Un Segundo Exodo: ¿qué tiene que ver esta guerra contra Israel?

Han llegado tiempos difíciles para nosotros. Los judíos y los creyentes de la Biblia en todas partes están conteniendo la respiración, inseguros de lo que está sucediendo en términos de sus creencias y de lo que dice la Biblia sobre los eventos del fin de los tiempos. ¡Especialmente los acontecimientos que incluso ahora están fuera de control en Tierra Santa! ¿Pero de qué se trata?

Israel ha estallado en una guerra catastrófica justo en el momento en que los judíos están regresando a su tierra en masa. Es casi como un segundo Éxodo y esta vez el Faraón parece estar EN LA TIERRA así como en las fronteras tratando de destruir a cualquiera que quiera regresar. Ahora no es sólo Egipto, sino todas las naciones limítrofes las que se han unido a los ataques diarios para robar la tierra de Israel y matar a sus habitantes. ¿Porqué ahora?

Ok, los judíos han celebrado el primer día de Pesaj de 2024, y en la mayoría de los seders, al menos se contempla, si no se discute, la cuestión de por qué los judíos parecen sufrir eternamente, como si fuera nuestro destino sufrir. Este año la celebración de nuestra libertad es cuestionable. ¡Cómo podemos celebrar la libertad cuando las naciones quieren acabar con nosotros, otra vez! — ¿Esta vez desde nuestra propia tierra dada por Dios? ¡Seguramente Hashem no debe estar mirando! ¿Por qué está pasando esto? ¡Pensábamos que el fin de los tiempos se trataba de regresar a la tierra, terminar el exilio y darle la bienvenida al Mesías! Quizás haya algo más que no hayamos visto. ¡Quizás el pueblo de Dios necesite una transformación!

Quizás podamos sacar fuerzas de las cosas negativas que están sucediendo. Miremos más allá de la realidad de lo que está pasando.

De acuerdo a un Artículo del Times of Israel con fecha de El 23 de diciembre de 2023, más de 2600 personas se mudaron a Israel entre el 7 de octubre y la fecha del artículo. De acuerdo con lacrónica judía, más de 6.500 judíos emigraron a Israel antes del 14 de febrero y se han presentado muchas solicitudes de aliá.

¿Qué se puede deducir de esto? Hasta el momento de la declaración en Times of Israel (23/12) no se habían producido muchas protestas anti israel en todo el mundo, al menos no como las ha habido recientemente. Entonces, ¿qué las motivó? ¿Culpa por no estar en la tierra para sustentarlo? ¿Un sentimiento de querer permanecer juntos, pase lo que pase? ¿O hay algo más?

Durante la seder en la casa de unos amigos aquí en los Altos del Golán, conocimos a algunas personas nuevas que acababan de mudarse de Estados Unidos. Todavía no han establecido residencia pero afirman que Israel es el único lugar para los judíos. ¡Vendieron todo y se apresuraron aquí, con o sin beneficios de aliá! ¡Definitivamente esta no es la primera vez que escucho a gente afirmar esto!

¿Es realmente Israel el lugar más seguro para los judíos, como sugiere el artículo anterior? Bien puede serlo, pero no lo parece en este momento. Dejando a un lado los sentimientos, ¿cuál es el plan de Hashem para Israel? ¿Existe un plan? ¿Los judíos serán perseguidos y atacados para siempre? ¿Será porque son el Pueblo de Alianza? ¿Es porque de alguna manera se extraviaron hace miles de años? Bueno, tal vez, pero no veo a un Dios amoroso y misericordioso castigando eternamente a un pueblo con persecución cuando no tienen idea de por qué. Estoy seguro de que hay algo más involucrado en el abrumador impulso de regresar a la tierra de nuestros antepasados. ¿Por qué estamos aquí, de hecho?

Otra cosa, ¿por qué las organizaciones cristianas, especialmente las evangélicas, creen que los judíos deben regresar a su tierra?

Según la declaración cristiana sionista en Wikipedia::

“Dios Padre, El Todopoderoso, eligió a la antigua nación y pueblo de Israel, los descendientes de Abraham, Isaac y Jacob, para revelar Su plan de redención para el mundo. Siguen siendo elegidos de Dios, y sin la nación judía Sus propósitos redentores para el mundo no se completarán”.

Por supuesto, detrás de esta declaración está la premisa de que el mesías cristiano (Jesús) debe regresar a Jerusalén y, como algunos han dicho, “convencer a los judíos de su misión divina y de su posicion de Mesias”.

