Preface
This study follows a thread that runs quietly through the
Scriptures—one that connects beginnings and endings, bodies and kingdoms, sight
and authority. It examines patterns that appear disconnected at first glance,
yet reveal a unified structure when viewed together. The journey moves through
narrative, law, and prophetic expression, uncovering a deeper coherence beneath
familiar texts. What emerges is not a new idea, but a recovered alignment—one
that invites the reader to reconsider how the parts form a whole.
1Sa
11:1 And Nacḥash the Ammonite came up and
camped against Yaḇěsh Gil‛aḏ. And all the men of Yaḇěsh said to Nacḥash, “Make a covenant with us, and
we shall serve you.”
1Sa
11:2 Then
Nacḥash the
Ammonite answered them, “For this I make a covenant with you, that I dig out
all your right eyes, and I shall bring reproach on all Yisra’ěl.”
The Concealed
Information in MT:
In 1 Samuel 11:1, the Masoretic Text (MT) begins abruptly
with Nachash the Ammonite besieging Jabesh-Gilead. However, the discovery of the
Dead Sea Scrolls (specifically 4QSam^a) and the records of the historian
Josephus revealed a "missing" paragraph that provides the critical
context for why this siege happened
The
Missing Context from 4QSam
The
expanded text found in the Dead Sea Scrolls explains that Nachash had already
been brutally oppressing the YasharELite tribes east of the Yarden (Gad and
Reuben).
The
Mutilation:
Nachash had gouged out the right eye of every man in those tribes (Gad and
Reuben) to strike terror into YasharEL.
The
Escapees: Seven
thousand men managed to escape this mutilation and fled to Jabesh-Gilead for
asylum.
The
Motive: Nachash
moved against Jabesh-Gilead "about a month later" specifically to
hunt down these 7,000 rebels who had taken refuge there
Link: Biblical Dead Sea
Scrolls - 1 Samuel 11
The DSS translation:
1 Samuel 11 from Scroll 4Q51 Samuel^a
1 Now Nahash king of the Ammonites oppressed the Gadites and
the Reubenites severely. He gouged out the right eye of all of them and there
was no one to save Israel. There did not remain an Israelite man who was beyond
the Jordan whose right eye Nahash king of the Ammonites did not gouge out,
except seven thousand men who escaped from the hand of the Ammonites and went
to Jabesh Gilead. And they were there about a month.[1] Then Nahash the
Ammonite came up, and encamped against Jabesh Gilead: and all the men of Jabesh
said to Nahash king of Ammonites, “Make a covenant with us, and we will serve
you.” 2 Nahash the Ammonite said to them, “On this condition I will make it
with you, that all your right eyes be gouged out. I will make this dishonor all
Israel.”
The Oppressing years during Judges:
Marked in Yellow: The Ammon oppression of 18 years among the 111 years of rules of oppression
|
Rule |
Scripture |
Years |
|
Mesopotamia — Cushan-Rishathaim |
Jud 3:8 |
8 |
|
Moab-Eglon |
Jud 3:14 |
18 |
|
Canaan — Jabin / Sisera |
Jud 4:3 |
20 |
|
Midian |
Jud 6:1 |
7 |
|
Ammon oppression |
Jud 10:8 |
18 |
|
Philistines |
Jud 13:1 |
40 |
|
Sum |
|
111 |
Josephus mentions this in Antiquities of The Jews Book 6
Chapter 5. Here is the link: The
Antiquities of the Jews, by Flavius Josephus
Nachash:
1. The Hebrew Etymology
The name Nachash (נָחָשׁ) is the standard Hebrew word for "serpent" or
"snake". In ancient Hebrew thought, names were often synonymous with
the nature of the person. By naming him Nachash, the biblical text and later
commentators link him to the adversarial "serpent" imagery of the
Garden of Eden.
2. Josephus’ Characterisation of "The Serpent"
While Josephus uses the name Nachash, he describes the king's
actions in a way that emphasizes "serpentine" traits—cunning,
subtilty, and a desire to "blind" or diminish the vision of his
enemies:
Subtilty and Cunning: Josephus notes that Nachash
sought to weaken the YasharELites not just through force, but through
"subtilty and cunning".
The Right Eye: Josephus provides the famous
explanation that Nachash gouged out right eyes so that when a soldier's left eye
was covered by his shield, he would be "wholly useless in war"
3. The Reason for a King:
1 Samuel 12:12 confirms that the persistent threat of
Nachash was a primary factor in the elders' demand for a king. The people chose
to transition from Samuel's judgeship to a monarchy specifically because they
sought a permanent military commander to end this prolonged Ammonite pressure.
1Sa
12:12 “And
when you saw that Nacḥash sovereign of the children of Ammon came against you, you said to
me, ‘No, but let a sovereign reign over us,’ when יהוה your Elohim was your sovereign.
4. The
Transition from Judgeship to Monarchy Under the Pressure of Nachash
1Sam 12:12 statement establishes a critical causal link: the
people’s desire for monarchy was not theoretical or political—it was reactionary,
driven by real and ongoing military pressure.
The crisis that gave birth to the monarchy in YasharEL did
not arise in a vacuum. It was forged under pressure—specifically, under the
sustained and humiliating oppression of Nachash, king of the children of Ammon.
Samuel himself later reveals this motive with striking clarity, removing all
speculation about why the elders demanded a king.
