Friday, March 20, 2026

The Ruach of Adoption: From Scattered Sonship to the Double Portion in the Direct Inheritance of Elohim

 

Preface 

In the sacred writings of the Torah and the teachings of our sages, profound truths emerge about lineage, inheritance, sonship, and the ultimate restoration of the scattered remnant. This note explores the halakhic foundations of raising children, the transfer of birthright and double portion, the divine allotment of nations versus the direct portion of YasharEL, and the redemptive path that leads the returning son back to full maturity under the authority of Elohim. Drawing from Torah verses, Talmudic insights, Targumim, Midrashim, and later codifications, it traces a unified thread: from patriarchal elevations and legal guardianships through prophetic promises of return, culminating in the eternal order where the refined heir receives the pi shenayim as a legitimate firstborn in the renewed creation 

I. The Halakha 

In the Torah and traditional Jewish law (Halakha), adoption is not a formal legal procedure that changes a child's biological lineage, but it is a highly regarded spiritual and social act. Below are the primary scriptures and legal precedents that define this framework. 

1. The Legal Elevation of Ephraim and Manasseh (Genesis 48) 

Jacob’s "adoption" of his grandsons is the primary Torah model for a younger son receiving the firstborn’s status and a double portion.  

A unique case of "elevation" occurs when a patriarch brings descendants into his direct line.

Genesis 48:5: Jacob tells Joseph, "Now your two sons... are mine; Ephraim and Manasseh shall be mine, just as Reuben and Simeon are mine." By this act, Jacob adopted his grandsons as direct sons, granting them full tribal status and a double portion of the inheritance 

Gen 48:5 “And now, your two sons, Ephrayim and Menashsheh, who were born to you in the land of Mitsrayim before I came to you in Mitsrayim, are mine – as Re’uěn and Shim‛on, they are mine. 

The foundational concept of adoption in Jewish thought is that raising a child is equivalent to giving birth to them.

·       Talmud, Sanhedrin 19b & Megillah 13a: "Whoever raises an orphan in his home, Scripture ascribes it to him as though he had begotten that child". 

·       Isaiah 64:8 (as interpreted by Exodus Rabbah 45): "Anyone who raises a child is called father, not the one who has begotten it". 

Isa 64:8 And now, O יהוה, You are our Father. We are the clay, and You our potter. And we are all the work of Your hand. 

·       Exodus 2:10: Moses is "brought to Pharaoh’s daughter, and he became her son." Even though he was biological Hebrew, the Torah recognizes the princess as his mother in a social and legal context within the Egyptian royal court.  

Exo 2:10 And the child grew, and she brought him to Pharaoh’s daughter, and he became her son. And she called his name Mosheh, saying, “Because I have drawn him out of the water.” 

2. Lineage and Tribal Rights 

Lineage is determined strictly by the biological father. An adopted child does not inherit

 the "tribal" status (e.g., Kohen or Levi) of the adoptive family. 

Numbers 1:18: "They declared their pedigrees... by the house of their fathers." Tribal 

identity is passed through the biological paternal line. 

Deuteronomy 25:5-6 (Levirate Marriage): This law ensures a man's name is not blotted out.

 The firstborn of a Levirate union is legally "reckoned as the deceased's own child" to maintain that biological lineage.  

Num 1:18 and they assembled all the congregation together on the first day of the second new moon. And they declared their ancestry by clans, by their fathers’ houses, according to the number of names, from twenty years old and above, each one head by head 

Deu 25:5 “When brothers dwell together, and one of them has died, and has no son, the widow of the dead man shall not become a stranger’s outside. Her husband’s brother does go in to her, and shall take her as his wife, and perform the duty of a husband’s brother to her.
Deu 25:6 “And it shall be that the first-born son which she bears does rise up for the name of his dead brother, so that his name is not blotted out of Yisra’ěl 

3. Rights of Inheritance 

In strict Jewish law, an adopted son does not automatically inherit from his adoptive parents because the biological connection remains the legal standard.  

Genesis 15:2-4: Abraham originally planned for his steward, Eliezer of Damascus, to be his heir because he was childless. However, Elohim clarified that only a biological son ("one that shall come forth out of thine own bowels") would be the primary heir. 

Gen 15:2  And Aram said, “Master יהוה, what would You give me, seeing I go childless, and the heir of my house is Eli‛ezer of Dammeseq?” 
Gen 15:3  And Aram said, “See, You have given me no seed, and see, one born in my house is my heir!” 
Gen 15:4  And see, the word of יהוה came to him, saying, “This one is not your heir, but he who comes from your own body is your heir.”  

Numbers 27:8-11: Defines the specific order of inheritance based on kinship. To grant an adopted child an inheritance, parents must use legal mechanisms like a gift or a formal will. 

Num 27:8  “And speak to the children of Yisra’ěl, saying, ‘When a man dies and has no son, then you shall cause his inheritance to pass to his daughter. 
Num 27:9  And if he has no daughter, then you shall give his inheritance to his brothers. 
Num 27:10  And if he has no brothers, then you shall give his inheritance to his father’s brothers. 
Num 27:11  And if his father has no brothers, then you shall give his inheritance to the nearest relative in his clan, and he shall possess it.’ ” And it shall be to the children of Yisra’ěl a law of right-ruling, as יהוה commanded Mosheh. 

4. Elevation of Status: Ephraim and Manasseh 

A unique case of "elevation" occurs when a patriarch brings descendants into his direct line.

Genesis 48:5: Jacob tells Joseph, "Now your two sons... are mine; Ephraim and Manasseh shall be mine, just as Reuben and Simeon are mine." By this act, Jacob adopted his grandsons as direct sons, granting them full tribal status and a double portion of the inheritance which he had reserved for Yoseph. 

5. Social and Legal Status 

Adoptive parents function as apotropos (guardians) with specific rights and responsibilities.