Aunque sea tan falso como afirmamos la mayoría de nosotros, el resultado es que se está ayudando a muchos judíos a regresar. ¿Condenaremos su buena voluntad y nos negaremos a aceptar sus regalos, aunque estén motivados por razonamientos erróneos? Votemos al bebe junto con el agua del baño? No creo. Hashem ha trabajado con las naciones para hacer realidad su voluntad a lo largo de milenios y no lo veo cambiando de planes ahora. Entonces, ¿cuál podría ser Su propósito al llevar a los judíos a experimentar una horrible guerra contra Israel en lo que muchos de nosotros creemos que es el fin de los tiempos? ¿Vamos a ver algo espectacular?

Algunos ven esta guerra como completamente controlada por un gobierno secular que no está dirigido por YHVH. ¿Algunos han declarado que Dios no está entre nosotros y no puede trabajar con este gobierno? ¡Esperar!

¿Trabajó Dios con Ciro de Babilonia para enviar a los judíos de regreso a la tierra? ¿No significa eso que todo está en Manos del Eterno Arquitecto de la Historia?

Otra cosa, además del atentado del 7 de octubre (ver mi artículo Bailando con el Diablo aquí, pronto lo tendrá en español), se han disparado muchos misiles, drones, cohetes y bombas contra Israel desde todos lados. Además de que muchos de nuestros queridos soldados murieron en la lucha con Hamás, Hezbolá y todos los representantes de Irán, ha habido muy pocas víctimas civiles. Como por ejemplo lo que ocurrió la noche del sábado 13 de abril cuando más de 300 proyectiles fueron disparados contra Israel desde Irán y nadie resultó herido excepto una niña beduina que resultó herida. ¿Es la fuerza de nuestra cúpula de hierro? ¿O es posible que alguien allá arriba nos esté cuidando? Es cierto que nuestro gobierno en su mayor parte se considera la única protección de Israel. Por más malvado que sea, ¿está Hashem ahí trabajando detrás de escena? ¿Puedes decirme que no lo es? Él puede desarraigar a los reyes cuando quiera. ¿Simplemente sucede que Él está trabajando junto a él y logrando lo que Él quiere?

Algunos de nosotros todavía cuestionamos la estúpida estupidez de nuestro gobierno por sorprenderse con el ataque del 7 de octubre, o incluso ignorarlo hasta que fue demasiado tarde. ¿Tenía Dios un propósito al permitirlo? ¿Tenía Él un mensaje para nosotros? ¿Lo usó de alguna manera para comenzar un ataque a mayor escala contra Israel que se desarrollaría para mostrar su mano poderosa al final? Y ahora, ¿qué pasa con nuestros 133 rehenes, que muchos de nosotros creemos que ya están en su mayoría muertos? No puedo entender el motivo de su tortura y muerte, pero no permitiré que mi fe en YHVH falle. He orado por ellos una y otra vez y es hora de dejarlos con el Todopoderoso que protege a los inocentes. ¿Lo hace o no? Algunos dicen que claramente no ha protegido a ninguno de ellos. ¿Asi que que hacemos? ¿Desechar nuestra fe? ¿Podría haber una razón para todo esto? Digo que lo hay, pero no puedo decirte qué es. ¿Echaremos la culpa al gobierno, o el gobierno es sólo una marioneta en manos de Hashem?

Si leemos las profecías de Ezequiel 37-39, queda bastante claro que algo corresponde con lo que está pasando.

Sé que estoy argumentando para salvar la reputación de Di-s. Algunos podrán afirmar que soy un fanático religioso. Puede que lo sea. Pero tengo claras un par de cosas.

  1. Esta guerra es necesaria para cumplir el Plan Divino y está insinuada en la Biblia.
  2. El pueblo siempre ha sufrido, especialmente el Pueblo de Alianza.
  3. La Biblia promete traer de vuelta a los que han muerto (¿rehenes?) en la resurrección. (Ver Isaías 26, Daniel 12, Ezequiel 37).
  4. La Tierra de Israel pertenece a YHVH y Él promete acabar con Edom (Isaías 63). Dice que lo hará solo (Isaías 63:3).
  5. Debe haber una separación entre los justos y los malvados. (La maldad está mostrando su rostro especialmente ahora. Esta guerra está revelando las actitudes y motivaciones secretas de la gente. Algunos judíos se aferran a su dinero como lo más importante que tienen. Algunos están vendiendo todo y mudándose a Israel, cueste lo que cueste. Muchos no- Los judíos hacen fila para ayudar, mientras que otros se tapan los oídos para no oír. Algunos buscan la ascendencia de sus padres y hacen búsquedas de ADN para ver si pueden ser judíos o de las 10 tribus perdidas.

