The Devil is NOT in the details because . . .

The devil is not in the details because. . . the devil does not exist except in the minds of those who believe he does!

 

But yeah,  understandably, that’s only an expression to mean:

 

“The details of a plan, while seeming insignificant,

may contain hidden problems that threaten

its overall feasibility.”

[from  What’s the meaning of the phrase ‘The devil is in the details’?]

 

 

Now, just think:  how does an expression like that become quotable, well, for those who’ve heard of it and actually use it?  Have you, dear reader, used it yourself?  And if so, do you know its origin?

 

If the answer is no (and even if it’s a yes), for the benefit of the clueless among us,  here’s a background-er:

 

—————————–

 

 

What’s the origin of the phrase ‘The devil is in the details’?

 

 

The devil is in the details

 

 

The source of the proverb :

‘The devil is in the details’ is often attributed to the German/American architect Ludwig Mies Van Der Rohe. This is almost certainly a misattribution.

 

 

The expression derives from an earlier German proverb – “Der liebe Gott steckt im detail”,  which translates as ‘God is in the detail’.

 

Mies Van Der Rohe is also associated with this earlier form but, although he may have used it, there’s no evidence that he was the first to do so.

 

In the migration of the phrases,  an ‘s’ was added – the earlier form is usually ‘God is in the detail’; the later form is more commonly ‘the devil is in the details’.

 

‘The devil is in the details’ only came into common use in the 1990s (Van Der Rohe died in 1969) and the earliest citation of it that I’ve found in print is in Richard Mayne’s explanation of the workings of the European Union – The Community of Europe, 1963:

 

 

On the principle that ‘the devil is in the details’, what should have been a merely formal occasion developed into a debate about the Community’s official languages and the site of its headquarters.

 

The phrase might have been tailor-made for negotiations between European Union countries, which are renowned for their labyrinthine and hair-splitting attention to detail.

 

—————————–

 

Okay,  all that background to repost an item included in

 

03/31/18 – Well hell!  Pardon the expression but it’s apropos for this update.

 

For a very short while there, we thought that the Vicar of Christ –  Pope Francis –  finally awakened to the same truth that Sinai 6000 has been ‘preaching’ in our website:  that hell and its ringleader the Devil, AKA Satan/Lucifer — do not exist except in the New Testament.

 

Yes indeed, they’re alive and well in  the Gospels, actually interacting and persecuting God/Man Jesus through their clueless human-cohorts (Roman gentiles and Jewish religious leaders), as well as in the Epistles of the apostle Paul,  one of which even goes into detail of the hierarchy of devils/demons/evil spirits and their specific assignments on planet earth.  Whaaatttt???

 

—————————–

 

Check out these newsbits for this shortlived papal declaration:

 

 Well hell (again), should anybody be  “freaking out” from this biblical TRUTH?  Hell NO,  everybody who’s been afraid of the devil who’s supposedly “in the details”  should feel LIBERATED from mental and spiritual bondage to this LIE that a creature like him even exists!

 

Now, if the Devil did exist, he would be the source of this lie that he exists, but alas, to him is attributed a host of wrong and mistaken practices (exorcism, devil worship, blame-game “the devil made me do it” from  mis-reading and mis-interpretation of Genesis 3, and the whole occultic culture, etc. etc.).

 

And here’s our take on ‘idolatry’ of the Pope:

And if anyone needs to understand who is the “serpent” in Genesis 3, here’s our explanation:

Reprise:  GOD is in the DETAIL[S]; He is omnipresent, omniscient, omnipotent, omni-everything else! Who the hell could believe otherwise?

 

 

   NSB@S6K

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What???!!! The God of Israel dictates EVEN WHAT WE SHOULD EAT???

Any inventor/maker/creator of any item that has to function properly and efficiently gives instructions to the user on how to take care of the item.  And let’s say it’s a motor vehicle that uses a particular fuel, the manufacturer specifies ‘this’ and ‘not that’ fuel or it might bog down.  I’ve gassed up my vehicle ignoring that rule and yeah, they’re right, trust the manufacturer.

 

So what’s the point?  Read the title of this post again!

 

Image from www.christianpost.com

Image from www.christianpost.com

And so, we’re resurrecting the series of articles that deal with that Q with this in mind:

  •  If the CREATOR made different living creatures
  • and we see some varieties of the animal kingdom eating only vegetation,
  • while others have the flesh of animals as their natural diet,
  • (yup, vegan and carnivorous even among those belonging to   non-human species),
  • then it makes sense that the CREATOR — if he loves HIS prime creation, humanity—
  • will include in his DESIGNER’s instructions,
  • the dietary prescription for this special species that share His Image of free will because this one was gifted with a superior brain;
  • and yet, with free will,  is given the freedom to obey or not obey His Designer’s Instructions,
  • specifically, in this topic, His Ideal Prescribed Diet for all Humanity.

Is there confusion about what humans should eat or not eat as specified in Leviticus 11?

 

Yup, but only if you misinterpret the words [fast forward to NT/Gospels] of the Christian 2nd Person of their Trinitarian God—the God-Man Jesus who is quoted in the Gospel of Mark 7:1-23  as having declared:  “All foods are clean.”

 

How to hermeneutically interpret that?   CONTEXT.

 

  • Jesus was a Jew.
  • To Jews, there is a dietary prescription in Leviticus 11 about clean and unclean meat.
  • And so, to Jesus the Jew,  if he was indeed the Creator of Genesis 1:
  • he would know why he prescribed only specific animals for human consumption, in the “Old” Testament;
  • he would know if he was indeed the Creator,  that ‘Unclean’ animals have certain enzymes called ‘putrescine’ and ‘cadaverine’ in their flesh that allow those animals to survive ingesting rotting poisonous meat because that is their assignment, their function, their purpose: to clean up the earth of such debris;
  • and he would know (as medical/dietary scientists learned so late but we thank them nevertheless for finally discovering the scientific reason for the prohibition given six millennia ago by the God of  Israel to His chosen people)
  • that those enzymes are still in unclean meat to this day!  Pigs and carnivorous animals who feed on rotting flesh did not suddenly change their nature just because Jesus supposedly declared “all foods clean”.

What we choose to feed on as humans is our choice, but if we find out that the Creator had prescribed what is the right food for humanity in His Instructions for Life, the TORAH, then why not adjust our tastebuds to the specific diet programmed by God Himself for His prime creation, the one He shared His Image with.  Yes, the one with the brain!

 

Ultimately, we are the ones who suffer from the choices we make, for good or for ill.  So, go ahead and enjoy your lechon, porkchops, ham, non-kosher food—and deal with the consequences.

 

Someone asked if it’s a “sin” to disobey the Creator’s dietary prescription for man?   Well . . . it’s probably more of a sin against yourself, since who suffers the resulting disease when you indulge in no-no foods for a period of time?  Your neighbor?  Nah, look in the mirror.

 

So, here’s what we have already posted about the Maker’s Diet:

Check out these links:

 https://www.pinterest.ph/pin/119556565088903257/

https://www.livestrong.com/article/83436-makers-diet-list/

 

 

Bon appetit!

 

 

 

NSB@S6K

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Is God the author of “evil”?

Image from www.hippoquotes.com

Image from www.hippoquotes.com

[First posted in 2012.  What prompted this repost is the series of mass killings, all occurring in the “land of the free”,  the great USA [February 2019].   After the mass murder during a concert in Las Vegas, and the vehicle rampage in New York, the latest tragedy  has just occurred in a First Baptist church in a small town in  Texas.  And as of this reposting [August 5, 2019], two more tragic incidents involving gun violence and senseless killings in Texas and Ohio have hugged media headlines for days now!  

 

Where in this ‘world-gone-mad’  is it safe to enjoy music, walk in a park, shop at Walmart, enjoy an evening out, or worship in church? The question that is in believers’ minds is usually:  Where is God in all this? Why is He so quiet, not preventing, not interfering? And since one act of violence was against worshippers of God in the ‘house’ of worship, why did God not intervene to protect worshippers of Him?

 

Let us not forget that all the evil is perpetrated by who else?   The only creature–

  • endowed with brains for reasoning and logic, 
  • made in the “image” of the Creator,
  • with free will to go against the laws for human relationships written in heart and conscience of the “I” in the “Image”;
  • who follows instead,  the “I-Me-Myself,” or simply the “I” in the “Idol”. 

Here’s the original introduction in 2012:

 

When we look at the current state of affairs everywhere in the world today, we start wondering if God is “in control” as we often hear from the mouths of die-hard religionists.  Nothing wrong with that, except we forget that the Giver of the gift of free will to humankind does not interfere with each individual’s use of that precious gift.  What He has done is to give instructions and commandments that would direct the only creature made in “His Image” to properly use His gift of free will, to make responsible choices, those aligned with His will, those that benefit fellowmen and this world the most, for that is what the TORAH teaches.

 

So where does evil come from?  For individuals to ‘make a choice’ there has to be at least one option—we used to think two options— to exercise that choice.  To be human is to be self-conscious and actually self-centered first (observe children); we have to be taught to be other-centered.

 

Ultimately, the answer is the misuse of this God-given gift.  Blame the Creator for giving humanity this gift?  No, instead, look in the mirror.  Enough people misusing the gift creates human-caused evil.  As for natural calamities, well, that is part of the natural workings in this created world.  Preventable? Sometimes. —Admin1.)

 

—————————————

 

If there is no evil being as a devil, and there are no demonic spirits wreaking havoc in our lives, then where is the evil coming from that we see in the world?