This is not a theoretical desire for political reform; it is
a reaction to fear, to vulnerability, to the visible inability of the existing
leadership structure to deal with an escalating enemy. Nachash was not merely a
passing invader—his campaign had already begun east of the Yarden, among the
tribes of Gad and Reuben. His method was not conventional warfare alone, but
terror: the gouging out of the right eye, systematically crippling the fighting
capacity of YasharEL and branding them with humiliation. This was oppression
that lingered, spread, and deepened over time.
And yet, during this very period, Samuel still stood as
judge in YasharEL. This creates the tension that sits at the heart of the
narrative: how could such oppression continue “under Samuel,” a prophet who
once led YasharEL to decisive victory at Mizpah?
The answer unfolds in the condition of Samuel himself. He
had grown old, and more critically, his sons—appointed as judges—were corrupt:
1Sa
8:3 But his
sons did not walk in his ways, and turned aside after own gain, and took
bribes, and twisted right-ruling.
The structure of judgeship, which depended on righteous and
Spirit-led individuals raised up in times of crisis, was now failing. Samuel
remained a prophet, but he was no longer functioning as an active military
deliverer. The people recognized this gap. What had once worked in moments of
divine intervention was no longer sustainable in the face of a persistent and
organized enemy like Nachash.
It is in this environment that the elders come to Samuel
with their request:
1Sa
8:5 and
said to him, “Look, you are old, and your sons do not walk in your ways. Now
appoint for us a sovereign to rule us like all the nations.”
What they sought was not merely judgment, but continuity—an
enduring military authority who would stand ready at all times, not one who
would arise sporadically. They wanted a king who would “go out before us and
fight our battles” (1 Samuel 8:20). Nachash had exposed the weakness of a
decentralized system.
1Sa
8:20 Then
we shall be, we also, like all the nations, and our sovereign shall rule us and
go out before us and fight our battles.”
Into this moment, Saul is chosen.
Yet when Saul is first anointed in 1 Samuel 10, something
unexpected happens: nothing immediate changes outwardly. There is no army
raised, no campaign launched against Ammon, no deliverance of Gad and Reuben.
Instead, Saul returns quietly to his ordinary life:
1Sa
10:26 And
Sha’ul went to his house too, to Giḇ‛ah. And with him went brave men whose hearts
Elohim had touched.
And even more striking:
1Sa
10:15 And
the uncle of Sha’ul said, “Please inform me what Shemu’ěl said to you.”
1Sa
10:16 And
Sha’ul said to his uncle, “He informed us plainly that the donkeys had been
found.” But he did not disclose to him about the matter of the reign, what
Shemu’ěl had said.
This is not the behaviour of a man stepping into active
kingship. It is the posture of one who has received a calling, but has not yet
entered into its public execution.
Samuel had told him beforehand:
1Sa
10:5 “After
that go to the hill (גבעה)
of Elohim where the Philistine watch-post
is. And it shall be, when you have come there to the city, that you shall meet
a group of prophets coming down from the high place with a stringed instrument,
and a tambourine, and a flute, and a lyre before them, and they are
prophesying.
1Sa
10:6 “And
the Spirit of יהוה shall come upon you, and you shall prophesy with them and be
turned into another man.
The location is not incidental—גבעה (Gibeah) is Saul’s
own העיר (city) in Benjamin. The English
translation conceals by translating Gibeah as ‘hill’. The transformation begins
not on a battlefield, but in his own environment. The Spirit comes upon him,
and he is changed internally before he is ever manifested externally as king.
This signals that his kingship begins as formation, not function.
Meanwhile, Nachash’s oppression does not cease. The tribes
beyond the Yarden remain vulnerable, and Saul, though anointed, does not
intervene. This is not negligence—it is structural reality. There is, as yet,
no centralized monarchy in operation. Saul has no standing army, no established
authority over all the tribes, and no national recognition strong enough to
mobilize YasharEL into coordinated action. The anointing has occurred, but the
kingdom has not yet taken form.
Then the crisis reaches a breaking point. Nachash advances
against Jabesh-Gilead. This is no longer a distant problem across the Yarden—it
is now immediate, pressing into the heart of YasharEL’s accessible territory.
The people of Jabesh, already aware of Nachash’s brutality, attempt
negotiation:
“Make a covenant with us, and we will serve you.” (1
Samuel 11:1)
But Nachash responds with the same established cruelty:
“On this condition I will make a covenant with you, that I
gouge out all your right eyes…” (1 Samuel 11:2)
At this moment, something shifts.
When the news reaches Saul:
1Sa
11:6 And
the Spirit of Elohim came upon Sha’ul mightily as he heard these words, and his
displeasure burned greatly.
This is the turning point. The same Spirit that came upon
him in Gibeah for transformation now comes upon him for action. What was
internal becomes operational. Saul steps into his role—not as a symbolic king,
but as a military deliverer. He summons YasharEL, unifies the tribes, and leads
them into battle. The victory is decisive.
Only after this victory does Samuel call the people:
1Sa
11:14 And
Shemu’ěl said to the people, “Come, and let us go to Gilgal and renew the reign
there.”
1Sa
11:15 And
all the people went to Gilgal, and there they set up Sha’ul to reign before יהוה in Gilgal, and there they
slaughtered slaughterings of peace offerings before יהוה. And there Sha’ul rejoiced,
and all the men of Yisra’ěl, very greatly.
