K
Kathleen18
Guest
Are you sure that was intended for me?
This is the example I am talking about. The speakers in this video are not really correct about Jesus. They are also not really correct on Judaism with that logic either.“Jesus knew that tradition produces religion and religion distances us from God, and leads us to focus on what is unimportant, on meaningless deeds.”
This part in that video doesn’t seem to be way off about Jesus, to you?
Kathleen18:
It was Jesus who excoriated the Pharisees for their man-made traditions. The Pharisees were very religious; thus just like today, if one is merely religious and not spiritually transformed, it amounts to hypocrisy. as Jesus put it:“Jesus knew that tradition produces religion and religion distances us from God, and leads us to focus on what is unimportant, on meaningless deeds.”
“And why do you break the command of God for the sake of your tradition? . . . These people honor me with their lips, but their hearts are far from me.They worship me in vain; their teachings are but rules taught by men’.”
So, when you noted the Sefer ha-zohar , (Hebrew: “Book of Splendour”) how is this comparable to Sufi-inspired Jewish work, written in *Judeo-Arabic in 11th-century Saragossa, is *Baḥya ibn Paquda’s “The Duties of the Heart” ( Ḥovot ha-Levavot )?Yes, so true, the Hebrew root-word is “scribe.” But “sefer,” if you know Hebrew, it simply means “book.” In most circles, however, it means books which are non-secular. Not everyone is a scribe, and not all seforim are written on parchment, to answer your question.
Still working on the Moses ben Shem Tov de León was a Spanish rabbi and Kabbalist …@Psalm62,
You can see my response about Ethiopian Jews having our sacred oral tradition (i.e., the Mishnah), here:
What’s interesting is that the sofer applied to those bearing the title from the First Temple period. If anyone is interested in reading more on this, “The scribe (sofer) in the second Temple Period.Yes, so true, the Hebrew root-word is “scribe.” But “sefer,” if you know Hebrew, it simply means “book.” In most circles, however, it means books which are non-secular. Not everyone is a scribe, and not all seforim are written on parchment, to answer your question.
The area in which the Jewish people lived. If, in Morocco - four royal cities – Casablanca, Rabat, Fez and Marrakech. MOROCCO and, VISITING JEWISH MOROCCOOn Sufi mysticism, it is well known about Rambam’s son, though I don’t see how this in any way pollutes Jewish mysticism. I don’t see how Avraham could’ve been wrong on that count, as Islam was mostly inspired BY Judaism, and adopted our history and theology - to one degree or another - so why not our mysticism?
Not according to the Talmud, which does not paint Jesus as great guy. But the prophecies said that He would be rejected by His own people.Yes, the rabbis know Jesus was a great guy, he had potential, but he sadly - and I really mean it - sadly wasn’t the Messiah.
TheDo rabbis tell us what to believe? Not any more than your Paul. Checkmate
Well at least you’re conceding; nobody said 24/7, but as Schäfer’s book describes, it is scattered throughout the Talmudic stories makeing fun of Jesus’ birth from a virgin, fervently contest his claim to be the Messiah and Son of God, and maintain that he was rightfully executed as a blasphemer and idolater. Again, just concede the point and move on. I there are Rabbis in Israel on YouTube claiming as much using the Talmud as their source. You have to understand, the Talmud is a vast collection of volumes written over many centuries by many rabbis…I’ve found no reasonable evidence to suggest our great Chazal spent their days mocking Jesus 24/7.
The tragedy is that it has become an industry for some for political purposes.It is sad that people refer our pain to “the Holocaust card.”
Nobody can possibly say that they feel their pain and suffering unless they have been in their shoes. And why you would say that I would joke about it is an incomprehensible statement.Though I didn’t loose any members, I still feel their pain. To you this may be a joke, but to us, to others, even non-Jews who suffered. . . its not joke. We take it very seriously.
Finklestein is not suggesting Israel should not be a modern state, but rather he exposes the terrible injustices and even atrocities the state of Israel has perpetrated against Palestinian families, their property and their lands. There are plenty of documentaries about all the injustices that most people never hear about. Here is a good documentary by Israeli citizen Anna Baltzer that I encourage everyone here to watch:. Dr. Finkelstein suggesting that Yisrael shouldn’t be a modern state is far from true. Did you know that the Arab leaders made a pact with Hitler before WWII to exterminate the Jews in Eretz Yisrael?