 

If it is caused by people, then we lay the blame there.  If it is caused by natural forces, since we cannot control nature, we live with precaution and safety-consciousness in a world of earthquakes, tornadoes, hurricanes, landslides and other natural calamities; after all, these are simply part of nature adjusting itself to maintain the balance the Creator set from the beginning of His designed order.  Everything else that does not fall under manmade causes and natural causes could ultimately be called, to borrow a phrase from insurance contracts, “an act of God.”

 

Many writers have seriously explored the problem of evil in the world and have arrived at different conclusions, depending on their system of belief.  Prime examples:

419gm2pappl-_ac_us240_ql65_Rabbi Harold Kushner’s When Bad Things Happen to Good People presents Reconstructionist Judaism’s point of view that horrible things do happen on a daily basis in this world, but gives a perspective that you would simply have to read in his book.

 

417ldjme7dl-_ac_us240_ql65_Atheist-turned-Christian C.S. Lewis struggled with the tension between belief and reality and a God who can allow so much suffering in his book The Problem of Pain; nevertheless, he never lost his faith in the Christian God.

 

51m6xalwgql-_sx329_bo1204203200_ In contrast, Bart Ehrman, NT scholar turned atheist because, as he explains in his book God’s Problem, the Bible fails to answer our most important question—why we suffer.

 

The worst thing you can tell relatives of a good person who was tortured and brutally murdered by strangers is— “it’s God’s will.”  That would make anyone turn against God, because why should God–the source of all good–will evil in the lives of good people?

 

So what’s the answer?  Where’s the answer? If one believes in God, turn to the Good Book and see what God Himself says. There are no simple answers but there is a verse that invites further exploration:  

 

[NIV]:  7 I form the light and create darkness, 
   I bring prosperity and create disaster; 
[KJV]     I, the LORD, do all these things. 7I form the light, and create darkness: I make peace, and create evil: I the LORD do all these things.

 

[ESV] I form light and create darkness, I make well-being and create calamity, I am the LORD, who does all these things.

 

Isaiah 45:7 [I am the One] Who forms light and creates darkness; Who makes peace and creates evil; I am HaShem, Maker of all these. — [ArtScroll Tanach/AST]

 

Please read the whole chapter of Isaiah 45 to get the context; better yet, start reading the whole book of Isaiah to truly understand what chapter 45 is all about. As we keep reiterating, verses isolated from context, Context, CONTEXT are easily misinterpreted.

 

One attempt to explain this particular verse went to such lengths to find out how many times the original Hebrew word for evil– “rah” —was used in the Hebrew Bible, counting the times “rah” meant “evil” and the times it meant “calamity, adversity, affliction, trouble” etc.  In this particular context of Isaiah 45, “evil” is used for trouble, calamity, and not moral evil which God by His nature, is never capable of causing.  (If you’re thinking of the book of Job, that’s another story;  please read the posts:

 

An even better explanation connects the verse to the religious historical context:  the Persian king Cyrus is used by YHWH as His anointed, His messiah, His instrument to enable the Israelites in exile to return to Jerusalem and rebuild the Temple. The prevalent belief among the Persians and followers of the Magian religion is dualism –that there are two supreme, independent, co-existing and eternal causes always acting in opposition to each other:  the author of good and the author of evil.  Adonai Elohim YHWH unequivocally states that He alone is the sovereign God, there is no other power that exists in opposition to Him; in that sense, everything occurs under His providential direction, whether good or evil.

 

Add to Isaiah the following verse from Amos:

 

Amos 3:6 – “Shall a trumpet be blown in the city, and the people not be afraid? shall there be evil in a city, and the LORD hath not done it?”

 

Just as darkness is the absence of light, evil is the absence of good.

 

When God withdraws from this world or conceals Himself, goodness, righteousness, justice and many more are at risk. God is the source of light in all its metaphorical implications [spiritual understanding, biblical comprehension, enlightenment, wisdom]. God is the source of all that is associated with good — kindness, charity, mercy, justice, love, order, etc.  Notice that those words reflect what is given in Commandments 5-10, all directed to levels of human relationship.

 

When people are ignorant of or are willfully violating God’s Torah, evil indeed triumphs.  In that sense and only in that indirect sense is God the author of evil.

 

 

   NSB@S6K
 AIbEiAIAAABDCNPkvrXuucmdeSILdmNhcmRfcGhvdG8qKGJkZTc0YTk3NmUxMGM4OTAzZjk5MDhkMjdkZDI2ODQ3OTliYmQ2MDkwAe5UdNp0lvYvCf8bjAFEJOY_fdsj
Sig-4_16colors

 

Dear S6K Visitor

[First posted in 2017 — directions for new visitors on how to navigate around this website.  Reposting for the benefit of new visitors or accidental drop-ins who don’t know what Sinai6000 is about.—Admin1]

 

 

Dear S6K Visitor,

 

Shalom, and welcome to our Sinai 6000 website!

 

Logo2 by BBB@S6K

Logo2 by BBB@S6K

 First of all, we salute you for being a Truth-seeker; were you not so, you would not be ‘landing’ on this website,  then lingering long enough to get beyond the first page that greets you with a message regarding what to expect from the reading material, some  1000  articles already posted since we joined the world-wide-web February of  2012.

 

Secondly, if you have consistently returned to read more of everything this site has to offer, we congratulate you for so doing,  because it means you —either have a genuine interest in expanding your knowledge outside the boundaries of your normal reading fare or,  you are in a crisis of ‘faith’, seriously questioning your belief system and seeking answers that satisfy.  

 

If S6K has helped you to expand your mind to many more sides of Truth than what you had previously self-confined and freely decided “this is it, there is nothing more to know” — then we are gratified to know that we have been of help to a few earnest seekers who have become regular visitors, in fact anonymous and nameless “friends” of S6K.

 

If you are one of such returning visitors, we hope you have learned to navigate through our website— a good place to start is the 

Site Map located at the upper right box above the scroll/active image where over 1000 posts are listed, showing the most recent post first under each TOPIC.

 

Image from ours-mag.com

Image from ours-mag.com

We have noticed that  a few visitors have downloaded almost all posts on our website; we are complimented by this and hope that for whatever purpose this is being done, that credit be given where credit is due, that our resource writers are acknowledged just as we acknowledge all featured materials that are not originally our work.

 

May YHWH bless you and keep you and continue to lead you to Himself through His TORAH, for that is the BEST place to be while on this earth, on a non-stop spiritual pilgrimage to know more about Him.  As you will discover, it is a lifetime quest, and we arrive only when our time on earth has expired, when we have entered our final Sabbath Rest,  and hopefully and finally, we meet the Giver of Life and the Revelator on “Spiritual Sinai” who once descended on a Mountain in the Desert of Sinai – – that God revealed His Name as YHWH.

 

May our Lord God YHWH bless us and our individual and collective quest with increasing knowledge of Him and true understanding of His Torah. 

 

May we all continue to live the Torah Life every moment while HIS breath of life continues to sustain our very lives, while on this earth.

 

SINAI 6000 

is based in Baguio City, Philippines.

 

 

 

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Q&A: Why did God have to choose a “people”?

content[First posted in 2012 when Sinai 6000 was just starting out.  This was asked by us, addressed to “Ask the Rabbi”.  The answer is of course from the Jewish perspective, specifically a Rabbi’s perspective.  

 

The Sinaite’s “A” to its own “Q”: 

Sinaites have since resolved this question for ourselves; it is a bit different from the Rabbi, and it is explained in many of our articles.  In a nutshell:  God had to start out teaching His Way and revealing Himself first to a ‘people’, a ‘nation’, distinct in its assignment and destiny by virtual covenant relationship with Him. If the whole world, all other people, other nations watch and see how well these people function with His laws and instructions on how to live with one another, His Way, then those nations/peoples will be so attracted that they too will wish to emulate and apply those laws to themselves and worship the God who is the Source of such guidance.

 

Update 2018:  We have featured a  book that tackles the topic of “chosenness”, please check out the following: 

Admin1].

 

 

 

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Question:

 

Why did God have to choose a “people”?

 

Why didn’t he make all his laws and commands and relationship available to the world equally?
When it comes down to it aren’t we all the same in potential as well as flaws? I always thought He did so in order to have a group of people that could be an “example” to the rest…but the more I think about it, if I had three children, it doesn’t make sense to put all my focus into one just so the other two can see how its done.
Thank you for your time…

 

 

Answer:  Rabbi M. Younger/Aish.com
Shalom

 

Thank you for your interesting question.

 

As I understand it there is a two part answer.

 

First, as a father of multiple children I can tell you that each is unique and we attempt to find the particular niche in the family for each one. I have one son who is very devoted to his Torah learning and we do what we can to support that and to not cause him undo interruptions. On the other hand, he is less than talented in using his hands. I have another who has not yet matured in his Torah studies but is both musical and handy. I will look for ways for him to show off his talents (usually that means singing zmiros at the Shabbos table) and help fix things around the house.

 

So too,on an national level. Different nations do have different aptitudes and attributes – call it spiritual genetics if you want. That nation that is built in the way that makes it most fitting to be the agency by which God manifests Himself in this world is the Jewish people.

 

But it is a two way street.

 

Let us go back to the beginning. God is the ultimate source of good and desires (to the extent that we can use such words to describe Him) to bestow good. God could have bestowed on us the good of the world to come without the “bother” of us going through this world first. But that would have been nahama d’kisufa – bread of shame, the unearned reward. It is the greater good to allow us to earn our future reward than to just give it to us.

 

We earn, or better yet create, our reward by overcoming the challenges that we are presented with an recognizing and manifesting God’s presence in this world. This world is called olam from the root word he’elem meaning hidden. God presents us with a universe in which he is hidden (mostly by allowing to imagine that we have independent existence hence desires and ego issues). Our mission is to get past the “curtain” of our self-centeredness and reveal God.

