3rd Commandment: Do Not Carry the Name in Vain - podcast episode cover

3rd Commandment: Do Not Carry the Name in Vain

Apr 27, 202649 minEp. 522
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Summary

Tim and Jon delve into the 3rd Commandment, clarifying its core meaning beyond simply misusing God's name in speech. They analyze the Hebrew words "name" (Shem) as reputation and presence, and "carry" (Nasa) as representation, drawing parallels to Aaron's role as a priest. The discussion highlights Israel's covenant responsibility to reflect God's character to the nations, and how their failure to do so, termed "in vain" (shav – futile or without purpose), profaned His holy name. The episode concludes by reframing the commandment as an invitation to faithfully embody God's purpose through loving actions and truthful speech.

Episode description

The 10 Commandments E6 — Shakespeare wrote in Romeo and Juliet, “What’s in a name?” In the Bible, it turns out a lot, actually. The creator God Yahweh is the source of all life and good, so his name is the greatest name. But surprisingly, he attaches his name to Israel, a lowly nation of former slaves, and enters into a covenant with them. The covenant starts with a list of 10 commandments, or 10 words, and following these commandments will lead Israel to life and flourishing. In this episode, Tim and Jon discuss the 3rd Commandment, which is all about how Israel will carry Yahweh’s name, or represent him to one another and the surrounding nations.

FULL SHOW NOTES

For chapter-by-chapter summaries, biblical words, referenced Scriptures, and reflection questions, check out the full show notes for this episode.

CHAPTERS

  1. What’s in a Name? (0:00-16:40)
  2. Carrying, Bearing, and Representing (16:40-35:10)
  3. What Does “in Vain” Mean? (35:10-48:42)

OFFICIAL EPISODE TRANSCRIPT

View this episode’s official transcript.

THE 10 COMMANDMENTS BIBLEPROJECT TRANSLATION

View our full translation of the 10 Commandments.

REFERENCED RESOURCES

SHOW MUSIC

  • “Planted By The River” by Lofi Sunday feat. Jk Beatbook
  • “New Mercies” by Lofi Sunday feat. PAINT WITH SOUND
  • BibleProject theme song by TENTS 

SHOW CREDITS

Production of today’s episode is by Lindsey Ponder, producer, and Cooper Peltz, managing producer. Tyler Bailey is our supervising engineer, who also edited today’s episode and provided the sound design and mix. JB Witty writes the show notes. Our host and creative director is Jon Collins, and our lead scholar is Tim Mackie.


Hosted by Simplecast, an AdsWizz company. See pcm.adswizz.com for information about our collection and use of personal data for advertising.

Transcript

Understanding God's Name and Command

In the play Romeo and Juliet, Shakespeare poses the question, what's in a name? Well, a lot actually. A name is more than just a label or a sound people use to get your attention. A name represents your whole idea. and reputation. It's the story of who you are. A proverb a good name is more desirable than great. Who is the source of all life and all that is good? His name is indisputably the greatest name. And yet, in the story of the Bible, Share his name or attach his name.

To Israel, what does that mean? Gives his name or attaches his name to others, it becomes a form of representation or a way that you encounter the God who is above and beyond. In the Ten Commandments, God gives Israel ten words that if followed will lead them to life and flourishing. Today we'll discuss the third, which is all about how they will represent his name.

You will not carry the name of Yahweh your Elohim and You might be familiar with the translation, don't take the name of the Lord in vain. which makes you think of merely misusing God's name in your speech, but the Hebrew word here is to carry the name. It seems like carrying the name is bigger, cause it refers to your behavior. Swearing falsely in my life. the name of God. Carry Yahweh's name in Ban. In vain. It's the Hebrew word shav. It can refer to something that doesn't fulfill its purpose.

Do the people of Yahweh exist as the people of Yahweh? Uh. Today, Tim Mackie and I discuss the third command about caring the name of Yahweh. It's not a command about cursing, it's a command about representing God to the world. Thanks for joining us. Hello John. We are today gonna discuss the third command or the word. The third word of the ten words the third command of the ten commands. We're going slow through the Ten Commandments because

This isn't simply just a list of things to check off. This is an invitation to a way of being in which you can truly find life. Yeah. Yep. And These are words that God spoke to the community of ancient Israel sitting at the foot of Mount Sinai. Mhm. It's like the first words that God said to Israel. the foundation, and then Jesus boiled it all down yet again to Love God and love your neighbor. Hm, which uh recall we found reflected in the overall shape of the ten.

