. A good example is the letter from WG, where
he pointed out an error. You can bet that I will never read that
passage again without that fact coming to my mind. Praise HaShem
(the Name) and thank you for your support.
May the peace
of God
be with you
always,
DEW
~ ~ ~
Dear Dean & Susan,
Thank you so much for sending me Hebrew
Roots with the article about "Oil For Our Lamps."
Its excellent and an answer to me from God. The week before
I asked God to explain this parable to me. The reason I asked is
because about a week before that it came to me to pray that I
would be one of the five wise virgins. I began to pray and
mentioned this to a friend. She told me I was wrong, that we
werent the virgins but Israel (Jews) were. This led me to
cry out to God for an explanation and then your newsletter came
days later for the first time. I knew it was Gods answer to
me.
I am including many Christians who
would so appreciate this newsletter. God bless you and keep up
this great work!
Your sister
in Yeshua,
LB
Shalom Aleichem LB,
It is always comforting to us to hear
that something that appeared in Hebrew Roots has been helpful to
another member of the Body.
At times, people (who do not have the
same understanding of scripture as we might have) say things that
quench our spirit and kill our hope. This is usually not
intentional, but results from the natural desire for people to
want others to see things the same way they see them.
The Apostle Paul said:
"For you are all sons of
God through faith in Christ Jesus. For as many of you as were
baptized into Christ have put on Christ.
"There is neither Jew nor Greek,
there is neither slave nor free, there is neither male nor
female; for you are all one in Christ Jesus. And if you are
Christs, then you are Abrahams seed, and heirs
according to the promise." (Gal. 3:26-29)
I believe with all my heart that
the five virgins represent the entire Bride of Messiah, both Jew
and Gentile. Let no man steal your crown.
Thank you for the many names you sent
us. Since Hebrew Roots does not advertise, the only way
news of our publication spreads is through people like you who
send us names of those whom they believe would both benefit from,
and appreciate receiving, this publication.
We have sent each of them the first and
latest issues, and a Materials Request Form. If they wish to
remain on the mailing list they simply need to contact us.
Otherwise, this present issue will probably be the last one they
will receive.
May the peace
of God
be with you
always,
DEW
~ ~ ~
Dear Dean & Susan,
Thank you very much for the literature
and tapes you have sent us -- we truly appreciate it!!!
Weve often wondered how it was
for Jesus during His life as a small boy growing up into manhood
-- on into the years of His association with His disciples --
everything about Him, His family and the time in
which He lived His life. Never dreamed that one day we would
receive a package in our mail containing literature and tapes on
this subject. Weve enjoyed every bit of the literature we've
read, and your tapes, and are looking forward to receiving
whatever more you may wish to offer.
We pray that our heavenly father will
surround you and your loved ones with His everlasting love and
protection, and bless you with good health always.
With love,
C & AR
Shalom Aleichem C & AR,
Thank you for making our day with your
kind words, but especially with the knowledge that you are taking
a part of your allotted time on this earth to offer up prayers on
our behalf.
May the peace
of God
be with you
always,
DEW
~ ~ ~
~ Baruch HaShem ~
Dear Bro. Dean & Sister Susan,
I have been reading Hebrew Roots and I
am learning in depth re: the Bible. I would like to share with
you some truths I have learned also.
The first one is re: our creator's
name. His name is Yahweh. The Jews believed it was to holy to
pronounce and so they used Adonai. If you notice in the bible
Yahweh talks all the time about his name. My People shall know my
name, my people shall call upon my name and etc.. The son of
Yahwehs name is "Yahshua." He said "I come
in my fathers name." In Hebrew shua is Saviour.
So it is Saviour of Yah.
The Jews use "Yeshua" because
they wont use "Yahshua" because again of the
"Yah" being to holy to pronounce.
I also would like to point out that
Yahweh is not a "god." He is the creator
of Heaven and Earth. He also is not a "Lord." These are
pagan titles. We can call Yahweh our El, or Elohim, our Almighty
and of course our Creator and our Father.
When people use God and Lord to me, I
ask them what is your Gods name or your Lords name?
There are Gods many and Lords many in this world, but only one
creator.
May Yahweh
Bless
you both,
VW
~
Mr. Wheelock,
First let me say that I enjoy and
benefit from your Hebrew Roots publication. I appreciate the time
and effort that goes into it.
But there is one thing that seems
strange to me, you use many Hebrew names and phrases and words,
which is good. A lot of times the Hebrew has a lot more meaning,
especially names, i.e. Yahshua as opposed to Jesus.
But Im curious as to why you use
Yahshua (Yeshua), but you dont use Yahweh or Elohim. Names
are important, names carry a lot of meaning.
Well, thanks for your time, and may
Yahweh bless you and your efforts.
