Monday, January 29, 2018

DECALOGUE 4 everyone


How to apply the
 •The Ten Commandments• (DECALOGUE) Exodus 20 in everyday life:
..
1. I AM YOUR G'OD, there are no other powers:

Purpose of everything: ONE ALMIGHTY GO'D.
every single event happens for a purpose. Every single atom in the universe has a godly purpose!

 Everything given to us is to be used for godly purpose.

2. Strive for total truth and unity: NOT TO WORSHIP CREATION AS CREATOR.
paganism/polytheism cannot bring unity, because every idol worshipper sees HIS idol as the most important one, or he sees each of world powers working at opposing purposes.

Monotheism forces us to see everything as synergy, all parts making a greater whole.

A created entity cannot represent the totality of creation, but only a fractured fragment, which ipso facto is a lie because it hides the fulness of truth.

3. NOT TO TAKE G'OD's Name ''in vain''.

Any attribute of the Almighty does not describe His totality.
We need to approach our Maker with due respect, love and trembling. Even when describing a partial ASPECT of His relationship with the world ,we need to remember that any ATTRIBUTE of Divinity does not DEFINE the Infinite One.

The lesson is to always strive to see the full picture in everything, not to mis-represent G'ods creation.

4. KEEPING & •REMEMBERING• SHABBAT to make it holy.

Although only Children of Israel are commanded to abstain from all labors on Shabbat,

the universal lesson for everyone is to always remember that this world is to be sanctified and made into a godly place of love, justice, and unity.

To ''rest'' on Shabbat means that we should strive to emulate our Creator in having a definite plan and a purpose in all our actions.

 Shabbat is our goal: to set aside time for purely SPIRITUAL holy time, pure from profane mundane weekly efforts.

5. HONORING OUR PARENTS:
Gratitude and respect for our life-giving parents is the first step of being a godly person.

If we don't appreciate our PARENTS, how can we appreciate G'od who sustains us at every moment?

6. YOU SHALL NOT MURDER.

If we cannot appreciate our parents or our Creator, we won't appreciate life!
G'ods most precious gift is LIFE! Ultimately that's our ONLY gift.
We need to hold life precious and not destroy it needlessly!
G'ods first commandment to Adam was to ''guard and rule the garden''. That includes protecting all life.

7. NOT TO PROPAGATE SEXUAL IMMORALITY.

Misusing intimacy for cheap animalistic thrills is to disrespect G'ods gift of life and of ''loving one's fellow human beings. To respect and love others means to honor their emotional and physical needs.

Using others as mere tools of sating one's own selfish self-gratifying physical desires is to dishonor the godly spark in others.

8. YOU SHALL NOT STEAL.
Loving one's fellow human beings and honoring all G'ods creatures as G'ods creation includes respecting others' property and rights from loss or damage.

9. YOU SHALL NOT PRESENT FALSE TESTIMONY.
Preserving G'ods truth and avoiding misleading others, especially to pervert justice, is especially heinous. Some people justify any sin if they think that their cause is right.
Justice isn't a far-off theoretical idea, but a DAILY struggle to be an HONEST truthfull human being at all times.

10. YOU SHALL NOT COVET.
This is a most important commandment, as it illustrates that not only our physical actions need to be godly, but even our THOUGHTS and EMOTIONS are to be pure.

..

((Ten Commandments

20 Then God spoke all these words:
I am the Lord your God who brought you out of Egypt, out of the house of slavery.
You must have no other gods before me.
Do not make an idol for yourself—no form whatsoever—of anything in the sky above or on the earth below or in the waters under the earth. Do not bow down to them or worship them, because I, the Lord your God, am a passionate God. I punish children for their parents’ sins even to the third and fourth generations of those who hate me. But I am loyal and gracious to the thousandth generation of those who love me and keep my commandments.
Do not use the Lord your God’s name as if it were of no significance; the Lordwon’t forgive anyone who uses his name that way.
Remember the Sabbath day and treat it as holy. Six days you may work and do all your tasks, 10 but the seventh day is a Sabbath to the Lord your God. Do not do any work on it—not you, your sons or daughters, your male or female servants, your animals, or the immigrant who is living with you. 11 Because the Lordmade the heavens and the earth, the sea, and everything that is in them in six days, but rested on the seventh day. That is why theLord blessed the Sabbath day and made it holy.
12 Honor your father and your mother so that your life will be long on the fertile land that the Lord your God is giving you.
13 Do not kill.
14 Do not commit adultery.
15 Do not steal.
16 Do not testify falsely against your neighbor.
17 Do not desire your neighbor’s house. Do not desire and try to take your neighbor’s wife, male or female servant, ox, donkey, or anything else that belongs to your neighbor.))