This is not redundant—it is confirmatory. Saul’s kingship is
established in stages. The first anointing marked divine selection; the victory
over Nachash demonstrated divine empowerment; the gathering at Gilgal
institutionalized his rule before the nation.
This sequence also aligns with the account preserved by
Flavius Josephus, who describes a second public confirmation of Saul’s kingship
following the victory, marking the formal transition of Israel’s governance
into monarchy.
Josephus quote: 4. And when Samuel had told them that
he ought to confirm the kingdom to Saul by a second ordination of him, they all
came together to the city of Gilgal, for thither did he command them to come. So,
the prophet anointed Saul with the holy oil in the sight of the multitude, and
declared him to be king the second time. And so the government of the Hebrews
was changed into a regal government; for in the days of Moses, and his disciple
Joshua, who was their general, they continued under an aristocracy; but after
the death of Joshua, for eighteen years in all, the multitude had no settled
form of government, but were in an anarchy; after which they returned to their
former government, they then permitting themselves to be judged by him who
appeared to be the best warrior and most courageous, whence it was that they
called this interval of their government the Judges. End Quote
Seen in this light, the timeline is not confused—it is
progressive. The oppression of Nachash begins before Saul’s effective reign,
continues during a period of transition, and is only broken when Saul has been
sufficiently formed and the situation demands unified national action.
Thus, the monarchy does not emerge merely because YasharEL
desired to imitate other nations. It emerges because the existing
structure—aged leadership, corrupt successors, and decentralized
authority—proved incapable of resisting a sustained external threat. Nachash
becomes the catalyst, exposing the system’s limits and forcing a transformation
in governance.
And Saul, though chosen early, steps into his role only when
both preparation and pressure converge—when the transformation wrought at
Gibeah meets the external crisis at Jabesh-Gilead.
In this way, the narrative holds together: calling precedes
action, formation precedes authority, and deliverance becomes the seal by which
kingship is publicly established.
5. Moving authority embodied in Samuel himself
In the closing phase of the judges, before the monarchy
visibly emerges, the life of YasharEL is not centered around a fixed sanctuary,
nor a standing government, but around a moving authority embodied in Samuel
himself. The text describes his ministry not as static, but as a living
circuit:
1Sa
7:15 And
Shemu’ěl rightly ruled Yisra’ěl all the days of his life,
1Sa
7:16 and
each year he made the rounds of Běyth Ěl, and Gilgal, and Mitspah, and rightly
ruled Yisra’ěl in all those places.
1Sa
7:17 Then
he returned to Ramah, for his home was there. And there he rightly ruled Yisra’ěl,
and there he built a slaughter-place to יהוה.
This circuit is more than geography—it is governance. In the
absence of a stable national center, Samuel himself becomes the axis around
which justice, instruction, and worship revolve. The reason for this
fragmentation lies in what had already occurred: the fall of Shiloh. When the
Ark was captured in the days of Eli (1 Samuel 4), the central sanctuary system
was effectively broken. The “place which יהוה would choose” (Deuteronomy 12) was no
longer functioning in its former clarity.
Into that vacuum, Samuel steps—not by establishing a new
centralized shrine, but by bringing the authority of Torah to the people
directly. His altar at Ramah is not rebellion, but restoration—similar in
pattern to what Eliyahu would later do on Mount Carmel. It is a re-gathering
point, a localized return to covenant in a time when the national structure has
collapsed. The nation, therefore, exists in a degraded but transitional
condition: spiritually dependent on a prophet, structurally decentralized,
and increasingly vulnerable.
This vulnerability is what Nachash exploits. His
oppression—already active beyond the Yarden among Gad and Reuben—exposes the
limitations of a system that depends on a single aging judge and lacks a
continuous military command. And it is precisely this pressure that leads the
elders to demand a king, as Samuel later recounts:
1Sa
12:12 “And
when you saw that Nacḥash sovereign of the children of Ammon came against you, you said to
me, ‘No, but let a sovereign reign over us,’ when יהוה your Elohim was your sovereign.
But when Saul is first chosen, the monarchy does not
suddenly replace the old order. Instead, the two systems overlap. Samuel does
not step aside; he incorporates Saul into his existing framework.
After the public selection, the text records a crucial act:
1Sa
10:25 And
Shemu’ěl declared to the people the rulings of the reign, and wrote it in a
book and placed it before יהוה. And Shemu’ěl sent all the people away, each to his
house.
The kingdom begins not with conquest, but with instruction.
The “manner of the kingdom” is written—codified—and placed before יהוה,
indicating that kingship is to operate under Torah, not above it.
Immediately after this, Saul returns to his house in Gibeah. There is no throne
established, no palace constructed, no army raised. The king goes home.
But Gibeah itself is not an ordinary location. Earlier,
Samuel had told Saul:
“After that you shall come to the hill of Elohim… and it
shall be, when you come there to the city, that you shall meet a company of
prophets… and the Spirit of יהוה shall come upon you, and you shall
prophesy with them, and shall be turned into another man.” (1 Samuel 10:5–6)
The “hill of Elohim” (גבעת האלהים)
is widely understood to be Gibeah, Saul’s own city. This means that
Samuel had already established a prophetic presence within Saul’s
environment. The training of the king does not occur in isolation, nor in a
distant sanctuary, but within his own territory, under the influence of
an active prophetic community.