Psalm 68:5: Describes Elohim as "a father of the fatherless," setting the standard for the community to care for orphans. 

Psa 68:5  Father of the fatherless, And Right-ruler of widows, Is Elohim in His set-apart dwelling.  

Esther 2:7: Mordecai "raised Hadassah... and when her father and mother died, Mordecai took her to himself as a daughter". 

Est 2:7  And it came to be that he was raising Haassah, that is Estěr, his uncle’s daughter, for she had neither father nor mother. The young woman was beautiful and of good appearance. And when her father and mother died, Mordeai took her as his own daughter.  

Talmudic Decree: Adoptive parents are entitled to a minor child's earnings and findings as "payment" for providing for their needs, ensuring an equitable relationship. 

II. The "Lost Son," the birthright 

1. The Transfer of the Birthright 

The birthright is not static; it moves based on merit and covenant faithfulness. 

·       1 Chronicles 5:1-2: "Now the sons of Reuben the firstborn of YasharEL... but, forasmuch as he defiled his father's bed, his birthright was given unto the sons of Yoseph." 

·       Genesis 48:17-19: Jacob deliberately crosses his hands to give the "fullness of nations" (melo ha-goyim) blessing to Ephraim, the younger, effectively making him the holder of the birthright among the scattered tribes. 

2. Ephraim’s Fall and "Non-People" Status 

The 10 tribes (Ephraim/House of Israel) committed spiritual adultery and lost their "sonship" status temporarily. 

·       Hosea 1:9-10: Yahuah declares them Lo-Ammi ("Not My People"). However, the promise follows that in the place where it was said they are not His people, they shall be called "Sons of the Living Elohim." This is the prophetic foundation for their "adoption" back into the family. 

Hos 1:9 then He said, “Call his name Lo-Ammi, for you are not My people, and I am not for you. 
Hos 1:10 “Yet the number of the children of Yisra’ěl shall be as the sand of the sea, which is not measured nor counted. And it shall be in the place where it was said to them, ‘You are not My people,’ they shall be called, ‘You are the sons of the living Ěl.’  

·       Jeremiah 31:9, 20: "For I am a father to YasharEL, and Ephraim is my firstborn... Is Ephraim my dear son? Is he a pleasant child?" 

Jer 31:9 “With weeping they shall come, and with their prayers I bring them. I shall make them walk by rivers of waters, in a straight way in which they do not stumble. For I shall be a Father to Yisra’ěl, and Ephrayim – he is My first-born. 

Jer 31:20 “Is Ephrayim a precious son to Me, a child of delights? For though I spoke against him, I still remembered him. That is why My affections were deeply moved for him. I have great compassion for him,” declares יהוה.  

3. The "Ruach of Adoption" (Huiothesia) 

The Greek word huiothesia (adoption) in the Epistles specifically refers to the legal placement of a son into his rightful inheritance. 

Romans 8:15 & 23: We see Shaul speaking of Ruach (Spirit) of adoption. Paul argues that even those "scattered" are waiting for the "redemption of our body," which is the final legal sealing of that sonship. 

Rom 8:15 For you did not receive the spirit of bondage again to fear, but you received the Spirit of adoption by whom we cry out, “Abba, Father.”  

Rom 8:23 And not only so, but even we ourselves who have the first-fruits of the Spirit, we ourselves also groan within ourselves, eagerly waiting for the adoption, the redemption of our body.  

Galatians 4:5-6: Yahusha came to redeem those under the Torah so that we might receive the "adoption as sons." In the context, this is the "return journey" of the Prodigal (Ephraim) being restored to the status he squandered (the Prodigal son parable). 

Gal 4:5 to redeem those who were under Torah, in order to receive the adoption as sons. 
Gal 4:6 And because you are sons, Elohim has sent forth the Spirit of His Son into your hearts, crying, “Abba, Father!”  

4. The Firstborn's Authority 

Yahusha, as the Protottokos (Firstborn of all creation), holds the ultimate legal deed. 

Hebrews 1:2-6: He is the "appointed heir of all things." By being "joint-heirs" (Romans 8:17) with Him, the returning "younger son" (Ephraim/the 10 tribes) gains access to the double portion of the New Yerushalayim that was originally lost through Reuben and later Ephraim’s idolatry. 

Rom 8:17 and if children, also heirs – truly heirs of Elohim, and co-heirs with Messiah, if indeed we suffer with Him, in order that we also be exalted together.  

A. Yahusha: The Only Legitimate Firstborn 

While men like Shem, Abraham, and David were "selected" as heirs despite not being biological firstborns, they remain "adopted" or "appointed" sons. Only Yahusha holds the title of Firstborn by inherent right. 

Targum Isaiah 53:5-10: "It was the pleasure of Yahuah to refine and purify the remnant of His people... they shall look upon the Kingdom of their Messiah... and in his soul he shall see and be satisfied."

The Double Portion: As the Firstborn (Prototokos), Yahusha possesses the Double Portion—the Kingly Scepter and the Priestly Birthright. By the Ruach of Adoption, He grants the "returning son" (Ephraim/the lost tribes) a seat in this inheritance.

 B. The Return to the "Direct Portion" 

The "lost son" (Ephraim) wandered into the nations and fell under the "boundaries of the sons of Elohim" (the secondary inheritance). By faith in the Goel, he leaves that secondary lot and returns to the Direct Inheritance of Yahuah. 

·       Hosea 2:1 (MT 2:3): "Say to your brethren, 'Ammi' (My People), and to your sisters, 'Ruhamah' (Pity/Mercy)."

·       The Realization: This is the "return journey" where the adopted son realizes that his inheritance is not in the "howling desert" of the nations, but in the New Yerushalayim, where he is restored as a "Son of the Living Elohim" (Hosea 1:10). 

5. The "All That I Have is Yours" (The Elder Brother) 

The insight into the elder brother (the House of Yahudah/those who stayed with Torah) reflects the tension in: 

Luke 15:31: "Son, thou art ever with me, and all that I have is thine." 

