We are still in touch and Micaela has taught her children to call us Safta (Grandma) and Saba (Grandpa)! We met with them on our last Mercy Mission and showered the five of them (three children) with “ mah-tah-NOTE,” gifts from YOU! It was considered a great “ mitzvah” to provide for her wedding. Micaela has a mother, but her father died in an accident when she was little. Many years ago, Jewish Jewels sponsored the wedding of an “orphan bride” in Israel. Having no father defines what an orphan is. (See Lamentations 5:3, 7.) The actual word “orphan” is only used four times in the New King James Version of the Bible, while the word “fatherless” is used 40 times. In traditional Hebrew biblical thought, a child who has a mother but no father is considered an orphan. The God of Abraham, Isaac, and Jacob highlights two of the His major roles: He is a Father, and He is a Husband. “ You shall not afflict any widow or fatherless child” (Ex. The Lord makes it clear that He insists on justice for the fatherless and widows: “ …Cursed is the one who perverts the justice due the stranger, the fatherless, and widow…” (Deut. The Hebrew word for “defender” is da-YAHN, literally, judge. The Hebrew word for “fatherless” is yeh-toe-MEEM, and the word for “widows” is ahl-mah-NOTE. King David gave us the most quoted psalm about these beloved ones of God: “ A father of the fatherless, a defender of widows, is God in His holy habitation” (Psalm 68:5). The Lord is reminding us this month that He has not forgotten anyone-especially orphans and widows. Dear Mishpocha (Family), Orphans and Widows
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