Thus, Saul’s early kingship is not marked by immediate
rulership, but by formation under prophetic oversight. Samuel’s
circuit—Bethel, Gilgal, Mizpah, Ramah—continues, but now extends functionally
into Gibeah, where the future king resides. The monarchy is being shaped within
the framework of the judgeship before it replaces it.
This relationship continues even after major events.
Following the failure at Gilgal, the text notes:
1Sa
13:15 And
Shemu’ěl arose and went up from Gilgal to Giḇ‛ah of Binyamin. And Sha’ul
mustered the people who were present with him, about six hundred men.
This movement is significant. Samuel is not distant from
Saul; he returns directly to his city. Gibeah becomes not merely the residence
of the king, but a point of ongoing prophetic correction and instruction.
The king is not autonomous—he is being actively overseen.
If we map Samuel’s circuit in light of this transition, the
structure becomes coherent:
- Ramah
remains the prophetic center, where Samuel dwells and where an altar
stands—a hub of restored worship.
- Bethel
anchors the nation in its patriarchal memory—the “house of Elohim,”
reminding YasharEL of covenant origins.
- Mizpeh
stands as the place of repentance and assembly. It is the place where
YasharEL returns to יהוה after the collapse associated with
Eli’s house and the loss of the Ark. Samuel leads, intercedes, and even
directs the battle against the Philistines (1 Samuel 7:9–10). Saul is
completely absent from the narrative at this stage—he is not yet
introduced.
- Gilgal
becomes the site of covenant renewal and kingship confirmation—where
Saul’s rule is tested and later established.
- Gibeah
emerges as the king’s dwelling, but also as a training ground,
infused with prophetic presence.
In this light, Saul’s life between his anointing and his
decisive victory over Nachash is not empty—it is structured, formative, and
extended. He begins in the fields, searching for donkeys, still functioning as
a son within his father’s household. He returns again to that same ordinary
life after being chosen. The monarchy, at this stage, is not visible in
power—it is hidden in preparation.
Meanwhile, the nation itself is slowly shifting. The people
have asked for a king, but they are still living within the rhythms of the
judges. Samuel still judges. The circuit still runs. The altar at Ramah still
stands. Yet beneath this continuity, something new is being formed: a
centralized leadership that will eventually replace the circuit with a throne.
This is why the later failure of Saul carries such weight.
When he acts unlawfully at Gilgal (1 Samuel 13), it is not the error of a
novice in his first days—it is the collapse of a man who has already been
shaped, instructed, and positioned over time. The tragedy is not haste alone,
but misalignment after preparation.
And this also resolves the apparent confusion in timing. The
oppression of Nachash begins earlier, beyond the Yarden, during a period when
Saul is not yet functioning as a national deliverer. The demand for a king
arises in response to that pressure. Saul is then anointed and enters a period
of formation under Samuel’s oversight—within the prophetic environment of
Gibeah and the broader judicial circuit.
Only when the threat reaches Jabesh-Gilead—crossing into
immediate proximity—and when Saul is sufficiently formed, does the Spirit come
upon him in a way that activates his role publicly.
The man who had returned quietly to his house now summons
YasharEL. The one who had been transformed among prophets now leads warriors.
The hidden preparation meets visible crisis.
Thus, the arc becomes clear: the donkeys mark the
beginning—the call emerging in obscurity. Nachash marks the end—the call
manifesting in power. Between them lies not confusion, but an extended and
necessary transition, where the judgeship does not abruptly end, but gradually
gives way to monarchy through instruction, oversight, and formation.
In that span, Samuel does not merely anoint a king—he trains
one, embedding him within a living network of prophetic authority, until
the moment arrives when YasharEL no longer moves in circuits, but under a crown.
6. The Nachash Appearances in Scripture
The first appearance of Nachash ( נחש )
is in the garden, not as a political enemy, but as a voice—subtle, persuasive,
and subversive. The text introduces him with a defining characteristic:
“And the serpent (נחש) was more crafty than any beast of the
field which יהוה Elohim had made…” (Genesis 3:1)
Here, נחש does not attack physically—he distorts
perception. He speaks, questions, reframes, and ultimately leads the woman
to see differently:
“And the woman saw that the tree was good for food…”
(Genesis 3:6)
This is critical: the fall begins with altered sight,
not force. The serpent does not remove the eye—he corrupts what the eye
perceives. From the beginning, נחש operates in the realm of discernment,
perception, and truth.
The woman was made from the side of man which English
translates as ribs ,whereas the Hebrew word tsela (צַלְעָה ) means
side. While scripture
Gen 2:21 So יהוה Elohim
caused a deep sleep to fall on the man, and he slept. And He took one/echath
אחת from/מ me his sides/tsalotav צַּלְעֹתָיו, and closed up the flesh in its
place.
Word-by-Word Breakdown
- אַחַת (Achath): The feminine form of the word for
"one".
- מִ (Mi-): A preposition meaning "from"
or "out of".
- צַּלְעֹתָיו (Tsalotav): This is a plural form of the root word tsela (side/rib)
with a masculine possessive suffix ("his")
Deep Spiritual
Connection
There is a beautiful
linguistic "mirroring" happening in the Hebrew of this chapter:
- Achath (One - feminine) describes the Tsela (Side -
feminine) taken from the man.