 

Originally this challenge was presented to Adam who included all of humanity in his great soul. When he failed the test, the challenge was then re-presented, not to one person, but to the corporate body made up of all humanity. But most of humanity abdicated responsibility for this job and just one person, back in the time of history when nations were being founded, accepted the mission for himself and his descendants. That was Avraham our forefather.

 

So it is to Avraham, whom we may call a “proto-Jew”, for he was still but one individual that we look as the progenitor of our nation. He was followed by Yitzchak and Yaakov as patriarchs and then there is the time of transition until we have a nation that is formed at the exodus from Egypt and the revelation at Sinai. And now we are all descended of that core nation and back to Avraham, Yitzchak and Yaakov. And it is these descendents that are the “chosen nation”

 

I hope that this has been helpful.

 

With blessings from Jerusalem.

 


The WAY of “SALVATION” in TNK

Image from amazon.com

Image from amazon.com

[This was first posted July 2, 2012, 

We are often asked by our former Christian colleagues, “so how are you now ‘saved’ if you no longer believe in Jesus Christ as God/Savior/Messiah?”  We don’t attempt to explain the long journey we’ve taken since we left Christianity ; we simply refer them to this website OR to the book recommended here as MUST READ.

 

 Here’s the original introduction to this post:  

 

Sinai 6000 is a RESOURCE CENTER for seekers after the ONE TRUE GOD.  It is not our intention to “evangelize” or “convert” others to any religion or system of belief.  What we do provide is information, as much as we have accumulated in our resources, our real and virtual library, including the information we have compiled in our collective minds and memory which we discuss every Shabbat.  We know for a fact and realize that the resources we have had access to are not so readily available or even accessible to other seekers, that is why we bother to type out articles and books to make it easy for website visitors to read as much as their minds can tolerate and process each visit.  We provide as many sources as we are able to, including uncertain and  differing opinions when we ourselves have not determined our own stand or position on any specific controversy.  

 

So here again, is one excellent source, already figured out and presented in a well-written organized chapter, from one of our favorite resource persons—James Tabor, Restoring Abrahamic Faith. This is from Chapter Five of that book, titled “Turning To God.”  How could we possibly improve on what Tabor has already written?  We cannot do better than this in explaining how people were saved before Christianity made salvation exclusive so we’re resorting to quoting from James Tabor extensively.

 

Some readers or our former Christian colleagues have the wrong impression that we are “Jesus-bashing”  . . . not at all;  it is not Jesus of Nazareth, the historical Jesus we are “bashing”;  rather we are re-examining the whole doctrinal theological system about him that emerged and has been perpetuated for two millennia;  we are endeavoring to re-educate Truth-seekers, specially those who do not have access to current biblical scholarship, or to published books that understandably do not make it into Christian bookstores.  Few venture outside of those boundaries of their beliefs so this website is a blessing from YHVH to us in this day and age of information technology when you can check out and learn as much as you want with the simple finger click of a  computer key.

 

Condensed and edited excerpts from this MUST HAVE book.—Admin1.]

 

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YHVH is near to all who call upon Him, to all who call upon Him in faithfulness.  

(Psalm 145:18)

 

How does one appropriate ABRAHAMIC FAITH . . . how does one obtain a right relationship with YHVH, the Creator God and participate in His WAY and PLAN?

 

The answer is profoundly simple, so much so that it can be stated in a single verse spoken directly by YHVH Himself:  

Turn to Me and be saved, all the ends of the earth;

for I am God, and there is no other!

(Isaiah 45:22)

 

The way to come into Covenant relationship with YHVH has never changed:  one must directly call upon Him, in the most heartfelt and utterly sincere manner.  There is no other way.  

 

YHVH Himself says,  “TURN TO ME.”

 There is only ONE Rock, Redeemer, Savior, and King —YHVH the Eternal God of Hosts (Isaiah 44:6-8).

 

 

 Isaiah 43-45 makes this point repeatedly, in the most unequivocal language possible.  This “turning” includes the whole range of concepts related to “Knowing God.  It involves a deep fear and love of YHVH, which comes from a sense of Who He is, His unsearchable greatness and goodness.  The very notion of turning implies a profound experience of repentance from sins, and seeking God with all one’s heart.  We have all sinned and turned to our own ways, we have all failed to meet even our own best standards, much less God’s WAY.  

 

Note the following texts:

 

Thus says YHVH, “Return to Me,” says YHVH of Hosts, “and I will return to you,” says YHVH of Hosts . . . “Turn now from your evil ways and from your evil deeds” (Zecharaiah 1:3-4).

 

“Seek YHVH while He may be found, call upon Him while He is near.  Let the wicked forsake his way, and the unrighteous man his thoughts; Let him return to YHVH, and He will have mercy on him; and to our God, for He will abundantly pardon.  For My thoughts are not your thoughts, nor are your ways My WAYs,” says YHVH.  “For as the heavens are higher than the earth, so are My WAYs higher than your ways, and My thoughts than your thoughts” (Isaiah 55:6-9).

 

When anyone, Jew or Gentile, turns directly to YHVH in this way, God promises to hear, forgive and enter into an intimate partnership with such a one:  

 

YHVH is near to all who call upon Him, to all who call upon Him in faithfulness (Psalm 145:18).

 

This way of salvation  has never changed.  It transcends all the so-called “dispensations” of all the ages.  It is the way of grace through faith.  It was the same for Enoch, Noah, Job, and Abraham, as well as Moses and all the Prophets.

 

 Christians, particularly, should take note that this way of salvation was affirmed by the historical Jesus the Nazarene.  He taught that sinners are to turn directly  to God to receive forgiveness. For example, he relates the story of the two men who go up to the Temple to pray, one self-righteous, and the other a “sinner”  The sinner turns directly  to God in repentance and goes away justified (Luke 18:13).  The well-known story of the “prodigal son” makes the same point.  In dozens of saying, Jesus unambiguously affirms this point:  God hears sinners who turn to him in heartfelt repentance.  He is simply echoing the teachings of the Prophets.

 

[Footnote:  Since other statements attributed to Jesus contradict this concept, either his later followers added these as they began to exalt him to divine mediator status, or he himself spoke in a nonsensical way.]

 

Many have been taught that the “Old Testament” offered forgiveness of sins based on the blood of animal sacrifices.  This is a misunderstanding of the Scriptures.  All sin is ultimately against God.  

 

When David commits adultery with Bathsheva, and even has her husband murdered, he turns to God for forgiveness.  He prays,

 

 Against You and You only have I sinned, and done what is evil in Your sight (Psalm 51:4; cf. 2 Samuel 12:13).

This is consistent throughout the Scriptures ((see Genesis 20:6; 39:9; Numbers 5:5-7).  

 

God promises forgiveness based on His own compassion and goodness:

 

I, even I, am the One Who wipes out your transgressions for My own sake (Isaiah 43:25).

 

For as high as the heavens are above the earth, so great is His steadfast love (chesed) toward those who fear Him.  As far as the east is from the west, so far has He removed our transgressions from us.  Just as a father has compassion on his children, so YHVH has compassion on those who fear Him (Psalm 103:11-13).

 

In steadfast love and faithfulness is atonement (lit. “covering”) provided for iniquity; and by the fear of YHVH one departs from evil (Proverbs 16;6).

 

Psalm 103:8 mentions the precise “character description” which YHVH revealed to Moses in Exodus 34: 

 

YHVH is merciful and gracious, slow to anger and abounding in steadfast love and faithfulness  (vs. 8). 

 

This forgiveness is direct and unmediated, based on the tender mercies and loyal love of YHVH.  Forgiveness of sins is not some cosmic “balancing of the books,” some legal transaction of justice, for which a payment in blood is required.  

 

YHVH forgives as a father

forgives His own children,

out of love and concern for them.  

The only way of salvation is by grace through faith, based on a personal encounter with God.  As David put it:  

 

Blessed is he whose transgression is forgiven, whose sin is covered.  

Blessed is the man to who YHVH does not impute iniquity,

and in whose spirit there is no deceit (Psalm 32:1-2).

 

The animal sacrifices were connected with the Holiness of YHVH’s Presence in the Tabernacle.  But these offerings were never a substitute for repentance and restitution or reconciliation (Numbers 5:5-7).  Notice the oft-overlooked text in Jeremiah:  

 

Thus says YHVH of Hosts, the God of Israel, Add your burnt offerings to your sacrifices and eat flesh.  For I did not speak to your fathers or command them in the day that I brought them out of the land of Egypt, concerning burnt offerings and sacrifices.  But this is what I commanded them, saying, Obey My voice, and I will be your God and you will be My people (Jeremiah 7:21-23).

 

This is an extraordinary insight regarding God’s true intent for Israel.  Even at the giving of the TORAH at Sinai He did not really want, or require, animal sacrifices (see Amos 5:21-25).  He wanted their inner devotion, which is the basis for the covenantal relationship.  

 

The whole system of sacrifices was an accommodation to their weaknesses, and their lack of reverence for the holiness of YHVH (see Ezekiel 20:24-26).  What does YHVH truly want?  

 

The sacrifices of God are a broken spirit, a broken and contrite heart O God, You will not despise (Psalm 51:17).  

 

The Prophets constantly repeat this consistent theme:

 

With what shall I come before YHVH, and bow myself before the High God?  Shall I come before Him with burnt offering, with calves a year old?  Will YHVH be pleased with thousands of rams, then thousands of rivers of oil?  Shall I give my firstborn for my transgression, the fruit of my body for the sin of my soul?  He has shown you, O man, what is good, and what does YHVH require of you but to do justly and to love mercy, and to walk humbly with your God?  (Micah 6:6-8).

