S
stillsmallvoice
Guest
I suppose that we must agree to disagree.(cont.)
Hatred is a valid emotion - an appropriate response - when directed at the truly evil: those who have gone beyond the pale of human decency by committing acts that unweave the basic fabric of civilized living. Contrary to Christianity, which advocates turning the other cheek to belligerence and loving the wicked, Judaism obligates us to despise and resist the wicked at all costs.
About two years ago, I was on the BBC discussing the tragic bombing of a gay pub that left three dead. I referred to the bomber as an abomination, to which Pastor Tony Campalo, US president Bill Clinton’s spiritual advisor, replied that we had to love the bomber in the spirit of compassion and forgiveness.
Similarly, in my years in Britain I was used to hearing victims of IRA terrorist attacks, after having lost fathers or brothers or sons, immediately announce on air their forgiveness and love for the murderers, in the spirit of Christian love. I disagree vehemently. The individual who, motivated by irrational hatred, chooses to murder innocent victims is irretrievably wicked. He or she has cast off the image of God that entitles them to love, and has forfeited their place in the human community.
Amid my deep and abiding respect for the Christian faith, I state unequivocally that, to love the terrorist who flies a civilian plane into a civilian building or a white supremacist who drags a black man three miles while tied to the back of a car is not just inane, it is deeply sinful. To love evil is itself evil and constitutes a passive form of complicity.
About Abram lying to Pharoah & Abimelech, despite his greatness, Abram was, first of all & above all, human, replete with foibles. The notion of (perfect?) saints is alien to Judaism. However, Abram, seeing as how God spoke to him on a regular basis, should have had more faith in God. It is on that basis, I think, that our Sages criticize him.
Mr. Ex Nihilo:
I think that it depends on motive, intention & ultimate purpose.If someone does not have an awareness of God, and they lie in order to maintain peace, then they are engaging in hypocrisy?
But if someone does have an awareness of God, and they lie in order to maintain peace, then they are engaging in something holy?
I admit that maybe I’m not understanding this so I have to ask where the boundary is between telling the truth and hurting others feelings?
In addition to this, I also have to ask how one’s awareness of God can turn a lie spoken in order to maintain peace from hypocrisy to righteousness?
If, when I pull over to fill up the Mazda, our 5-year-old gets out & eagerly proceeds to wash the windshield and only succeeds in making it dirty and, when he’s finished, looks at me, positively beaming, and proud because he honestly believes that he’s helped his Daddy and thus contributed something to our relationship, and asks, “Daddy, is it good?”, should I then be an ogre and say, “No Naor, it’s not good. The windshield was clean but now it’s dirty because of you,” or should I say, “Yes, Naor, you’ve helped Daddy; thank you” and give him a hug and wait until we get home & he’s asleep and then go out and wipe the windshield?
One can tell the truth and still be guilty, say, of tale-bearing/gossiping. Truth (however one defines it) must be juxtaposed to other abiding values.
Be well!
ssv