- This "One" portion is then built
into an Ishah (Woman - feminine).
- Later, in Genesis 2:24, the man and woman
become Basar Echad (One Flesh - masculine).
The "Feminine
One" (Achath) is taken out so that the two can come back together
as a "Masculine One" (Echad).
The Queen at the Right
Hand
In Psalm 45:9,
the text says: "At thy right hand did stand the queen
in gold of Ophir."
If the "Side" (Tsela)
taken from Adam was the right side, it establishes the Right Hand as
the position of the "Helper" (Ezer) and the "Queen"
from the very beginning.
Supporting the
"Right Side" Mapping
- The Place of Honor: In ancient Near Eastern and Biblical
thought, the right hand is the side of authority, strength, and
intimacy. For the Woman to be taken from the right side and then stand
at the right hand of the Man signifies her role as his direct equal and
his most trusted strength.
- The Covenant Alignment: Just as the "Queen" stands at
the right hand of the King, the Messiah (the Last Adam) is seated at
the Right Hand of the Father (Psalm 110:1). If the
"Body/Bride" of Messiah is his "Side," she is
positioned exactly where the Queen is in Psalm 45—at the right hand.
- Benjamin (Son of my Right Hand): Interestingly, Saul was from the tribe
of Benjamin (Bin-Yamin), which means "Son of the Right
Hand." This connects back to our discussion of the Monarchy:
the "Right Hand" is the place where the kingdom and the marriage
covenant intersect.
The "Flesh and
Bone" Unity
When Adam says, "This
is now bone of my bones, and flesh of my flesh" (Genesis 2:23),
he is recognizing the "Side" that was missing from his own body. If
that side was the right side, her standing at his right hand
"completes" the picture, restoring the side that was opened.
The Spiritual Map:
- The Act: A "One" (Achath) side is taken (The Right
Side).
- The Position: The Queen stands at the "Right
Hand" (Psalm 45:9).
- The Result: The two become "One" (Echad) flesh (Genesis
2:24).
Now this is a stunning
synthesis of the typological map we have been building. We are
seeing a connection the biological act in Eden to the military mutilation in
the days of Saul, revealing a consistent "Serpentine" strategy across
scripture.
The Right Side and the
"Eye" of the Body
By identifying Eve as
the Right Side (Achath Mitzalotav), we see why the
Serpent (Nachash) targets her. In the "Manner of the King" and the
"Manner of the Body," the right eye is the eye of
vision, aim, and spiritual foresight.
- The Mutilation of Vision: Just as Nachash the Ammonite sought
to gouge out the right eye of the men of YasharEL to make
them military useless (unable to aim while the shield covered the left
eye), the Nachash in the Garden attacked the "Right
Side" (the woman) to blind the corporate body of Adam.
- The Federal Headship: As noted, the woman was deceived first
(1 Timothy 2:14), but the "Right Eye" of the marriage
union was darkened, leaving Adam—the federal head—to follow into death.
The "blinding" of the right side led to the fall of the whole
house.
1Ti 2:14 And Aḏam was not deceived, but the woman, having been deceived, fell into
transgression.
The Serpent's
Signature (Gouging the Right Eye)
The tactic of Nachash the
Ammonite in 1 Samuel 11 was not a random cruelty; it was
a literal imitation of his spiritual ancestor in the Garden.
- The Edenic Strike: The Serpent strikes the "Right
Side" (Eve) to deceive.
- The Ammonite Strike: The Serpent-King (Nachash) strikes the
"Right Eye" to enslave.
- The Spiritual Paralysis: Once the right eye is gone, the shield
(the Torah/Protection) becomes a wall that traps the soldier. He has a
left eye, but he cannot see the enemy or aim his weapon. He is alive but
"wholly useless in war" (Josephus).
Saul's Mission:
Restoring the Vision
This adds a deep layer to
why Saul’s 18-year apprenticeship had to culminate in the battle against Nachash.
- The Counter-Strike: Saul was the "Son of the Right
Hand" (Benjamin). His first act as king was to stop the Serpent from
gouging out the right eyes of the 7,000 refugees.
- A Temporary Resurrection: By saving the right eyes of
Jabesh-Gilead, Saul was momentarily "resurrecting" the vision of
the nation. He was acting as the "Beloved" should, protecting
the "Right Side" from the Serpent’s deception.
The Messianic
Full Circle
The "Messiah
Concealed" in this map is the one who ultimately heals the "Right
Eye":
- Adam (Federal Head): The Right Side is taken, deceived, and
the body falls into the grave (Sheol/Saul).
- The Last Adam (Messiah): His side is opened on
the cross (a restoration of the Edenic act). From that side, the Bride
(The Queen) is built and restored to the Right Hand (Psalm
45:9).
- The Healing: Unlike Saul, who eventually fell into
the "grave," Messiah restores the vision. He doesn't just save
the eye; He is the light.
In the Garden and in the days of Saul, the Nachash
(Serpent) wanted to take the right eye to enslave the
person. However, Yahusha commands the follower to voluntarily sacrifice the
right eye if it becomes the entry point for deception.
The Right Eye as the
Gate of Deception
As we established,
the Right Side/Right Eye represents the Queen, the Vision, and
the Aim.
- The Problem: Because the right eye is the "eye
of aim," if it is corrupted by lust or pride, it "aims" the
entire body toward sin.