Entonces, sí, hay mucho que contemplar y lo mejor que podemos hacer es confiar en que Dios hará Su voluntad. Sólo él está a cargo, sin importar lo que estén haciendo los gobiernos y las organizaciones. ¡No nos interponemos en Su camino!

Mi esperanza es una fe mayor mientras vemos que las montañas se desmoronan y las torres caen. ¡Que seamos fieles a través de todo!

Ariella

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Cómo ser un individuo y seguir siendo religioso

¿Es posible tener una religión basada en la Biblia sin inclinarse ante alguna jerarquía? ¿Qué pasa con el judaísmo? ¿Es mejor que otras religiones?

Hay varias ramas del judaísmo, algunas más complejas que otras. Cada uno tiene su propia Halajá, Mitzvot o conjunto de normas que sigue. Algunos judíos o aspirantes a judíos todavía están en el desierto reuniendo información sobre qué camino tomar. Yo afirmaría que la mayoría de esta clase son de ascendencia judía (quizás perdida en el proceso de la inquisición) o de las 10 tribus perdidas. Pero ¿cómo se sabe a qué grupo seguir y cuánto derecho tiene una organización a ejercer influencia sobre sus seguidores?

Quizás estemos cansados de instituciones creadas por el hombre que nos gobiernan sin que nosotros decidamos al respecto. Vemos jerarquías en el catolicismo, y en cualquiera de las principales iglesias cristianas, en los diferentes niveles del judaísmo ortodoxo y también en los movimientos más liberales del judaísmo rabínico. ¿Qué tal el caraísmo? ¿Está esto exento? Me doy cuenta de que hay al menos tres o cuatro grupos de caraítas, cada uno con su propio enfoque del Tanaj y la Torá. Hay siddurim para algunos de estos. Algunos exigen una estricta observancia de su Halajá.

Si bien personalmente sugiero individualidad en nuestro enfoque en la Torá y su Tanaj interpretativo, no recomiendo el caos. Lo diré, aunque a menudo parece un caos cuando la gente considera su propia religión natal y la encuentra defectuosa. Y cuando se dan cuenta de que cosas que antes consideraban leyes fundamentales de pronto se les presentan como si tuvieran poco valor bíblico, se desilusionan. Algunos descartan por completo la religión, otros buscan otras religiones y otros intentan encontrar la verdad por sí mismos. Pero, considerando este gran renacimiento religioso que está ocurriendo en todo el mundo, ¿estamos entre los que abandonan todas las formas y ceremonias y desechan por completo lo que consideramos religión organizada? ¿Cómo vamos a tener una religión si no tenemos algo en lo que estemos de acuerdo?

La forma caraíta de judaísmo, a diferencia de otras ramas del judaísmo, parece permitir la libertad más bíblica, que es lo que muchos buscan. ¿Pero podemos estar de acuerdo en algo? ¿Podemos aceptar estar en desacuerdo y seguir unidos? La verdad fundamental del caraísmo es que todo debe basarse en la Torá dada en el Sinaí y las obras de los profetas en el Tanaj. En el caraísmo hay un rechazo universal de lo que se llama la Torá Oral o תּוֹרָה שֶׁבְּעַל־פֶּה.
Esto se basa en las instrucciones a Moisés de que Israel no agregue ni quite de las palabras que YHWH le dio a Israel.

“No añadirás a la palabra que yo te mando, ni quitarás de ella, para que guardes los mandamientos de Jehová tu Dios que yo te mando”. – Deuteronomio 4:2

La ortodoxia, así como otras ramas del judaísmo que siguen a los rabinos, afirman que los sabios recibieron la transmisión de la Torá y se les dio el derecho de reinterpretarla y aplicarla como mejor les pareciera. La siguiente cita lo resume:

“La tradición judía identifica la cadena histórica interpretada por individuos a quienes se les confió la transmisión de la Ley Oral desde Moisés hasta el período rabínico temprano: “Moisés recibió la Torá y la transmitió a Josué;
Josué a los Ancianos; los Ancianos a los profetas; y los profetas lo transmitieron a los hombres de la Gran Asamblea”. (mira aquí).

