Tag: story

  • Gardener, Shepherd and Hunter: 7 Scenes Unseen by Man

    Gardener, Shepherd and Hunter: 7 Scenes Unseen by Man

    ACT 2 – Scene 1 – in an unseen place


    Where am I?

    I have brought you to a place unseen by man.

    You showed me a scene I had never seen of the death of Abel.. and Eve mourning the loss of her son murdered by her other son… and about sin in Eden. Was this story of Moses true?

    I have shown you scenes revealed to Moses from near the beginning of time. His story was true, though Moses was not there.

    Tell me, why did Moses leave Egypt?

     By faith Moses, when he had grown up, refused to be called the son of Pharaoh’s daughter..

    [Click here to read NASB in context]

    Hebrews 11:24

    By faith he left Egypt, not fearing the wrath of the king; for he persevered, as though seeing Him who is unseen.

    Hebrews 11:27 NASB

    Moses was sort of a shepherd then, wasn’t he?

    Yes, in a sense.. But a later shepherd led his followers to the right answer from Scripture to your question. Do you recall what David said?

    מִזְמוֹר לְדָוִד יְהוָה רֹעִי לֹא אֶחְסָֽר׃

    The LORD is my shepherd; I shall not want.

    Moses followed the unseen Shepherd as he led the Hebrews from slavery in Egypt.

    So is this place like when you showed me what happened east of Eden?

    These scenes take place in the unseen places above the heavens — or beneath the earth — places connected to the timeline of man yet separate from the mortal life of any one man or woman.

    I don’t think I understand, I thought as my Guide explained unseen places where He has evidently led me.

    Allow me to show you one such unseen scene from around the time of Moses. The actions here impact a righteous man who lived in a different land. But this scene does not take place there.

    Unseen in Uz

    One day the angels [sons of God] came to present themselves before the LORD, and Satan [the adversary] also came with them.

    The LORD said to Satan, “Where have you come from?”

    Satan answered the LORD, “From roaming throughout the earth, going back and forth on it.”

    Job 1:6-7 NIV

    Do you know this story?

    Yes. It’s about Job, who suffers all kinds of evil without knowing why.

    Is Job part of this conversation with the LORD in the unseen place? So who is the main character in this story of Job?

    I knew the obvious answer. Job was clueless about God allowing him to suffer severely for some time.

    Satan.. And didn’t you also say that Moses called him the Serpent?

    You yourself recognized the Serpent as the hunter. And what prey does he hunt?

    Souls! The soul of Cain.. the soul of Eve.. the soul of Adam..

    So too is Satan hissing at God when he calls for evil to tempt Job’s soul toward the pit of darkness.

    So the Serpent’s name is really Satan.

    שָׂטָן

    śāṭānnoun

    superhuman adversary, הַשּׂ׳ :
    a. of Job, one of בְּנֵי אֱלֹהִים Job 1:6, 7 (twice in verse); Job 1:8, 9, 12 (twice in verse); Job 2:1, 2(twice in verse); Job 2:3, 4 (twice in verse); Job 2:6, 7.
    b. of high priest of Israel before י׳, Zechariah 3:1, 2(twice in verse); Greek Version of the LXX. ὁ διάβολος.
    c. as proper name שׂ׳ Satan 1 Chronicles 21:1 (interpret 2 Samuel 24:1), Greek Version of the LXX διάβολος (Greek Version of the LXX σατάν 1 Kings 11:14, 23; Σατανᾶς Matthew 4:10; Mark 1:13; Luke 10:18 + 33 times NT).

    Source- [Lexicon :: Strong’s H7854 – śāṭān

    And as Moses said, this Tempter is cunning; and as a spirit shepherding evil in the unseen places he has many names, sometimes even appearing as a wolf in sheep’s clothing.

    שָׂטַן

    śāṭan – verb

    Outline of Biblical Usage
    (Qal) to be or act as an adversary, resist, oppose

    Strong’s Definitions
    שָׂטַן sâṭan, saw-tan’; a primitive root; to attack, (figuratively) accuse:—(be an) adversary, resist.

    Strong’s Number H7853 matches the Hebrew שָׂטַן (śāṭan), which occurs 6 times in 6 verses in the WLC Hebrew.

