Exodus/Shemoth 20: “I am YHWH”

[First posted in 2012, part of the Exodus series.  Translation:  The Five Books of Moses by Everett Fox “EF”; where text is unclear, it will be supplemented by AST/Artscroll Tanakh and Robert Alter’s The Five Books of Moses.  The commentary are from S6K and AST and EF.–Admin1]

——————————————–

Exodus/Shemoth Chapter 20

God spoke all these statements, saying:

S6K:  Self-identification of the GOD Who Communicates, and Who starts revealing Himself and His Ways; these verses answer the specific questions:

WHO’s speaking? 

What is His NAME? 

Why should you listen to Him?

What did He do for you specifically, children of Israel (and gentiles mixed among you) who were former slaves in Egypt?

ASTThis is the positive commandment to believe in the existence of HaShem as the only God.

2. I am YHWH

your God,

who brought you out

from the land of Egypt, from a house of serfs.

 

 

Image from www.levitt.com

S6K:  What does He then require of you, since He liberated you from former bondage to your cruel Egyptian masters? Complete allegiance, exclusive to Him:

 

 

3. You are not to have any other gods before my presence

 

 

 

S6K:  Is it not rather strange for YHWH who knows there are no gods that exist “equal to Him’ that he should feel threatened by? This reminder continues all throughout the Hebrew Scriptures.  Why is this so?  If you know you are the father of all your children, would you keep reminding your children and your wife who you are?  Well, if your wife is unfaithful, adulterous, has relationships with other men, there is reason to feel insecure.  YHWH is ALONE, there are no other gods that exist, HE KNOWS THAT. . . but unfortunately men do not . . . and so He competes with the gods of men’s making, the gods that dominate men’s minds, hearts, lives. How does one experience the existence of the One True God?  

Through His revelation, 

His created world, 

and his acts in history as recorded in the Hebrew Scriptures.  

 

But alas, other man-made scriptures have duplicated the original with additions and distortions or complete fabrications, and our One True God YHWH has to compete with those “testimonies” as well!

 

 

4. You are not to make yourself a carved-image or any figure that is in the heavens above, that is on the earth beneath, that is in the waters beneath the earth;

 

Graven images in heaven above might be the heavenly bodies, particularly the sun which appears to dominate ancient religious cultures; google “sun worship” and you will get a glut of information more than you’d care to know, including December 25, “sol invictus”. . . ever wonder why we celebrate it to this day? 

It is commonly claimed that the date of December 25th for Christmas was selected in order to correspond with the Roman festival of Dies Natalis Solis Invicti, or “Birthday of Sol Invictus”[7] but Pope Benedict XVI has argued that the December 25 date was determined simply by calculating nine months after March 25, regarded as the day of Jesus’ conception (the Feast of the Annunciation).[8] This claim was mainly based on a passage of the Commentary on the prophet Daniel by Hippolytus of Rome, which was written around year 204.[9] However, even Pope Benedict has stated that “Christmas acquired its definitive form in the fourth century when it replaced the Roman Feast of the Sol invictus.” [10] [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sol_Invictus]

 

The First man to declare himself a god, was Nimrod. His mother, Semiramis, declared herself to be “The Mother of god”.  Together with their son, Tammuz, they replaced the worship of Jehovah God, with a  Triune – “trinity” mystery god.  Since Tammuz married his own mother – he was both – “God – the Father” and “God – the son”. [http://christmasxmas.xanga.com/633489653/item/]

 

Most people who do have statues of their gods know the difference between the god they worship and the statue which supposedly simply aids them in their worship. This has been the explanation given by Catholics whose cathedrals are full of images. Isn’t it better to simply OBEY the commandment? But how can catholics obey when this commandment is missing in their version of the Bible?  [Source: http://www.beginningcatholic.com/catholic-ten-commandments.html]

 

 

Here are the Catholic Ten Commandments:

    1. I am the LORD your God. You shall worship the Lord your God and Him only shall you serve.
    2. You shall not take the name of the Lord your God in vain.
    3. Remember to keep holy the Sabbath day.

 

 

AST:  Second Commandment: Prohibition of Idolatry,  This commandment comprises four negative injunctions:  

(1)  It is forbidden to believe in idols;  

(2) It is forbidden to make or possess them;

(3)  It is forbidden to worship them through any of the four forms of Divine service (prostration, slaughter, offering upon an altar, libations of wine or other liquids upon an altar) and

(4)  it is forbidden to worship an idol by a means that is unique to it.

