M
Mickey
Guest
I see. So you are free to reject it. Fair enough.The Church has no offical stance.
I see. So you are free to reject it. Fair enough.The Church has no offical stance.
Never said I rejected it. Those sites are traditionally thought to be correct so we faithful accept they are what they are.I see. So you are free to reject it. Fair enough.
I am thinking that Rome most likely does not accept that this is really the western wall from the second temple…and that they go there to pray as an ecumenical gesture.I assume you aren’t suggesting that our last two Holy Fathers would pray at a satanic site due to ecumenism.
I did not say that. I am saying that (according to your bishop) a Catholic is free to reject it as being on or near the site of Christ’s Nativity. Right?Never said I rejected it.
I believe it is above all our pay grades lol. I actually visited the site a few years back while doing research. Many Christians as Jews were there praying and giving praise to God. You feel such a loving atmosphere there. As I stated above, if Satan is there then he is surely not changing hearts lol.I am thinking that Rome most likely does not accept that this is really the western wall from the second temple…and that they go there to pray as an ecumenical gesture.
Discerning whether or not there is anything satanic about it…is above my pay grade.![]()
I assume they can if they please. A Catholic can reject Christ as well.I did not say that. I am saying that (according to your bishop) a Catholic is free to reject it as being on or near the site of Christ’s Nativity. Right?
Tradition places it there. The fathers of the Church confirm it’s authenticity. It is a place that is venerated just as we venerate other holy objects such as Icons. Therefore, I believe it is a part of Holy Tradition.The point he was making is that tradition places it there, but there is no set Church Teaching on the matter. It is still a Holy Site because it is a Church that contains the Body of Christ.
Then why comment?I’m not going to watch the video. What Meltzerboy said is enough for me to not waste my time on it.
Wow! Finally, someone interested in discussing the facts rather than crying “anti-semite, anti-semite.”The Strange Story of the False Wailing Wall
askelm.com/temple/t000701.htm
The Temple Mount and Fort Antonia
askelm.com/temple/t980504.htm
Bordeaux Pilgrim 333 AD
christusrex.org/www1/ofm/pilgr/bord/10Bord07aJerus.html
The 1st century Roman Jewish historian, Flavius Josephus in book ‘The War of Jews’ had quoted Jewish rebel commader at Masada in 73 CE, saying: “Where is this city that was believed to have God himself inhabiting therein? It is now demolished to the very foundations, and hath nothing left but that monument of it preserved, I mean the camp of those that hath destroyed it, which still dwells upon its ruins”.
“In biblical times the Haram was not a sacred place. Instead it was the place that Orthodox Jews considered defiled and the most despised place in the world. Within these walls were found no remnants of any of the earlier temples but rather an image of Mars, the Roman god of war,”
wrmea.org/component/content/article/371-2011-august/10647-misunderstandings-about-jerusalems-temple-mount.html
http://www.wrmea.org/images/stories/August_2011/map01.jpg
British archaeologist Kathleen Kenyon discovered in 1962 that the entire City of David in the past had been only that little rock ridge on the western bank of the Kidron Valley. In early 1970s, Professor Benjamin Mazar, former President of Hebrew University too, confirmed that Haram al-Sharif was indeed a Roman fortress.
Coins from 17AD found under Jerusalem’s Western Wall hints sacred site NOT built by Herod
dailymail.co.uk/sciencetech/article-2065254/Coins-Jerusalems-Western-Wall-hints-sacred-site-older-Herod.html
Exactly my sentiment. One that Ernst Martin’s studies seem to confirm.Again…Christ told us that “there will not be left here one stone upon another.” So I do not believe this “western wall” has anything to do with the second temple.
The second claim regarding the Zohar in the Kabbalah surely points in that direction since it is so typical of antisemitic writing, while the third claim about the Shekhinah may simply be due to ignorance. I also stated that the first claim concerning the identity of a Roman fortress is open to discussion. So we have a melange of three arguments that don’t fit together under the title of Satanic ritual.Then why comment?
Meltzerboy has also implied that the presenter in the video is an anti-semite. Utter tripe.
Why is it ignorance?The second claim regarding the Kabbalah surely points in that direction, while the third claim about the Shekhinah is simply ignorance.
You appear persistent in dismissing the Kabbalah as pertaining only to an occult system despite what I mentioned in my earlier post. Why don’t you check the several Jewish websites which explain what the meaning and function of the Kabbalah is in Judaism? Why are you so willing to believe a video on youtube constructed by a dubious source but you are not willing to investigate the Kabbalah further based on any legitimate Jewish or Christian sources? I seem to recall from other threads that you are anti-Zionist, and Zionism can be and has been discussed and debated. But why bring so-called Satanic rituals from the mystical Kabbalah, which is part of Judaism (though not all movements and never considered a holy text as is the Torah) into a political discussion of Zionism?Exactly my sentiment. One that Ernst Martin’s studies seem to confirm.