    Job seemed helpless; not able to do anything about the evil.

    Satan requested permission from God to contend with him on earth.

    My thoughts and countenance were really quite dejected by now..

    Remember what David said about the valley of the shadow of death? .. It is the place of evil.

    I recalled briefly the Lord’s words to Cain before he murdered Abel.. The LORD cautioned Able BEFORE he turned against his brother and against the LORD who was with him and leading him along the valley of the shadow…

    So how can any man resist evil from these unseen places and remain faithful to the LORD?

    Do you know how David petitioned the LORD when God was angry at him for his sin?

    Just like Moses, I thought, David had murdered a man. He had blood on his hands.. NO LESS THAN CAIN!

    A psalm of David. A petition. NIV

    LORD, do not rebuke me in your anger or discipline me in your wrath.

    Psalm 38:1 NIV

    Some prayers are praises to God who we cannot see, while others are petitions from our place near the valley of the shadow to the unseen place — a place above time and circumstance where the Lord sits on the Throne of justice and the Mercy Seat of redemption.

    Psalm 38 NASB, KJ21, OJB, WLC

    Yᵊhōvâ

    Hashem, rebuke me not in Thy wrath; neither chasten me in Thy hot displeasure.

    2 (3) For Thine khitzim (arrows) pierce me, Thy hand presseth me sorely.

    3 There is no soundness in my flesh, because of Thine anger; neither is there any rest in my bones, because of my sin.

    4 For mine iniquities have gone over mine head; as a heavy burden, they are too heavy for me.

    5 My wounds are foul and corrupt because of my foolishness.

    6 (7) I am bent down; I am brought low

    I go in mourning all day long.
    7 For my sides are filled with burning,
    And there is no healthy part in my flesh.

    8 I am feeble and sorely broken; I have groaned because of the disquiet of my heart.

    David pleads for mercy, confessing his guilty deeds by which he deserves the WRATH OF GOD.. He then bows down to God acknowledging:

    Lord, all my desire is before You;
    And my sighing is not hidden from You.

    I know now after seeing these unseen places that I have NO right to expect anything from God…

    David is quiet before the LORD, then pleaing:

    Yes, I am like a person who does not hear,
    And in whose mouth are no arguments.
    15 For I wait for You, Lord;
    You will answer, Lord my God.

    AND listen to David’s plea to the Judge of all men. Read it:

    (WLC 38:21) וּמְשַׁלְּמֵי רָעָה תַּחַת טוֹבָה יִשְׂטְנוּנִי תַּחַת רדופי־ טֽוֹב׃

    They also that render evil for good are mine adversaries; because I follow the thing that good is.

    Psalm 38:20 KJV

    Eve encountered an adversary opposed to God! As did the first adam and the sons of adam.. Job.. and David.. And yes, so have you. And WHY? David tells us.

    Because those who follow God and do what is good suffer evil by the hand of the adversary of the LORD God lurking in the unseen places. For Satan is an enemy of all Light which overcomes the darkness.

    21 Do not abandon me, Lord;
    My God, do not be far from me!
    22 Hurry to help me,
    Lord, my salvation!


    The light shines in the darkness, and the darkness has not overcome it.

    Gospel of John 1:5 NIV

    The Gardener the Shepherd and the Hunter - Introduction to a story by Roger Harned

    To be continued…

  • Gardener, Shepherd and Hunter: 6 – Synopsis ACT 1

    Gardener, Shepherd and Hunter: 6 – Synopsis ACT 1

    The Scenes

    Once upon a time…

    An illustration of times in life beyond the bounds of time and place.

    We learned (with our eyes closed) that sometimes the only way for the blind to see beyond the ends of the infinite line of time is to listen to our Guide rather than than embrace the false vision of a fallen world.


    Then the LORD God took the man and put him in the Garden of Eden to cultivate it and tend it.