5. you are not to bow to them,

for I,  YHWH your God, am a zealous God,

 

 

EF:  The Hebrew word (kanna) has a cognate meaning in Arabic, “red (with dye),” so an interesting English analogy expressing facial color changes, would be “livid” (from the Latin “color of lead”).

 

S6K:  Other translations use the word “JEALOUS”.  If the latter, here’s a puzzle: “a jealous ‘Elohiym.”  If there is None like Him, what is there to be jealous about? Apply the same to a married couple; unfaithfulness of one spouse causes doubt and jealousy on the part of the faithful spouse; even if the unfaithful one has changed, there is always that doubt.  But YHWH knows everything, even the secrets in men’s hearts, and perhaps that omniscience knows that half-hearted faith could so easily be diverted. EF’s  word “zealous” is the better word, our God YHWH is truly zealous about His being One, the only God, and ignorant humans should know Him, specially if He has taken the trouble to be KNOWN to all who care to know Him.

calling-to-account the iniquity of the fathers upon the sons, to the third and the fourth (generation) of those that hate me, 

 

6  but showing loyalty to the thousandth of those that love me, of those that keep my commandments

 

AST: Children are punished only if they adopt and carry on the sinful legacy of their parents, or if it was in their power to protest, but they acquiesced to the lifestyle that was shown them (Sanhedrin 27b).

 

 

S6K: We read this verse a bit differently, like a hyperbole, a figure of speech demonstrating the comparison between God’s anger at sin (visiting it upon the later generations, to the 6th degree—meaning, a long time) with His loving kindness to “thousands” (a much longer time compared)  that love Him and keep His commandments. His grace and mercy extends farther than His anger at sin.

 

 

7. You are not to take up the name of YHWH your God for emptiness, for YHWH will not clear him that takes up his name for emptiness.

 

 

AST: Prohibition of vain oaths.

You shall not take the Name of HASHEM, your God, in vain, for HASHEM will not absolve anyone who takes His Name in vain.”  

Just as it is forbidden to show contempt for God by using an idol, so it is forbidden to disgrace His Name by using it for no valid purpose.

 

 

S6K:  This commandment is where our Sinai 6000 group is not 100% together in agreement, as we have explained in previous articles.  Some of us feel that unless we use the Name and keep declaring it verbally and in writing, no one will ever know about it.  The others’ reluctance is more on the context of saying the Name without a title such as “Adonai Elohiym YHWH” (Lord God YHWH), not just saying YHWH by itself.  Jewish friends tell us they use it in the context of prayer only and still, with much reluctance.  Ultimately, each person has to decide for himself, how to apply this commandment. EF explains “emptiness” as “use for a false purpose” . . . sample . . . when “religionists” use His Name to elicit a response from hearers, usually to give donation or charity because he is supposed to be a YHWH-worshipper.  We met someone like that whom we helped to the hilt, and yet was disappointing because while he mouthed Torah and YHWH and even claimed to be a prophet of God, his behavior and bad-mouth negated all his life-work of working on the TNK. If anything, he was a ‘turn-off’ rather than a ‘turn-on’.

 

 

8  Remember the Sabbath day, to hallow it.  

 

9  For six days, you are to serve, and are to make all your work,

 

10  but the seventh day is Sabbath for YHWH your God:  you are not to make any kind of work, (not) your, nor your son, nor your daughter, (not) your servant, nor your maid, nor your beast, nor your sojourner that is within your gates.

 

 

11  For in six days YHWH made the heavens and the earth, the sea and all that is in it, and he rested on the seventh day; therefore YHWH gave the Sabbath day his  blessing, and he hallowed it.

 

AST:This day is a constant reminder that God is the Creator, who created for six days and rested on the seventh.  Sabbath observance testifies to this concept.

This is from http://www.the-ten-commandments.org/romancatholic-tencommandments.html.

The following from the Catholic Encyclopaedia Vol. 4, p. 153 also confirms the deletion of the second Commandment and the change of the fourth.

The church, after changing the day of rest from the Jewish Sabbath of the seventh day of the week to the first made the third commandment refer to Sunday as the day to be kept holy as the Lord’s Day.