This confirms that while the returning son receives grace and a robe (identity), the "elder" son never lost the legal standing of the Father's house, yet both must recognize the Father's heart to be fully "one" in the end. 

III. The Boundaries of the Nations 

The restoration of the "lost son" (Ephraim/Israel) involves a return to being Yahuah's specific inheritance, contrasted with the other nations allotted to lesser beings. 

LXX (Septuagint) Deuteronomy 32:8: "When the Most High divided the nations... he set the boundaries of the nations according to the number of the angels of God (aggelōn theou)". 

Dead Sea Scrolls (4QDeut^j): "...according to the number of the sons of Elohim (bene elohim)". 

MT (Masoretic Text): "...according to the number of the children of YasharEL (bene yisrael)". 

Expounding: Verse 9 follows: "For Yahuah's portion is His people; Jacob is the lot of His inheritance". While nations were "adopted" or allotted to deputies, YasharEL is the legitimate firstborn portion of Yahuah himself. 

3. The Rights of the "Adopted" Heir (Genesis 15) 

The case of Eliezer shows that in the absence of a biological heir; an adopted servant could claim the full rights of sonship once given the title deed. 

Targum Onkelos Genesis 15:2-3: "And Abram said... I go childless, and the son of the sustenance of my house is this Damascene Eliezer... behold, the son of my house is my heir." 

Early Sages (Maimonides/Rambam): In the Mishneh Torah (Laws of Inheritance), it is noted that while biological lineage is the default, a father has the legal power to designate a specific son as the "firstborn" for the sake of the double portion, or to grant gifts that function as inheritance to those not biologically entitled (e.g., an adopted son). 

Nuzi Tablets Comparison: Ancient Near Eastern laws (contemporary to the Patriarchs) show that an adopted son would yield the "primary" status only if a biological son was subsequently born. In the case of YasharEL, the return to the "Father's House" is a legal restoration to a primary status that was once lost. 

4. Moses as the Adopted Prince (Exodus 2:10) 

LXX Exodus 2:10: "And the child having grown, she brought him to the daughter of Pharao, and he became to her as a son (egenēthē autē eis huion)." 

Mekhilta de-Rabbi Ishmael: Sages note that because Bithiah (Pharaoh's daughter) raised Moses, she is credited with his name and identity more than his biological parents. This substantiates the "right of the raised son" to carry the name and authority of the house that brought him in. 

IV. David’s Lineage 

1. The Legal Identity of the "Ephrathite" (Ruth 4 & 1 Samuel 17) 

The term Ephrathite (Ephrati) used for Jesse and David (1 Samuel 17:12) identifies them not just by geography, but by the legal "house" of Mahlon, who was an Ephrathite (Ruth 1:2). 

1Sa 17:12 (MT): Now Dawi was the son of that Ephrathite of Běyth Leem in Yehuah, whose name was Yishai, and he had eight sons, and in the days of Sha’ul the man was old among men.  

Ruth 4:5 (MT): Boaz declares: “On the day you buy the field from the hand of Na‛omi, you shall also acquire Ruth the Mo’aitess, the wife of the dead, to raise up the name of the dead on his inheritance.” 

Ruth 4:10 (LXX): "I have purchased Ruth... to raise up the name of the deceased upon his inheritance, and the name of the deceased shall not be blotted out from among his brethren." 

Targum Ruth 4:10: "To raise up the name of the dead... that the name of the dead be not cut off from his brothers and from the gate of his place." 

The Point: Obed was biologically the son of Boaz (Yahudah), but legally the son of Machlon (Ephrathite/Ephraimite line via the House of Rachel). By calling him "Naomi’s son," the community recognized the Levirate restoration. David’s kingly line is thus an adopted lineage that merges Yahudah’s sceptre with Joseph/Ephraim’s birthright. David is an "Ephrathite" (1 Sam 17:12) because he carries the legal name and inheritance of the House of Rachel/Ephraim through Machlon. 

The Goel Realization: David’s plea in Psalm 51 and Psalm 69 is a recognition that his "blood lineage" and "Levitical sacrifices" cannot save him from the death penalty of adultery and murder. He appeals to the Goel (Redeemer) who stands outside the Levitical order. 

2. The Failure of the Levite Altar (Psalm 51) 

David’s realization after his sin with Bathsheba was that the Levitical system (Torah of animal sacrifice) had no "legal standing" to atone for intentional murder or adultery. 

Psalm 51:16 (MT): "For Thou desirest not sacrifice; else would I give it: thou delightest not in burnt offering." 

Targum Psalms 51:18: "For You do not desire a holy sacrifice, or I would give it; You do not take pleasure in a burnt offering." 

Expounding: David sought the Goel (Redeemer/Kinsman) who operates outside the Levitical order—the "Greater One" who is the true Firstborn. This is why David points to the Melchizedek priesthood (Psalm 110), which is a priesthood of "sonship" rather than "genealogy." 

3. The Pattern of the "Non-Firstborn" Chosenness 

Scripture consistently shows that the biological firstborn is bypassed for the adopted/chosen heir, proving that "Sonship" is a grant from the Father, not a right of the flesh. 

Shem: Not the eldest of Noah's sons (Yapheth was the elder, Gen 10:21). 

Gen 10:21  And also to Shěm, the father of all the children of Ěer, the brother of Yapheth the elder, children were born 

Abraham: Listed first but likely younger than Haran (Gen 11) as Haran had children of marriageable age.

David: The eighth son (1 Sam 16), chosen over Eliab the firstborn.

Ephraim: The younger, placed before Manasseh (Gen 48).

