joH'a' chutmey 'oH teH, je QaQtaHghach altogether.
The LORD's ordinances are true, and righteous altogether. Psalm 19:9b
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Klingons love nothing like a good fight - can you imagine being expected to "lay down the law" to one? To explain what God's laws, his "chutmey" are?
What does it mean to declare God's "ordinances," his chutmey areTRUE as we hear in Psalm 19?
First, because the Klingon vocabulary we know is meager - I've used a word here chut (law) to stand in for the Hebrew mishpat. That's weak, and might make us miss the point - it's far more than just "law" that the Psalmist is talking about here. One writer notes that the word here rendered chutmey (laws) in Klingon,
...refers also to the revealed truth of God, with the idea that that has been judged or determined by him to be right and to be best. It is the result of the divine adjudication as to what is true, and what is best for man. The word is often used in this sense. Compare Ex 21:1; Le 18:5; 26:43; compare Ps 9:7, Ps 9:16; 10:5. [Albert Barnes' Notes on the Bible]
We're told here that these ordinances, these judgements of God are TRUE. The Hebrew word here for "true" is the same word, emeth, used in Psalm 117 when we're told "the truth (or faithfulness) of the LORD endures forever." What God says, what he decides ENDURES, it lasts. We may see people or institutions fail us, we might even see mountains crumble - but God's word, his promises are enduring.
But this isn't a purely intellectual truth, like the facts of mathematics or propositions of geometry. God's mind for us is RIGHTEOUSNESS. The word is tsadaq and encompasses the idea to be right (in a moral or forensic sense). In the KJV it is translated as cleanse, clear self, to be or do justice and more. I've rendered it here with the word QaQtaHghach, QaQ (be good), taH (ongoing) plus the nominalizing suffix ghach: QaQtaHghach it sort of means "being-good-ness." That's a thin bit of word for what God intends us to be, to be righteous when we live our lives by his judgements. Psalm 119 reminds us that living by this word can make a difference
How can a young person stay pure?
By obeying your word and following its rules.
I have tried my best to find you—
don’t let me wander from your commands.
I have hidden your word in my heart,
that I might not sin against you. Psalm 119:9-11 NLT
Part of the challenge of experimenting with the Klingon Language Version, "how might I explain this to a Klingon?" is really a way for me to translate these words into my own life. It may seem fanciful - and not altogether practical - but it has real consequences. I don't expect Klingons or aliens to show up any time soon, but when I wrestle with HOW to render something in Klingon, I gain personal insight into the application of the Scriptures in my life.
Some time ago I tried to translate the wa'maH chutmey - the ten commandments. I tried, not so much to literally translate, but to present the meanings of the commandments (http://members.aol.com/jpklingon/10c.html). I didn't do it to teach catechetical instruction - but it was, for me a bit of catechism, because it made me break the commandments down into the simplest terms I could (remember the small lexicon we have to work with). While not many tlhInganpu' will read what I did I'VE read it - and that's made a difference to me to reflect on and pray over these chutmey, these laws of the LORD. And when we do that, God can touch us, lead us and instruct us by his word.
joH'a' chutmey 'oH teH, je QaQtaHghach altogether.
The LORD's ordinances are true, and righteous altogether. Psalm 19:9b
Πᾶσαν χαρὰν ἡγήσασθε , ἀδελφοί μου , ὅταν πειρασμοῖς περιπέσητε ποικίλοις
Consider it all joy, my brethren, when you encounter various trials
Count 'oH Hoch Quch, wIj loDnI'pu', ghorgh SoH pum Daq various temptations James 1:2
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This morning I had to alter my normal bike route. I needed to swing by the ATM as well as drop off an overdue book at the library. So I found myself biking down an unfamiliar street. As I moved through, I spotted a flash of movement - a bird? No, it was a paper airplane. When I looked again, I saw its "pilot," a 7 year old barefoot boy in his pajamas, happily launching his plane into the air again and again.