MD
~
Hebrew Roots:
Ive enjoyed quite a few articles
in your magazine, however, something on page 8, column 2,
paragraph I of the Nov./Dec. 1997 issue stood out in a negative
way. I quote the paragraph: "Are there any members of the
Bride of Messiah today who stand guilty of desecrating Gods
name? If so, complete repentance and a change of behavior is
required." While I have no argument that there are many ways
of desecrating the Fathers name, Id also have to say
that you are guilty of doing the same by almost totally leaving
it out of your publication, especially when we all know that the
name was in scripture in each place where we find LORD in capital
letters today. YHVH told of a time in which the prophets caused
the people to forget His name in Jer. 23:27 and other places, and
while I am not trying to advocate which pronunciation is correct,
or even which spelling of the tetragrammaton, I cannot help but
feel that upholding the removal and replacement of the name is
certainly doing that. Moreover, when one really studies out what
it means to take the name in vain, removing and almost never
using it would also render one guilty just as much so as the
indiscriminate use thereof.
HA
~
Dear Dean & Susan,
Thank you for sending me two issues of
"Hebrew Roots" and the list of past issues and tapes. I
want them all.
I found your attitudes open and
refreshing -- a welcome change from those of some others who
continually excoriate those true believers who are not followers
of their own brand of truth.
I am more than a little cautious about
your use of Hebrew names and "roots." Some brethren
have so avidly sought for spiritual nourishment since the ___
debacle that they have mistakenly gone back to Judaism or into
the "Sacred Names" heresy thinking that God is a Jew.
He isnt, and He doesnt want us to be.
Taken from the historical perspective I
think your information is helpful, but please reconsider
your use of Hebrew words and names alone. It will confuse
some, turn others off to your writings, and may reinforce the use
of so-called sacred names by some. Why not: Jesus (Yeshua) etc.?
In that way all bases would be covered.
Thank you for your love of Gods
family and your efforts to bring us all closer to Christ.
AE
~
Shalom Aleichem VW, MD, HA &AE,
Thank you all for taking the time and
making the effort to express your thoughts about "The
Name." I appreciate your generally non-condemning attitude,
although I do take issue with HAs statement that not using
the "Name" of the Creator in print is a form of
desecration. In my humble opinion, it is a form of respect,
because of what He Himself spoke to the children of Israel at
Mount Sinai:
"You shall not take the name
of the LORD your God in vain, for the LORD will not hold him
guiltless who takes His name in vain."
(Ex. 20:7)
Personally, I would rather fail
on the side of to little public usage rather than to much,
thereby making the sacred name of YHVH to be so
common that crude people begin using it in the form of a curse
the way they do with some of the English counterparts.
Of course, as VW points out, the
English words "God" and "Lord" are titles or
descriptions and not actual names. However, the same is true of
the Hebrew words "El" and "Elohim." I find it
difficult to understand why some feel it is all right to use
"El" and "Elohim" but not the English
equivalent, "God." Take a good Hebrew concordance and
study all of the usages of the word "Elohim" you
will find that it is used, in the Pages of the Bible to describe:
"other gods," "the judges," "strange
gods," "molten images," and "men." This
is why it is so important to identify that we worship the
"God of Abraham, Isaac, and Jacob."
Much the same can be said for the word
Lord ("Adonai" in Hebrew). Many people object to this
word, saying it is of pagan origin. However, once again the Bible
uses the Hebrew word "Adonai" to identify both the
"Creator God," and "my master" (meaning a
man)." Of course, for some, the pagan god Baal was their
"adonai" or "lord," but that did not prevent
the use of the word Adonai to represent YHVH in Scripture. Since
HaShem (the Name) is not fussy about the usage of these words in
Hebrew, I do not feel the need to be fussy about the English
equivalents.
Now to the tetragrammaton, the
""
(YHVH) which is translated in our English Bibles as
LORD. with all capital letters. Currently the most
popular pronunciation of this name is "Yahweh."
However, I am totally convinced this is not the correct
pronunciation. This is why I never use that form of the
Name in my own writings, but only when quoting others. The
correct pronunciation of the Name has been hidden for
centuries, and we may never know how to correctly pronounce it
before Messiah returns. Perhaps our Father in heaven got tired of
hearing people use His name in a vain way, and therefore caused
it to be hidden.
We do know that the first
syllable of the Name is probably "Yah."
But should we go around using this name in public? Many Hebrew
names end with the suffix "yahu" (pronounced
yah-hoo). For example, Isaiahs name in Hebrew
is Yehshayahu. in English we use that word (Yahoo)
to define a person who is regarded as "crude or
brutish." I believe this is a blatant form of taking the
LORDs name in vain, for it uses a derivative of Gods
Name to identify people who are the antithesis of God.
