Thursday, October 29, 2020

BORDERS OF PREJUDICE

Yehovah is gracious and full of compassion, slow to anger and great in mercy. Yehovah is good to all, and His tender mercies are over all His works” (Psalm 145:8-9).

If asked if you are a merciful person, you would probably answer, “I think I am merciful. To the best of my ability, I sympathize with those who suffer. I try to help others and when people hurt me, I forgive them and don’t hold a grudge.”

All true Christians have a good measure of mercy for the lost and hurting, certainly, and that’s something to be thankful for. But the sad truth is, there are biases in our hearts running like deep rivers, and over the years they have carved out borders of prejudice.

From what Scripture says, we know that our Savior would never turn down the desperate cry of a prostitute, a homosexual, a drug addict or an alcoholic who has hit rock bottom. The Messiah’s mercies are unlimited: there is no end to them. Therefore, as his called-out Assembly; The Messiah’s representative body on the earth; we cannot cut off anyone who cries out for mercy and deliverance.

All over the world, God’s people are experiencing suffering, afflictions and torture more than ever in their lifetime. And there is a divine, eternal purpose in the intensity of these spiritual and physical battles now being endured in the true body of the Messiah Jesus. Like his God and Father Yehovah he shows tender mercy towards all people.

Jesus never established vengeful, hate-filled armies; he used no carnal weapons. Instead, he pulled down strongholds by his mighty lovingkindness. Our lord has but one battle plan: tender, merciful love. Indeed, love drives all his works on earth. Jesus is the full expression of God’s love: “Blessed be the God and Father of our Lord Jesus the Messiah, the Father of mercies and God of all comfort” (2 Corinthians 1:3).

The darker the days become, the more the world is going to need consolation, hope and love. People will need to see that others have been in the battle of their lives and were brought through. We need to be able to say, “I have proven the Messiah I serve to be merciful and kind. He has loved me through everything, and his love and mercy can be yours, as well.”

No matter how hopeless things seem, the lord Jesus has tender mercies for you, to bring you through.

Written by David Wilkerson and edited by Bruce Lyon  

Tuesday, October 27, 2020

YEHOVAH’S PROPOSAL TO ISRAEL

Exodus: 19:3-6: And Moses went up unto God, and Yehovah called unto him out of the mountain, saying, thus you shall say to the house of Jacob, and tell the children of Israel; you have seen what I did unto the Egyptians, and [how] I bare you on eagles’ wings, and brought you unto Myself. Now therefore, if you will obey My voice indeed, and keep My covenant then:

You shall be a peculiar treasure unto Me above all People: for all the earth [is] Mine: And you shall be unto me a kingdom of priests, and a holy nation.

The word for “possession” is a very special Hebrew word, “segullah”. It refers to a king’s most highly prized and treasured possession. Israel was being offered the opportunity to be Yehovah’s crown jewel. The final clause calls attention to the fact that although every nation and people belongs to Yehovah, His intention was to set Israel aside as a special people, uniquely above any other. 

A holy nation of Priests 

Notice Exodus 19:6: … “you shall be to me a kingdom of priests and a holy nation,” which elaborates the specific nature of the proposal He was making to Israel. So we see that joined with Israel’s calling to be Yehovah’s treasured possession was to be a kingdom of priests. As priests they were to SERVE as Yehovah’s mediator’s, representatives, and ambassador’s to the rest of the world. The call was both corporate and individual.

The invitation to become a kingdom was to fulfill the promised made to Abraham and Judah. Yehovah had promised that His seed – Jesus would process the promised land. In order to possess the land he would have to rule over it. Thus, Abrahams “seed” (Jesus) would by necessity be a king. [Galatians 3:16: Now to Abraham and his “seed” were the promises made. He doesn’t say, and to seeds, as of many; but as of one, and to your “seed”, which is the Messiah] All kings of course, need a kingdom. Further, Yehovah clearly promised Judah that a king would come from his line to rule over all of Israel [Genesis 49:8-10]. Thus, if Israel accepted Yehovah’s proposal given at Mount Sinai, Yehovah’s promised kingdom program would be initiated. Yehovah’s plan to fix everything, to restore the Garden of Eden, to heal the cosmos, was no longer a mere concept. At Sinai, Yehovah’s promise to undo the damage done in the Garden when Adam rebelled against Him, began to take form. 