This truth can also be found from the following URL which you will need to copy and paste into the address bar as links promote search engine ranking and I cannot promote what is not Biblical truth. The Catholic version is the column on the right hand side titled “A Traditional Catechetical Formula.” The URL is http://www.vatican.va/archive/ccc_css/archive/catechism/command.htm

In 1562 the Archbishop declared that tradition now stood above scripture.

The authority of the Church is illustrated most clearly by the scriptures, for on one hand she recommends them, declares them to be divine, and offers them to us to be read, and on the other hand, the legal precepts in the scriptures taught by the Lord have ceased by virtue of the same authority. The Sabbath, the most glorious day in the law, has been changed into the Lord’s day. These and other similar matters have not ceased by virtue of Christ’s teaching (for He says that He has come to fulfill the law, not to destroy it), but they have been changed by the authority of the Church.” — Gaspare de Posso Archbishop of Reggio, Council of Trent.

Most denominations you ask about the fourth Commandment will say the day is Sunday, otherwise you will receive as many as 1001 different excuses in avoidance of this one Commandment. Besides the five hundred plus denominations that have already rediscovered the truth about this Commandment, it seems the only other Church that acknowledges the truth is the one who changed the day without God’s approval. Since they believe their authority stands above God’s, they observe the wrong day also. If you ask the Catholic Church you will get a statement like the following,

Most Christians assume that Sunday is the biblically approved day of worship. The Catholic Church protests that it transferred Christian worship from the biblical Sabbath (Saturday) to Sunday, and that to try to argue that the change was made in the Bible is both dishonest and a denial of Catholic authority. If Protestantism wants to base its teachings only on the Bible, it should worship on Saturday.” — Rome’s Challenge www.immaculateheart.com/maryonline Dec 2003. Watch this short video to find out what happened to those who did not obey the commandment of the Catholic Church in the dark ages. You can also read more Sabbath Statements from the Roman Catholic Church from this website.

12  Honor your father and your mother, in order that your days may be prolonged on the soil that YHWH your God is giving you.

 

 

Jewish commentators explain that the 5th commandment immediately follows the first 4 that relate man toward God because parents, fathers are commanded to teach their children in the Shema (Deuteronomy 6:4:-9). It is ideal that parents pass on their faith to their children, otherwise who else will teach the child while his mind is still compliant, trusting of his parents. We are in our religions because our parents had us baptized, took us to church, perhaps taught us the Bible.  Some retain the same faith as their parents; others take off to a different direction; would that be honoring one’s parents? When children reach the age of responsibility, they are old enough to check out the faith they have inherited and make decisions for themselves. 

 

13. You are not to murder.  

 

[AST] Mechilla notes that the first commandment of the second tablet corresponds to the first of the other one, faith in God.  Someone with true belief in God as the Creator and Sustainer of human life will not commit murder.

EF: You are not too . . . : Closer to the Hebrew rhythmically would be a sequence like “No murder!/No adultery!” etc.  or “Murder not!/”Adulter not!” etc.

murder: Some interpreters view this as “killing” in general, while others restrict it, as I have done here.

adulter:  The English has been tailored to fit the Hebrew rhythm of the last five “commandments,” all of which began with lo (“no”) and a two-syllable command.

steal:  ancient Jewish tradition understood this as a reference to kidnapping .

Image from mymorningmeditations.com

flashing torches:  perhaps a poetic description of lightning

You are not to adulter.  

You are not to steal.  

You are not to testify against your fellow as a false witness.

14 You are not to desire the house of your neighbor,

you are not to desire the wife of your neighbor,

or his servant, or his maid, or his ox, or his donkey, or anything that is your neighbor’s.

15.  Now all of the people were seeing the thunder-sounds, the flashing-torches, the shofar sound, and the mountain smoking;  when the people saw, they faltered and stood far off.

 

 

16. They said to Moshe:  You speak with us and we will hearken, but let not God speak with us, lest we die!

 

S6K: What a privilege it is to be spoken to by the Creator God and yet these people “trembled” and “stood far off” and then begged Moses to be the one to speak to them and not this God they have just met “in person” so to speak, through audio-visuals of smoke, thunder, lightning, and . . . just how does a voice resemble a trumpet, perhaps in eardrum-splitting volume?  Again, it is easy to judge in hindsight, knowing what we know today but if we were there ourselves, we might have reacted in exactly the same way. Any experience of the supernatural, the unfamiliar, the unknown, is enough to strike fear in one’s heart. 

17 Moshe said to the people:  

Do not be afraid!  