Pero muchos de nosotros vemos tanta desviación de las palabras originales de Moisés que buscamos un acercamiento a la Torá que resista la prueba del tiempo. Y, por supuesto, hay problemas para aplicar toda la Torá incluso hoy en día porque no hay Templo ni sacrificios. Esa parte de la Torá parece haberse perdido al menos hasta que se construya otro Templo. Algunas de las normas actuales no permiten cosas como la poligamia, lo que significa que tenemos que mirar de nuevo y comprender los principios detrás de lo que estaba permitido. A veces la Torá permitía algo pero no había ninguna ley que dijera “lo harás o no lo harás”. Así que la aplicación de la Torá tiene un desafío continuo y así debe ser. No hay ningún deseo de que recreemos una nueva religión jerárquica que decida por nosotros lo que debemos o no debemos hacer. Después de todo, Moisés dijo:

“Ahora bien, lo que os mando hoy no es demasiado difícil para vosotros ni está fuera de vuestro alcance. No está en el cielo, de modo que tengas que preguntar: “¿Quién subirá al cielo para recibirlo y proclamárnoslo para que podamos obedecerlo?” Tampoco está más allá del mar, de modo que tengas que preguntar: “¿Quién cruzará el mar para conseguirlo y proclamárnoslo para que podamos obedecerlo?” No, la palabra está muy cerca de ti; está en tu boca y en tu corazón para que puedas obedecerlo”. Deuteronomio 30:11-14

Entonces, ¿qué se requiere de nosotros hoy? ¿No sería un buen punto de partida si empezáramos a estudiar seriamente el Tanaj por nosotros mismos y dejáramos de aprender tanto de rabinos y pastores? No digo que no haya razón para dejar de aprender y sí, otras personas deben tener influencia, pero ninguna tiene derecho a ejercer autoridad espiritual sobre el individuo en este momento. Y cuando el templo se restablece y se instala el Sacerdocio junto con un tribunal levítico apropiado, entonces los juicios estarán en orden. Aún no estamos allí. Y no creo que ninguno de nosotros sepa cómo será exactamente.

Lo que se requiere en este momento es que estudiemos y oremos, pidiéndole al Eterno que escudriñe nuestros corazones y nos mantenga ante Su vista mientras nos entregamos voluntariamente a obedecer Sus mandamientos. Después de todo, ¿es posible que estas leyes ya estén escritas en nuestros corazones y mentes?

“Porque este es el pacto que haré con la casa de Israel después de aquellos días, declara Jehová: Pondré mi ley dentro de ellos, y la escribiré en sus corazones. Y yo seré su Dios, y ellos serán mi pueblo. Y ya no enseñará cada uno a su prójimo ni cada uno a su hermano, diciendo: ‘Conoce a YHWH’, porque todos me conocerán, desde el más pequeño de ellos hasta el mayor, declara YHWH. Porque perdonaré su iniquidad y no me acordaré más de su pecado.” – Jer 31:33-34

“Él te ha dicho, oh hombre, lo que es bueno; ¿Y qué exige YHWH de ti sino hacer justicia, amar la bondad y caminar humildemente con tu Dios? Miqueas 6:8.

Enfocando en la Tora

Ariella

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How to Be an Individual and still be Religious

Is it possible to have a Bible-based religion without bowing to some hierarchy? What about Judaism? Is it better than other religions?

There are several branches of Judaism, some more complex than others. Each has its own Halakha, Mitzvot or set of standards which it follows. Some Jews or wanna-be Jews are still in the wilderness gathering information about which road to travel. I would assert that most of this class are either Jewish by descent (perhaps lost in the process of the inquisition) or of the 10 lost tribes. But how does one know which group to follow and how much right does an organization have to exert influence over its adherents? 

Perhaps we are tired of man-made institutions that rule over us without our decision in the matter. We see hierarchies in Catholicism, and any of the mainline Christian churches, in the different levels of Orthodox Judaism and also in the more liberal movements of Rabbinic Judaism. How about Karaism? Is this exempt? I realize that there are at least three or four groups of Karaites, each with its own approach to the Tenakh and Torah. There are siddurim for some of these. Some require strict observance of their Halakha. 

While I personally suggest individuality in our approach to the Torah and its interpretive Tanakh, I do not recommend chaos. I will say, though it often seems like chaos when people consider their own natal religion and find it flawed. And when they realize that things they have formerly considered as fundamental laws suddenly loom up before them as having little Biblical value, they become disenchanted. Some throw religion out completely, others look for other religions, still others try to find the truth by themselves. But, considering this great religious renaissance going on around the world, are we among those who abandon all forms and ceremonies and throw out completely what we consider organized religion? How will we even have a religion if we do not have something that we agree on? 