Yahusha as the Firstborn: Colossians 1:15-18 and Hebrews 1:6 identify Him as the Prototokos (Firstborn). He holds the Double Portion by right, which He then shares with the "brethren" who are brought in through the Ruach of adoption 

Col 1:15  who is the likeness of the invisible Elohim, the first-born of all creation.
Col 1:16  Because in Him were created all that are in the heavens and that are on earth, visible and invisible, whether thrones or rulerships or principalities or authorities – all have been created through Him and for Him.
Col 1:17  And He is before all, and in Him all hold together. 
Col 1:18  And He is the Head of the body, the assembly, who is the beginning, the first-born from the dead, that He might become the One who is first in all.  

4. The Allotment of the Sons of Elohim (Deut 32:8-9) 

The nations (Gentiles) are indeed "sons" in a general sense, as they were allotted to the Benei Elohim (Sons of Elohim). However, the status of YasharEL is unique. 

Deuteronomy 32:9 (MT): "For Yahuah's portion is His people; Jacob is the Chebel (Lot/Cord) of His inheritance." 

LXX Deuteronomy 32:9: "And His people Jacob became the portion of the Lord, Israel the line of His inheritance." 

V. The Early Sages Interpretation 

Early Sages (Sifrei Deuteronomy Piska 312): Explains that while the nations were "handed over" to deputies (termed as tenant farmers and their sons), Yahuah kept YasharEL for Himself. The "return" of the lost son is the return to the Father’s direct portion, leaving the secondary inheritance of the "sons of Elohim" behind. 

Here is the quote: 

(Devarim 32:9) "For the portion of the L-rd is His people": An analogy: A king had a field and gave it to tenant-farmers, who began to steal from it — upon which he gave it to their sons — who began to be worse than the first. When a son was born to him, he said to them: Get out of what is mine. You cannot remain there. Give me my portion so that I can recognize it. (To see the complete explanation, you may read from the link below) 

Link: Sifrei Devarim 312:1 | Sefaria Library 

The "Adopted Son" (Ephraim/David/The Believer) realizes his inheritance only when he recognizes that his biological or "Levitical" standing is insufficient. He must be redeemed by the Goel (Yahusha), who restores the birthright that was squandered. The inheritance is reserved in the New Yerushalayim, where the legal deed of the Firstborn is fully realized. 

The Sages explain that Yahuah did not deal with the nations directly after the Tower of Babel, but "handed them over" to the 70 heavenly princes. 

Sifrei Deuteronomy 312 derivation (based on ancient Jewish interpretation): "When the Most High gave to the nations their inheritance... He assigned them to the seventy angels. But when He came to the portion of Jacob, He did not hand them over to an angel or a prince... Yahuah’s portion is His people; Jacob is the lot of His inheritance." 

Targum Pseudo-Jonathan (Deut. 32:8-9): 

בְּאַחְסָנוּת עִלָאָה עַלְמָא לְעַמְמַיָא דִי נְפָקוּ מִבְּנוֹי דְנׂחַ בְּאַפְרָשׁוּתֵיהּ מִכְתָּבִין וְלִישְׁנִין לִבְנֵי נְשָׁא בְּדָרָא דְפַלְגוּתָא בֵּי הוּא זִמְנָא רָמָא פִיצְתָא עִם שׁוּבְעִין מַלְאָכַיָא רַבְרְבֵי עַמְמִין דְאִתְגְלֵי עִמְהוֹן לְמֶחֱמֵי קַרְתָּא וּבֵי הוּא זִמְנָא אָקִים תְּחוּמֵי אוּמַיָא כִּסְכוּם מִנְיַין שׁוּבְעִין נַפְשָׁתָא דְיִשְרָאֵל דִנְחָתוּ לְמִצְרַיִם 

When the Most High made allotment of the world unto the nations which proceeded from the sons of Noach, in the separation of the writings and languages of the children of men at the time of the division, He cast the lot among the seventy angels, the princes of the nations with whom is the revelation to oversee the city, even at that time He established the limits of the nation’s according to the sum of the number of the seventy souls of Israel who went down into Mizraim. 

Expounding: This confirms that the "Gentile" nations are indeed "sons" (Banei Elohim), but they are sons of a secondary degree, under stewardship. YasharEL, however, is the Chebel (measuring cord) of Yahuah Himself—the firstborn with the direct line to the Father. 

→ Targum creates a numerical correspondence: World order mirrors YasharEL’s structure 

Element

     Number

Nations

      70

Angels / Princes

      70

Souls of YasharEL (Gen 46:27 / Exod 1:5)

      70

 

1. SIFREI DEVARIM 312 (c. 3rd century CE) 

What it actually establishes:

·       Mashal:King → field → given to tenant farmers
Son born → king takes back his portion

·       Nimshal:
→ Nations = distributed
ישראל = חלק יהוה (direct portion)

Point:

·       ישראל (YasharEL) is not treated like the rest of the nations

·       Emphasis = exclusive possession by Yahuah.

 

2. TARGUM PSEUDO-JONATHAN (c. 7th–8th century CE) 

What it adds explicitly (Deut 32:8): 

·       Nations from בני נח (Gen 10 context)

·       Division at דור הפלגה (Gen 11 context)

·       שובעים מלאכיא רברבי עממין: → seventy angels / princes of nations

·       Boundaries set according to: → 70 souls of ישראל 

3. RELATION BETWEEN THE TWO 

Sifrei: 

·       Conceptual framework
ישראל = direct portion
→ nations = “others” (implicitly delegated) 

Targum Pseudo-Jonathan: 

·       Expands mechanism
→ nations = assigned to 70 angelic princes
→ explicitly ties to:

o   Gen 10 (70 nations)

o   Gen 46 (70 souls of ישראל

Gen 46:27  And the sons of Yosěph who were born to him in Mitsrayim were two beings. All the beings of the house of Ya‛aqo who went to Mitsrayim were seventy.  