- The Connection to Eve: The woman (the Right Side)
"saw" that the fruit was good for food and pleasant to the eyes (Gen
3:6). Her "Right Eye" vision was compromised by the Serpent’s
suggestion, leading to the fall of the Federal Head (Adam).
Maimed for Life vs.
Whole for Geyhinnom
Yahusha’s teaching
creates a direct parallel to the choice faced by the men of Jabesh-Gilead:
- The Choice of the Serpent (Nachash): "I will make a covenant with
you on the condition that I gouge out all your right
eyes" (1 Sam 11:2). Nachash wanted them to keep their lives but lose
their vision/aim so they could be slaves.
- The Choice of the Messiah (Yahusha): "If your right eye causes you to
sin, pluck it out." Yahusha is speaking more than what a moral eye
can see. He is speaking of a high ended sin i.e. adultery which has no
sacrifice on the Levitical altar. The adultery has to be going astray from
the husband Yahusha to a false worship system lusting for the woman ‘Hagar’
whom Saul the emissary said in Galatians 4 is present Yerushalayim along
with her children in bondage. John reveals her as ‘Mystery Babylon, the
mother of all Harlots’, the great city on whose streets the 2 witnesses
laid killed termed as Egypt and Sodom.
Mat 5:27 “You heard that it was said to those of
old, ‘You shall not commit adultery.’
Mat 5:28 “But I say to you that everyone
looking at a woman to lust for her has already committed adultery with her in
his heart.
Mat 5:29 “And if your right eye causes you to
stumble, pluck it out and throw it away from you. For it is better for you that
one of your members perish, than for your entire body to be thrown into
GěHinnom.
The ‘right eye’ to be plucked and thrown away is the one
lusting this carnal woman and her delicacies. While one may say this analogy
doesn’t fit as how can one live without his right eye. He will be rendered
useless for war and that’s exactly the strategy used by Nachash the king of the
Ammonites. If you see an individual then the analogy doesn’t make sense.
Yahusha was talking about the Corporate body and separation from it for its
right eye is seeking the delicacies of this woman deceived by the Nachash just
as Chauah was in the garden of Eden. Remember, we are talking about Federal
headship here. Once the member which causes to sin is amputated for the right
reason, we are incorporated into the body of Messiah which is full of light,
direction and alignment to Elohim’s purpose.
The Corporate Solution: When the "Right
Eye" (the leadership or a specific member) of the corporate body begins to
"lust after Hagar" (the system in bondage, Galatians 4:25), the
remaining members must sever themselves from that member or
the whole body is thrown into Geyhinnom.
The Federal Headship
and the "House of Blood"
This ties back to Saul
(Sheol) and Adam.
- Saul’s Failure: Saul eventually "kept his
eyes" on the spoil and the people’s approval rather than cutting off
the desire of his eyes. Because he wouldn't "pluck out" his own
rebellion, his whole "House" became a "House of Blood"
and went down to the grave.
- David’s Transition: David, though he sinned with his eyes
(Bathsheba), repented with a "broken and contrite heart." He was
willing to be "maimed" to keep his soul by looking at the
greater sacrifice which the Levite altar couldn’t offer.
·
The
Prophetic Map Summary
|
Entity |
Role of the Right Eye |
Result |
|
Eve (The Side) |
Corrupted by the Serpent's "seeing"
(Gen 3:6). |
Fall of the Federal Head. |
|
Jabesh-Gilead |
Threatened with mutilation for slavery. |
Saved by the "Son of the Right Hand"
(Saul). |
|
Yahusha's Law |
Must be sacrificed if it leads to sin. |
Entrance into Life/Kingdom. |
|
The Queen (Ps 45) |
Standing at the Right Hand with
pure vision. |
Eternal Monarchy with Messiah. |
7. The Prophetic
Irony of the Serpent
The Paradox of the
Pole: Looking Beyond the Poison
In Numbers 21, the Nachash is
no longer just the deceiver (Eden) or the mutilator (Ammon); it is the Mirror
of the Curse.
- The Sight Connection: As noted, life is restored by perception.
To live, one had to look at the very thing that was killing them.
- Messianic Concealment: Yahusha explicitly claims this
"Serpent" role in John 3:14-15: "As
Moses lifted up the serpent in the wilderness, even so must the Son of Man
be lifted up."
- The Federal Link: On the pole, the Serpent
represents Sin judged. Just as the "Right Eye" must
be plucked if it causes sin, the "Serpent" must be lifted up
(exposed and judged) so the people can look past the
judgment to the Healer.
Nehushtan: The Serpent
Becomes an Idol
The corruption of the
bronze serpent in 2 Kings 18:4 provides the perfect bridge to
your Hagar/Babylon analysis.
2Ki 18:4 He took away the high places and broke the
pillars, and cut down the Ashěrah, and broke in pieces the bronze serpent which
Mosheh had made, for until those days the children of Yisra’ěl burned incense
to it, and called it Neḥushtan.
- Misdirected Worship: What began as a tool to restore
"Right Eye" vision became a "False Woman" (an idol)
that blinded the people. They began to burn incense to the object rather
than the Elohim who commanded it.
- Hezekiah’s Amputation: Hezekiah’s act of breaking the serpent
in pieces is a corporate "plucking out of the eye." He saw that
the object—once a means of life—had become a "member that causes to
stumble." He "threw it away" to save the body from
Geyhinnom.