I can't say why, but that moment just gave me a lift. As I sailed on to work, I thought of him, enjoying a warm summer morning, standing, running and leaping in his front yard to fly on his wings of paper.
The apostle James, in his letter to believers scattered throughout the known world, reminds us
Consider it all joy Count 'oH Hoch Quch
As we've spread farther across Earth, as we spread out into the solar system and beyond, we need to hear those words.
This joy spoken of in the Bible - Xara in the Greek, is cheerfulness, i.e. calm delight - something I think I saw in that boy as he launched out into the morning skies with his airplane. It's what James advises us to find in the midst of lifes trials. Never forget - the Bible is NOT unrealistic. The call to joy isn't blind optimism, but a trusting faith that relies on a loving God to lead us through trouble.
Certainly no Klingon would think that Quch - happiness - was found denying the difficulties of life. But Klingons would NOT let those trials prevent them from finding the Quch, the Joy in life as we do find it.
Whether we speak of JOY, or XARA or QUCH - remember, that calm delight is indeed what God wants you to find. This is what Jesus is promising when he says:
tlhob, je SoH DichDaq Hev, vetlh lIj Quch may taH chenmoHta' teblu'ta'.
Ask, and you will receive, that your joy may be made full. John 16:24
This summer day, as you have opportunity, kick off your shoes! Run through the grass! Take delight in God's love and the reassurance that he does indeed desire that lIj Quch may taH chenmoHta' teblu'ta' - your joy may be made full.
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This summer is turning out to be a busy one for me. It's my own fault - I tried out for - and got in - a musical. That's only one of the reasons I haven't had much time for podcasts, but it's a big one. It's been a long time since I was in a show like this - I'd forgotten how much it was like taking a second job. Despite the work, it's a great group and really a lot of fun.
If you've ever been in a show, you'll know that, among other things the work includes the task of memorizing the music and words you're expected to sing and say. This is somthing you can't fudge - you've got to get it right. You need to know those words by heart. The words have to be ready at the moment you're expected to say (or sing) them. AND EVERYONE in the show has to do this - you need to be ready and quickly say your part in turn. When you do, the show comes to life.
The psalmist here reminds us of the power of bringing the Word to your heart When it goes IN to your heart - it can give a rejoicing heart, and it gives you an OUTLOOK, a way to look and see clearly.
Today, we think of "the heart" -(lebh in Hebrew, or tIq in Klingon) as "the emotions." It's often contrasted with our logical, mental side - but this isn't the Biblical picture, for the heart encompasses the whole range of our inner life. We go too far when we think we can divide our selves into pieces, like parts of a machine. As Easton's Bible Dictionary notes:
According to the Bible, the heart is the centre not only of spiritual activity, but of all the operations of human life. "Heart" and "soul" are often used interchangeably (Deut. 6:5; 26:16; comp. Matt. 22:37; Mark 12:30, 33), but this is not generally the case. The heart is the "home of the personal life," and hence a man is designated, according to his heart, wise (1 Kings 3:12, etc.), pure (Ps. 24:4; Matt. 5:8, etc.), upright and righteous (Gen. 20:5, 6; Ps. 11:2; 78:72), pious and good (Luke 8:15), etc. ...The heart is also the seat of the conscience (Rom. 2:15).When we take this word into our heart, our leb, in the Hebrew, or tIq in Klingon - we can rejoice. Not because we've stored up something and are holding it inside, but because that word, once inside, drives us with a new outlook - it can give us the "script" as it were to guide us in our lives.
In less than two weeks I'll be on a stage with dozens of other cast members putting on a show. We've had the scripts for weeks and have all been working on this show. IF we only learned the words, and held them in our mental filing cabinets - well, the show would be a bust. But when we learn it all by heart, and then use those words to ACT, to interact, to laugh and sing - we will bring our story to life.
And it's a reminder that all of us need to store up God's word in our heart - not as more index cards in our mental file, but the script for our lives, to drive our actions!