"While  the Hebrew word beriyt (pronounced bear-reet) means "covenant," the cultural background of the  word is helpful in understanding its full meaning. Beriyt comes from the  parent root word bar meaning grain. Grains were fed to livestock to  fatten them up to prepare them for the slaughter.
Two other Hebrew words  related to beriyt and also derived from the parent root bar can help  understand the meaning of beriyt. The word beriy means fat and barut  means meat. Notice the common theme with  beriy and barut, they  have to do with the slaughtering of livestock.
The word beriyt is  literally the animal that is slaughtered for the covenant ceremony. The  phrase "make a covenant" is found thirteen times in the Hebrew Bible. In  the Hebrew text this phrase is "karat beriyt". The word karat literally  means "to cut".
When a covenant is made a fattened animal is cut into  pieces and laid out on the ground. Each party of the covenant then  passes through the pieces signifying that if one of the parties fails to  meet the agreement then the other has the right to do to the other what  they did to the animal (see Genesis 15:10 and Jeremiah 34:18-20)."
AHLB# 1043-H
 
This is interesting and relevant as it applies to the former Temple ceremony.
ReplyDeleteYikes. Not something to be taken lightly!
ReplyDelete