The Karaite form of Judaism, in contrast to other branches of Judaism, seems to allow the most Biblical liberty, which is what many are seeking. But can we agree on anything? Can we agree to disagree and still stand together? The fundamental truth of Karaism is that everything must be based on the Torah given on Sinai and the works of the prophets in the Tanakh. In Karaism there is a universal rejection of what is called the Oral Torah or the תּוֹרָה שֶׁבְּעַל־פֶּה. 

This is based on the instructions to Moses that Israel not add nor subtract from the words he was given by YHWH for Israel.  

“You shall not add to the word that I command you, nor take from it, that you may keep the commandments of the LORD your God that I command you.” – Deu 4:2 

Orthodoxy, as well as other branches of mainstream Judaism, claim that the sages received the transmission of Torah and were given the right to reinterpret it and to apply it as they saw fit. The following quote sums it up:

“Jewish tradition identifies the unbroken historical chain of individuals who were entrusted with passing down the Oral Law from Moses to the early rabbinic period: “Moses received the Torah and handed it down to Joshua; Joshua to the Elders; the Elders to the prophets; and the prophets handed it down to the men of the Great Assembly.” (see here).

But many of us see so much deviation from the original words of Moses that we look for an approach to Torah that stands the test of time. And of course there are problems applying all of the Torah even today because there is no Temple and there are no sacrifices. That part of the Torah seems to have been lost at least until another Temple is built. Some of today’s norms do not allow things like Polygamy which mean we have to take a new look and understand the principles behind what was allowed. Sometimes the Torah allowed something but there was no law saying “Thou shalt, or thou shalt not.” So Torah application has an ongoing challenge and must be so. There is no desire that we recreate a new hierarchical religion that decides for us what we shall or shall not do. After all, Moses said:

“Now what I am commanding you today is not too difficult for you or beyond your reach. It is not up in heaven, so that you have to ask, “Who will ascend into heaven to get it and proclaim it to us so we may obey it?” Nor is it beyond the sea, so that you have to ask, “Who will cross the sea to get it and proclaim it to us so we may obey it?”  No, the word is very near you; it is in your mouth and in your heart so you may obey it.” Deu 30:11-14 

So what is required of us today? Wouldn’t it be a good place to start if we began to study the Tanakh in earnest for ourselves and stop learning so much from rabbis and pastors? I do not say there is no reason to stop learning and yes, other people must have an influence, but none have the right to exercise spiritual authority over the individual at this time. And when the Temple is reestablished, and the Priesthood is installed along with a proper Levitical court, then judgments will be in order. We are not there yet. And I don’t think any of us knows how it will be exactly. 

What is required at this time is that we study and pray, asking the Eternal to search our hearts and keep us in His sight while we willingly surrender to obey His commandments. After all, is it possible that these laws are already written in our hearts and minds?

“For this is the covenant that I will make with the house of Israel after those days, declares the LORD: I will put my law within them, and I will write it on their hearts. And I will be their God, and they shall be my people. And no longer shall each one teach his neighbor and each his brother, saying, ‘KnowYHWH,’ for they shall all know me, from the least of them to the greatest, declares YHWH. For I will forgive their iniquity, and I will remember their sin no more.” – Jer 31:33-34 

“He has told you, O man, what is good; and what does YHWH require of you but to do justice, and to love kindness, and to walk humbly with your God?” Mic 6:8.

Yours,

Ariella

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History of Oral Culture in Modern Religion

by Guest Author/Contributor, Devorah Yocheved

Part I

The Convergent Tides of Oral Cultures and the Rise of Literate Cultures Produced Two Major Religions in a Backlash to Retain the “Old” While Embracing the “New” World Order

Israel went into the Babylonian exile on the cusp of a major paradigm shift in history: the rise of the written text and literacy.  Scholars in this area of study attribute the addition of vowels to the Greek alphabet for hastening the “literate world.”  As was typical of the emerging nations of the new Western worldview, the people of exiled Israel, now the Jews in the nations struggled to retain their ancient identity as the chosen people of the Torah of Moses while embracing the new literate world founded in the Greco-Roman cultures.