YEHOVAH SO LOVED THE WORLD

THAT HE CHOSE ISRAEL 

Yehovah invited Israel to become a special kingdom, distinct from all the nations of the world. Does that mean that Gentiles are less valuable in the eyes of Yehovah that Israel? Absolutely not! As the apostle Peter says: “I now realize how true it is that God does not show favoritism but accepts from every nation the one who fears Him and does what is right” (Acts 34-35). The reason Yehovah chose Israel was to have them serve as “a kingdom of priests and be a holy nation” (Exodus 19:6). A priest acts as a mediator between God and man. Israel was being called to function as a people uniquely devoted to Yehovah, who would introduce Him to nations of the world.

Note: They were not to be a people unto themselves, enjoying their special relationship to Yehovah and paying no attention to the nations of the world. Rather, they were to represent Yehovah to the nations of the world and attempt to bring them to Him.

This calling was a clear reiteration of what Yehovah stated previously to Abraham, “I will make of you a great nation… and in you all the families of the earth will be blessed” [Genesis 12:2-3]. Yehovah’s purpose from the very beginning was to bless, “every tribe and tongue and people and nation” [Revelation 5:9]. The reason Yehovah called Israel and made them a special nation is because He loves every nation!

Yehovah so loved the world that He chose Israel. They were called to SERVE as a priestly nation, as Yehovah’s special ambassador’s and representatives. When you read the New Testament you will notice that this call to be a “kingdom of priests,” is a phrase used by the apostle John to refer to all believers, both Jew and Gentile. In the book of Revelation, we are told that Jesus, “has made us to be a kingdom, priests to his God and Father.

Note: Peter 2:5: You also, as lively stones, are built up a spiritual house, a holy priesthood, to offer up spiritual sacrifices, acceptable to God through Jesus the Messiah.

Verse 9: … you are a chosen generation, a royal priesthood, an holy nation, a peculiar people; that you should show forth the praises of Him – Yehovah, who has called you out of darkness into His marvelous light:

Yehovah first called Israel to be a unique people who would function in a priestly role for Him. Today, this calling remains for all who have been grafted into the true “Israel of God” [Romans 11:11-20; Galatians 6:15-16] If you are a disciple of Jesus the Messiah, then, like Israel, you have been called as Yehovah’s representative, His witness, and His ambassador’s of blessing to the world.

YOUR POSITION IN THE MESSIAH

In John 14, Jesus tells us it is time for us to know our heavenly position in him. He explained to the disciples, “Because I live, you will live also. At that day you will know that I am in my Father; and you are in me, and I in you” (John 14:29-20). This verse is one of my favorites! We are now living in “that day” Jesus speaks of. In short, we are to understand our heavenly position in our Messiah.

Most of us do know our position in the Messiah; that we are seated with him in the heavenly places; but only metaphorically. We don’t know it in experience. What do I mean by this expression, “our position in our Messiah”?

Very simply: Position is “where one is placed, where one is.” Yehovah our God and Father has placed us where we are, which is in the Messiah. In turn, the Messiah is in and with the Father, seated at His right hand. Therefore, if we are in the Messiah, we are actually seated with Jesus in the throne room, where he is. That means we are sitting in the presence of Yehovah, the Almighty God. This is what Paul refers to when he says we’re made to “sit together in the heavenly places in the Messiah Jesus” (Ephesians 2:6).

The moment you place your trust in Yehovah's anointed one, the Messiah, and follow up in obedience, and are baptised, and die to self, you’re taken into him by faith. You become a new creation in him, as a part of the New Humanity that he - Jesus is the beginning of, and the Federal head. Yehovah acknowledges you in His son, and as one of His sons seats you with His son in the heavenlies. This is not merely some theological point, but a factual position.

So now, as you surrender your will to Yehovah, you are able to claim all the spiritual blessings that come with the position He has placed you. Of course, being “in the Messiah” doesn’t mean you leave this earth. You can’t manufacture some emotion or feeling that takes you up into the heavenlies. No, heaven has come down to you, through the power of the Spirit of God. The Messiah the son, and Yehovah the Father come to indwell you and made their abode there: “If anyone loves me, he will keep my word; and my Father will love him, and WE will come to him and make our home with him” (John 14:23).

Note: Jesus says, if you love him you will keep his word and if you do that then his Father - Yehovah will love you, and both he and Yehovah will come to you, and indwell you through the spirit of Yehovah.

