555 Difficult Bible Questions Answered by Adolphus Theodore Sieker (9780217146708)
Adolphus Theodore Sieker Release Date: 10 December 0140 Format: Paperback Pages: 196 Publisher: General Books ISBN: 9780217146708 ISBN-10: 0217146708
Purchase of this book includes free trial access to www.million-books.com where you can read more than a million books for free. This is an OCR edition with typos. Excerpt from book: more far-reaching. He realized there his danger and his need of a blessing. He no longer bargained with God, he saw that his own strength was futile, he was a humble suppliant for God's favor. From that night on he was a different man, by no means perfect, but far better than before. 72. Did Jephthah Really Offer Up His Daughter As a Sacrifice? Both the Authorized and Revised Versions leave the question in doubt, and commentators have been divided in opinion as to whether she was sacrified or doomed to live the life of a recluse. Human sacrifices are an abomination unto the Lord. A new reading or translation which several notable scholars have urged as the correct one is: "It shall surely be the Lord's or I will offer up to him a burnt offering." Hebrew scholars declare this to be the more accurate rendering. (See Judges n 130, 31, 39.) It changes the aspect of the case and makes Jephthah to say practically that if the first living thing that came forth from his house to meet him was one that would be unacceptable, then a burnt offering of an acceptable character would be substituted. This would lead to the conclusion that the daughter was not sacrificed, but condemned to a Mfe of perpetual virginity and a burnt offering offered p in her stead. Several eminent writers, including Joseph Kinchi, Ben Gerson and Bechai (Jewish authorities) and a number of Christian authors, held that instead of being sacrificed she was shut up in a house specially prepared by her father and visited there by the daughters of Israel four days in a year as long as she lived. In support of this theory it is pointedout that the Hebrew term employed to express Jeph- thah's vow is the word neder, which means a "consecration" and not che-rem, which means "destruction." 73. Why Do the Jews Face the Ea...