The shift from purely oral cultures, without writing, to text driven literate cultures allowed people to remember their thoughts without the use of memory aids and to work out more complex solutions.  This gave birth to the analytical and systematic thinking which produced science, history, philosophy and liberal education.  Professor Walter J. Ong wrote extensively about this “evolution of consciousness” in his 1982 book “Orality and Literacy.”  This evolution is manifested in the classical Greek years as seen in the science of Euclid and Meton, the philosophical works of Plato and Aristotle, and the more objective historians such as Herodotus, Thucydides, Xenophon, and Ctesias.

This new world was no longer solely dependent on the elite scribal class of literates who controlled not only the limited written texts; they controlled the oral narratives from 3000 BCE through the 1st millennia CE.  The West developed along these lines as a more secular, pragmatic and individualized society through the text based education of “higher learning.”  The purely oral cultures that did not let go of their “orality,” as humanity moved towards “literate” text based cultures, were relegated to the “primitive” end on the continuum to “modernity.”  The growing literate cultures remained segregated into classes of the uneducated poor and the educated rich, farmers and city dwellers, the people of oral folk traditions and the townsfolk of letters.

In the midst of this major shift in human history two new religions emerged that not only embraced the new literate mind set but used ancient scribal traditions to preserve their “primitive” oral traditions in their literature and liturgical traditions alongside new theologies that have endured the test of time: Rabbinic Judaism and Christianity.  The rabbis of the Talmud claimed that they were handing down “the oral tradition that was given to Israel through Moses at Sinai.”  The Christian founding fathers claimed equal infallibility in their new theology and text, the New Testament.

Is there verifiable authority for these claims?  Looking first at the earlier rabbinic tradition, we ask these questions: 

What if the Jewish people have bet our collective soul on the wrong oral tradition that is based in lies and false narratives that aids and abets the exile mentality far from our original Covenant?  And if we have, how do we know that and, for the sake of a true return to our Maker, how do we do that?

The Mishna Talmud created a new utopian world for the Jewish people to learn of, embrace, and use to manage the changing social environs in their ever extended exile far from their original covenant and homeland of Israel.  This new oral tradition retained a memory of their original texts, the Torah and the Prophets, placing them alongside new texts from the exile that were added to the Hebrew canon.  The rabbis completed their work of codifying the Talmud which included ancient scribal devices of repetition and mnemonic memorization along with formulaic expressions such as proverbs and pithy maxims required in a purely oral tradition absent the use of a written text.

This method cleverly allowed the rabbis to invent new and every changing interpretations of the original and foundational text memorialized in the Torah and the Prophets Masoretic text.  In the earliest meeting places of the exile and during the second temple period in Israel the people gathered to hear the public readings from the Torah, but in a new and different language [Aramaic] and with new and different interpretations and translations [targumim].

What followed was a vast and never ending collection of commentaries from generation after generation of “Torah scholars” known collectively as the rabbis and sages of the past two thousand years.  The retention of this “oral tradition” has worked well to help the Jewish people feel “connected” to their original covenant made at Sinai.  

It is implemented through ritualistic formulas of blessings, prayers, mitzvot, and celebrations that replaced the Covenantal temple, priesthood and appointed times in Israel.  The orality of the rabbinic tradition is reinforced with the hermeneutical learning method of the Mishna Talmud which interprets Torah through formulaic and mnemonic expressions and repetition.

I forsook the false narrative of my birth religion Christianity that teased out its oral traditions and theologies based on the reinterpretation of the Torah and the Prophets in the New Testament.  I chose the Jewish faith and tradition in my adult years seeking an authentic connection to the Covenant Maker of Israel as given in the Torah and the Prophets.  I chose to move to Israel as an heir of Abraham through Jacob. 

It has been heartbreaking to learn that the Jewish people in the exile inherited the false narrative based on the new Writings and expounded in the Talmud as their interpretive text of the Torah and the Prophets.  The written Hebrew text of the Torah and Prophets has been sublimated to the replacement theology of rabbinic Judaism.  The Jewish people have inherited this false religion crafted for the exile with no way back to our Covenant of the Ten Words, the Land of Israel, and the proper authority under the Levitical priesthood in the House of YHVH on Mt. Zion.

In fact, we learn that the Torah and the Prophets are not historically significant but allegorical, that Ezra rewrote and restored Torah, that the rabbis replaced the Levites as the presumptive authority to handle and reinterpret the Torah through a contrived chain of transmission, and that when the “mashiach” comes the rabbinic tradition will continue as the legal and religious authority over the Jewish people. Many believe that there is no need for the temple to be restored and that the Jewish people are not required to live in their Covenant Homeland of Israel … none of which is supported by the Torah, the Covenant or the Prophets.