John 14:10-11: Do you not believe that I am in the Father, and the Father in me? the words that I speak unto you I speak not of myself: but the Father that dwells in me, he does the works. Believe me that I am in the Father, and the Father is in me...

John 3:33-34: The one who has received his - Jesus testimony has set his seal to this, that God is true. For he whom God sent continues to speak the words of God, for He continues to give to him the spirit without measure.

Leave your sins and worldly pursuits behind and “lay aside every fleshly weight that so easily besets you.” Go inside and take your position in the Messiah. Yehovah, our God and Father has called you to enter into the joy of your deliverance and acceptance. So, when you wake up tomorrow, shout, “Hallelujah - Praise Yehovah! for I’m accepted by Him and my heart abounds with thanksgiving and joy.”

Sunday, October 25, 2020

WHAT "FULFILL THE LAW" MEANT IN ITS JEWISH CONTEXT

What did Jesus mean when he said that he “came not to abolish the Law but to fulfill it”? (Matthew 5:17)

The key is that the phrase “fulfill the Law” is a rabbinic idiom. It is found several other places in the New Testament and in Jewish sayings too. Hearing it in context will shed light on its true meaning.

To fulfil the Torah

The translation of “to fulfill” is lekayem in Hebrew (le-KAI-yem), which means to uphold or establish, as well as to fulfill, complete or accomplish. David Bivin has pointed out that the phrase “fulfill the Law” is often used as an idiom to mean to properly interpret the Torah so that people can obey it as God really intends.

The word “abolish” was likely either levatel, to nullify, or (la’akor), to uproot, which meant to undermine the Torah by misinterpreting it. For example, the law against adultery could be interpreted as only about cheating on one’s spouse, but not about pornography. When Jesus declared that lust also was a violation of the commandment, he was clarifying the true intent of that law, so in rabbinic parlance he was “fulfilling the Law.”

Fulfilling the Law as Obedience

The phrase “fulfill the Law” has another sense, which is to carry out a law – to actually do what it says. In Jewish sayings from near Jesus’ time, we see many examples of this second usage as well:

These two meanings of “fulfill” shed light on Jesus’ words on in Matthew 5:19:

…Anyone who breaks one of the least of these commandments and teaches others to do the same will be called least in the kingdom of heaven, but whoever practices and teaches these commands will be called great in the kingdom of heaven.

Here the two actions of “practicing” and “teaching others to do the same” are an exact parallel to the two idiomatic senses of “fulfill.” In contrast, the words “break” and “teach others to break” are the idiomatic senses of “abolish.”With this in mind, you can see that Matthew 5:19 parallels and expands on Jesus’ words about fulfilling and abolishing the Torah in Matthew 5:17.

By understanding this idiom we see that Jesus was emphatically stating that his intention was to explain God’s Word and live it out perfectly, not to undermine or destroy it.

Why was Jesus emphasizing this point? Most likely because the Jewish religious leaders had accused him of undermining the Torah in his preaching. Jesus was responding that he was not misinterpreting God’s law, but bringing it to its best understanding.

Furthermore, if any of his disciples twisted or misinterpreted its least command, they would be considered “least” in his kingdom. Jesus’s entire ministry as the Messiah was devoted to getting to the heart of God’s Torah through what he said and how he lived.

Notice that on at least one occasion, Jesus leveled this same charge against the Pharisees. He accused them of nullifying the law to honor one’s mother and father by saying that possessions declared corban (dedicated to God) could not be released to support one’s elderly parents (Mark 7:11–12).

Certainly Jesus fulfilled the law by obeying it perfectly. But as the Messiah, he also “fulfilled” it by clarifying its meaning and enlightening people about how God truly wanted them to live.

What Paul says about fulfilling the Law

In the past, the idea that “the Messiah brought the Law to an end by fulfilling it” has been the traditional rationale of why Christians are not obligated to keep the laws of the Old Testament.

We overlook the fact that in Acts 15, the early church declared that Gentiles were not obligated to convert to Judaism by being circumcised and taking on the covenant of Torah that was given to Israel.

Instead they were told that they must simply observe the three most basic laws against idolatry, sexual immorality and murder, the minimal observance required of Gentile God-fearers.1

According to Acts, the reason Christians have not been required to observe the Torah was not because it has ended, but because we are Gentiles (at least most of us).

