H
Hail_Linus
Guest
I have been reading the book “Jewish Views of the Afterlife” by Rabbi Simcha Paull Raphael. It seems to me that Jews used to have a similar view of the afterlife to Catholics.
Why don’t I hear modern Jews speaking about the afterlife and judgement in these terms?
In the Talmud you find these examples:
Why don’t I hear modern Jews speaking about the afterlife and judgement in these terms?
In the Talmud you find these examples:
- If a man counts money from his hand into the hand of a woman so as to have the opportunity of gazing at her, even if he can vie in Torah and good deeds with Moses our teacher, he shall not escape the punishment of Gehenna. (Berakhot 61a).
- If the person who comes before God has [knowledge of] Torah in hand, but none of Mishnah, God turns his face away from him, whereupon the wardens of Gehenna overpower him like wolves of the steppe, fall upon him, and fling him into its midsts. (Midrash on Proverbs 10:17)
- Rabbi Eliezer’s pupils asked him, “What judgment is there in the grave?” He replied, “When a man quits this world, the Angel of Death comes to him and sits by his grave, and beating it with his hands, says, Tell me your name.’ ‘Flesh and blood is my name. It is revealed and known to Him who said, and the world was. But I do not know what my name is.’ Then immediately the soul reenters his body. He stands up and is brought to judgment.”
- Rabbi Joshua ben Levi says, "They bring a chain of iron, half of it burning like fire, half as cold as ice, and they beat him with it. At the first stroke his limbs get separated; at the second, his bones are scattered. Then the ministering angels gather them together, and restoring him, beat him a third time, and demand of him an account and reckoning, and judge him measure for measure.
- "On ,the second day they judge him in the same manner.
- “On the third day they judge him further, and they punish his two eyes, his two hands, his two feet and his two ears, his mouth and his tongue. Why are his eyes punished? Because he looked with them upon transgression. Why his ears? Because he heard sinful utterances with them. Why his lips? Because he uttered with them words of foolishness. And why his tongue? Because he has testified falsely with it. Why his two hands? He committed violence and robbery with them. Why his two legs? Because he hastened with them to transgression.” Rabbi Yehudah says, “Whoever has gone to a married woman shall hang ignominiously in Gehinnom; and whoever slanders his neighbor shall be suspended by his tongue.”