I do not wish to be part of
furthering the taking of His Name in vain by printing it in our
publication. Rather I prefer, like the Jews, not to use it at all
in a public way. How I use the Name in the privacy of
my own home, in prayer, or in Scripture reading, is another
matter. That is between HaShem (The Name) and myself.
Is it really necessary for
Believers to actually Pronounce the name of the Creator God in
public? After all, we now have a Father/child relationship with
Him. I never called my physical father Emory, although that was
his name. Nor do my adult children call me Dean or Mr. Wheelock.
I called my father Dad, or Daddy, or
Pa. I believe we have the proper example of how we
should address the Father in the following scripture:
"For you did not receive the
spirit of bondage again to fear, but you received the Spirit of
adoption by whom we cry out, Abba, Father.'"
(Rom. 8:15)
However, this does not answer
the question about what word to use when writing about God in a
publication. We have tried a number of ways; God,
the Creator, our Father, YHVH,
HaShem and the Eternal, and
probably some others I cannot remember right now. Personally, I
like the expression HaShem, for it simply means
the Name. To me it gives a sense of reverence to
Gods Name without making its usage too common.
However, we must also not ignore the other example that is set
for us in the Greek Scriptures. All of the apostles and writers
of the New Testament used the Greek word Theos,
of which our English equivalent is God. As the old
saying goes, "If its good enough for the apostles,
its good enough for me."
As to the correct spelling of the
Hebrew name for Jesus, we could probably also disagree about that
until He returns. We prefer to use the common Messianic Jewish
form, which is Yeshua. VW would like us to
use Yahshua. Another reader, not quoted
here, would like us to use Yahoshua. Still
others want Yehoshua.
I would like to also make a comment
concerning the name Jesus, and the title
Christ. Jesus is the Anglicized name form of the
Greek name for Yeshua, Ieasous. All
names go through transformations between languages. Thus, Miriam
in Hebrew becomes Mary in English and Maria in
Spanish. Christ is the Anglicized form of the Greek
word Christos, which merely means Messiah (Mashiach
in Hebrew).
Thirty years ago I was baptized in the
name of "Jesus Christ." I did not even know that His
Hebrew name was Yeshua, or that His Hebrew title was Mashiach.
Were I to be baptized today I would prefer the Hebrew name and
title be used. However, I am not going to be re-baptized just
because I have now learned what my Saviours name
is in-Hebrew. Jesus Christ is still the most
excellent name in the English language.
AE expressed concern that we use to
many Hebrew words and names. I understand the frustration, I had
the same reaction when I first began to study into the Hebrew
roots of the Faith. However, I found that after becoming more
familiar with the Hebrew, it actually enhanced my ability to
think in a more Hebraic manner. I believe this is necessary if we
desire to more fully understand what Yeshua and the other Jewish
writers of the New Testament were trying to teach the Believing
community. The Hebrew mind is much different than our western
civilization mind set, which is really descended from the
cultures of Greece and Rome, and is a block to our full
understanding of the Scriptures. Even the Greek New Testament is
full of Hebrew idioms. if we do not recognize them, we are bound
to lose a certain amount of the message they were meant to
convey.
As to the statement that God is not a
Jew, of course He is not. He is the Creator of the Jews, just as
He is of all the races. However, Yeshua certainly came
to this earth as a properly observant Jew. Not exactly the way
some of the Pharisees would like to have seen Him, but the way He
was supposed to be according to Torah. Will He be a Jew
when He returns???
In my opinion, to downplay Yeshuas
Jewishness is to miss the point of much of His teaching.
Certainly one can be saved without embracing
Jewish roots. However, I desire to understand as much
about my Husband as possible so that I can prepare myself as best
I can for our wedding.
I also would not characterize the Sacred Names groups
as falling into heresy. They do present valid reasons for their
belief that one should hold the name of YHVH in awe and use it
with reverence. What I do object to is when some of them tell me
that I must believe as they believe, and that I must pronounce
the Name as they pronounce it in order to be saved.
But then, that same type of attitude is a problem that is extant
in the practice of many Believers, not just Sacred Name folk. I
did not get the impression that the writers of the letters quoted
here held that rigid of a position.
We all need to be gentle with
one another and look for those areas where we agree, not
emphasizing those areas where we disagree. Only then can we begin
communicating with one another in a manner that will allow us to
learn why we disagree on certain points of doctrine. That
exercise in itself can be a very important step in our own
spiritual development.
Finally, it is certainly not
the purpose of Hebrew Roots to bring people into
Rabbinic Judaism. On the other hand, we have seen years of effort
on the part of many teachers to keep us away from things
Jewish so that we not be tainted. Both
approaches are equally wrong. Let us not forget that Orthodox,
Rabbinic Jews can, and many have, become Believers in Yeshua
as their Messiah. For this we say, Baruch HaShem
(Blessed be the Name).
May
the peace of YHVH
be
with all of you always,
DEW