Paul, of course, was zealous in saying that Gentiles were not required to observe the Torah when some insisted they become circumcised and take on other observances. He himself still observed the Torah, and proved it to James when asked to do so in Acts 21:24-26. Yet he still maintained that Gentiles were saved apart from observing it.

Paul supported this idea by pointing out that the Gentiles were being filled with the Holy Spirit when they first believed in the Messiah, not after they had become Torah observant (Galatians 3:2-5).

He also pointed out that Abraham did not observe the laws of the Torah that were given 400 years later, but was justified because of his faith. (Galatians 3:6-9)2 He concluded that all who believe are “sons of Abraham” even though this very term was usually reserved for circumcised Jews.

Paul’s use of “Fulfill the Law”

An important part of this discussion is that Christians widely misunderstand the word “Torah,” which we translate as “law.” We associate it with burdensome regulations and legal courts. In the Jewish mind, the main sense of “Torah” is teaching, guidance and instruction, rather than legal regulation. Notice; a torah of hesed, “a teaching of kindness” is on the tongue of the Proverbs 31, woman (Proverbs 31:26).Why would torah be translated as law? Because when God instructs his people how to live, he does it with great authority. His torah demands obedience, so the word takes on the sense of “law.” But in Jewish parlance, torah has a very positive sense, that our loving Creator would teach us how to live. It was a joy and privilege to teach others how to live life by God’s instructions. This was the goal of every rabbi, including the Messiah Jesus.

The question then becomes, if the Torah is God’s loving instructions for how to live, why would Gentiles be excluded from its wonderful truths?Surprisingly, in both Romans and Galatians, after Paul has spent a lot of time arguing against their need to observe the Torah, he actually answers this question by explaining how they can “fulfill the Law.” He says:

Let no debt remain outstanding, except the continuing debt to love one another, for he who loves his fellow man has fulfilled the law. The commandments, “Do not commit adultery,” “Do not murder,” “Do not steal,” “Do not covet,” and whatever other commandment there may be, are summed up in this one rule: “Love your neighbor as yourself.” Love does no harm to its neighbor. Therefore love is the fulfillment of the law. (Romans 13:8-10)

For the whole law is fulfilled in one word, “You shall love your neighbor as yourself.” (Galatians 5:14)

If Paul is using first idiomatic sense of “fulfill the Torah”, he is saying that love is the supreme interpretation of the Torah; the ultimate summation of everything that God has taught in the Scriptures.

Paul was reiterating Jesus’ key teaching about loving God and neighbor that says “All the Law and the Prophets hang on these two commandments” (Matthew 22:40). The two laws about love are not just more important than the rest, they are actually the grand summation of it all.

About a century later, Rabbi Akiva put it this way: “Love your neighbor as yourself; this is the very essence (klal gadol) of the Torah.” Love is the overriding principle that shapes how all laws should be obeyed.

Love as fulfilling the Torah

Paul also seems to be using the second idiomatic sense of “fulfill the Torah” (as obedience; to say that loving your neighbor is actually the living out of the Torah. When we love our neighbor, it is as if we have done everything God has asked of us. A Jewish saying from around that time has a similar style:

If one is honest in his business dealings and people esteem him, it is accounted to him as though he had fulfilled the whole Torah.

The point of the saying above is that a person who is honest and praiseworthy in all his dealings with others has truly hit God’s goal for how he should live. He didn’t cancel the Law, he did it to the utmost!

Similarly, Paul is saying that when we love our neighbor, we have truly achieved the goal of all the commandments. So instead of saying that the Gentiles are without the law altogether, he says that they are doing everything it requires when they obey the “Law of the Messiah,” which is to love one another. (Mark 12:28-34)

For him, the command to love is the great equalizer between the Jew who observes the Torah, and Gentile who does not, but who both believe in the Messiah.

Paul says: “For in the Messiah Jesus neither circumcision nor uncircumcision has any value. The only thing that counts is faith expressing itself through love.” (Galatians 5:6)

Is the Messiah the end of the Law?

Paul tells us in Romans 10:4 that the “telos” of the law is the Messiah, which has been translated “the Messiah is the end of the law”. Much debate has occurred over this line. However, few have noticed the surprising way that "telos" is used elsewhere in the New Testament.