The deep seated angst that continues to reside in the soul of the Jewish people is palpable and is reinforced by the nations continuing hatred of Israel, her people and her land.  We are at war again with our neighbors and their allies in the world for our very survival in this Land of Israel.  No one can be trusted or believed to have the answer.  There are no good answers politically or religiously that will take us back to our Covenant Maker.

Many of us are asking: how do we return to our Covenant Maker as He wills for us?

We must return to our original Torah as given to Moses and as seen through our Prophets, through the end of the first kingdom and into the Babylonian exile, before we have a chance to understand the Will of our Covenant Maker.  Even though there is evidence of scribal tampering and false narratives that made it into our canon, it is possible to see through these lies as enabling the post-biblical replacement theology of exile.

We must admit that we have exchanged our Covenant and our very essence for a manmade construct that enables our exile mentality.  We must seek the ancient and everlasting path back to our Covenant Maker.

As suggested by students of ancient history, we must be willing to put ourselves in the sandals of those ancients.  We must wipe our minds clean of our preconceived assumptions and work to understand their worldviews in their lifetimes.  We must forsake manmade interpretations of Torah and relearn what YHVH said then and what He is saying now from His Written Word that was given to His Servant Moses in that day.

Starting with the understanding that Moses and the people who stood at Sinai in 1552 BCE lived in a world that did not have writing for the many.  There were no books that could be accessed, no libraries or education for the common people. From Genesis to the first kingdom of Israel was a time of purely oral cultures, bereft of literacy and written literature.  The people were wholly dependent on the narratives of the elite scribal classes regarding the heavens and life itself.  

Most of humanity has been dependent on and enslaved by the dominance and persuasiveness of the few who controlled the flow of information whether orally or textually received.  The people of the world are in the same predicament today.  No matter how much we have “advanced,” we are being held hostage by the few self-proclaimed elites who control the flow of information, politically, socially and religiously.

With this basic understanding and in that mindset, we will approach our written text and behold what the Creator of the universe, the Holy One of Israel, actually did for all of humanity through the Covenant He made with Israel.  We have forgotten and even forfeited the redemption from bondage that was granted to us 3500 years ago at Sinai.  We have forgotten who we are as Covenant Israel.  We must remember.

And, keeping in mind that He never changes and that His Word is everlasting, we can at least begin to understand that what He willed for Israel then and what He wills for us today has not changed.  We have changed and that is why we must seek His ancient and everlasting paths back to Him and His Covenants.

נִדְמוּ עַמִּי מִבְּלִי הַדָּעַת כִּי־אַתָּה הַדַּעַת מָאַסְתָּ וְאֶמְאָסְאךָ מִכַּהֵן לִי וַתִּשְׁכַּח תּוֹרַת אֱלֹהֶיךָ אֶשְׁכַּח בָּנֶיךָ גַּם־אָנִי׃

Hosea 4:6: “My people are destroyed for lack of knowledge.  Because you have rejected knowledge, I also will reject you from ministering before Me.  Since you have forgotten the Torah rule of law of your God, I also will forget your children.”

שִׁמְעוּ אֵלַי רֹדְפֵי צֶדֶק מְבַקְשֵׁי יְהוָה הַבִּיטוּ אֶל־צוּר חֻצַּבְתֶּם וְאֶל־מַקֶּבֶת בּוֹר נֻקַּרְתֶּֽם׃ הַבִּיטוּ אֶל־אַבְרָהָם אֲבִיכֶם וְאֶל־שָׂרָה תְּחוֹלֶלְכֶם כִּי־אֶחָד קְרָאתִיו וַאֲבָרְכֵהוּ וְאַרְבֵּֽהוּ

Isaiah 51:1-2: “Listen to me, you who pursue righteousness, who seek YHVH: look to the rock from which you were hewn and to the quarry from which you were dug.  Look to Abraham your father and to Sarah who gave birth to you in pain; when he was but one I called him, then I blessed him and multiplied him.”

2024-02-22 devorah yocheved

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Dancing with the Devil?

At the October 7, Nova Festival thousands of young people were gathered in a quiet park near Gaza, many of them dancing to psytrance music with a giant illuminated Buddha in their midst. It was Shabbat and a day most observant Jews were celebrating Simchat Torah, a day dedicated as Joy of Torah. These festivities sound pretty condemnable, especially when you see the footage of the semi-nude dancers in their celebration of love and peace. But might there be another way to see it?