 

It has always been the same, from age to age.  YHVH the Creator, whose Hand has made all things, is greater than any Temple or system of worship.  

 

I shall desire loyal love (chesed), not sacrifice” says YHVH (Hosea 6:6).  

 

[Footnote:  This idea is found in many passages in the Hebrew bible, but particularly in the Psalms: see Psalms 27:6, 50:7-15; 69:29-31; 107:22; 141:2.  It is also worth noting that this verse is quoted by Jesus more often than any other single text of the Hebrew Bible (Matthew 9:13, 12;7).  

 

He responds directly to those who cry out to Him:  

 

Thus says YHVH, Heaven is My throne, and the earth is My footstool.  Where is a house you could build for Me? . . .  But to this one I will look, to him who is humble and contrite in spirit an who trembles at My Word (Isaiah 66:1-2).

 

 Burnt offering and sin offering You have not required . . .  Behold I come; in the scroll of the book it is written of me; I delight to do Your will, O my God; Your TORAH is within my heart (Psalm 40:6-8).

 

In point of fact, the animal sacrifices in the Temple were not for the forgiveness of sin in the first place.  The majority of them had to do with ritual defilement, offerings of thanksgiving, and fellowship meals.  Even those connected with “sin” were not some magical means of automatic forgiveness through blood.

 

 The one way of forgiveness has always been the same:  repentance, confession, and restitution (see Numbers 5:5-7).  Without repentance toward God there was no forgiveness.

 

 

 Ezekiel 18 sets forth the whole system of God’s justice and His mercy in the clearest possible way:  

 

The soul who sins shall die . . . . but if a wicked man turns from all his sins which he has committed, and keeps all My statutes, and does what is lawful and right, he shall surely live, he shall not die.  None of his transgressions which he has committed shall be remembered against him; because of the righteousness which he has done, he shall live.  Do I have any pleasure at all that the wicked should die?” says YHVH God, “and not that he should turn from his ways and live?” (Ezekiel 18:4, 21-23).

 

The blood of “covering” (atonement) was to reinforce upon the people the Holiness of God and the life and death issues involved in sin, but the “broken and contrite heart” is the only real “sacrifice” required.

 

Abraham “trusted in God, and it was counted to him as righteousness” (Genesis 15:6).

 

 “The righteous (the zadiq) shall live by faith” (Habakkuk 2:4).  

 

Any and all who fear, love, and obey Him, living that life of faith, are associated with Abraham in the promises of Genesis 12:1-3, and are fully a part of this broader “household of faith” (Genesis 18:19).  

 

 

To be continued in The WAY of SALVATION in TNK – 2: “The Fundamental Flaw of Christianity”

 

Why Anti-Semitism?

61XHIVkINxL._AA160_[This was first posted in 2013; we are revisiting as a result of many searchers interested in  The Jewish Mystique by Ernest Van Den Haag.  Sharing Chapter 5 of this MUST READ book.  For visuals connected to this topic, check this link:  http://www.tabletmag.com/jewish-arts-and-culture/155833/postcards-anti-semitic—-Admin1]

 

 

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 WHY ANTI-SEMITISM?

 

 Jews “cause” both anti-Semitism and pro-Semitism; without them we would have neither, since both are reactions to Jews. The Jews are the cause of anti-Semitism in the sense–no more, no less–in which marriage is the cause of divorce. No divorce without marriage. No anti-Semitism without Jews. But to end in divorce, there must be specific elements in one or both partners of the marriage, or in their relationship to each other, or to other persons, that lead to divorce. So with the relationship of Jews to their environment. The Jews are necessary to anti-Semitism–but not sufficient. Why is the relationship what it is? Why is it so often hostile?

 

An anti-Semite is hostile to Jews because of some characteristics which he dislikes and which he thinks Jews have exclusively, or in greater measure than non-Jews. Whether they do or do not have these traits (and whether one regards them as valuable or vile), there must be something in the Jews, or in their situation, that invites the attribution of these characteristics to them rather than to bicyclists; in addition, there must be something in the character of anti-Semites that makes it possible, or necessary, for them to associate Jews with disliked characteristics, or to dislike characteristics which Jews have because it is they who have them.

 

The characteristics attributed to “witches” burned in the seventeenth century, though sometimes accepted by the “witches” themselves, were the products of the fantasy of their persecutors. But there also was something in the personalities of those singled out as witches, or in their relationship to the world, which invited the attribution; just as there was something in the personalities of the witch-hunters which convinced them of the need to fear and hunt witches. The only thing we can be sure of is that the “something” was not that the women actually were “witches”. Similarly we can be sure that what arouses anti-Semitism is not what Jews actually are; it is, as it were, the negative part of their mystique.

 

To say that the victim had some characteristics that led to his victimization, is not to excuse, or justify, those who victimized him any more than it excuses, or justifies, a murderer to point out what characteristics of the victim caused the murderer to single him out and kill him. It means, however, that there was something about the victim–actual or, if the murderer is insane or misled, only believed–that led the murderer to select him. It may be a “good” or “bad” characteristics or a neutral one: political prominence, virginity, promiscuity, beauty, or wealth, may happen to attract the murderer, and may lead him to kill the victim.

 

There certainly are traits, actual or putative, that distinguish Jews. If one loves or hates a person or group, one has oneself the ability to do so, and one’s object has the ability to arouse and focus these feelings–whether because of actual or of putative qualities. What Gentiles see in seeing Jews is likely to be a compound of the Gentile mystique about Jews and of reality–the latter being shaped by both the Gentile and the Jewish mystique.

 

 

PRE-CHRISTIAN ANTI-SEMITISM

 

Fundamental to either view or feeling, though seldom explicit and conscious, is hostility to the Jewish belief in one God, a belief to which anti-Semites very reluctantly converted and which they never ceased to resist. Anti-Semitism is one form this resistance takes. Those who originated this burdensome religion–and yet rejected the version to which the Gentiles were converted–easily became the target of the resentment. One cannot dare to be hostile to one’s all-powerful God. But one can to those who generated Him, to whom He revealed Himself and who caused others to accept Him. The Jewish God is invisible and unrepresentable, even unmentionable, a power beyond imagination, a law beyond scrutiny. He is universal, holding power over everybody and demanding obedience and worship from all. Nonetheless, He entered history and listened to, argued with, and chose the Jews–and the Jews alone. They are His people (though He must have known that He would be in for an endless argument). No wonder they also are the target of all those who resent His domination.

 

The Jewish God was both universal–the only real God–and tribal: He had chosen the Jewish people and in exchange bound them to worship Him exclusively. Thus the Jews invented both monotheism and religious intolerance, or at least a passive form of it.* They had the only true religion, the only true promise; the only real God had chosen them–leaving the rest of the world to be comforted by false gods and messiahs. The Jews have suffered from their own invention ever since; but they have never given it up, for it is, after all, what makes the Jews Jewish. The Christians, when they became dominant, transformed the passive Jewish intolerance into active Christianity intolerance–of which the Jews became the first victim.

 

[*The Jews did not actively object to what non-Jews believed. They merely thought the beliefs wrong–to us a very tolerant view. In the context of antiquity it seemed arrogant and ill-mannered. The passivity itself rested on arrogance.]

 

The ancients had many gods. These gods were powerful to an unspecified degree, and loved, hated, intrigued, and fought with each other, just as mortals did. They even competed for the devotion of the people who worshiped them. People thus had a choice as to which god to appeal to on each occasion–and they attributed their victories and defeats to the relative strength and benevolence of the tutelary deities invoked. No god had a monopoly: worshippers of one god recognized the existence of others, and did what was necessary to pay their respects and to conciliate them.

 

Each tribe or nation was quite willing to acknowledge not only the actual existence, but also the power of the gods of other tribes or nations, though every nation usually retained a preference for the home-grown deity. The recognition was quite sincere, for the ancients found the existence of diverse tribal and specialized deities quite as natural as the existence of diverse tribes or occupations.

 

It was regarded both as prudent and as a matter of common courtesy to honor the gods worshiped by others. One joined in the appropriate rituals and sacrifices when meeting with aliens who worshiped alien gods. Further, the gods served as political symbols. To accept the political domination of Rome did not mean that the subject peoples had to give up their customs, language, and culture. On the contrary, these were often accepted by the Romans. It meant an exchange: the subject people would add the Roman gods to their own and recognize them, at least as honored guests in their midst.

 

The vast religious tolerance prevalent in antiquity went far beyond what we conceive of as tolerance today. People not only granted the right to others to keep their own religion; they were convinced that the religion of the others was no less true than their own, their gods no less real–though each people hoped that their gods were the most powerful where it counted.

 

The Jewish religion did not fit into this framework at all. It made the Jews misfits in the world of the ancients and probably was one cause for the ultimate destruction of their country and their dispersal by the Romans.

 

The Romans treated the Jews tolerantly enough; but as victors, they insisted on those of their customs which symbolized submission to Roman power. Symbols of the Roman Empire–statues of Roman gods and semi-divine emperors–had been accepted everywhere else without difficulty. But to the Jews the statues were a blasphemous abomination, because of the Mosaic commandment that enjoins against making “any likeness of anything,” and against “bowing down thyself to them or serving them.” Hence the Jews rebelled with religious zeal again and again, until their community was finally destroyed.

 

Later indeed the Jews destroyed the Roman framework that had made them misfits: their own religion, or much of it, was universally accepted, with the exception of the troublesome commandment against likeness (although there have been iconoclastic moments in Christian history). But the Jews managed not to fit into the new Christian framework–so largely their own creation–any better. The Jewish Messiah the Gentiles recognized was not recognized as genuine by the Jews. He was not good enough for them–a view the Gentiles rather resented.* The gods the others believed in remained false gods to the Jews. He had revealed Himself to them only and He had chosen them alone. Which left the rest of the world out in the cold.