Pirkei De-Rabbi Eliezer, Chapter 24 

אמר הקדוש ברוך הוא לשבעים מלאכים הסובבים כסא כבודו: בואו ונרד ונבלבל את לשונם... והפילו גורלות ביניהם... ונפל גורלו של הקדוש ברוך הוא על אברהם ועל זרעו... שנאמר: כִּי חֵלֶק יְהוָה עַמּוֹ יַעֲקֹב חֶבֶל נַחֲלָתוֹ 

Translation: "The Holy One... said to the seventy angels who surround the Throne of His Glory: 'Come, let us descend and confuse their language'... and they cast lots among them... and the lot of the Holy One fell upon Abraham and his seed... as it is said: 'For the portion of Yahuah is His people, Jacob the lot of His inheritance.'" 

VI. The Rejection of Direct Governance (1 Samuel 8) 

When YasharEL demanded a king "like all the nations," they essentially asked to be placed under a "deputy" (a human king), moving away from the direct "portion" of Yahuah. 

1 Samuel 8:7 (MT): "And Yahuah said unto Samuel... they have not rejected thee, but they have rejected Me, that I should not reign over them." 

Targum Jonathan 1 Samuel 8:7: "For they have not rejected you, but my Memra (Word) they have rejected, from being King over them." 

Expounding: By choosing a human king, YasharEL effectively placed themselves under the "allotment of the sons of Elohim" (the system of deputies) rather than the direct rule of the Father. 

A. The Levirate Kingship of David 

As we saw, David’s lineage (Obed/Mahlon) is a legal adoption through Ruth. This "Ephrathite" lineage (1 Samuel 17:12) allowed the Kingship to hold the "place" of the Firstborn until the true Heir arrived. 

·       Psalm 89:26-27 (MT): "He shall cry unto Me: 'Thou art my Father'... I also will appoint him my firstborn (bekhor), the highest of the kings of the earth." 

·       Expounding: David was the eighth son (not a biological firstborn), yet Yahuah "appoints" him as a firstborn. This is a legal status—a Levirate-style guardianship over the inheritance of YasharEL. David holds the "office" of the son, but he is still a "debtor" to the law of sin and death, as seen in his inability to find a sacrifice for his own blood-guilt in the Levitical system (Psalm 51). 

B. Yahusha: The Legitimate Son (Not Debted by Blood) 

The "Legitimate Son" comes through the lineage but is not "indebted" to the biological fallen nature or the legal "guardianship" of the human kingship. 

LXX Isaiah 9:6: "For a child is born to us, and a son is given to us, whose government is upon his shoulder... and his name is called the Messenger of Great Counsel." 

Targum Jonathan Isaiah 9:6: "The prophet said to the house of David, For unto us a child is born... and his name has been called from of old... Messiah, who shall endure to eternity." 

Expounding: Yahusha is the Goel (Redeemer) who pays the "debt" of the fallen kingship. He releases YasharEL from the "Spirit of Bondage" (the legal status of a minor/servant under a deputy) and translates them into His own direct inheritance. 

 C. Restoration to Priests and Kings 

The goal of the "adoption" was always to return YasharEL to their original "Firstborn" status—the Royal Priesthood

Exodus 19:6 (MT): "And ye shall be unto Me a kingdom of priests, and a holy nation." 

Targum Onkelos Exodus 19:6: "And you shall be before Me kings and priests and a holy people." 

Revelation 1:6 / 5:10: "And has made us kings and priests unto Elohim and His Father."

Expounding: Through the Ruach of adoption, the "lost son" (Ephraim/YasharEL) is no longer a subject of a "deputy" king or an "angelic prince" (the allotment of the nations). He is restored to the Table of the Father as a joint-heir with the Firstborn. 

D. Release from the "Adoption" Journey 

Until the New Yerushalayim, the believer is "reserved" for this inheritance. The "adoption" is the legal bridge between the rejection in 1 Samuel and the restoration in the Kingdom. 

Galatians 4:1-5: "The heir, as long as he is a child, differeth nothing from a servant... but is under tutors and governors until the time appointed of the father... to redeem them that were under the law, that we might receive the adoption of sons." 

The Point: The "tutors and governors" are the deputy kings and the deputy allotments. Yahusha, the Legitimate Son, ends the period of "minority" and brings the son into full legal maturity and direct access to the Father. 

VII. Tithe (one-tenth) or the "Firstfruits" of the nations. 

1. The Legal Ratio: 70 Nations vs. 7 Nations 

The 70 nations of Genesis 10 represent the "fullness" of the world under the supervision of the Banei Elohim (Sons of Elohim/Angels). The 7 nations of Canaan represent the specific legal "stronghold" that YasharEL had to overcome to take their inheritance. 

Deuteronomy 7:1 (MT): “When יהוה your Elohim brings you into the land which you go to possess, He shall also clear away many nations before you: the ittites and the Girgashites and the Amorites and the Kena‛anites and the Perizzites and the iwwites and the Yeusites, seven nations greater and mightier than you.  

Targum Pseudo-Jonathan (Deut. 7:1): אֲרוּם יַעֲלִינָךְ יְיָ אֱלָהָךְ לְאַרְעָא דְאַתְּ עָלֵיל לְתַמָּן לְמֵירְתָהּ וְיִגְלֵי עַמְמִין סַגִּיאִין מִן קֳדָמָךְ חִתָּאֵי וְגִרְגְּשָׁאֵי וְאֵימוֹרָאֵי וּכְנַעֲנָאֵי וּפְרִיזָאֵי וְחִיוָאֵי וִיבוּסָאֵי שִׁבְעָתֵי עַמְמִין סַגִּיאִין וְתַקִּיפִין מִינָךְ 

When the Lord thy God shall bring thee into the land to which thou wilt come to possess it, and He will make many peoples to go out from before thee, the Hittites, Girgashites, Amorites, Kenaanites, Perizites, Hivites, and Jebusites, seven nations more numerous and strong than thou. 