The first four are all related to God. And then the fifth is an interesting kind of hinge and then six through ten are all related to how you treat relate to people. That's right. Yes, so we're gonna look at now the third word. That is the third commandment. Uh super interesting it's related to God, specifically the name of God. But you're already faced with challenges from the how you choose to put it into another language. How do you translate that?

Yeah, translation and interpretation are bound up together. So how about we just read A few versions of it. Okay. To see what people are after and let's just take it from there. Продолжение следует... Alright. Third command. So here's three popular English translations the New International Version, the New Living Translation, and maybe a lesser known, but one that I'm really into these days called the Lexum English Bible.

And they read, You shall not misuse the name of the Lord your God, or the Lexum English Bible has the name of Yahweh your God. Mm-hmm. Missuse the name. The English Standard Version and the King James are in partnership here. You shall not take the name of the Lord your God in vain. To take in vain. The new revised Standard Version You shall not make wrongful use. Of the name of the Lord your God. So that's very similar to misuse. Mm-hmm. Wrongful use. Mm-hmm.

Mm-hmm. And just for a lesser known English translation, but just an interesting take on it, the Common English Bible, C E B. Do not use the Lord your God's name as if it were of no significance. The most literal translation would be as follows. You will not carry The name of Yahweh, your Elohim. I'm gonna hang with the King James with in vain, if by vain we mean of vain purpose, of empty purpose. Ya, vanity means emptiness?

Mm-hmm. Yeah. Is this where these other translations were getting the idea of useless? Useless, yeah, or of no significance. No significance. Yeah. Okay. He shall not carry and we'll talk about it in more depth. You will not carry the name of Yahweh your Elohim in vain, for Yahweh will not leave unpunished, or he will not declare innocent. The one who carries his name. In vain.

So actu even this translation that's mine I'm not very satisfied with. So maybe let's hold it up for revision as we have our discussion here, shall we? Sure. Okay. So

God's Name: Reputation and Presence

First, let's think about the two main words here, which are the name. Clearly the name's important. This whole thing is about God's name. Yeah. What is God's name? In the Hebrew Bible, God's name is spelled with four Hebrew letters. Yod He Vav He. Called the tetragrammaton. Which is a Greek way to refer to it. Tetra four means four, grammar means letters. The four letters. And the most ancient pronunciation that we're pretty sure we can recover of it would have been Yahweh.

Means the one who is. He is. Such a rad name. It's like the coolest name ever. That's good. The one of it. So that's God's name. So this prohibition is don't do something to the name. The one who is. And what are you not supposed to do to the name? It's the verb nasa, which means to pick up and carry. Okay. So that's one question. What does it mean to carry the name? Okay. So let's back up from that.

Let's look at the meaning of name in the Bible. Then let's look at this word carry, then we have to look at this word in vain. Three short word studies, shall we? Okay. So, first of all, the Hebrew word for name is Shem. Okay. And its first main meaning is name. Yeah. The thing that humans Yeah. So sound waves that come out of a human's mouth. that humans have agreed together that these are the sounds. That when we say them it refers to that person or thing.

The name. John. Your parents just decided, made a decision. The human to be born, right? Yeah. From your mother's womb that this would be his name is John. Yeah. So it's an actual name. But even in English the word name has a wider resonance of meaning. I can um Hmm Drag your name in the dirt. That's a English turn of phrase. Yeah. What are other name turns of phrase that we have? How about this one? To make a name for yourself. Yep. She made a name for herself by doing X, Y, or Z. Mm-hmm.

You can tarnish someone's name. Oh yeah, yeah, that's right. Mm-hmm. And if you want to reverse that, you can clear your name. Uh yeah, clear your name. Clear your name of any guilt or something. Yeah. Yeah. That's a very common one. Mm. Yeah. So both to tarnish your name, clear your name, and make a name for yourself, Yeah, it refers to your reputation. Yeah. So not just the actual sound or word to your name. Yeah. But when who you are is brought up in conversation

People have feelings. It brings up feelings, right? And associations. Yeah. A story attached. Yeah. And that whole story, right, can be referred to as your name. Correct So that's true in Hebrew too. So here's just an example of a proverb a good name is more desirable than great wealth. says Proverbs twenty two one. So for people when they hear your name to think good things. That is actually more valuable than that. 랜글랜글랜글랜글랜글랜글랜글랜글 This is good ancient wisdom.