The Pattern of
Blindness vs. Sight
Tying the Garden, Saul,
and the Wilderness together:
- Eden: The Serpent blinds through a "False Vision" (lust of
the eyes).
- The Wilderness: The Serpent kills, but the Bronze
Serpent restores sight through "Faithful Perception."
- The Kings (Saul/Hezekiah): Saul failed to destroy the
"Serpent" (disobedience), leading to the Grave. Hezekiah
succeeded in "plucking out" the idol, leading to life.
- The Hagar System: The "Bronze Serpent" turned
into an idol is the perfect shadow of the Mystery Babylon system—something
that may have had a divine origin or religious appearance but has become a
harlot system that must be destroyed.
"The Nachash strategy is consistent: if it
cannot blind you through mutilation (1 Sam 11), it will seduce you
through misdirected worship (2 Kings 18). Whether it is Nachash the Ammonite or
Nehushtan the idol, the result is the same—the loss of the 'Right Eye' vision
of Yahuah's purpose. Only by looking at the Serpent on the pole (Messiah
bearing the curse) is the 'Right Side' restored to its proper alignment at the
Right Hand of the King."
8. The Alignment with ‘The
manner of the king’ and the ‘Transition of Ages’
The Nachash (Serpent) is
discerned through four distinct dimensions—Deception, Healing, Idolatry, and
Destruction—culminating in the Messianic Internalization.
The Right Eye as
the Throne of Discernment
By linking Deuteronomy
23:3 (the exclusion of the Ammonite) to 1 Samuel 11:2 (the
gouging of the eye), you reveal that the Serpent's goal is to prevent the
"Assembly of Yahuah" from ever seeing clearly.
Deu 23:3 “An Ammonite or Mo’aḇite shall not enter the assembly of יהוה, even a tenth generation of them shall not ever enter the
assembly of יהוה,
- The 10th Generation: The perpetual exclusion of Ammon
represents a system that can never enter the Covenant. Therefore, its only
strategy is to ensure that those inside the Covenant are
blinded.
- The Royal Aim: A king needs his "Right Eye"
to lead the nation in war and justice. By demanding the right eye, Nachash
was attempting to ensure that even if YasharEL had a king, that king would
be a blind puppet, unable to "aim" the nation toward the Torah.
The Civil War of the
Senses: Nachash vs. Yahusha
The contrast drawn
between the External Mutilation of Nachash and the Internal
Discipline of Yahusha is the heart of the transition from the Old to
the Renewed Covenant.
- The Slave Master (Nachash): He takes your eye to make you a servant
of Golan (Exile/Captivity). If he owns your sight, he
owns your labour.
- The Deliverer (Yahusha): He commands the "plucking" to
make you an heir of Life. If you own your sight (by governing
it), you own your soul.
- The Corporate "Right Eye": In the context of our discussion
on Saul (Sheol), Saul failed because he allowed his
"Right Eye" to be governed by the fear of the people and the
delicacies of the spoil. He kept his physical eyes but lost his spiritual
discernment, leading his entire "Federal Body" into the grave.
The Progressive Map of the Serpent
This
summary should be the "Executive Overview" of your notes, showing
the Evolution of the Eye:
|
Stage |
Manifestation |
Action on the "Eye" |
Result |
|
Eden |
The Whisperer |
Corrupts (Lust
of the Eyes) |
Fall of the Federal Head. |
|
Wilderness |
The Bronze Sign |
Restores (Faithful
Perception) |
Life through looking at the Curse. |
|
Hezekiah |
Nehushtan (Idol) |
Blinds (Misdirected
Worship) |
The tool becomes a Harlot system. |
|
Ammon |
Nachash the King |
Destroys (Physical
Mutilation) |
Slavery and the demand for a King. |
|
Basharah |
Yahusha |
Governs (Sacrificial
Purity) |
Entrance into the Kingdom of Light. |
The Final Perspective:
Guarding the Vision
The ultimate conclusion is
now clear: True Monarchy is the Governance of Vision.
- Saul was a king who could see the enemy but couldn't see the Torah
(Blindness).
- David was a king who saw his sin, "plucked out" his pride,
and looked to the Altar (Discernment).
- The Messiah is the King who is the Light, standing at
the Right Hand (Psalm 45), restoring the "Right
Side" (The Bride) to full, uncorrupted vision.
9. The Genetic roots
of Ammon
The Immoral Seed: A
Loss of Transcendent Vision
The daughters of Lot were
survivors of Sodom, but they were blinded by the trauma and immorality of
that system.
- The Failure of Sight: They looked at the smoldering ruins of
the plain and concluded that "there is not a man on earth to come in
unto us" (Genesis 19:31-32).
Gen 19:31 And the first-born said to the
younger, “Our father is old, and there is no man on the earth to come in to us,
as is the way of all the earth.
Gen 19:32 "Come, let us make our father
drink wine and lie with him, so that we preserve the seed of our father.”
- The Missed Path: They had no "Right-Side
vision"—the ability to look toward the covenant family of Abraham.
Instead of trusting their father to seek a set apart alignment with
Abraham’s clan (their true brethren), they resorted to a carnal,
serpentine deception to preserve their seed.
- The Result: Ammon was the fruit of this "incestuous blindness."
The seed was born out of an act where the "Right Eye" of moral
discernment was completely gouged out in favour of carnal survival.