Sunday, January 28, 2018

Israel as a Blessing

Historical approach to Israel as 'suffering servant'.

 Jews, as Abraham's descendants are the Keepers of the Covenant, they are promissed to bring blessing to all nations.

(Sorry, being followers of mr.Jzs doesn't make you 'descendants' of Abraham, anymore than it could make u jewish, regardless of Non-Testament's claims)
  
Some gentiles' object to Suffering Servant being ISRAEL, on the grounds that Jews aren't all righteous. One answer i have is: the righteous remnant of Israel , of which the real messiah will be born, that 'remnant' will be wholly righteous, as written.

Another answer is, a sinner who sincerely repents is considered 'righteous'. King David, in spite of his serious sin, has REPENTED, and Torah considers him WHOLLY RIGHTEOUS. As it is written ''the righteous fall seven times''.

I propose that we can see Israel ''being a blessing'' if we carefully examine the historical interactions  between the various nations and the Jews. Very often, (with some exceptions to be sure), a pattern emerges: The states which left Jews relatively unmolested to freely practice Judaism, those nations had often PROSPERED.

Some examples:
the Golden Age of Spain, the Golden Age of Islam, the Golden Age of Russia, the Golden Age of Poland.

 I propose that the dominance of Great Britain as world power has faded roughly when they stopped supporting Jewish rights. And British influence has returned when they STOPPED discriminating against the Jews.

i know it isn't a perfect pattern and one might note many exceptions. However, i DO feel there are enough ''coincidental'' parrallel points in history, to render my point at least somewhat valid.

(Hey, even ancient Egypt was a world power until they ''let the Jews out''!)  

Wednesday, January 24, 2018

Israel chosen

Israel/Jacob/Judah =G'ods servant//priests:
Lev.25:55,
Isaiah 41:8-9,
ls. 43:10,
ls. 44:1,
ls. 44:21,
ls. 45:4,
ls. 48:20,
ls. 49:3,
ls. 54:1,
ls. 61:6* (ministers/priests)
Ez.28:25,
Ez. 37:25,
Jer. 30:10,
Jer. 46:27-28,
psalm 136:21-23,
kings 8:23,
kings 8:36,
2Chron. 6:27,






Israel/Judah/Ephraim =G-od's son:
Exod.4:22,
Deut.14:1,
Ps. 82:6,
Jer. 31:9,
Jer. 31:20

Israel =G*od's Chosen:
 Exod. 19:5-6,
Deut. 7:7-8,
Deut. 14:2,
Is. 43:10,
Is. 61:6-9,
Is. 63:20,
Is. 65:4
Psalm 105:6-11,
2Sam. 3:18,

/quran 2:47, 2:122/

Tuesday, January 23, 2018

Parshat BO Torah lessons (Exodus 10)

Parshat 'Bo' (Exodus 10)
Some basic teachings contained in Parshat Bo:

•Parshat Bo begins with an important concept: G-od's interactions with the nations instruct us about our task in life, which is to grow in awareness of G-o'ds presence. In order that G-od's will might be done, He takes away a measure of free will from the world leaders (specifically from Pharaoh in this parsha). The Hebrew phrase for this concept is ''LEV MELAHHIM B'YAD HASHEM'' (Heart of kings /is/ in G-od's hand).

•parshat Bo states that Hashem 'hardened' Pharaoh's heart, so he would not be moved by G'ods display of might in bringing the ten plagues upon Egypt. The verse states the purpose of this 'hardening': it was to show to all the nations how Hashem shapes and manipulates the natural world to bring Israel to Him.

•(Some commentaries note that the 'hardening of the heart' was to RETURN Pharaoh's free will, not remove it~ only through 'hardening of the heart' would pharaoh be able to retain his free will when faced with G'ods might in the form of the ten plagues. The revelation of G'ods might in Egypt was so OVERWHELMING that only through 'hardening of the heart' was Pharaoh able to retain his free will).