The 1/10th Principle: Seven is exactly one-tenth of seventy. In Torah law, the "Tenth" (Tithe) is Set Apart unto Yahuah (Leviticus 27:32). By driving out these seven, YasharEL was legally "cleansing" the tithe of the earth to establish the Father's direct throne. 

Passing Under the Rod

Leviticus 27:32–33 establishes the foundation of this concept:

“And every tithe of the herd and of the flock, all that passes under the rod, the tenth shall be set-apart to יהוה. He shall not examine whether it is good or bad, nor shall he exchange it; and if he does exchange it, then both it and its substitute shall be set-apart; it shall not be redeemed.”

The practice described is precise and deliberate. The animals were made to pass one by one under a rod held by the shepherd, moving through a narrow passage so that each could be counted individually. The counting was sequential—one, two, three, and so on—and the tenth animal was automatically designated as set-apart to יהוה. This process was not random, nor was it based on appearance, strength, or value; it was determined purely by order of passage. The rod (שבט / שרביט) functioned both as an instrument of counting and as a symbol of authority, the same term used elsewhere for a sceptre or a shepherd’s staff.

Because the selection belonged entirely to this ordered process, the Torah strictly forbade human interference. “He shall not examine whether it is good or bad” means the owner was not permitted to evaluate the animal—he could not prefer a strong animal nor reject a weak one.

Likewise, “nor shall he exchange it” prohibits substitution after designation. A man might be tempted to act in two ways: if the tenth animal was strong and valuable, he might wish to keep it and substitute a weaker one; if it was weak or blemished, he might attempt to replace it with a better one to honor יהוה. The Torah forbids both motives equally. If a substitution was attempted, the law imposed a strict consequence: both the original animal and the replacement became set-apart, and neither could be redeemed. This ensured that the divine assignment could not be manipulated, improved, or avoided. What passed under the rod remained exactly as determined.

This same language reappears in Ezekiel 20:37, where it is applied not to animals but to people:

“I will cause you to pass under the rod, and I will bring you into the bond of the covenant.”

Here, the phrase retains its core meaning but shifts in application. Passing under the rod becomes a process of individual reckoning under authority. Each person is brought forward, counted, and placed under examination. The immediate context clarifies its function: “I will purge out from among you the rebels and those who transgress against Me” (Ezekiel 20:38).

Thus, the act involves inspection, separation, and covenantal assignment. Just as animals were counted without preference, so individuals are brought under divine authority without concealment or self-determination.

This pattern is consistent across the shepherd imagery of Scripture. Jeremiah 33:13 speaks of flocks once again passing under the hands of the one who counts them, reinforcing the idea of individual enumeration and oversight. Micah 7:14 calls for the people to be shepherded with the rod, highlighting authority and guidance. Psalm 23:4 presents the rod as both discipline and comfort, indicating control that brings security. Across all these passages, the rod represents authority, and passing under it signifies being brought into accountable relationship under that authority.

Jer 33:13  In the cities of the mountains, in the cities of the low country, and in the cities of the South, and in the land of Binyamin, and in the places around Yerushalayim, and in the cities of Yehuah, the flocks once again pass under the hands of him who counts them,’ declares יהוה

Mic 7:14  Shepherd Your people with Your rod, the flock of Your inheritance, who dwell alone in a forest, in the midst of Karmel. Let them feed in Bashan and Gil‛a, as in days of old. 

Psa 23:4  When I walk through the valley of the shadow of death, I fear no evil. For You are with me; Your rod and Your staff, they comfort me

The Targum on Ezekiel 20:37 expands this further with explicit judicial language:

וַאֲנִיחַ עֲלֵיכוֹן גְזֵירַת דִינִי וְאָעֵיל יַתְכוֹן בְּמַסוֹרֶת קַיָמָא
“And I will place upon you the decree of My judgment, and I will bring you into an enduring bond.”

Each component carries weight. “I will place upon you” indicates imposition, not invitation. “The decree of My judgment” (גזירת דיני) refers to a formal judicial ruling, not general discipline but an authoritative sentence. “I will bring you in” signals entry into a defined state, and “into an enduring bond” (מסורת קיימא) describes a binding, lasting, and irrevocable relationship. The structure is clear: first, judgment is imposed; then, a covenantal bond is established.

Within this framework, passing under the rod is not merely counting but a complete process: individuals are brought under authority, subjected to judicial evaluation, separated where necessary, and then bound into a covenantal relationship. Nothing is hidden, nothing is adjusted by human preference, and nothing can be exchanged once determined.

This leads to the underlying theological pattern. The one who brings the flock under the rod is the shepherd who holds authority. Those who pass under the rod are not chosen because they are flawless, but because they are counted and brought under that authority. The process includes exposure, judgment, and assignment, yet it results in belonging. The movement is from being uncounted to being accounted for, from being outside to being brought in, through a process that is both judicial and covenantal, resulting in a binding state that cannot be altered. 

2. The 70 x 7 Debt and the "Release" (Shemitah/Jubilee) 

The number 490 (70 x 7) is the legal timeframe for the "reconciliation of iniquity" and the "bringing in of everlasting righteousness" (Daniel 9:24). 

The Debt: YasharEL fell into the "debt" of the nations by demanding a king (1 Samuel 8) and practicing the idolatry of the 70 deputies. 

The LXX / MT Connection: While the MT of Deuteronomy 32:8 says "according to the number of the children of YasharEL," the LXX and 4QDeut^j (Dead Sea Scrolls) explicitly say "according to the number of the angels of Elohim" (70). 

The Expounding: To be "delivered" from these 70 deputies, YasharEL had to pay a debt of 70 x 7. This is the spiritual "Jubilee" where the slave is released from the "tutor and governor" (the deputy/angel) and restored to the Direct Father. 