It's great ancient wisdom. Yeah. Totally.'Cause you can earn a bunch of money but at some point you'll use it up or run out. But if people think well of you Then there's always opportunity to be productive again. Yeah. And then what do you really want in life? A bunch of money or beautiful relationships? Yeah. Yeah. Yeah.

So that's example of a good name for people to think well of you. That is, your name refers to you, really. Which is why in the Bible, for your name fall into some bad reputation, for people to think badly of you or poorly of you in the future, that's like the ultimate disaster of a human life is for your name to fall into Disrepute. Yeah. So for example, um for your name to be used. In curses, the way that people curse each other in the future? Hmm. So in Isaiah sixty five.

God's talking about people who have been opposed to God's purpose in Israel. And who have actually begun to persecute and do violence towards God's like chosen prophets and representatives. God says, Listen, you're not going to have a future, your name will be left for a curse among my chosen ones. Yes. But my servants will be called by another name. for people to say, mmm, may you not become like so and so Ha ha.

Yeah. Yeah. This is a way to um especially someone you know really well who you know who they can't stand or you know who they're afraid they're like becoming like. Yes. is to then give them that name. Yeah. You know who you're acting like right now? You know who you sound like? Yeah. Yeah, because then somebody's like, I'm not likely to Yeah, that's using that person's name as a curse. Mm-hmm. Yeah. That's interesting. Yeah.

Yeah. Yeah. May you become like so and so or you know who you're like right now. Mm-hmm. Yeah. And then when God says, My servants will be called by another name, so these are people whose name has been mistreated in reputation, but God will give them a new name. Okay. God will rename them, as it were, which means a new identity, a new reputation. Okay.

This is why wiping out someone's name or blotting out the name is the ultimate tragedy. This idea that you have all these names written down, and if your name's written on like a list, like a rock. Then you're in. You're on the list. Yeah. But to w erase someone's name means th it's like they never were. Yeah. Sad. No one says their name anymore. Mm-hmm.

So when we're thinking about the name of the one who is, Yahweh's name, who's the author of all reality, Yahweh's name is like the greatest name. The creator of all things. So th the idea of God's name being honored, God's name being great, there's a passage in Malachi chapter one where God talks about from the rising of the sun to To its setting, my name will be great among the nations. Incense will be offered to my name, my name will be great.

So to have a great name is to have be honored, and if God's the most honorable being,'cause he's the source of all being in reality, then got us the greatest name. We're saying name means reputation. Mm-hmm. Yeah. So then the biblical authors take another step. The name of Yahweh has something special to it. What is so interesting is that there's all kinds of examples in the Hebrew Bible where it's hard to tell apart the name of God from the very presence of God.

So when God says He's going to guide the Israelites through the wilderness into the land of the Canaanites. to give them that land as he promised Abraham, Isaac, and Jacob. God says, I'm gonna send a messenger to go with you, like a a sign or a Symbol of my divine presence with you. Gets translated Angel, my angel, my messenger. And then God says, you know, you should be careful around that messenger. Don't rebel against him, because he won't pardon your transgressions. My name is in him.

Hm. So how you treat him is how you treat me. And if you mistreat me as I'm protecting and guiding you to give you a gift. Don't be surprised if you forfeit the gift. Okay. Name becomes a way to describe the whole. Mm-hmm. God is in him. Yeah. But instead of saying I am in him He says, my name My name is in him, yeah. Not only is it a way to refer to your reputation, it's a way to just then talk about your very essence. Yes. Yeah. That's right.

Yeah, which is why in the book of Deuteronomy, when God talks about hey, Israelites, when you get into the land and you organize yourself and tribes and districts and there's a central place where you all go to encounter me and bring your offerings to me. a central place of worship. God calls by many times over, almost a couple dozen times in Deuteronomy, he calls it the place where his name will dwell.

His name will take up residence in a place or a space or a building. And this phrase appears over and over. So people look at a building or a they that's Yahweh's place. That's the place where his name lives. Yahweh can attach his name to things, and then how people relate to that thing. Is now how you relate to God. God's name is shareable. So in other words, when God gives his name or attaches his name to others, to something.