The connection between the Western Wall and the Occult system known as the Kabbalah is also disturbing, and the presenter in the video touches on this.
What is also disturbing is that some on this thread seem afraid to discuss this topic and wish to shut down the debate by yelling “anti-semite”, etc. That’s a red flag in my book.
In Hebrew, G-d is spoken of both in the masculine and the feminine. The Shekhinah is NOT considered a false god in Judaism, but rather another name for G-d. And the concept, as I already noted, is also used in Christian theology. Please check this for yourself on legitimate Jewish and Catholic websites rather than relying essentially on the veracity of this video.Why is it ignorance?
The presenter in the video has explained that the Shekhinah is not a divine presence. He explained that it is the Kabbalistic feminine emanation of the false god, the Shekhinah. He explained that the Kabbalah is an esoteric, occult system. Everything that I have read thus far confirms these claims. You say that such claims are “simply ignorance.” Well, start providing some evidence in favor of your argument. Quit yelling “anti-semite” and quit using the fallacy that Popes and other famous people have visited the Western Wall - as if that fact is somehow relevant to the discussion.
Well, it seems that you have watched quite a few of his videos. I can’t comment on his Sandy Hook video but he is certainly entitled to exercise his free speech in an entertaining manner if he so chooses. He may a bit sarcastic but he is not an anti-semite, at least from the videos I have seen. If you wish to document his anti-semitism then please do so with something he has said that is anti-semitic.If you check out the websites of Brother Nathanael Kapner:
realjewnews.com/
brothernathanaelfoundation.org/
you will discover that according to him, the root of all evil and the cause of all evil as well as the greatest threat to Christianity are “the Jews”. For instance, in addition to this obscene video you can also discover that the Sandy Hook massacre was a Jewish fabrication in order to remove handguns from “the goyim”.
At first glance one might think that no one could possibly listen to this obvious madness about a Jewish plot, or these ridiculous assertions about Jews and Judaism and expect that anyone could possibly believe these things. Apparently you would be wrong.
Ernest Martin was not an archeologist, especially if you read his eclectic biography. A.S.K.'s founder was affliated with Mr. Martin.Exactly my sentiment. One that Ernst Martin’s studies seem to confirm.
The connection between the Western Wall and the Occult system known as the Kabbalah is also disturbing, and the presenter in the video touches on this.
What is also disturbing is that some on this thread seem afraid to discuss this topic and wish to shut down the debate by yelling “anti-semite”, etc. That’s a red flag in my book.
Now, we are getting somewhere.In Hebrew, G-d is spoken of both in the masculine and the feminine. The Shekhinah is NOT considered a false god in Judaism, but rather another name for G-d. And the concept, as I already noted, is also used in Christian theology. Please check this for yourself on legitimate Jewish and Catholic websites rather than relying essentially on the veracity of this video.
Wow. Those are interesting and possibly controversial questions. Very few, no doubt, will be qualified to answer them, here at CAF. Like you, I am totally uninformed and therefore unqualified…I sense truth in this although I know nothing about it.
This is simply not true. The Shekhinah has never been perverted into a false god by the Kabbalah. If that were so, I can assure you no Hasidic Jew would bother reading and studying the Kabbalah. It may be that this man does not believe in the necessity of studying the Kabbalah since there are plenty of Orthodox Jews who do not study it, but that is a far cry from impugning it as a source of occultist ideology. Or, to give him the benefit of the doubt, it may be that he gleaned this from studying and misinterpreting the meaning of the Kabbalah since it is so very challenging to understand and apply it to the Torah.Now, we are getting somewhere.
The presenter is NOT saying that in authentic Judaism (you know, the Judaism of Moses and the prophets and the Old Testament) that the Shekhinah is a false god. He is saying that in the Occult system of thought known as the Kabbalah as expounded upon in the Zohar and expanded upon in the 18th century Hasidic movement (which he is implying is NOT authentic, Old Testament Judaism) that the Shekhinah has been preverted into a false god.
You are correct, he was not an archeologist. But he appears to have been a talented historian and researcher.Ernest Martin was not an archeologist, especially if you read his eclectic biography. A.S.K.'s founder was affliated with Mr. Martin.
One would be better off reading about the numerous theories regarding the location of Herod’s Temple by reading from those who have most to gain from knowing where exactly the Temple site was actually located.
templemount.org/
The other website from the daily mail confirms that the Western Wall was constructed near the Temple and that it was finished during the lifetime of King Herod’s grandson…years before the destruction of the Temple and the Temple walls, not the walls surrounding the Temple and the Temple buildings.
the other website listed is from the **Washington Reporter **which tends to take a slanted viewpoint on the Israeli-Palestine conflict.
God’s peace
micah