Believe it or not, we find two other places where the verb form of "teleos" (to end, complete) is used together with "nomos"(law) in the sense of in the sense of keeping or fulfilling (obeying) it!

Then he who is physically uncircumcised but keeps (teleo) the law will condemn you who have the written code and circumcision but break the law. (Romans 2:27)

If you really fulfill (teleo) the royal law according to the Scripture, “You shall love your neighbor as yourself,” you are doing well. (James 2:8)

Certainly in these two passages, the sense of teleo is not “terminate, bring to an end.”

Let’s also examine the other verb that is used in a similar context, pleroo (“to fulfill,” in the sense of filling up). This is what is used in Matthew 5:17, “Do not think that I have come to abolish the Law or the Prophets; I have not come to abolish them but to fulfill (pleroo) them.”

Note how the verb pleroo is used in these other passages:

Love does no wrong to a neighbor; therefore love is the fulfilling (pleroo) of the law. (Romans 13:10)

For the whole law is fulfilled (pleroo) in one word: “You shall love your neighbor as yourself.” (Galatians 5:14)

Like teleo, the sense of pleroo here is that of upholding the Torah and living it out, rather than seeking its termination.

The Messiah is the Goal of the Torah

So, how should we read Romans 10:4? In light of the rest of Paul’s writing, I think it’s wise to take a two-handed approach. Scholars point out that while "telos" can mean “end,” it can also mean “goal” or “culmination.” They suggest that Paul’s wording in Romans 10:4 is deliberately vague, conveying two ideas at once. The Messiah  is both the goal and the end of the Law, they conclude. The Messiah is the climactic goal of the Torah, the living embodiment of the holiness and compassion toward which God was aiming. Jesus is the “word made flesh.” He is the only one who has ever perfectly lived out the Torah, thus becoming the only perfect man who has ever lived.

If the Torah is God’s teaching for how to live as his people, in what sense could it end? It doesn’t. But, as Christians, we believe that Jesus took upon himself the punishment we deserve for our inability to keep God’s commands. As such, he brought the law to the end of its ability to separate us from God because of our sin. For that we rejoice!

Second, God’s policy for centuries had been to separate Israel from the influence of its pagan neighbors. He did this so that he could train his people properly, like a parent teaching a child (Galatians 3:24). In the Messiah, God gave a new command that went in the opposite direction. Instead of maintaining their distance, Jesus’ followers were to go into the world and make disciples of all nations (Matthew 28:19).

The instant Peter visited the first Gentile, the policy of separation collided with the new policy of outreach. According to Jewish law, Peter could not accept Cornelius’s hospitality because Gentiles were “unclean.” But God had given him a vision in which unclean animals were declared “clean.” (Acts 10:9-16)

With the guidance of the Spirit, the church ruled in Acts 15 that Gentile believers did not need to enter into the covenant that was given on Mount Sinai. The “dividing wall of hostility” that the Torah put up to keep the Gentiles away was brought to an end (Ephesians 2:14).

What about God’s Covenant with Israel?

The Torah also contains God’s covenant with Israel. Did Jesus bring this covenant to an end? Absolutely not, Paul exclaims! Just look at Romans 11:

I ask, then, has God rejected his people? By no means! …As regards the gospel, they are enemies for your sake. But as regards election, they are beloved for the sake of their forefathers. For the gifts and the calling of God are irrevocable. Romans 11:1, 28-29

Paul mourns deeply for his Jewish brothers who have been alienated from God’s promises, and he longs for them to believe in their Messiah. He pictures Israel, the family of Abraham, as an olive tree that Gentiles have been grafted into. Some of Israel’s branches have been cut off, but he’s is optimistic that they can be grafted back in again. In no way does Paul think of God’s covenant with Israel as nullified.

In Conclusion

As Gentiles, Christians are not obligated to keep the Mosaic covenant. It was given to Israel, not to the world. We are saved by faith in the Messiah because of his atoning death, not by keeping a covenant we were never given.

How then are we to live? Paul and the other New Testament writers spend most of their letters discussing this very subject. In Acts 15:21, the Jerusalem Council points out that that Gentile believers will hear Moses preached every weekend in the synagogue. Certainly they will learn how to live from hearing the Torah preached.