It it becomes a form of representation or a way that you encounter the God who is above and beyond, but I can truly encounter something of that God. Angel or in this building. The point is this metaphorical nuance of part for whole is actually think important to this larger phrase carry the name. Okay. Maybe let's pause on name, let's go to the word carry. Yeah. Okay. Shall we? Shift gears? Okay. From name.

To Carry, Bear, and Represent

So to carry the name, it's translated to take the name. Yeah, or use the name of the year. Use the name, but it's the word carry. It's the Hebrew verb nasa. It's one of the first verbs you learn. It's used all over the Hebrew Bible hundreds of times. If you're familiar with a mid twentieth century American space program called the National Aeronautics and Space Administration, NASA. To lift up They lift up rockets from the ground.

Someone found a special little Yeah, this is a little Hebrew hack if you're learning. Hebrew and American. Do you think wait, do you think that's a purpose or do you think that's a happy coincidence? Oh it's a happy coincidence. Because the people who name these agencies they get pretty creative. Well, who knows? I don't know. You'd have to go ask the founders of NASA. I don't know. But how you transliterate the Hebrew word in English letters is how you spell the acronym NASA.

Nasa. To carry. Nasa. To lift up. To pick up. To pick up. Lift up and then also then once you pick it up it's in your hands and you are carrying. What's great about this word is so concrete. Mm-hmm. It's like not abstract at all. No. Yeah. I can take something and I can with my pure physical force lift it off the ground and move it around. I can carry. That's right. Yes. So you can pick up a box, you can pick up a child, you can carry

A tree, carry a goat, carry a sheep. This is what the word means all throughout the Hebrew Bible. Yeah. Maybe not like a real big goat. You might want to just Yeah, and certainly walk. Probably not knocks. So just like in English, in English we carry things metaphorically. I'm carrying a really Heavy burden today can mean lots of things. Like you actually have a heavy backpack on or something terrible happened to a friend. Yeah. And you're carrying that. Yeah. so to speak

So similarly you can metaphorically carry things in Hebrew. Okay. And I guess what's very interesting. You can actually do a search on, well, what would it mean to carry the name when you add this verb to the noun name? How many times does that appear in the Hebrew Bible? It appears three times outside the Ten Commandments. Two occur just a few chapters after the Ten Commandments, in something that God says to Moses on Mount Sinai.

And it's a description of what Israel's priests are to do when they go in and out of the tabernacle. When the priests go in and out of the tabernacle, they're wearing a bunch of special clothes. And one of the special things that they wear is this chest plate with these gold settings in which are set twelve gemstones. And on the gemstones are quite the Yeah. Etched. Super fancy outfit. Yeah. On the gemstones are etched the names of the twelve tribes of Israel.

And this is a all of symbolism bound up with the fact that this particular Israelite, the priest Is a representative of the Like when the priest goes in with those names etched on the stones, it's as if all of the people of those tribes are walking into the tent. He's going in on behalf of all the tribes. Mm-hmm. But actually in a way to think about it is all the tribes are going in with him. Yeah.'Cause he's carrying them in.

They are represented by him, they are in him, on him, they're on him, mm-hmm in the form of those stones. So two times in Exodus chapter twenty eight, that representative entering of all the tribes into the tent, in the form of the priest entering in, that's called Aaron carrying their name before Yahweh. So you will set stones on the shoulder pieces as stones of remembering for the Israelites. And Aaron will carry the names, their names before Yahweh. Is that how it's usually translated?

Oh okay, that's a great point. That's how I've translated these two. Aaron will carry the names of the Israelites. he won the song. He will Nassau their name. The shim. Nassau the Shem. Yeah, that's right. That's Exodus twenty-eight, twelve. Niv, Aaron is to bear the name. NAS Aaron will bear their names. Ah the CSB What is the CSB? Christian Standard Bible. I forgot that. Yep. He will carry their names. There you go, carry. So bear or carry? When when do you ever bear something?

I don't. I don't never say that. I say carry. Well we say that's a heavy burden to bear. So that's the Bear a burden, maybe'cause of the alliteration. Maybe the alliteration. old word isn't it? It's an old word for carry. Yeah. It sounds like ceremonial or fancy. Does sound s that's why they chose it. Ha ha. Ceremonial. It's the fancy word. Yeah. Okay.