    Genesis 2:15 NASB20

    The Characters

    • Narrator
    • a Guide, who has led our Narrator through scenes so far near the beginning of time and engages us in conversation and thought about God’s word and character
    • Cahyin – קַ֫יִן proper name, masculine Cain, Kain eldest son of Adam and Eve
      • a farmer (or a gardener)
    • Abel – הֶבֶל Hebel, heh’-bel; , the son of Adam:—Abel.
      • a shepherd
    • the LORD – יְהֹוָה Yᵊhōvâ
    • Eve – חַוָּה khav-vaw’ Eve = “life” or “living”
      • (living with the grief of the death of her son Abel and the sin of her son Cain)
    • the Serpent – נָחָשׁ naw-khawsh’, From נָחַשׁ nâchash, naw-khash’; a primitive root; properly, to hiss
      • the Hunter, cunning, constantly questioning God and known by many names

    Now Abel was a keeper of flocks, but Cain was a cultivator of the ground.

    Genesis 4;2b NASB20

    Some takeaways from Act 1

    He has sown the seeds of envy and will harvest the thistles of thanklessness.

    Insight of the Guide about the Gardener, Cahyin

    “Not only is this tragic death of their son Abel new to them,” my guide pointed out to me, “the impact of DEATH itself has just gripped Adam and Eve — two parents who the LORD had told many years before,

    ‘You shall surely die.’”

    Genesis 2:17 וּמֵעֵץ הַדַּעַת טוֹב וָרָע לֹא תֹאכַל מִמֶּנּוּ כִּי בְּיוֹם אֲכָלְךָ מִמֶּנּוּ מוֹת תָּמֽוּת׃

    You open your eyes in a place of darkness. And darkness and deception are the place where the hunter hides.

    If you look closely you will find the hunter wherever there is disobedience to God.

    Now the serpent was more cunning than any animal of the field which the LORD God had made.

    Genesis 3:1a NASB20

    Introducing the first adam:

    COMMENTARY: Adam did not create Eve. 
    Some Bibles translate 'Adam' as 'man' because Scripture commonly uses the word to mean (literally) mankind (by contrast to creatures of God not in His image).

    Lexicon :: Strong’s H120 – ‘āḏām אָדָם

    Then the man said,
    “At last this is bone of my bones,
    And flesh of my flesh;
    She shall be called ‘woman,’
    Because she was taken out of man.”

    Reintroducing ‘Eve’

    Lexicon :: Strong’s H802 – ‘iššâ אִשָּׁה

    For this reason a man shall leave his father and his mother, and be joined to his wife H802; and they shall become one flesh.

    Genesis 2:24 NASB20
    COMMENTARY: Note that WIFE and WOMAN are the same word: אִשָּׁה 'iššâ

    Once upon a time…

    … there was a woman. She was wife of the man. They both sinned. And almost immediately their own children (even as grown men) also sinned.

    It was only then that Eve would have wailed wantonly with tears of remorse.

    For by their sin, she and her husband would first witness death — as the LORD God had warned — DEATH of their son by the blood-stained hands of the first son of the first adam who disobeyed God.

    They had ALL been deceived by the constant, cunning questioning by the hissing hater of God.

    Did God really say..?

    The Gardener the Shepherd and the Hunter - Introduction to a story by Roger Harned

    To be continued..

    God willing…

  • Gardener, Shepherd and Hunter: 5- the Hunter

    Gardener, Shepherd and Hunter: 5- the Hunter

    the hunter


    Do you see him?


    I strained my eyes to look back beyond the time when I had just witnessed the killing of Abel by Cain. Not only was he not the hunter, but I could no longer see him in the chaotic mist of that place beyond the field of Abel’s blood. In fact, I could no longer see their field at the edge of the garden.

    I can’t tell what I see, but I don’t see a hunter.

    Did you read what I just showed you from in the beginning Book?

    I thought I knew it without having actually read the Scripture to which my Guide had pointed me. With a questioning tone in my uncertain voice I read:

    “So it came about in the course of time that Cain…

    No, son.. You must look back further in the beginning of the Book to what I showed you. Do you see it again?


    My mind wandered aimlessly back to what I almost recalled, but could not see.

    In the beginning God created the heaven and the earth. And the earth was without form, and void; and darkness was upon the face of the deep..

    and God divided the light from the darkness.. ..the greater light to rule the day, and the lesser light to rule the night.. And God created .. every living creature..

