R
reen12
Guest
Hi, brabble,
Glad we got it straighted out!
Anyway, I tried to find the site that I read on the
position of suffering in Judaism, and couldn’t find it.
I’ll keep on searching.
So I’ll summerize:
there was/is an element of punishment for sins in
Judaic thought, even a Kabbalistic concept of
a sort of reincarnation…if I’m suffering, it’s to come
to spiritual terms for something that I did in a
previous life.
what I did do was check an online Bible and found
a footnote to a chapter in the gospel of John that
might be worth looking at:
usccb.org/nab/bible/john/john9.htm
see footnote #2 on a chapter from Exodus.
Where I wrote that the “glory of God be revealed” is
actually; that the work of God be made manifest.
The idea that the man was suffering necessarily
as a result of his own sins or the sins of his parents
[see the Exodus reference] was obviously an
accepted idea, and that’s why the people asked
Jesus the question.
What stunning *relief *it must have been to hear that
suffering was not necessarily the result of personal
sin or the sin of one’s parents or ancestor’s.
Furthermore, the value of redemptive suffering in
Catholicism elevates that very suffering to that
of immense value to the Kingdom of God. I can
well believe that this is the point that the Holy Father
would stress in anything he writes or says about
suffering. Redemptive suffering turns dross into
gold.
Have I responded clearly enough to your interest
in Judaic theology?
reen12
I pray to the God of Israel and hope that Jesus
is the Messiah.
Glad we got it straighted out!
Anyway, I tried to find the site that I read on the
position of suffering in Judaism, and couldn’t find it.
I’ll keep on searching.
So I’ll summerize:
there was/is an element of punishment for sins in
Judaic thought, even a Kabbalistic concept of
a sort of reincarnation…if I’m suffering, it’s to come
to spiritual terms for something that I did in a
previous life.
what I did do was check an online Bible and found
a footnote to a chapter in the gospel of John that
might be worth looking at:
usccb.org/nab/bible/john/john9.htm
see footnote #2 on a chapter from Exodus.
Where I wrote that the “glory of God be revealed” is
actually; that the work of God be made manifest.
The idea that the man was suffering necessarily
as a result of his own sins or the sins of his parents
[see the Exodus reference] was obviously an
accepted idea, and that’s why the people asked
Jesus the question.
What stunning *relief *it must have been to hear that
suffering was not necessarily the result of personal
sin or the sin of one’s parents or ancestor’s.
Furthermore, the value of redemptive suffering in
Catholicism elevates that very suffering to that
of immense value to the Kingdom of God. I can
well believe that this is the point that the Holy Father
would stress in anything he writes or says about
suffering. Redemptive suffering turns dross into
gold.
Have I responded clearly enough to your interest
in Judaic theology?
reen12
I pray to the God of Israel and hope that Jesus
is the Messiah.