What Aaron is doing with the names of Israel is carrying their name before Yahweh. Now let's think of all the ways that Aaron could mess up that process. Yeah. What could go wrong? Now he's carrying their name before Yahweh and he's brought he's gonna offer some gifts, he's gonna offer sacrifices as a symbol of surrender, of honor. So let's say ooh, let's say something that actually maybe does happen. Let's say they Aaron's sons, the uh other priests, they get super drunk like the morning.

This is this is what happens to Aaron Suns Ray. Uh perhaps. Perhaps it's implied. It's implied. In Leviticus. It's strange fire. And then right after that God says, Hey, never Drink on the job. Drink. before you come into the tent. Yeah. Just don't do it. Bad idea. Yeah. So let's say he's plastered drunk. Okay. And he comes in all tipsy with all the names of Israel on him. That would be bad news. He would be miscarrying the name. He's a bad representative in that. Yeah.

So something like this seems to be part of what it means to carry the name of Yahweh. What Aaron is to do for Israel. Israel is supposed to do with Yahweh's name, to carry the name. Do not carry the name in vain. Assumes that they do carry the name. Yeah. And carrying the name means to represent. Yep. Yeah. So this kind of fundamental insight

And the importance of it was brought to my attention by a Hebrew Bible scholar, Carmen Imes, who was also a friend'cause we went to college with her many years ago, in her book, Bearing Yahweh's Name at Sinai. Oh, she the bear. She uses bearing. Yeah, that's true. Yeah. It's fancy. It sounds like it's the same. Fancy word. It's totally right. So

She goes through the whole history of interpretation because from most translations, r remember all the way back to the beginning, say don't misuse the name, don't take it in vain. Right. Which is usually taken to mean Using it as a curse word. Yeah. Yeah. Or dishonoring it in our speech. Yeah. is different than this idea. It's much smaller, but Yeah, you might say misusing God's name in your speech is one way. Yeah. You could misrepresent God. Right.

It seems like carrying the name and we'll look at what in vain means in just in a few minutes, is bigger'cause it refers to your behavior. There is one other place the phrase carry the name is used, and it's in a psalm from a poem from the book of Psalms, Psalm 16, verse 4. Those who hurry after another God. will increase their own sorrow. I will not pour out their drink offerings. Of blood? Who's the I? Uh. Uh it's the speaker of the poem. It's connected to David. Okay.

I will not pour out their drink offerings of blood, nor will I carry their names on my lips. No, no. Drink offerings of blood. Yeah. Oh, offer a sacrifice of the blood of an animal. That's a drink offering. Well, yeah, it's a interesting way. Usually a drink offering is actual liquid like wine or oil or something. But in this case it's metaphorically referring to the blood of the animals uh

Drink offering. Oh, okay. So he's saying they're pouring out drink offerings to other gods. I'm not gonna do that. Okay. Mm-hmm. Yeah. People who hurry after another God increase their sorrow. What do we mean to hurry after another God? Well, you could offer sacrifice to another God, or you could carry their name on your lips. And so the their name is the other gods. Yes. Okay.

Yeah. So why would you call on another god? You want to get something done. You wanna leverage the reputation of that god. Or the power of that God to do something. So O Baal or O Marduk, save me. Bring rain to my crop. Or here's another example, and look at this is from Leviticus nineteen. And check out the con. It's a group of commands given to Israel. Leviticus nineteen, eleven, you will not steal.

And you're like, oh, that sounds like one of the Ten Commandments, because it is. You will not deceive, you will not lie to one another, and you will not swear an oath falsely in my name. So that none of you profane or treat as common the name of your God, I am Yahweh. Mm-hmm. So that's interesting. Stealing, deceiving, lying, swearing falsely in my name is a way to mistreat the name of God. So why would you swear falsely in the name of Yahweh? And here this is in the context of oaths.

How can I trust your word? Mm-hmm. Yeah, you're manipulating other people. into doing what you want and you're using God's name as like leverage. So I swear to Yahweh, I will pay you back if you just loan me those hundred shekels. And you know in your mind you don't have a hundred shekels and you don't have a way to get them to pay him back. So you're using Yahweh's power and reputation as a way to manipulate someone to get get what you want. That seems to be an idea. That's deceiving and lying.

Profaning the name. swearing falsely and that profanes the name. So is it possible? That carrying the name of God on your lips, is that what the third command refers to? So maybe the question is, what does it mean to carry the name of the Lord your God in vain? Aaron Powell So it seems like I have two ideas of what it can mean now. One is To carry the name means to speak the name. Mm-hmm. And so to carry the name on the lips is just a way of saying I'm saying the name. Mm-hmm.