In the framework, the "Tenant Farmers" (the nations/deputies) held the field until the Legitimate Son (Yahusha) arrived at the Jubilee of Jubilees (5000 AM). His arrival triggers the "eviction" of the deputies' authority, allowing the "unalloyed" remnant (the 7,000 who did not bow to Baal) to be recognized as the Father's direct portion. 

The 70 x 7 debt was the legal "rent" or "penalty" incurred while the field was in the hands of the farmers. Yahusha pays this to restore the "Cord of His Inheritance. 

3. The Levirate Kingship and the "Legitimate Son" 

Since the House of David was a Levirate-adopted lineage (Obed/Machlon), it served as a "holding pattern" for this debt. David, as the "Ephrathite" (1 Samuel 17:12), held the Joseph/Ephraim birthright in trust. 

Targum Jonathan (Genesis 49:10): 

לָא פַּסְקִין מַלְכִין וְשַׁלִיטִין מִדְבֵית יְהוּדָה וְסַפְרִין מֵאַלְפֵי אוֹרַיְיתָא מִזַרְעֵיהּ עַד זְמַן דִי יֵיתֵי מַלְכָּא מְשִׁיחָא זְעֵיר בְּנוֹי וּבְדִילֵיהּ יִתְיַמְסוּן עַמְמַיָא

Kings shall not cease, nor rulers, from the house of Jehuda, nor sapherim teaching the law from his seed, till the time that the King the Meshiha, shall come, the youngest of his sons; and on account of him shall the peoples flow together. 

The Point: The "Legitimate Son" (Yahusha) is the only one who can cancel the 70 x 7 debt because He is not "indebted by blood" to the fallen nature of the 70 nations or the 7 nations. He is the Goel (Kinsman Redeemer) who buys back the "allotted inheritance" that was lost. 

4. "Yahuah Kept Them to Himself" 

The Sifrei Deuteronomy 312 and Targum Jonathan emphasizes that while the 70 nations were "apportioned" to the 70 princes, Yahuah "set His cord" (Chebel) on Jacob. 

Sifrei Deuteronomy 312: "When the Holy One... divided the nations... He assigned a prince to each. But the portion of Yahuah is His people... He said, 'Let these others go to the princes, but Jacob is My portion.'" 

The Return Journey: The "lost son" (Ephraim) who was scattered among the 70 nations is being gathered back. He is leaving the "secondary inheritance" of the Banei Elohim and returning to the Firstborn status under Yahusha. 

VIII. The Final Summary of the 7’s 

1. The 70 Nations vs. The 7 Nations (1/10th Tithe) 

The 70 nations of Genesis 10 represent the "world system" under the 70 deputies (LXX Deuteronomy 32:8). 

Deuteronomy 7:1: Yahuah commands the removal of 7 nations greater than YasharEL. 

The Legal Ratio: 7 is exactly one-tenth (a tithe) of 70. By driving out these 7, YasharEL was legally "cleansing" the tithe of the earth to establish the Father's direct portion.

The Debt: This 70-to-7 ratio establishes a 70 x 7 debt (490 years/cycles) that must be reconciled to release the "Lost Son" from the deputy's authority. 

2. The 70,000 Dead (The Judgment of the Census) 

In 2 Samuel 24:15, a plague kills 70,000 men of YasharEL after David’s census.

Targum Jonathan 2 Samuel 24:15: "And there died of the people from Dan even to Beersheba seventy thousand men."

The Refinement: This represents the "death of the fleshly count." In the 7,000-year plan, the biological/national pride must be "refined" away. For every 1,000 of the 70 nations, a complete unit (the 70,000) is judged to leave behind only the spiritual "Firstborn" remnant.

 3. The 7,000 Remnant (The 1/10th of the Judgment) 

Just as 7 nations are 1/10th of 70 nations, the 7,000 who did not bow to Baal are the 1/10th of the 70,000 judged in the plague.

1 Kings 19:18 (MT): "Yet I have left me seven thousand in YasharEL... which have not bowed unto Baal."

The Legal Standing: This 7,000 is the "Refined from the Refined." They are the ones who survive the 70 x 7 debt cycle and the 6,000 years of labor to enter the Sabbath. 

4. The 7,000-Year Consumption (The Sabbath) 

We saw the framework that the Messiah arrives at 5000 AM to pay the debt. This leaves the 6th Millennium (5000-6000) for the "Gathering of the 10 Tribes" and the 7th Millennium (6000-7000) for the Sabbatical Rest.

Early Sages (Sanhedrin 97a): "The world exists for six thousand years, and in the seventh [7,000th], it shall be desolate."

The Purpose: This 7,000th-year "desolation" is the final Shemittah (Release). All debts of the 70 nations and the 70 x 7 cycles are blotted out. 

Summary of the Numerical Ledger 

70: The total nations/deputies (The World).

7: The tithe/nations driven out (The Firstfruits of the Land).

70,000: The judgment on the "fleshly" house (The Census Plague).

7,000: The preserved remnant (The 1/10th who did not bow to the deputy).

70 x 7: The legal debt (490) settled by the Goel (Yahusha) at the Jubilee of Jubilees (5000 AM). 

This process leads to the 8th Day (Shemini Atzeret), where the adoption journey ends, and the "refined" son enters the New Yerushalayim as a Legitimate Heir, no longer under the tutor of the 70 deputies. 

The 8th Day: Circumcision of the Inheritance 

The final step is the transition from the 7,000th-year desolation to the 8th Day (Shemini Atzeret).

The Legal Sealing: In Torah, the 8th day is for circumcision—the removal of the flesh.

The Final Dot: This mirrors the "redemption of our body" (Romans 8:23).The "adoption" is a legal status used during the "journey," but on the 8th Day, the adoption ends because the son has reached full legal maturity and direct essence with the Father 

IX. The "Double Portion" in the Mishneh Torah

In Maimonides' Mishneh Torah, Hilchot Nachalot (Laws of Inheritance) 2:1, the legal requirement is defined as follows: 

“The firstborn takes a double portion as one among the property of his father, as it is said: ‘to give him a double portion’ (Deuteronomy 21:17) 

The Key Term: Pi Shenayim (פִּי שְׁנַיִם). Literally "two mouths" or "two portions".