 

[*The Jews, of course, merely maintained that he was not genuine.]

 

The religion of the Jews appeared to Gentiles absurd as well as outrageous; and ridiculous, too, if one considered that it was the religion of a small, insignificant, rustic nation, not distinguished for any major contribution to civilization. The Jewish views were certainly neither diplomatic nor endearing, and in the framework of antiquity, unreasonable, intolerant, and irrational. A tolerant and cultivated man, the emperor Julian Apostata, plaintively wrote of the Jews: “While striving to gratify their own God, they do not, at the same time, serve the others.” This, according to Julian, was “their error.” Politically, it was. And Jewish views were held with unaccustomed fanaticism. For the Jewish God did not serve His people. His people served Him–a wholly unancient conception.

 

Not content with holding such absurd and intolerant beliefs–which, at best, could provoke only the ridicule, and, at worst, the hostility of all other peoples–the Jews rigidly refused even to tolerate the reasonable beliefs of others. The Romans had conquered them; but the Jews had the audacity to object to any attempt of the Romans to allow their soldiers to worship in their own fashion. All this in the name of what the Jews declared to be God’s law against erecting false idols. It was as though the American Indians were to try to prohibit their conquerors from engaging in Christian worship in America. Such intolerance and apparent arrogance could not but provoke hostility. It did. Of course, in their view, the Jews merely objected to desecration of their holy sites. But try explaining that to a Roman.

 

Pre-Christian anti-Semitism was reinforced by a number of other Jewish traits. Their all-power God was invisible. He had forbidden the making of images not only of Himself but even of humans, let alone other gods. This prohibition helped to protect the belief in one God, for images soon come to be worshiped themselves, and different images would develop into different gods. Images of human beings could easily assume divine stature. And they could be used for magical purposes. Thus the Jewish religion differed from the others in kind; it did not compete with them, or recognize them, or have different rituals of the same genre. It was sui generis, a different kind of religion altogether, and it set its chosen people apart.

 

This “apartheid” was enjoined on the Jews as a moral duty, too. They were not meant to mingle with non-Jews and did not, to the extent to which they followed their religious leaders. To be sure, tribal pride and its enlargement, nationalism, as well as insistence on the superiority and preservation of one’s culture, have always been with us. But these elements were religiously elaborated and adhered to by the Jews in far greater measure than by any other people–if such things can be measured. The Greeks did not think highly of “Barbarians” either. But the Jews went further and were more exclusive.

 

The Romans were hospitable to other cultures, religions, and peoples: not without grumbling, but still they were about as hospitable as present-day Americans. The Jews were stiff-necked, literal minded, bothersome, and unrealistic. They refused to make the slightest concession, objecting even to Roman money because it bore the portraits of the emperors. In short, they gave no end of trouble–willfully, the Romans must have thought.

 

Most unpleasant, their invisible God not only insisted on being the one and only and all-powerful God–creator and lord of everything and the only rightful claimant to worship–He also developed into a moral God.

 

This, too, distinguished Him, and his worshipers, from the deities familiar to the pre-Christian world. These gods usually were personifications of the forces of nature, such as fertility; or of elements of the human personality, such as cunning; or of the social environment, such as war, craftsmanship, or art. Often these elements were blended, and the gods assumed magnified human personalities or natural powers; a moral element was present at times, but no more so than it is in most human beings. And one invoked the help of these gods by pleading, currying favor, and bribing them through sacrifices and through the fulfillment of their special demands.

 

The God of Israel, though only slowly shedding these elements, developed into something far more demanding, far harder to understand and obey. He developed from a natural into a truly supernatural spirit, and He demanded that his people follow moral rules and live a righteous life, in obedience to His law. Unlike the gods of others, who represented and accepted all parts of the human personality as they coexisted, fused, or struggled with each other, the God of the Jews came to represent a stern, dominating, and demanding paternal Superego–long before one of His chosen people invented, fathered (or at least baptized) the superego. The Jews exclusively worshiped a father God–not, as others did, a family of gods. This, too, set the Jews apart, not just because of their beliefs, but also because of the style of life that these beliefs enjoined.

 

The gods of the ancients were more or less helpful to, and protective of, their devotees, and were worshiped and sacrificed to for that reason. The Jews too had been chosen to receive certain promises from their God. But their choice involved incessant fidelity on the part of the Chosen, whose major preoccupation became the interpretation and fulfillment of their part of the bargain–the Law. Jewish life became God-centered, dominated by a priesthood which insisted on rituals and sacrifices, and by prophets who called on the people and their leaders to return to the spirit of Jehovah’s laws; they interpreted all misfortunes as deserved punishments for disobedience, inflicted by an angry God. Jehovah exacted His end of the bargain and was not satisfied with anything but full value.

 

The Jews were constantly driven by their God, as His perpetual debtors. Their whole life revolved about doing His will, performing their duties to Him, attempting to satisfy Him. But speaking through His prophets, God spoke only of His displeasure. His Chosen People were dutiful enough; they were ungrateful, faithless–in short, their God acted as an insatiable Superego. And the God of Israel punished His people accordingly with wars, floods, bondage, and famines, though saving them at the last moment, despite their sinfulness, because of the merits of one or two among them. He was infinitely merciful, this awe-inspiring father. He had to be, for in His eyes His people were infinitely guilty.

 

All this was hard to understand for the more easygoing ancients, and struck them as superstitious, a little ridiculous, ignorant, and unrealistic, as, indeed, it often strikes today’s easygoing sophisticates, who may regards the whole business as “neurotic.” The Jewish law seemed almost perverse in the value it placed on the invisible benefits of moral righteousness relative to the accessible pleasures of the senses. And yet, the Jews seemed uncanny. For there was no denying the moral fervor with which they stuck to their supernatural beliefs in the midst of a world concerned with quite different things. (In a similar way, the Roman Catholic Church, which certainly understands the power of more ascendency, has gained much from the almost eerie respect  the ordinary man pays to the priest whose choice it is, on religious grounds alone, to live in celibacy.)

 

 

CHRISTIAN ANTI-SEMITISM

 

Pre-Christian anti-Semitism is explained largely by the Jews’ contempt for Gentile gods and values, and by their continued insistence that they had a monopoly on the true God, and had been chosen by means of a special covenant. It is all right to love one’s own God. It is certainly dangerous, however, to assert that the gods worshiped by others are false, and that their worshipers are being fooled–and to insist further that, unlike oneself, these worshipers of other gods were not chosen by the only true God, as evidenced by the unalterable fact of being born into the wrong group. Too bad for them.

 

When expressed by a small and powerless people, such as the Jews, such ideas cannot but lead to hostility and ridicule. When held by a dominant one, such ideas can lead to, or be used for, all the evils of racism. Which is what happened. The anti-Gentilism of the Jews was as real as–and preceded–the anti-Semitism of the Gentiles. But the Gentiles were materially stronger. The Jews were hoist by their own petard in more senses than one.

 

Christianity added elements to anti-Semitism which have their roots in the historical relationship between the Christian and the Jewish religions. Yet the Christian anti-Semites were no more conscious of the nature of these elements than the Jews. As was pre-Christian anti-Semitism, so Christian hostility to the Jews was overdetermined: in addition to the historical-religious, many other elements contributed to it; each of these, economic, religious, political, or psychological, might itself be a sufficient cause of anti-Semitism.

 

Christianity accused the Jews of having slain God. (As late as Vatican II, this accusation was seriously discussed, and cardinals of the Roman Catholic Church were on both sides of the question.) Deicide was attributed to the Jews because one of them, who proclaimed himself the Messiah and later was deified by His followers, was crucified in Jerusalem. The execution was carried out in the Roman manner (crucifixion was not a Jewish manner of execution) by the Roman troops occupying Jerusalem, probably because Jesus, as did other religious leaders of the time, appeared to the Romans as a dangerous subversive who might stir up the people against the Romans.

 

The Gospel tales–written long after the events–which have the arrest made and the death sentence pronounced at the behest of the Jewish Sanhedrin are scarcely plausible from a legal or historical viewpoint. The writers of the Gospels knew that Christianity was not making much headway among the Jews, whereas the number of Gentile converts, particularly Roman converts, was steadily mounting. It would have been undiplomatic, therefore, to saddle the Romans with deicide–while to accuse the Jews of hating the new God who came from their midst was to make that God more acceptable to the Romans. We don’t know whether such considerations actually entered the minds of the Gospel writers. But these considerations would plausibly explain why the Jews, and not the Romans, were accused of what certainly must have been a Roman action– the condemnation and execution of Jesus.

 

It is quite likely, however, that the Jewish authorities did not greatly oppose the anti-subversive measures of the Romans. They, no less than the Romans, were opposed to whatever might stir up the people and lead them to attempt armed rebellion. For they saw–and history proved them right–that such a rebellion was quite hopeless. The prophets who arose from the people had little grasp of the distribution of power and relied, more than did the priestly hierarchy which dominated the Sanhedrin, on supposed divine revelation–which had led to disastrous adventures in the past. The many sects, the many enthusiasts, the many would-be prophets, the many fanatics and anti-Romans kept the established authorities, both Jewish and Roman, quite busy. If the Roman authorities wanted to avoid trouble, so did the Jewish authorities, for they feared the defeat which would–and in the end did–cost them the remnants of their independence. So much for the history of the matter, which is perhaps less important than the psychological genesis of anti-Semitism.

 

The Jews were accused of having killed God. Actually, the hostility to them may be based as much on having given birth to Him. For the Messiah, too, was a demanding and moral god who exacted sacrifices undreamed of before Christianity. Those making these sacrifices may well have turned into unconscious resentment not against the Savior–clearly an impossibility–but against His progenitors and relatives. After all, these relatives had mistreated the Savior, and murdered Him–which rationalizes any amount of hostility.