But then there's a deeper meaning, perhaps. Which is that if a name is someone's reputation To carry someone's name means to represent their reputation. Yeah, yeah, right. And that's what the priest is doing. for Israel with the stones. is Israel's identity and their story and who they are, I'm representing to Yahweh by carrying their names on me. Yeah. So in the same way We're asked to carry the name of Yahweh, his story, who he is, his character, all of that.

Yes. Yeah. So this links us and again, thank you, Carmen Nimes, for this.

Israel's Priestly Role

Fundamental insight. This goes back to the prologue to the Ten Commandments, the opening speech. that introduces the whole covenant partnership between God and Israel. And what God said was, now, Israel, this is Exodus chapter nineteen, right before the Ten Commandments, if you all will listen, listen to my voice, And keep my covenant. Then you will be to me a special possession among all the peoples. Like you're my crew. You're my special humans among all the humans.

All of the land belongs to me, but you all will be for me a kingdom of priests and a holy nation. So priests there is important because then that sets up an analogy What Aaron is to be for the people, all of the people are to be for Yahweh. Yeah. How are people gonna encounter Yahweh? It's gonna be by how you carry me out. while you carry the name. How you carry the name. How you represent me.

Mm-hmm. Yeah. So in that sense, Yahweh attaches his name to this angel. My name is in him. Mm-hmm. How you treat him is how you treat me. But also then what he is to you is who I am to you. Mm-hmm. Yahweh attaches his name to a building, mm-hmm, a temple. Then here Yahweh is attaching his name to like the Israelites. Yeah. So that now how people perceive you and think about you is how they will think about me. It's a risky move. To attach your name to something. Yeah.

it's an intimate moment It's a v intimate move. Yeah, they become representatives of you. Yeah. So this is what God is doing when he enlists Israel as his covenant partners. He makes vulnerable his name. Among the nations. Mm-hmm. Because the nations will know Yahweh by how they are gonna act. Mm-hmm. Yeah, and there's one particular prophet among Israel's prophets that really picked up on this theme and focused on it, it's the prophet Ezekiel.

And in a really important pivot moment in the book of Ezekiel, he Focuses in on God's name and the fate of God's name in the history of Israel. And he basically describes the whole history of Israel as defiling and dishonoring the name, that Israel brought dishonor on God's name among the nations. It's actually what he says in Ezekiel chapter thirty six.

When Israel Defiled Yahweh's Name

He says the Israelites were living on their land and But they defiled the land with their ways and their deeds, and he starts to name like idolatry, they sacrificed children to other gods, they neglected the poor, it was like bad scenes. So for all the blood they poured out on the land. I poured out my anger on them, and what does that mean? I scattered them among the nations. I dispersed them in the countries, according to their deeds I judged them, and then they went into the nations.

And there they defiled my holy name. How did they do that? Well, when the nations said about them, wait, these are the people of Yahweh But they just went out from his land. You can just kind of see the connection here. Yeah. Like You're not representing me well. These are Yahweh's people. So they don't have a land anymore and they were conquered by their enemies. Well, what kind of God is Yahweh then? Mm-hmm.

So then God's response then in the next line is, And so I had deep concern for my holy name. And then he goes on to talk about what he's gonna do to restore the holiness of his name. So this is a good example of Israel miscarried the name and that's what Yahweh's asking them not to be. And it does. Cussing. Ha ha ha. If they were mistreating each other. Yeah. They weren't doing right by each other.

Right. Yeah, that's right. Mistreating each other, mistreating their children, mistreating the poor. Mm-hmm. I mean, there's the three big categories idolatry, injustice. And child sacrifice are like the big list of three horrible things that Ezekiel's really frustrated about, sad about as he looks back over Israel's history.

But then what we also saw is this phrase carry the name in your mouth is also a way you can use this phrase to refer to fault Or misuse of Yahweh's reputation in your speech. And that actually is another way that this command gets interpreted and understood within the Torah itself. And Leviticus nineteen's an interesting example of that. Don't steal, don't deceive, don't lie, don't swear an oath falsely in my name.