The Point: In the scriptural framework, the "firstborn" doesn't just get more; he receives a mathematical advantage that signifies his role as the head of the house. This is the portion the "returning son" (Ephraim) claims through Yahusha, who is the only legitimate Bechor (Firstborn). 

2. The Aramaic "Double Portion" (Targum Onkelos) 

When the Torah (Deuteronomy 21:17) speaks of the double portion, Targum Onkelos—the authoritative Aramaic translation—clarifies the nature of this right: 

לְמִתַּן לֵיהּ חוּלָקָא דִתְרֵין בְּכָל דְּיִשְׁתְּכַח לֵיהּ

 ·       The Key Term: Chulaka di-Trei (חוּלָקָא דִתְרֵין).

·       The Legal Meaning: "A portion of two." This confirms that the inheritance is not merely a gift but a legal allotment (Chulak) that cannot be legally revoked by the father once the son is "recognized" 

3. Connecting the Dots: The Legal "Recognition" 

For an "adopted" son to receive this Pi Shenayim, the father must perform the act of Recognition (Yakir).

Mishneh Torah 2:14: "A father's word is always accepted... even if he said that a person who was not known to be his son was his firstborn son".

The High-Level Connection: This is exactly what happens in the 6th Millennium (5000–6000 AM). Yahusha "recognizes" the scattered Ephraimites (the 10 Tribes) and grants them the Chulaka di-Trei (Double Portion). Without this judicial recognition (Yakir), the returning son would remain a "debtor" to the 70 nations' allotment. 

4. Summary of the Final Ledger: 

70 Nations/Deputies: The original legal allotment after the Tower of Babel.

7 Nations (1/10th): The "tithe" of the earth conquered by YasharEL.

70 x 7 Debt: The 490-year/cycle penalty for rejecting direct rule for a human king.

Pi Shenayim (פִּי שְׁנַיִם): The double portion reserved for the Firstborn, paid for by the Goel at the Jubilee of Jubilees (5000 AM) .

The 8th Day: The final entry into the New Yerushalayim, where the "Adopted Son" is legally sealed as a Legitimate Heir. 

X. The Melchitsedeq Priesthood 

The Melchizedek Priesthood is the legal "seal" on the adoption of sons, as it represents a priesthood of status and sonship rather than a priesthood of genealogy (Levi). In the scriptural framework, this is the "Double Portion" priesthood that Yahusha uses to redeem the firstborn right. 

1. The Priesthood of the Firstborn

Before the Golden Calf and the appointment of the Levites, the priesthood belonged to the firstborn son of every family. 

The Legal Shift: Because of the 70 x 7 debt and the fall into idolatry, the firstborn was "stripped" of this role, and it was given to the Tribe of Levi as a temporary guardianship.

The Restoration: The Melchizedek Priesthood is the restoration of this original patriarchal order where the King and Priest are one. 

2. Melchizedek as the "Unalloyed" Pattern 

Traditional Jewish midrash (and the Targums) identifies Melchizedek with Shem, the son of Noah.

The Scepter and the Birthright: By identifying Melchizedek as Shem, the sages show that the priesthood was a hereditary firstborn right that passed from Noah to Shem, then to Abraham.

The Recognition (Yakir): When Melchizedek (Shem) blessed Abraham, he was legally "recognizing" Abraham as the heir to this higher order. 

3. Yahusha: The Melchizedek Goel 

Yahusha does not come from the tribe of Levi (the "guardians"), but from Yahudah. Legally, He can only be a priest if the law is changed back to the Order of the Firstborn. 

Hebrews 7:12: "For the priesthood being changed, there is made of necessity a change also of the law."

The Legal Logic: To release the "Adopted Son" (Ephraim) from the 70 nations, Yahusha operates under the Oath of Yahuah (Psalm 110:4), which bypasses the biological debt of the Levite altar.

The Double Portion: As the Melchizedek Priest-King, He holds both the Scepter (Yahudah) and the Double Portion (Yoseph/Ephraim). This is the Chulaka di-Trei (Aramaic: חוּלָקָא דִתְרֵין) that He shares with the returning remnant. 

4. The 8th Day Realization 

The Melchizedek priesthood is termed "eternal" because it is not based on "physical descent" but on the "power of an indestructible life". 

The Adoption Ends: The Ruach of adoption is the "down payment" of this priesthood.

The Final Step: On the 8th Day (Shemini Atzeret), the "Adopted Son" is no longer a minor under an earthy priesthood tutor but is fully "conformed to the image" of the Melchizedek Son, entering the "Assembly of the Firstborn" (Hebrews 12:23). 

Summary 

This note examines adoption in Torah and halakha as a spiritual and social elevation rather than a change in biological lineage or tribal status. It highlights key models such as Jacob’s elevation of Ephraim and Manasseh for the double portion, the strict patrilineal inheritance rules, and guardianship responsibilities. The discussion extends to prophetic themes: the temporary loss of sonship by the House of Ephraim (Lo-Ammi), the promise of return as sons of the Living El, and the contrast between delegated allotments to the 70 nations/deputies (per Deuteronomy 32 variants and sages) versus YasharEL as Elohim’s direct chebel. Numerical patterns (70 nations vs. 7 tithe nations, 70×7 debt, 70,000 judgment vs. 7,000 remnant, 7,000-year framework) illustrate refinement and release. Through the Goel (Yahusha as legitimate Protottokos and Melchizedek Priest-King), the scattered returning son is redeemed from secondary stewardship, recognized (Yakir), and granted the pi shenayim double portion in the New Yerushalayim. On the 8th Day, adoption matures into full, direct heirship—no longer under tutors, but sealed in eternal sonship and royal priesthood.

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