Perhaps we cross a red line when we open this topic—one that perhaps should be left in the virtual trash can and not resurrected.
So if this material is offensive, then you know what to do!

I certainly do not have all the answers! I could, in fact, be wrong and some of my best thoughts have been to ask others for their opinions. And I am going to do just that here. So please respond with your best judgment on this issue.

There are definite questions about the whole affair and most Bible believers would say that the dancers were doing something wrong or at least out of place. Were they?

And what part did the Eternal, Hashem, G-d, YHVH have to play in this? Was it discipline? Punishment? Was it that these dancers somehow opened up the door to the devil (evil, or however you call the dark side) by being in a state of idolatry? Immorality? Some would say so. Most of our world doesn’t even know the meaning of idolatry since it seems consigned to an era long past when people bowed down to images and believed they had some kind of magic powers.

Perhaps we should sweep this whole thing under the rug. But if we do, will there be a repeat of what happened? Has G-d somehow abandoned the Jewish people? Do we need to put some things under the microscope?

Why were foreign workers, who were in Israel simply to earn some money, slaughtered if it was about punishment for idolatry? They were not even present at the festival. I hate the word punishment and all it brings to mind although some declare it to be such. And how is the slaughter to be seen as punishment if nothing can be learned by it? At least not for those who died. But is there something for the rest of us to learn?

Why were there a lot of religious Jews slaughtered in their Kibbutzim if this was Hashem showing his anger? Could it have something to do with religion? Is there something that caused a rift among the young and blinded them to the 10 commandments? Keeping Shabbat? Immorality? Idolatry? How actually do the commandments play out in today’s world?

Can I play the devil’s advocate to extreme moralists? What if these people did not know the meaning of the commandments? What if somehow those who were Jewish were tired of all the burdens that were imposed upon them for the past myriad generations by those who taught religion to their ancestors? But if this be the case, then why were the foreign workers killed and some Muslims as well? Maybe it was not punishment. Or did this act open the door to something evil and as a result, a lot of innocent people got swept away with it?

Most of us who study the Bible know that dancing before a Buddha is wrong, actually similar to the Golden Calf at Sinai. But I think there is a difference. At Sinai, the act was done out of rebellion—just a few weeks after hearing G-d’s voice speak the commandments from the mountain. The Hebrews said something to Aaron about Moses having abandoned them and thought they needed a new leader. Some were ready to go back to Egypt. They were doing apparently what they had observed in Egypt and no, those who danced around the golden calf were not holy— that’s why Hashem told Moses to have them slaughtered. Wow! Seems so unjust in the light of modern thinking! And I say “seems” because maybe we have the wrong idea of G-d, again!

But what does this have to do with semi-nude dancing on Shabbat before a Buddha? Do we somehow need to go back to the Bible to learn what it says and means? Is somehow the Bible outdated?

If you have read this far, I am sure some of you are ready to stone me. It’s ok, then, let’s all throw out the Bible and be done with it! The problem may well be with a religion that has taken the place of the Bible. That the Bible—rather Torah, we hear, can only be understood by rabbis and we can only understand when we follow the interpretations written by the Sages. I remember Catholics telling me that only the priests in that religion can understand the Bible and so the members must go to mass to learn. Hmmm, has something similar happened in Judaism? Moses says in the Torah that it is not too hard to understand.

Deut. 30: 11“For this commandment that I command you today is not too hard for you, neither is it far off. 12 It is not in heaven, that you should say, ‘Who will ascend to heaven for us and bring it to us, that we may hear it and do it?’ 13 Neither is it beyond the sea, that you should say, ‘Who will go over the sea for us and bring it to us, that we may hear it and do it?’ 14 But the word is very near you. It is in your mouth and in your heart, so that you can do it.”

So why do we need extra interpretors? But that is beside the point in this article, it all boils down to why the apparently good suffered with those who were at least blinded to Torah and what was expected of them? I have heard it voiced on social media groups that we all need to become religiously observant in order that this not happen again. Then why were some of the people that were killed, raped or kidnapped, religious Jews? It doesn’t make sense.

So maybe we don’t have any clear answers, but we do need to take a closer look at the Judaism we know today how it compares to what was written in the Torah which came to us by the hand of Moses. Judaism claims to be the keeper of the Torah. But how close are its teaching to that which came down from Moses?

If our religion is wrong, we need to get it right. And yes, we are warned in the prophets that things like this would happen if we left the Torah. And on this theme, we might well ask, why the Holocaust? Why Pogroms? Are there answers? I hope so!

Ariella Golani

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