Well what's interesting is when you when you make an oath by the name of Yahweh, what you really are doing is your Yeah, you're borrowing credit from Yahweh's Bank of reputation. Yeah. Yeah, yeah. Growing from Yahweh's reputation. Mm-hmm. So you are using his name. Yeah. But for the purpose of calling up his reputation and saying, hey, you know Yahweh is faithful and good. And so trust me, because I'm going to bring Yahweh's name into this, meaning his reputation into this.

Yeah, yeah. Yeah. That's a good way to put it. Mm-hmm. And so the danger, if you're gonna be deceitful by doing that, you are tarnishing or abusing or Yeah, and so then that brings us to the phrase in vain.

"In Vain": Empty and Futile

So, vain. It's the Hebrew word shav, and it's very difficult to capture in English how this word works. Yeah. Because When it's referring to words, words of Shav, what it often refers to is lying or deceitfulness. So Somebody can speak Shav, like Psalm forty one. and by which he means s somebody who's trying to lie to me and take advantage of me. To speak chav. But then it can refer to Mm something that doesn't fulfil its purpose. So Psalm 108, verse 12, Oh God.

Give us help against our enemies, because rescue that comes from humans, it's shock. It's worthless. Useless. So if what I'm looking for, I'm not sure if you're Reliable. This true rescue for my enemies. I can't depend on humans to do that. That'll just that won't actually be true. Notice the word true came to my mind. Yeah. It seems like deceptive. is a word that works for both. Mm-hmm. Like you can deceive with a lie, mm-hmm, but then you can also be deceived by something's value.

You can think, Oh, this person's gonna rescue me, but that was a deception because they can't. Yeah. Ah, unless Yahweh is building at a house, the people who build a house are building for Shav, for no purpose, or for a a wrong purpose. Unfulfilled purpose. It won't actually succeed. Mm-hmm. It won't be what it's made to be. Yeah. A house should endure so that it can protect you.

Right. That's what a house is for. But if they build it in a shoddy, unreliable way, it can't actually be what it's made for. So don't carry the name of the Lord your God and Shah. God has attached his name to you for a purpose. Mm. To represent him. And if you become an unworthy representative, then You have become Shav. That's interesting. So Shah is pointing to the purpose of something.

Mm. Yeah. Yes. So is that right? Yeah, and actually I think that's what vein means in its older English meaning. How's that? Yeah, with vain purpose. Can you look it up? Can you look at the animal here? Okay. Of the English word vein? Yeah. Yeah. Ah the word vain in English comes from the Latin word vanus, which means empty, lacking content. The word was first recorded in Middle English in the late twelve hundreds. Yeah. would be lacking value or effect or futile. Value or effect.

So Yahweh called Israel to represent him before the nations for a purpose. And if the effect that God was aiming for is rendered futile because of their moral corruption, their moral compromise, their idolatry, then they have carried the name for a futile purpose. You're not doing what you were purposed for. Yeah, it's failed at actually doing the thing it was meant to do. Yeah, failure to launch. If a cup is empty, it's maybe failed, I suppose.

Yeah, it's not fulfilling its purpose. That's what it's made for. But uh if a hole is empty, it has fulfilled its purpose. It's supposed to be a hole. Yeah. So what does Israel exist for? Really? Is the the Hebrew Bible's trying to give an account for why this people came into existence? And then endured and survived. What's the purpose? Yeah. What's the purpose? Is it fulfilling its purpose? If it's not, it's what's the word shov? Shav. Shav.

Is that what it feels like that's what we're getting at? Does it fulfill its purpose? That's right, yeah. Why do the people of Yahweh exist as the people of Yahweh? Uh-huh. Well, they were called to be an image and a representative. God to the nations and then to represent the nations before God, kind of like the Aaron the priest represents the tribes before God and man, if they fail at being that. By their behavior, they misrepresent God then they'll be

Certainly won't represent the people well before God and they've ruined it. Yeah. Ruined the purpose. So Shav's actually the negative. Shav is the failure to fulfill the purpose. Yeah. There's gotta be an English word for that. If you fail to fulfill your purpose, futile usually means of no purpose. I had a purpose, but it was futile, misspent. I worked all day. Thinking I could build X, Y, or Z.

And then it crashed to the ground. My efforts were futile. I had a aim or a purpose. Didn't succeed. Futile. But it seems like something's futile, you're saying it had no purpose. Mm. Right. That's what you're saying. Something's futile. Yeah, it ended up being purposeful. But if you said something's ineffective Mm. Then you're saying it has a purpose, it just didn't actually do the thing it was meant to do. Yeah. Interesting. Yeah. Fruitless. Pointless, useless, ineffective, faulty, false.