 

Further, the Jews remained faithful to their old God and repudiated His son. By this faithfulness, they show that they regard themselves still as chosen–and that the Christians worship a false god, a phony Messiah. Theirs remained a Father religion. Christianity became a Son religion. By their rejection of the Son, the Jews identified themselves with the Father, thus calling upon themselves all the resentment–all the ambivalence, at least–that comes with being identified with the Father.

 

But there is more. According to Freud, the Jews probably murdered not the Son, but God the Father–symbolized by Moses, the man who led them out of Egypt and out of the wilderness and gave them their Law. The grave of the father of Judaism was never found. According to Freud’s speculation, the Jews in one of their many rebellions against his leadership actually murdered Moses. They never overcame their guilt feelings and became zealous and obedient sons to the father they had slain.

 

Even if Freud’s speculation is no more than Freud’s own fantasy, it seems a fantasy that meets, articulates, and explains, if not the facts, the conscious and unconscious fantasies of mankind and certainly of the Jews. The idea of parricide, and of expiation by the guilt-ridden sons through sacrifice of one of their own, was widespread among Oriental peoples, and quite popularly accepted among the Romans at the time the Gospels were created.

 

The Christians, through acknowledging the hereditary sin against God the Father, were purified of it and made, they thought, reacceptable to Him by their identification with the sacrifice of the Son. Jesus voluntarily allowed Himself to be slain. He was sent by His Father to redeem the world. The people who actually killed Him, according to the Gospels, however, did not accept their Oedipal guilt, and, above all, the expiatory sacrifice of Jesus. Thus they were not redeemed. They continued to refuse purification, and thus to bear their sin, and, by their insistence that Jesus was a false Messiah, to add to it.

 

This insistence on the invalidity of Christ’s redemptory sacrifice–for the sake of which the Jews suffered so much–could not but throw some doubt on the certainty of salvation. There were some–the Jews–that denied that Jesus had saved anyone; they were willing themselves to die for the sake of this denial. Thus in Christian eyes the Jews became representatives of the offended, vengeful, and, according to them, unappeased Father.

 

In sort, the Jews repeated – however involuntarily and unwittingly – in the Christian world the arrogance which had caused the ancient world to hate them. They told the Christians that they had fallen for phony Messiah, just as they had told the ancients that they worshiped false gods.* They, the Jews, alone were in possession of the true religion. What chutzpah.

 

[*Perhaps “signified”–by  their very existence and beliefs–is a better word than “told”: the Jews did not proselytize, but their beliefs could not be ignored either.]

 

But the Christians understandably were far more irked than the ancients. To the ancients, the Jewish religion was arrogant, foolish, and alien. To the Christians, it cast doubts on their most cherished beliefs. For many centuries Christians regarded the promise of life everlasting–paradise–as the most important thing on earth. Yet doubt was thrown on their belief in their salvation out of the same tradition from which the belief itself sprung, by the very people among whom the Messiah had arisen. An uncomfortable situation. It is not astonishing that the Jews were treated as one is always tempted to treat those who arouse doubts about one’s own most cherished beliefs.

 

Things would have been different if one of them, Paul, had not decided that the Messiah rejected by the Jews could be accepted by the Gentiles, provided they would not first have to become Jews and be circumcised. The story of salvation could be universalized. Paul proceeded to do this quite successfully.

 

Thus Gentiles accepted what the Jews had rejected and, in turn, rejected the people that did not want to give up being chosen. The Jews were burdened thenceforth not only with the sin which is the heritage of mankind, but also with their refusal to accept redemption, with slaying Him who wanted to redeem mankind, and finally with casting unrepentant doubt on the genuineness of the salvation vouch-safed the Gentiles.

 

The Christians now felt they could do to the representatives of the Father, in the name of the Son, what Christians would normally be punished for–were it not that the Son had removed the credentials of these representatives, the unredeemed Jews, and thus allowed them to be punished. To the Jews were attributed, unconsciously and sometimes consciously, all the things the sons fear: the father will castrate and kill them. And vengeance was taken on the Jews for these dreaded paternal intentions and fantasied deeds.

 

The Jews obdurately denied their share of guilt and their need for salvation and insisted that they had a special arrangement with God, the Father, which would save them and (the Christians thought) nobody else. If the Jews were right to extent, the many renunciations that Christianity had imposed on its Gentile converts were in vain. The pleasures of this world would have been renounced for the sake of a paradise which was, after all, reserved for Jews.

 

No wonder the very existence of the Jews became a thorn in the side of Christianity. A useful thorn, as it were. For the Jews, by attracting hostility to themselves, solidified the identification of Christians with each other. Nothing does as much for internal solidarity as the existence of an external enemy. To the enemy, the group can attribute whatever it fears or detests in itself. Against him it can unite. Against him it can discharge hostility. As the chastity of nineteenth-century women required prostitutes, so the purity of Christian faith required Jews.

 

 

THE JEWISH CONSPIRACY: AN ANTI – SEMITIC FANTASY

 

In the primitive way in which they conceive it, the community of attitudes and characteristics among Jews was a myth invented by the Nazis for their own convenience. Radical parties, right or left, always simplify experience, however illegitimately, so as to manipulate a series of stereotypes in the end. It is their way of making life intelligible–and of proving that they could change it for the better and, therefore, ought to be on top.

 

Above all, Nazis, contrary to logic and fact, believed that the common attributes of the Jews (some real and some imagined for convenience) would lead to concerted actions and common purposes, to a conspiracy aimed at dominating and exploiting Gentiles. This “theory” was occasionally supported by faked documents–e.g., the “Protocols of the Elders of Zion.”

 

Support for this sort of idea is produced by the general human inclination to attribute whatever is unpleasant or undesired to malevolent demons. With increasing secularization, the demons have been replaced by malevolent human groups–e.g., Jews, or capitalists. Witches form the bridge between these two versions. Thus the Germans, according to Hitler, did not lose World War I because they had been defeated by their enemies–an unacceptable blow to their superiority feelings–but because they were stabbed in the back by the Jews. And again, the Great Depression of the 1930’s was caused by Wall Street Jews somehow acting in concert with Communists, who were also, it seems, Jews. And so on.

 

The Nazis were not very original in these fantasies. One model of the technique had been furnished – in secular form – by Karl Marx, a Jew. Of course, the Nazis are right: Jews are on all sides. The Nazis were wrong only in believing that they act in common: Germans, too, may be on all sides and so may women.

 

Marx attributed all the evils of the world to the capitalistic system; his less sophisticated followers (at times including Marx himself) went on to attribute the evils of the world directly to the malevolence of capitalists. They humanized the theory, as Madison Avenue would say. Hitler blamed “the system,” and “the Jews” who were supposed to be dominating it, for every wrong. Marx before him had blamed the capitalist system and “the capitalists” who were supposed to be dominating it. The “logical” structure is the same.

 

The socialist leader August Bebel – a German who died long before Hitler became known – was more accurate than he realized when he said: “Anti-Semitism is the socialism of the lower middle class.” Psychologically it is indeed the equivalent of socialism, and takes its place for those to whom socialism is, or, as a result of its failures, becomes, unacceptable. (All utopian systems, and all systems supported by utopian enthusiasts, “fail”: nothing ever lives up to our fantasy.) The symbols are different by the psychological essence of either ideology is the same: the evils of the world are presumed to be caused by a wrong system maintained by a small group who benefit from it and deliberately use the system to exploit the great majority. That majority – the people – are actually superior to the exploiters, either by virtue of their “race” and historical mission (Hitler) or by virtue of their “proletarian” descent, economic position, and historical mission (Marx).* The superior majority has the historical mission of eliminating the historically or racially corrupt minority, after which the millennium begins.

 

[*Marx was considerably more sophisticated than Hitler and, above all, unlike Hitler, he was part of the rationalistic humanitarian tradition even though he repudiated it as sentimental in favor of science. Wherefore he appeals more to intellectuals. But his popular appeal has the same source as Hitler’s: secularized Manichaean eschatology.]

 

The origins of this conspiracy theory are found in primitive anthropomorphism. A traffic accident, or for that matter, a war, an economic depression, low farm prices, or the obsolescence of a given industry–all these things happen without being necessarily willed by anyone; yet they may injure or damage almost everyone, although in different degrees. As everyone pursues his course, the collision happens. As every farmer produces, prices fall, given certain circumstances. As each nation tries to achieve goals regarded as necessary by its government, it may collide with another nation pursuing its goals. An industry becomes obsolete because of technological developments not necessarily aimed at making it obsolete.

 

However, all of us find it hard to accept that anything really occurs without anyone willing it. Human beings usually have, or think they have, a purpose in their actions. They tend, therefore, to ascribe purposes to the world at large and to nature – and even more to actions undertaken or set in motion by fellow humans, such as wars or traffic collisions. It is hard for us to see that these may be simply the unintended result of deliberate acts. When these results are particularly unpleasant, they are ascribed to malevolent spirits and–with the secularization of our imagination – to malevolent people. Jews, for the reasons given, were easily the most likely malefactors.

 

Long after Marx, and not so long after Hitler, new versions of this ever-popular story, which in the childhood of the human race started with myths of demons and their human servants, abound. What else is C. Wright Mills’ fascinating fable of the “power elite”?* In each of these versions, the believer has discovered that there are men more powerful than others, and that they often have more prestige and income than others, too. He then discovers that men outstanding in one activity are or become important in others, too: generals become corporate directors, directors of one corporation become directors of another, a man powerful in California may be influential in Washington and New York. The believer then concludes that these people, who have in common the fact that they are powerful, have little to divide them from each other, and that they share an overriding aim: to act in concert to their advantage and to the detriment of the less powerful. And that explains whatever happens that is unpleasant. “They” done it, whatever it is: started the war, or lost it… caused the depression, or the inflation… brought about the imperialistic expansion, or the cowardly retrenchment.

