Blessed are You, O Lord our God, King of the Universe

Baruch atah adonai elohaynu melech ha’olam

 

 

 

I’ve been to enough Seder dinners to know that lots of traditional Jewish prayers start with this sentence. So in my book, I wanted to include it.  Now I don’t know that Daniel’s mom started her Shabbat prayer with these words exactly when she lighted the Sabbath candles, but I think it’s a safe assumption that she said something like that.  I got to thinking about the English translation – specifically “universe.”  Nowhere in the NASB do we have the word universe.  It doesn’t sound like a Bible word, does it?

If Daniel said, “Baruch atah adonai elohaynu melech ha’olam,” what was his understanding of olam?

Olam occurs 439 times in the Old Testament, and only 4 of those times does it refer to the physical world. All the other occurrences have to do with time —everlasting, forever, always, ancient, perpetual.  Thanks to Einstein we know that space is inextricably linked to time; nevertheless, the emphasis of olam is forever, not everywhere. Adonai elohim isn’t just Lord over everything, He’s Lord over every when, every where – Lord of ALL.  He’s King of the Universe – He created it.  He’s King of Forever – He created forever.  He’s Lord over every aspect of creation, transcendent.  He exists apart from and is not subject to His creation, and yet He chose to humble Himself and enter creation as a man. Why? To redeem us, certainly,  but also to make Himself known.

Like so many others, I’m doing The Bible Recap with Tara-Leigh Cobble. One of the daily prayers before you do your Bible reading is,

God, let me see something about you I’ve never seen before.

That’s a prayer God loves, don’t you think?  Because that’s what He wants for us.  The Lord our God, King of All, wants to make Himself known to us. What a privilege!

Similar Posts

  • Something new for 2024

    When I became a believer during my senior year in high school, I loved studying the names of God. I had a big poster filled with God’s names and attributes: I Am, El Shaddai, Elohim, etc… It was a black background with His names in different colors filling the poster. Anyone remember it? The poster…

  • Ancient Navigation

    The fish blinked her long lashes and helped you climb into a kuphar that the babbler birds wove just for you. You climbed in, and the wind blew you here. Who would have guessed that navigating the Euphrates and the Tigris would look essentially the same for 27 centuries? In Nebuchadnezzar’s day, willow roundboats covered…

  • |

    What is the Blood Curse of Jeconiah? Part 2

    Through the prophets Samuel and Isaiah, God promised Israel that the throne of David would be established forever. Nevertheless, Israel didn’t have a smooth ride. Because of Solomon’s disobedience, the Kingdom split in his son Rehoboam’s reign. God gave Jeroboam the Northern Kingdom, leaving Rehoboam with the remnant – Judah. The Northern Kingdom lasted for…

  • Rosemaling

    Rosemaling, the Norwegian folk art originally developed as painting flowers on wood, provides some texture for my story. Joe’s mom serves mujaddara,  a Middle Eastern dish of lentils, rice, and caramelized onions, in a beautiful rosemaled platter. https://www.dailyscandinavian.com/the-story-of-norwegian-rosemaling/ Rosemaling went out of fashion in the nineteenth century, but it’s seen a resurgence with the popularity of…