The Legacy of the
"Abominable Seed"
Because Ammon was brought
forth through a lack of vision, the entire nation of Ammon became the embodiment
of that blindness.
- Brethren but Adversaries: While they were kin to YasharEL, they
were the "daughters' seed," carrying the trauma and immorality
of Sodom into every generation.
- The Perpetual Exclusion: This is why the Torah excludes them to
the 10th generation (Deuteronomy 23:3). It isn't just a punishment;
it is a recognition that the "Ammonite Spirit" is a blinded
spirit that cannot perceive the "Manner of the King."
Nachash: The Natural
Fruit of the Root
When Nachash the Ammonite
demands the right eyes of YasharEL, he is simply trying to force his
"brethren" to look like his own ancestors.
- Misery Loves Company: Because his own lineage was born from a
lack of vision (the daughters' failure to see Abraham's house), he seeks
to ensure YasharEL can no longer "aim" toward their own Covenant
headship.
- The Federal Link: Lot's daughters "uncovered"
their father in the dark; Nachash seeks to "uncover" and shame
the men of Jabesh-Gilead. Both acts are Serpentine strikes against
the honour and vision of the family.
Insights:
These insights adds a
critical "Biological Genesis" to the map:
- The Origin: Lot’s daughters have no right-side vision, choosing
incest over covenant alignment with Abraham.
- The Manifestation: Ammon becomes a nation
"reserved" in blindness, excluded from the assembly.
- The Aggression: Nachash the Ammonite (The Serpent)
seeks to export his blindness to YasharEL through
mutilation.
- The Solution: Saul (Son of the Right Hand) must
defeat this "blinded seed" to preserve the vision of the
Covenant.
This explains why the
Ammonites were so persistent and personal in their hatred—they were the
"dark mirror" of what happens when the Right Eye is lost to the
immorality of the "Sodom system."
10. How It All Relates
to Messiah Yahusha
What we have built is not
merely a historical reconstruction—it is a prophetic anatomy of sight,
headship, and restoration, and it reaches its full resolution only in
Messiah.
From the beginning, the
conflict is not primarily political—it is optical and covenantal.
In Eden, the first Nachash
( נחש
) does not kill Adam and Chauah—he redefines
what they see:
“And the woman saw that
the tree was good…” (Genesis 3:6)
The fall begins when the right-side
perception is corrupted. The woman—the taken side ( tselah צלע)—functions as the perceptive extension of
the man. When that side is deceived, the entire body collapses. This is not
merely individual—it is federal headship failure.
From there, the pattern
intensifies. In the wilderness, the same Nachash ( נחש ) appears again—not as deceiver but as judged
image:
“Make a fiery serpent…
and it shall be that everyone who is bitten, when he looks, shall live.”
(Numbers 21:8)
Here is the paradox: the
curse must be looked at to be overcome.
This is where Messiah
begins to emerge beneath the text.
Because later, Yahusha
explicitly declares:
“As Moses lifted up the
serpent in the wilderness, even so must the Son of Man be lifted up.” (John
3:14)
This is the turning point
of our entire structure.
Messiah does not remove
the serpent—He becomes the locus where the curse is exposed and judged.
The poison is not avoided—it is absorbed and rendered powerless.
Nachash the Ammonite
does something profoundly revealing:
“I will gouge out all
your right eyes…” (1 Samuel 11:2)
This is not random
brutality—it is the physical manifestation of Eden’s spiritual strategy.
- Eden → corrupt the right-side perception
- Ammon → remove the right-side perception
The serpent evolves:
- from deception
- to destruction
And this is where Saul
enters—not as Messiah, but as a shadow of incomplete restoration.
Saul, from Benjamin
(son of the right hand), rises to defend the right eye. He prevents the
mutilation and restores vision temporarily. But he cannot sustain it. Because
the real problem is not external blindness—it is internal misalignment of
vision. Saul keeps his physical eyes but loses discernment. He sees the
people, the spoil, the pressure—but not the command of יהוה.
So, the pattern
exposes itself:
A man can retain sight
and still be blind. This is where Messiah Yahusha surpasses Saul completely.
When Yahusha says:
“If your right eye causes
you to stumble, pluck it out…” (Matthew 5:29)
He is not speaking of
mutilation—He is reversing the strategy of Nachash.
- Nachash removes the eye to enslave
- Yahusha commands removal to liberate
This is the deepest
inversion.
The serpent says: “Lose your eye so you can live as my servant”
Messiah says: “Lose your corrupted sight so you can enter life”
Now the final
alignment:
In Eden → the side is
opened → the bride is taken
In Messiah → the side is opened → the bride is restored
The wound is reversed.
And where is Messiah now?
“Sit at My right hand…”
(Psalm 110:1)
And: “At Your right hand
stands the queen…” (Psalm 45:9)
This completes our entire
right-side theology.
- The right side was deceived
- The right eye was targeted
- The right hand was threatened
But in Messiah:
- The right side is restored (Bride)
- The right eye is purified (discernment)
- The right hand is enthroned (authority)
So, the full resolution
is this:
Messiah does not merely
heal blindness—He recreates the entire system of sight, restoring the
body, the bride, and the throne to their original alignment.
Where Nachash:
- corrupts
- blinds
- destroys
Messiah:
- exposes
- purifies
- restores