Yvonne Cintron
Bristol Community College
Page Break At first glance it seems that Steven Cahill's The Gift of The Jews: How a Tribe of Desert Nomads Changed the Way Everyone Thinks and Feels, would be about just that "gifts." Upon further reading it becomes known that while Cahill does speak about the importance of these "gifts" the book is also filled with accounts in history, brief stories found in the Hebrew Bible, which depict the history of the Jewish people and their development of their relationships to God. This book may certainly be difficult to follow at times. In fact, I would say I had a love/hate relationship with the book. The language was hard to follow at times and required a few reads …show more content…
"There is no future as we have come to understand it, only the next revolution of the wheel" (p.94) If life is just a circle, then not only what we do has no meaning but none of us nor life matters, because it'll all repeat itself. One can't talk about monotheism without mentioning Avraham. He could be considered the father of monotheism, he was a model for his rejection of idol worship. The new monotheistic point of view believed that life moved on as opposed to repeating itself, this allowed for an individual to have value in their life. For our lives to matter we need to have the ability to influence the future. In the same token this is why the individual holds so much importance. Each individual is valuable because they are the same as all the others, but in the same breath no one person is more important than the …show more content…
Yaweh demanded that the Israelites be let go. "Who is Yaweh?" (p.113) was Pharaoh's response, to which was returned by the ten plagues, each plague destroying an Egyptian god. Humans are made in God's image, we are taught to be "God-like" but we are to do so without actually being God. We are promised that along our journey in being "God-like" the sins we fall short of are to be forgiven. But if we don’t try we will be held accountable and judged by God. Pharaoh, still had no faith even as each of the plagues swept across Egypt, it wasn’t until his own child was killed that he agreed to release the Israelites. Soon after Pharaoh changed his mind and sent his army after Moshe and the Israelites. "Do not be afraid! Stand fast and see Yaweh's deliverance which he will work for you today." (p.119) God parted the sea and the people made it to dry ground. The people gained faith in Yaweh, essentially becoming "the people of Yaweh." This was their God, the God of Surprises, and they were his people."