The Apostles knew that we can discover great wisdom within the Torah because Christ himself was the goal toward which it was aiming. This is our goal too; to be filled with the love and goodness of our lord and Messiah, Jesus.

~~~~~

Note: The three commandments against idolatry, sexual immorality and murder were considered the three most heinous sins, and also sins that Gentiles were particularly prone to commit. The requirements for Gentiles in Acts 15 are stated plainly.

A GOOD EY OR A BAD EYE? A CRITICAL IDIOM

The eye is the lamp of the body. If your eyes are healthy, your whole body will be full of light. But if your eyes are unhealthy, your whole body will be full of darkness. If then the light within you is darkness, how great is that darkness! (Matthew 6:22-23)

Over the years, these mysterious words of Jesus have invited all kinds of speculation. But we can crack Jesus’ cryptic saying about the “eye” by hearing it within its Hebraic context, and grasping the figures of speech that Jesus was employing.

Jesus was most likely comparing the idea of having a “good eye” with having a “bad eye,” two idioms that have been a part of the Hebrew language from biblical times until today.

Having a “good eye” (ayin tovah) is to look out for the needs of others and be generous in giving to the poor. To have a “bad eye” (ayin ra’ah) is to be greedy and self-centered, blind to the needs of those around you.

You might be surprised at this, but these same idioms appear elsewhere in the Scriptures where they clearly refer to generosity or stinginess. (See Matthew 20:15; Proverbs 22:5, 28:22) The subject of money is also prominent in surrounding passages in this sermon.

Why Your “Eye” is Critical

Why is a person’s “eye” toward others so critical to Jesus? Because our relationship with money reveals our relationship with God. To have a “bad eye” is to cling to the little that you have, resenting those with more and refusing to help those with less.

Your attitude shows you think that God isn't generous, that He is either unwilling or unable to care for you. It also reveals how disconnected you are from the struggles of others. No wonder Jesus says that life becomes dark indeed when you’ve cut yourself off from both God and those around you.

On the other hand, if you’re radically convinced of God’s caring presence in your life, you’re also confident that God will provide for your needs, as you wal in faith obedience before Him. Not just materially, but emotionally and spiritually as well.

You may not be wealthy by the world’s standards, but you have a rock-solid understanding that what you have is enough, that ultimately your own situation will be secure. The fruit is a generous attitude, a “good eye” toward others. How can your life not brighten when you think this way?

Having a “good eye” or a “bad eye” also points toward a more fundamental issue; what is your primary motivation? Is your driving concern your own comfort in life, or do you look beyond yourself?

Ever more our Christian culture reinforces our self-centeredness, as books and sermons increasingly aim to appeal to our “felt needs.” After steady diet of self-therapy, however, we simply won’t tolerate a sermon that points out sin or pushes us to care about others. All we want to hear about is, “What’s in it for me?”

What the Torah Taught

Many of us are glad to skip past the Old Testament’s legal codes. Its laws about unclean foods and ritual impurity strike us as strange and distasteful. But these rules likely didn’t surprise the Israelites, because sacrifice and food laws were common among Israel’s neighbors.

What would have shocked Moses’ first listeners were God’s lengthy list of commands for caring for the vulnerable. Loans to the needy were to be without interest, and if they couldn’t be repaid in seven years, they were to be forgiven (Deuteronomy 15:1-3).Slaves and even animals were released from labor for one day of the week, making their need for rest equal to their owner’s. If hard times forced a farmer to sell his land, it was to be returned in the year of Jubilee, which took place every fifty years (Leviticus 25:28).

In contrast, the gods of Israel’s neighbors were concerned only with sacrifices and ceremonies. They were not terribly moral, and often were fickle and cruel. The God of Israel was unique in tying worship of him with compassion for others. When his people began to believe that rituals were all he required, God sent prophets to remind them that justice to the poor was his greatest concern. This was the heart of Jesus’ teaching too!

Today, people wonder what difference it makes that Jesus was Jewish. What about his culture should affect us here and now? The rituals and food laws of Israel were quite similar to those of other nations. The distinctive feature of the Torah was its great concern for society’s vulnerable. When Jesus came along, he emphasized the very same thing!

The more we read Jesus’ words in their Hebraic setting, the more we discover that to follow Jesus as his first Jewish disciples did, we need to learn to have a very “good eye.”

~~~~~

Note: Having an ayin ra’ah, a “bad eye,” a self-centered attitude, should not be confused with “the evil eye” (ayin ha’rah)—a superstition that a person can cast a spell through an envious gaze.