 

[*Mills updated the matter: since the nation is more prosperous, it is harder for most people to believe that economic circumstances determine everything; they have found otherwise. Hence the “power elite” is not, in the main, an economic class. It is a status group.]

 

Just as Hitler and C. Wright Mills did, I too have come to the conclusion that we are dominated and exploited by a “power elite.” Only, unlike my fellow scholars, I don’t identify the members as either rich or Jewish. Upon extensive research, I found that we are dominated by men wearing glasses; they succeed in getting each other into corporate directorships, become generals, music critics, stockbrokers, senators, Supreme Court justices, and cabinet members. They conspire against anyone not shortsighted. I can prove that easily. (For statistical tables about eyeglasses worn by men in leading positions, which clearly demonstrate my theory, see Appendix.)

 

Until Hitler nearly killed them all, the Jews were excellent targets for this sort of thing. To Gentiles, they were strange and uncanny: in, but not really accepted as part of, the society in which they lived. They were active, often reached outstanding positions, yet were different and therefore did not quite belong. And they certainly had something in common that could not be denied and that differentiated them: they were Jews. It is as though they were some kind of family mysterious to nonmembers, some kind of network with an eerie communications system, omnipresent, powerful, sinister, and yet almost anonymous at the center of the body politic. Were they not on all sides? Did they not therefore cause everything? It is the “therefore,” of course, that constituents the fallacy: men with glasses are prominent on all sides but do not “therefore” act in common to cause everything. Even if people have things in common, it does not follow that they will act in common, let alone conspire. But it’s too nice a theory just to drop.

 

Among many widely recognized and ambivalently admired characteristics of the Jews are a desire for education, a low rate of alcoholism, an almost invisible rate of what we not call juvenile delinquency (“radical” activity is the Jewish form of defying authority). These characteristics do not make the anti-Semites like Jews – on the contrary. After all, such traits can be explained: the desire for education is part of Jewish pushiness and of the plan for world domination; if you are engaged in a serious conspiracy, you can’t afford to get drunk–in vino veritas: people who have so much to hide won’t dare to get drunk; and there is no need for juvenile delinquency if you, together with your parents, are conspiring to do in the rest of the world.

 

The interesting thing is that all of these paranoid fantasies are also negative versions of half-truths: Jews are ambitious; they have messianic dreams; and their abstemiousness may have something to do with fear of baring guilty secrets to a hostile world. These semiconscious Jewish feelings are perceived by anti-Semites and projected as realities. Thus, anti-Semitism on the psychological level is the product of a cooperative effort involving Jews and their enemies; on a rational level it is nonsense, a pseudo explanation of history which, particularly in time of distress, helps people shift the blame from themselves.

 

This nonsense was accepted by enough people to make possible the horrors of concentration camps and the murder of six million Jews. It is hard to believe in God; it is harder still to believe in human rationality.

Dogmatic Theology – Christianity/Judaism

[Originally posted in 2012.  This brief discussion is from  A History of the Jews by Christian historian Paul Johnson; he discusses the difference in dogmatic theology where Christianity had problems formulating while it was relatively absent from rabbinical Judaism. This book as been featured as MUST READ and MUST OWN, downloadable as ebook from amazon.com; reformatted for posting.]

 

Equally important, however, was another characteristic of Judaism:  the relative absence of dogmatic theology.

 

Almost from the beginning, Christianity found itself in grave difficulties over dogma, because of its origins.

 

It believed in one God, but its monotheism was qualified by the divinity of Christ.  To solve this problem it evolved the dogma of the two natures of Christ, and the dogma of the Trinity — three persons in one God.  These devices in turn created more problems, and from the second century onwards produced innumerable heresies, which convulsed and divided Christianity through the Dark Ages.

 

The New Testament, with its enigmatic pronouncements by Jesus, and its Pauline obscurities–especially in the Epistle to the Romans — became a minefield.  Thus the institution of the Petrine Church, with its axiom of central authority, led to endless controversy and a final breach between Rome and Byzantium in the 11th century.  The precise meaning of the eucharist split the Roman trunk still further in the 16th.  

The production of dogmatic theology — that is, what the church should teach about God, the sacraments and itself –became the main preoccupation of the professional Christian intelligentsia, and remains so to this day, so that at the end of the 20th century Anglican bishops are still arguing among themselves about he Virgin birth.

The Jews escaped this calvary.  

 

Their view of God is very simple and clear.  Some Jewish scholars argue that there is, in fact, a lot of dogma in Judaism.  That is true in the sense that there are many negative prohibitions –chiefly against idolatry. But the Jews usually avoided the positive dogmas which the vanity of theologians tends to create and which are the source of so much trouble.  They never adopted, for instance, the idea of Original Sin.  Of all the ancient peoples, the Jews were perhaps the least interested in death, and this saved them from a host of problems.  It is true that belief in resurrection and the afterlife was the main distinguishing mark of Pharisaism and thus a fundament of rabbinic Judaism.  Indeed the first definite statement of dogma in the whole of Judaism, in the Mishnah, deals with this:  ‘All Israel share in the world to come except the one who says resurrection has no origin in the Law.’ But the Jews had a way of concentrating on life and pushing death–and its dogmas–into the background. Predestination, single and double, purgatory, indulgences, prayers for the dad and the intercession of the saints — these vexatious sources of Christian discord caused Jews little or no trouble.

 

It is significant, indeed that whereas the Christians started to produce credal formulations very early in the history of the church, the earliest Jewish creed, listing 10 articles of faith, was formulated by Saadiah Gaon (882-942), by which time the Jewish religion was more than 2,500 years old.  Not until much later did Maimonides’ 13 articles become a definitive statement of faith, and there is no evidence it was ever actually discussed and endorsed by any authoritative body.  The original 13-point formulation, given in Maimonides’ commentary on the 10th Chapter of the Mishnah, on the Tractate Sanhedrin, lists the following articles of faith:

  1. the existence of a perfect Being, the author of all creation;
  2. God’s unity
  3. his incorporeality
  4. his pre-existence
  5. worship without intermediary
  6. belief in the truth of prophecy
  7. the uniqueness of Moses
  8. the Torah in its entirety is divinely given
  9. the Torah is unchangeable
  10. God is omniscient
  11. He punishes and rewards in the afterlife
  12. the coming of the Messiah
  13. the resurrection

This credo, reformulated as the Ani Ma’amin (‘I believe’), is printed in the Jewish prayer-book.  It has given rise to little controversy.  Indeed, credal formulation has not been an important preoccupation of Jewish scholars.  Judaism is not about doctrine — that is taken for granted — as behavior; the code matters more than the creed.

 

The lasting achievement, then, of the sages was to transform the Torah into a universal, timeless, comprehensive and coherent guide to every aspect of human conduct.  Next to monotheism itself, the Torah became the essence of Jewish faith.

Spiritual Values in the Book of Exodus

[This article is part of a 2012 doctoral dissertation entitled,  Dramatic Ironies and Illusions in the Book of Exodus: A Profile of a Nation’s Identity, Responsibility, and Destiny,  written by Sinaite ELZ@SK6 who has since passed on to her Spiritual Sinai, or so we imagine.]

 

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Spiritual values are those that pertain to the soul, having holy, divine, sacred, and immaterial worth.  They are of priceless importance that transcends the test of time.  The promises of God to Israel’s ancestors forged the nation’s faith that leaned toward ceremonial or liturgical expression.  Moses lived to see the provisional fulfillment of the two out of three promises. The spiritual values in the book of Exodus constitute the promises of God to Israel through Abraham and Moses and their commitment to the God who delivered them from bondage.

Promises of the Ancestral God of Israel.

God promised to bless Abram and his descendants as well as all those who blessed them, to curse any who cursed them and to make Abram’s people a channel of blessing to all mankind.  God changed his ame to Abraham, meaning “father of a multitude” because his seed shall be as numerous as the stars and shall be nations and kings.  The promise was expanded by stating that the seed would be afflicted fonr 400 years and afterwards shall possess Canaan, the Promised Land.  Circumcision was a symbol of God’s everlasting covenant with the Hebrews as a people.  God’s promises to Abraham were passed on to Moses and the Hebrews in Egyptas Abraham’s descendants.  In Exodus, God promised to be with Moses in Egypt for him to accomplish his mission as deliverer: “And he said, Certainly, I will be with thee; and this shall be a token unto thee, that I have sent thee: When thou hast brought forth the people out of Egypt, ye shall serve God upon this mountain”(Exodus 3:12).

He had promised to be with the Israelites in the wilderness to train them as his own, separate from all the people on earth: “And he said, my presence shall go with thee, and I will give thee rest” (Exodus 33:14)

 

In the faith of ancientIsrael, the guidance out ofEgyptwas inseparably connected with the guidance into the Promised Land.  When Abraham went toCanaan, God appeared to him and said: “Unto thy seed will I give this land: and there builded he an altar unto the Lord, who appeared unto him” (Genesis 12:7).