    (Then my thoughts continued out loud.)

    So God created man in his own image, in the image of God created he him; male and female created he them…

    “No,” I replied with the cluelessness of a student caught off-guard by a teacher. “I don’t see it. I don’t see any hunter.

    Do you think that you know good and evil from the beginning of the Bible?

    I dared not answer from this chaotic recall from my mind. (But I had read this frequently in the past.)

    You open your eyes in a place of darkness. And darkness and deception are the place where the hunter hides.

    Was this a hint from my Guide?

    Please, won’t you just tell me where I can find the hunter?

    If you look closely you will find the hunter wherever there is disobedience to God.

    I gave his words weighty thought as I listened to my Guide read what I had missed as my Guide then read from the Beginning to me.

    Then the LORD God took the man and put him in the Garden of Eden to cultivate it and tend it. The LORD God commanded the man, saying, “From any tree of the garden you may freely eat; but from the tree of the knowledge of good and evil you shall not eat, for on the day that you eat from it you will certainly die.”

    I had once memorized this from Genesis 2:16-17 and thought that I knew it well. But when my Guide recited it, NOT for my memorization but with authority, he said it differently.

    “The Lord God commanded the man,” my guide had emphasized.

    And then, as if to underline what he had just read, my Guide paused.. and looked into my eyes, making sure I was paying attention before he continued with what the Lord God had said.. I mean, what the Lord God had commanded.

    I wasn’t really thinking about the Hunter, then, but I knew it was important. He read on about the man being lonely and the woman being made from him.

    I tried not to let the naked part distract me (as it often did when I was a boy). So recalling that they were Cain and Abel’s parents helped. But then I couldn’t really see the serpent as a talking snake..

    Now the serpent was more cunning than any animal of the field which the LORD God had made.

    Genesis 3:1a NASB20

    Why did you stop?

    So you could tell me about the serpent you see.

    It’s a snake and I don’t really like snakes at all. You know, I can’t really picture a snake talking to Eve either..

    You’re not saying that this serpent didn’t talk, are you?

    Oh? .. No, I guess not. Moses said that THIS serpent talked to Eve.

    I’d just never thought about her being Cain and Abel’s mom.. or how that meant that Cain and his brother would not grow up in Eden. Looking back, I guess I see the serpent talking to Cain’s mom.

    Then I recited the next part from some long-ago memory.

    “Has God really said, ‘You shall not eat from any tree of the garden’?”

    And why does Moses’ story tell us that this serpent was cunning?

    Isn’t the serpent asking Eve to tell him something he already knows?

    Indeed he is.

    Is it a good question?

    I thought about it.. A good question? Is it a good question.. good..? good. Why would the serpent ask that?

    Isn’t the serpent trying to trick Eve? I don’t think that could be good. It can’t be a good question like the questions God asks.

    No it can’t.

    And if the serpent’s question is not a good question what kind of question is it?

    The serpent is up to no good. So I guess that makes it an evil question.

    You have already seen what happened to the man and the woman, before Cain killed Abel. Do you recall what happened to the serpent?

    That’s why he has to crawl on his belly?

    It’s much more than that.

    And I will make enemies
    Of you and the woman,
    And of your offspring and her Descendant;
    He shall bruise you on the head,
    And you shall bruise Him on the heel.”

    Genesis 3:15 NASB20 – click here for more versions

    Finally I asked, “Is the Serpent the Hunter?”

    Yes. The Serpent is the Hunter.

    But this cunning hunter of souls so willing to question God appears in other forms, clothing himself in unsuspecting ways to wayward men and unsuspecting women.

    We will meet up with this hunter again…


    the hunter

    The hunter hisses at God

    Pursues his own passion

    Questions glorious Light

    Hissing silently

    Ruling a pit of darkness

    Darkness of stolen light

    Devouring his fallen prey

    Drawing blood from Adam

    DEATH in dry dust

    Stung by sin’s ever-damning curse

    .. therefore, beware.

    “Behold, I am sending you out as sheep in the midst of wolves; so be as wary as serpents, and as innocent as doves.

    Matthew 10:16 NASB + Caution of the Lord Jesus to his disciples