Mm. Failed. Failed. Profitable. New guitar. Nugatory. Where did you see that? Yeah. Nugatory. I love that word. Ha ha. I don't know why it makes me laugh. It's a funny word. I'm either thinking of a noogie A noogie, that's why it's a good one. Like top of their head with your knuckles. Uh huh. I don't know why that makes me laugh. Yeah,'cause Newgies are funny. But I don't how's it related to Nugatory? What does that mean? No, no, no, no, no, no. That seems more like feudal. Useless or futile.

From the Latin nugatorious, which means a trifle. Apparently people in the eighteen hundreds were using the word nugatory a lot. Ha ha ha. It's really trilling up. Use this chart. Let's bring it back. Okay.

Live Out God's Purpose Faithfully

Uh What is the po larger point that we're after here, Joe? Don't carry the name of the Lord your God for Shav. Yeah. I think all these words kind of help us get to the point. Don't do it in a futile way. Don't do it in a useless way. Don't do it in a ineffectual way. Yeah. But all those are negative ways of saying, hey, do it in a way that fulfills its purpose. Right. Slip it over. Yeah, like we've been doing. This is what yeah, this is how we end this.

Because one way you could carry the name of the Lord your God in vain is with your speech, to actually use the name of God as like religious leverage to manipulate someone else. Mm. But the actual phrase carry the name can refer to behavior and as well as speech. Yeah. So then you flip it and you say, Well, what does it mean to carry the name of the Lord your God in truthfulness? Hmm. With purpose. With faithfulness. With faithfulness. Yeah. Yeah. Yeah.

And now Wow. Now you're into the kingdom of priests. Yeah. Category. Yeah. You're in that arena and you think of what does it mean for Aaron to carry the name of Israel into the temple. Mm-hmm. Yeah, it means to come offering gifts. And acts of surrender. Which is a way of recognizing and thanking God for giving life and rain and abundance and fertility to his people. So gratefulness is a way of relating to God that is Faithful. But here carrying the name also then before the nation. Right.

Mm-hmm. And it seems like all the laws that we're gonna read later, it's all about building a society in which people actually do right by each other. Yeah. And they protect each other. Yeah. And especially those who really need protecting, like the orphan and the widow, and that there isn't corruption and injustice. And so to carry the name means Yeah. To love your neighbor. Mm-hmm. Yeah. In a way the third command is don't screw it up. Yeah. So fast. Don't mess it up.

my crew. I've attached my name to you. There's a lot of ways this could go right. There's a number of ways this could go wrong. Don't misrepresent me. I've commissioned you. Don't misrepresent me. Which means do represent me faithfully. Yeah. Which is very open ended. Opens up to well, what is the purpose of a human life. Hm. And now we're almost back to how we had the last two conversations, which is like love God, love your neighbor. Yeah. Mm-hmm. Third command. Don't have any other Elohim.

No other Elohim is your rescuer, liberator, or creator. Hmm. You will dishonor. God and dishonour yourself. Treat something else as God. Don't fabricate something and then treat it as if it is your source and your liberation and your creator. You'll dishonor God and yourself and probably mistreat yourself and others in the process. And let's say you find yourself among the community that thinks that it's representing God to the world in some way. Don't mess it up. Do represent God faithfully.

Yeah, let's flip all three of those over. So I am your life. So find life in me. Mm-hmm. Yeah. You are my image. Yeah. Image me facefully. Image me faithfully. And you have a purpose. Yeah. Which is to be my representative here. Yeah. Raptor. That me faithfully. Represent me faithfully. Yeah, all of a sudden command Two and three come real close to each other. They do. Which they are literally close to each other. Mm-hmm. There, the second third command, yeah.

It's interesting. These first three that we've looked at are ways of thinking about the biggest Concerns of human life. Yeah. And certainly the life of God's people.

Reflecting on Divine Commands

Thank you for listening to Bible Project Podcast. Next week we look at the fourth command. Remember the Sabbath. Number four is the most culturally specific to the life and liturgy. Religious calendar of ancient Israel and then of later Judaism. So let's get ourselves into the heads of an ancient Israelite. What is the fourth command all about?

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