 

This promise was reaffirmed to Isaac and Jacob, and was renewed in the time of Moses.  Hence,Canaanis known as the Promised Land.  The Hebrew religion found expression in faith in God who makes promises and guides into the future.  This “nomadic faith” that Buber (1991) describes as having a different accent from that of the religions of sedentary peoples of the Fertile Crescent, in which the cult was bound to sacred places, worships “the God of the fathers,” who guides the ancestors into new places as wanderers and adventurers.  They ventured in faith, as did Abraham who migrated from Mesopotamia, and they trusted their mobile God to lead them into the future, toward the realization of the divine promises.  The people’s historical pilgrimage provided the background of Exodus.  God in heaven saw the trouble of Israel when they were in Egypt so He delivered them.  When the Israelites committed idolatry, God threatened to destroy them and make a great nation out of the children of Moses.  God had promised Abraham, Isaac, and Jacob that he would make of their children a great nation.  This promise could have been fulfilled through Moses, who was a son of Jacob.  But God had also promised that their King would come through the tribe of Judah, and Moses was of the tribe of Levi.  If God destroyed the rest of the people of Israel, His promise to Judah could not be fulfilled.  Hence, his words were to test Moses and he was pleased to see Moses’ faith.

 

A Mother’s Faith.

Jochebed, the mother of Moses, was given the task by the Egyptian princess to nurse and train Moses.  This is an amazing choice because she was a willing mother, contrary to those who look upon the responsibilities of motherhood  as a burden.  She looked upon her duty as her highest privilege.  No gladder time ever came in her life history than this time when she realized that to her was given the matchless privilege of mothering and training her own child.  She entered upon her task with an eagerness born out of a motherly love, and with the faith so strong to see it work through.  By faith, Moses was hidden, by faith, Moses, when he was come to years, refused to be called the son of Pharaoh’s daughter.  So she was rewarded by the raising up of a great life that fathered a nation and one of the supreme makers of history.

 

The Commitment of Moses.

For 40 years, Moses’ life demanded a remarkable exercise of patience and contentment with his humble office.  When God commissioned him to deliver his people from the Pharaoh’s hand, although he was at first reluctant, he at length accepted the appointment, and returned to Egypt to undertake the mission.  Having full knowledge of the desert, he knows that it contains no sufficient provision for such a great host, yet he trusted and obeyed his God.

 

Self-denial and the patriotism of Moses shone remarkably when God threatened to destroy the nation and to raise up a better people from the seed of Moses.  God’s proposal was not taken advantage of by Moses, even if it would have brought much distinction to his family.  Instead he interceded for the people until their ancient position and promises were restored (Exodus 32).  It is evident that Moses knows fully well how he and the Hebrews stand before God based on their election as God’s chosen people.  This strengthened his resolve to bring back the glory of the status and promises made by God to their ancestors. God’s word “put off thy shoes from off thy feet; for “The place whereon thou standest is holy ground” implies a call for Moses to come barefoot in the presence of God as an honest declaration of his utter dependence upon him.  In his nomadic world, Moses would have fashioned his own sandals – self-made or more broadly, man-made.  Standing in the realm of his own creation limited his capabilities.  To step out of his sandals, the ones that he produced enabled Moses to experience the full majesty and might of God’s creative possibilities.  Moses modeled man’s inadequacy in facing life’s impossibilities 40 years long and a wilderness wide: an unyielding king, an army in hot pursuit, an ocean as an obstacle to escape, a long desert journey with a million to feed.  He had come to terms with a God whose capability is infinitely larger than man at his best.  His commitment to the will of God made him give up human arrogance in exchange for rich possibilities and provisions.

 

Moses is being called to “step” into a new realm of possibility-into a quality of life he cannot produce his own.  He is directed to take a step of faith into “holy ground” – the turf that has come under the touch of the divine, and cannot be produced by human actions.  So God was inviting Moses to commit to the fundamental fact of every human life: in order to stand up with God, one must come to him on the terms of his holiness, not one’s own.

 

The Commitment of the Levites

As Moses came down from the mountain after being with the Lord for 40 days and 40 nights, he saw the Israelites worshipping the gold bull. He felt the same way as God did about the sin of idolatry.  He crushed the idol into powder, threw the gold dust on water and made Israel drink it as if they were drinking their own sin.  He broke the tables of stone bearing the Decalogue, for the people had already broken the covenant.  Furthermore, he acted on God’s command to kill those who had rejected the word of God.  The men of Levi obeyed the command and slew three thousand of the guilty on that day.  Moses and the Levites’ commitment to their sacred covenant with God prepared them for their great work of caring for the tabernacle.


Illusions in the Book of Exodus

[Originally posted in 2012 when we first started this website.  The author has since passed on to her Spiritual Sinai.  This article is part of a doctoral dissertation entitled,  Dramatic Ironies and Illusions in the Book of Exodus: A Profile of a Nation’s Identity, Responsibility, and Destiny,  written by Sinaite ELZ@SK6.]

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The perception that represents what is perceived in a way different from the way it is in reality is called an ‘illusion’.   Illusions are reflected in man’s culture or man’s system of understanding his own predicament. What makes them illusory is that while they look to be true, they are actually false.

 

 

Man’s False Concept of Himself.

 

Moses’ vision of his position and power caused him to attempt to liberate and thought that a few blows of his might would emancipate his people.

His illusory estimate of his knowledge and power deprived him of his self-fulfillment.  All the learning of Egyptwas not enough to equip Moses for his life-work.  All who have done anything great in the world have graduated in God’s college.  It took him another 40 years of humbling experiences in the Midian desert to realize this.  By spending much time alone with him in seclusion and solitude, his eyes of faith were opened to God’s timing and plan.  God’s workers may take their arts course in the world’s universities, but they must take their divinity course alone with God.  For one to be used in the service of God, he must be set apart from the world and its system, characterized by Egypt, and be thoroughly immersed in the instruction of God.

 

 

 

Man’s Illusory Concept of Social Status.

 

In the encounter between Pharaoh and Moses, the Shasu, an Egyptian term which meant “to wander around” serves to illuminate the social attitude of the ancient Near East. Moses, fierce-eyed, face sun-baked, and creased, his robe  woolen, his beard full, his hair unruly and his smell goat-ish, was identified as one of the landless people who lived at the edge of more sedentary civilizations, the nomadic folks who wandered the wilderness in tents.  They were infinitely lower than the social refinement of the Egyptians.

 

 

The Egyptian myth of the divine being born in pharaohs is evidently a delusion as the events of the plagues show.  What grips the attention is the slave hut by theNile, where Moses and Aaron were born, rather than the pyramids where the Pharaohs were buried.

 

 

 

Man’s Wrong Notion of Time. 

 

 

 

It is remarkable how the Pharaoh fixed his promises of “tomorrow” each time he was asked to let go of the Hebrews that they may serve God.  His inability to trust the God of Moses was born out of his hardened heart.  The illusory idea that he is still in control is manifested in his repeated delaying tactics.  It would have been quite easy for each plague to have been removed on the very day Moses spoke to him.  Man’s time is always tomorrow, but God’s time is always today as his name “I AM” signifies.  He uses smallweapons of frogs, lice, flies, and locusts to humble the pride of man.

 

 

 

Man’s Vision of Predicament.

 

 

The fleeing Israelites found themselves in between two mountains and the Red Sea which blocked their forward progress.  The burden of their numbers and their helplessness was viewed as a sweet prey by the frustrated Egyptians.  This predicament created an illusion of the perfect trap.  Hence, the Pharaoh and his company of chariots were tempted to pursue them as God intended.

 

Rulers tend to magnify their power and capability by single-handedly controlling the affairs of their domain.  Moses attempted to do just that.  It was from his father-in-law’s divinely given wisdom that he delegated the work among able men who fear God, men of truth who hate and discourage covetousness.  They became rulers of thousands, of hundreds, of fifties, and of tens.  God modified his system by the appointment of the 70 elders.

 

 

 

Man’s Delusion of God.

 

 

When Moses had been away for 40 days on top of the mount, an incredible change took place on the spirit of the people.  In their hearts, they wished to return to Egypt; and as if to prepare for this, they took steps to institute a form of worship similar to that of the Egyptians.  The worship of the bull was notoriously common in Egypt and the bull represents the god Osiris, the embodiment of strength and endurance.  There is the pervading illusion of paying homage to a tangible god, a popular desire that is connected with the mysteries of religion.  It is difficult for humanity to realize that God is spirit.

 

 

 

Man’s Fantasy of Freedom and Service.

 

 

That Israel is destined for service in the Promised Land is illusory.  This is sufficiently indicated in the people’s inadequacy at Sinai, their sin of the golden calf, and the actual progress of Israel’s history.  The years in the desert describe a long drawn out courtship between God and Israel, with covenants, infidelities, and reconciliations.  These people gave themselves to something that they would not fully enjoy-knowing the Promised Land only in promise.

After the song of Moses and the Israelites in Exodus 15, the hosts of liberated people were still dwelling in the illusion of freedom.  They had not yet sensed the situation into which they were plunged.  The riches of Egypt were behind them, and the poverty of the desert was before them.  The satisfaction of plenty to eat in the land of Goshen would soon be exchanged for the near-hunger of the desert.  The activities of a busy life, even though forced, would soon be reversed in the idleness of a wilderness with its lack of food and pasture.

 

Consequently, the dramatic ironies in the book of Exodus consisting of the Pharaoh’s plan, the divine appointment of Moses, the election of a people, the divine revelation and power are all directed to matters of the soul that have sacred and immortal worth.  The promises of God to the patriarchs of Israel had to be fulfilled in spite of man’s calculations and manipulations.  The discussions of the illusions of man’s false conceptions of himself, his time, his social status, his life situation, his freedom, and his God all redound to the truths that are unfolded in the text.  A profound understanding of man’s fallibility and inadequacy as illustrated in the dramatic ironies and illusions eventually accentuates the moral and ethical imperatives in order for man to fulfill the divine obligations set forth in the covenant with God.

 

 

ELZ@S6K

In Memoriam