•Remembering Israel's slavery in Egypt is a CONSTANTLY binding commandment, a sign for all the generations. The mitzvas of Tefillin, of Passover and of Shabbat are all ways to remember the egyptian slavery. (Parshas Bo ends with the mitzva of Tefillin).

•Exodus 12:2 uses a very surprising word toward the egyptians: rayekha רעיך ''your friend/neighbor/fellow human being. The word ''reish-ayen'' is found in the iconic ''Love your /neighbor/ as yourself'' (Lev.19:18). Though it might be understood as refering only to our 'friends' or brothers, we see that even the EGYPTIANS who had after all ENSLAVED us, are nevertheless referred here as 're'ah', towards whom we are supposed to act with love.
(of course ''loving one's neighbor'' does not mean allowing ourselves be abused or killed. It means that we need always to relate to others with JUSTICE, not with vengefulness.)

•We see that G-od gives all nations a CHANCE to join Israel in serving Him, as a number of Egyptians DID join Israel during Exodus. However, those who seek to harm Israel will be punished, even though it might take a long time...

Wednesday, January 10, 2018

ETERNAL LIFE IN TORAH

Eternal Life in the Torah

•Job had the assurance that although he was going to be eaten by worms, he would receive a new body and in that body would actually see God face to face, obviously conscious.

In Job 19:25-27 he says that “I know that my Redeemer lives, and that in the end he will stand upon the earth. And after my skin has been destroyed, yet in my flesh I will see God; I myself will see him with my own eyes—I, and not another. How my heart yearns within me!”

•Isaiah 26:19: “But your dead will live; their bodies will rise. You, who dwell in the dust, wake up and shout for joy. Your dew is like the dew of the morning; the earth will give birth to her dead.”

•Dan 12:1-3, is clear: “At that time Michael, the great prince who protects your people, will arise. There will be a time of distress such as has not happened from the beginning of nations until then. But at that time your people—everyone whose name is found written in the book— will be delivered. Multitudes who sleep in the dust of the earth will awake: some to everlasting life, others to shame and everlasting contempt. Those who are wise will shine like the brightness of the heavens, and those who lead many to righteousness, like the stars for ever and ever.”

•The wicked are like ‘the beasts that perish’ (Ps 49:12, 20) without any hope that they ‘should live on forever’ (Ps 49:9). However, the righteous have the triumphant expectation that ‘God will redeem [them] from the grave [ Sheol]; he will surely take [them] to himself’ (Ps 49:15).

•Genesis 5:24: God will snatch, take or receive us to himself when we die.

•Psalm 73:23-25 makes contrast between the wicked and the righteous.  ''You guide me with your counsel, and afterward you will take me into glory’ (Ps 73:24).”

•Daniel 12:1-3 clearly refers to life after death and a bodily resurrection.
In the 73rd Psalm a man named Asaph describes “You will guide me with Your counsel, and afterward receive me to glory. Whom have I in heaven but You? And there is none upon earth that I desire besides You. My flesh and my heart fail; but God is the strength of my heart and my portion forever” (Ps. 73:24-26).

•Other Psalms too mention the existence after death and affirm continued existence after death, such as: Ps.16:10 “... will not abandon me to the grave... will... fill me with... eternal pleasures at your right hand.”;

•Ps. 21 “surely you have granted him eternal blessings.”;

•Ps. 49:15 “but God will redeem my life from the grave; he will surely take me to himself.”

•Other verses assuring us of eternal life and ressurection for those who observe the commandments:
*Isaiah 26:19.
*Daniel 12:2.
*Ezekiel 37:12-14.
*Psalm 16:10.
*Psalm 86:13.
*Psalm 71:20.

•Torah speaks of several noteworthy people being "gathered to their people." See, for example, Gen. 25:8 (Abraham), 25:17 (Ishmael), 35:29 (Isaac), 49:33 (Jacob), Deut. 32:50 (Moses and Aaron) II Kings 22:20 (King Josiah). This gathering is described as a separate event from the physical death of the body or the burial.

•Belief in resurrection of the dead is one of Rambam's13 Principles of Faith. The second blessing of theShemoneh Esrei prayer, which is recited three times daily, contains several references to resurrection.


Parsha Re'ei

Parsha Re'ei (Deut.11:26-16:17) starts with Torah urging us to open our eyes and really SEE (Re'ei) the available blessings of a li...