Hebrew Word Study – Wasted Vineyard – Shadam – Shin Daleth Mem
Haggai 2:17: “I smote you with blasting and with mildew and with hail in all the labors of your hands; yet you turned not to me, saith the Lord?”
The Book of Haggai is an often overlooked Book of the Bible, probably because it is only two chapters. Haggai was the first of the three post exilic prophets. The others were Zechariah who lived the same time Haggai did and Malachi who lived about 100 years after Haggai. It is believed that Haggai was taken captive to Babylon by Nebuchadnezzar when he was a child. He began his ministry about 16 years after the return of the Jews to Judah to rebuild the temple.
Haggai came to the scene when the work on rebuilding the temple came to a halt due to the Samaritans raiding the Hebrew’s crops while they were trying to rebuild the temple. The harassment was so great that the people gave up on the temple and for 18 years just focus on making a living and restoring their economy. Only problem is that during those 18 years things got worse and they ended up in famine.
Think about it for a moment. Did God ever call you to do something and you started off with great enthusiasm but then when resistance came along or your livelihood was threatened, you gave up. Twenty years go by and still you have your tale tucked behind you, thinking about completing your mission to God – maybe some day when you get a good retirement under your belt.
Would you like Chaim Bentorah as your personal Hebrew teacher?
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Well, here is Haggai with a word for you. “Get moving.” In fact he is attributing the current famine in the land due to the failure of the people to carry out God’s desire. “I smote you with blasting…”
The word smote is nakah which is a sudden striking down. This is in a Hiphil form so God has brought about some situation that caused a blasting. In the Hebrew it is shadam. This is a wasted or worthless cornfield or vineyard. In other words, God caused a sudden wasting of the cornfields and vineyards. This may be a reference to the harassment of the Samaritans who would ransack their cornfields and vineyards to keep the people from rebuilding the temple and hopefully discourage them to the point where they would return to Persia. The word shadam is built on the word dam which means blood. The Shin represents a corruption or destruction. In other words God cause a destruction or corruption of their life’s source, their crops, their economy. Basically, God is saying that He brought about the sudden destruction of their economy, not the Samaritans. He brought it about because they abandoned His calling.
He also smote them with hail which, even today, will destroy an entire crop of corn or grain. He also sent mildew. Mildew is yaraq which is a pale greenish color and is felt by some scholars to refer to a disease that afflicts corn and other types of grain. I mean Israel’s poor corn and grain crop did not stand a chance. What the Samaritans did not ransack, hail took out and what was left from that was struck with a disease. In America we could loose a crop of corn from a hail storm in Kansas, but we still have corn in Illinois, but that could get hit with a disease and the corn in Iowa could get wiped out by bandits in the commodities market like it did during the Great Depression.
The prophet concludes by saying “in all the labors of your hand.” What you work so hard for, your entire savings, you retirement funds, God can wipe it out in one swift blow. You see the people were trying to re-build the temple and make a living at the same time. When problems arose they focused on making a living and put the work of the temple on hold until they improved their economic condition, but Haggai was saying: “Hey, gang, look, you economics will be wiped out by plague, bandits, and storms whether you’re working on the temple or not. At least if you continued to work on the temple, you would have been getting God’s work accomplished. Now look, nothing is accomplished.
That last phrase is a little disturbing: “Yet you turned not to Me.” The word translated as turn is literally in the Hebrew “with you” or “in company with you.” Quite literally this phrase reads: “And yet you did not walk in company with me.” That was the problem, not their ceasing to build the temple but their ceasing to walk hand in hand with God. It is sort of a picture of God and the people building the temple together, and suddenly God looks over His shoulder and sees everyone is gone and He is left alone.
We are facing some difficult times in this country and all God is asking is that we just walk hand in hand with Him, continue doing His good work. If bandits, disease, or storms hit, don’t run and hide, just keep laboring with the Lord. The bandits, disease and storms will come whether you are laboring with Him or not. Isn’t it better to have your hand in His when those things do come?
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Thanks & Blessings, it means a lot to me!
Thank you so much, I really enjoy these daily devotions they are such an encouragement. I have bought a couple of your books as well such a blessing to me.
Once again, Amen. I love studying Chaim’s insights. The older I’ve become the more truth has been revealed. If only I had received this truth 52 yrs ago, with my life focused more on physical rather than spiritual.
I look at my wife and my financial accumulation compared to other family members and we fall short. Interestingly, nobody, not one, in our family has the spiritual exuberance we do. Sadly, without a change, those material things will mean nothing in the end, as my wife enjoy living eternally in the presence of the King! Oh,how I love Him!
Amen! Amen! ☺️
I really love this study. I am getting to know much of the Hebrew words and alphabets. This will in turn draw me closer to God. God bless you sir, and am willing to learn more.
Hello Justice, It’s great to see you hunger for more. The DWS’s are meant to wet the appetite to study the Biblical languages which are much easier than you’d imagine. Consider joining us at our growing online community, The All Access Learning Channel https://www.hebrewwordstudy.com.
Blessings,
Chaim & Laura
Superb application of The Scriptures, very thankful
Thank you again because what you wrote is very true.
I’m trying to build my own temple and by that I mean that I want to learn all I can about God and the word of God!
Easter is coming and I feel that God wants me to write something about that. There are two different suppers written about in the Bible and Christians often get these confused. One happened
before Passover. This is the one where Jesus washed the feet of the disciples. I like calling that the “Lord’s Supper” not the “Last Supper”. The last supper that Jesus ate was during Passover. It’s called the Seder which means order. This is done in a way to remind people of the exodus. Jesus ate and then they sang the Hallel (Psalms 113-118) . It was after this supper that Jesus was arrested.
It would help Christians to learn about the Jewish people and their culture in order to better understand the Bible.
It’s a wake up call to see that God speaking to my heart through these lessons . I pray before I read the notes and it seems to coincide with the lesson . Thanks for sharing