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06-21-2007, 03:19 AM | #71 |
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06-21-2007, 03:39 AM | #72 |
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06-21-2007, 04:18 AM | #73 | |
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All of our 21st century, Christian, or atheist, non-Jewish meanderings here are totally irrelevant to current Jewish thought. Most of the mitzvot have been irrelevant anyway, since the destruction of the Jerusalem Temple in 70 CE. |
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06-21-2007, 04:27 AM | #74 | |
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OTOH, "Leviticus," as part of Torah, is quite important, as a cultural artifact at the very least, to the Jewish people as a whole. Many Jews think that it is extremely odd that Gentiles have appropriated the Jewish Holy Scripture and added to it and misinterpreted it so very badly. Now feel free to ignore all this and post a silly non-sequiter, as is your wont. |
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06-21-2007, 04:43 AM | #75 | |
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I'll address this, since Clouseau obviously can't. Jesus spoke as a rabbi and as a Hillelian Pharisee, at that. The mitzvot of Leviticus are obviously confusing and seemed harsh, in the 1st Century CE, as today. Jesus the proto-rabbi seemed to think life-saving benefit overruled Torah. He also cited precedent, from centuries earlier, when David and his men ate bread offered to YHWH in the Temple, surely a much greater offense than scraping off a few grains of wheat from a field, as Jesus's men were accused of. Jesus said: "The sabbath was made for man, not man for the sabbath." (It is my understanding that when the Judean elite were exiled to Babylon and could not perform animal sacrifice at the Temple[s], they needed another way to worship and remain cohesive ethnically. The "laws", including dietary and sabbatical ones, were written for this purpose. Since they were enslaved, telling their captors an "ancient myth" that showed their powerful god didn't allow them to work one day a week was a pretty good scam, apparently.) Jews today, following the interpretations of Talmud, are allowed to save a life or limb on the Sabbath. If someone needed to go to the hospital, Jews, even the Orthodox, are allowed, even commanded, to hop in a car and drive the injured party there. Not just a human life. If your donkey falls in a well on shabbat, you may pull him out as well. In a related note, sick babies may not be circumcised on the 8th day. Only healthy babies may be circed on the 8th day. The Talmud provides all sorts of wiggle room. |
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06-21-2007, 06:47 AM | #76 |
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Of course, it was evolution that yielded all the wiggle room the Talmud, the "final product", provided. The Mishnah, which came first, didn't provide quite as much of that wiggle room. The traditions found in the Mishnah were likely very similar to the "traditions of men" to which Jesus referred and rejected. It is, IMHO, that the Tosefta and Talmuds opened up more wiggle room because of the rational influence and interpretation that Jesus had first given.
Quite correct in your overall analysis, though, except that if you are really tying Jesus to Hillel there is no evidence for such a claim. |
06-21-2007, 08:11 AM | #77 | |
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Much of the known world, dominated by the corrupt, troubled Roman Empire, reacted with determination that this man's teaching was not going to get a hold on society; following Christ was made illegal for centuries, until it finally dawned on the Romans that 'if you can't beat 'em, join 'em'. So citizens of the empire thereafter enjoyed a sort of immunity from the demands of the gospel- they were already Christians because they had been baptised, because their own ruler said they were, and nobody was going to argue, who wanted to live long. The Arabs, who had no suitable connexion with the early church, eventually followed suit, with their own umbrella religion to keep bad consciences from all, with no exceptions. What of the Jews? They were soon deprived of Temple, sacrificial system, and even Promised Land. There can have been very few of them who did not wonder if God had abandoned them because they had rejected Jesus as their Messiah. Those who did not must have wondered whether Judaism had ever been any more than a myth. But, like Europeans and Arabs, many Jews needed an umbrella to shield them from the gaze of God, so they carried on as best they could, as they still do. But for the fantasy, or the fact, of Christ, as one decides, there would have been no 'Catholic Church' and no Islam, and, due to disillusionment and apparent rejection, Judaism would quite probably by now have simply died away into a long-forgotten historical religion. |
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06-21-2007, 12:01 PM | #78 | ||||
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Then why does none of your following preaching reflect that? I'm guessing you talked to one misinformed Jew.
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06-21-2007, 12:16 PM | #79 | ||
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06-21-2007, 01:28 PM | #80 |
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"Too far unbelievable" that you have not studied even a little bit about Judaism, 1st cent CE or current? Are not familiar with Hillel and have not heard of Yom Kippur? Are not, indeed, at all familiar with the history of your own religion, outside of predigested whitewashed pap?
Quite. Try another thread for your sermons, Falwell lite. |
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