For it is to test you that God has come,

to have awe of him be upon you,

so that you do not sin.

 

 

18 The people stood far off, and Moshe approached the fog where God was.

 

 

19 YHWH said to Moshe:  Say thus to the Children of Israel:  

You yourselves have seen that it was from the heavens that i spoke with you.

20.You are not to make beside me

gods of silver, gods of gold you are not to make for yourselves!

21  A slaughter-site of soil, you are to make for me,

you are to slaughter upon it

your offerings-up, your sacrifices of shalom,

your sheep and your oxen!  

At ever place where I cause my name to be recalled

I will come to you and bless you. 

Image from imgur.com

22  But if the slaughter-site of stones you make for me,

you are not to build it smooth-hewn,

for if you hold-high your iron-tool over it, you will have profaned it.

S6K:  Is it not odd that God prefers altar material as He has created it, un-improved by human hands . . . what is the message?  That nature as He designed it cannot be improved upon by humans?  Or that the best of human effort is not good enough? Or that between humanity and creation, the latter has performed according to His purposes while humanity with free will has misused it, against His revealed will? Look at the magnificent cathedrals, priestly garments, adorned altars of religious sects, while well intentioned and inspired by love for God, would these not be acceptable to YHWH?  What is His simple requirement?  Read vs. 22 again.

23  And you are not to ascend my slaughter-site by ascending-steps, that your nakedness not be laid-bare upon it.

 

 

EF: that your nakedness: To make sure that the priests’ genitals not be uncovered during the rites; the Egyptians wore rather short skirts (Palut).  Note again the desexualizing of religion.

Exodus/Shemoth 20: "I am YHWH"

[First posted in 2012, part of the Exodus series.  Translation:  The Five Books of Moses by Everett Fox “EF”; where text is unclear, it will be supplemented by AST/Artscroll Tanakh and Robert Alter’s The Five Books of Moses.  The commentary are from S6K and AST and EF.–Admin1]

——————————————–

Exodus/Shemoth Chapter 20

God spoke all these statements, saying:

S6K:  Self-identification of the GOD Who Communicates, and Who starts revealing Himself and His Ways; these verses answer the specific questions:

WHO’s speaking? 

What is His NAME? 

Why should you listen to Him?

What did He do for you specifically, children of Israel (and gentiles mixed among you) who were former slaves in Egypt?

ASTThis is the positive commandment to believe in the existence of HaShem as the only God.

2. I am YHWH

your God,

who brought you out

from the land of Egypt, from a house of serfs.

 

 

Image from www.levitt.com

S6K:  What does He then require of you, since He liberated you from former bondage to your cruel Egyptian masters? Complete allegiance, exclusive to Him:

 

 

3. You are not to have any other gods before my presence

 

 

 

S6K:  Is it not rather strange for YHWH who knows there are no gods that exist “equal to Him’ that he should feel threatened by? This reminder continues all throughout the Hebrew Scriptures.  Why is this so?  If you know you are the father of all your children, would you keep reminding your children and your wife who you are?  Well, if your wife is unfaithful, adulterous, has relationships with other men, there is reason to feel insecure.  YHWH is ALONE, there are no other gods that exist, HE KNOWS THAT. . . but unfortunately men do not . . . and so He competes with the gods of men’s making, the gods that dominate men’s minds, hearts, lives. How does one experience the existence of the One True God?  

Through His revelation, 

His created world, 

and his acts in history as recorded in the Hebrew Scriptures.  

 

But alas, other man-made scriptures have duplicated the original with additions and distortions or complete fabrications, and our One True God YHWH has to compete with those “testimonies” as well!

 

 

4. You are not to make yourself a carved-image or any figure that is in the heavens above, that is on the earth beneath, that is in the waters beneath the earth;

 

Graven images in heaven above might be the heavenly bodies, particularly the sun which appears to dominate ancient religious cultures; google “sun worship” and you will get a glut of information more than you’d care to know, including December 25, “sol invictus”. . . ever wonder why we celebrate it to this day? 

It is commonly claimed that the date of December 25th for Christmas was selected in order to correspond with the Roman festival of Dies Natalis Solis Invicti, or “Birthday of Sol Invictus”[7] but Pope Benedict XVI has argued that the December 25 date was determined simply by calculating nine months after March 25, regarded as the day of Jesus’ conception (the Feast of the Annunciation).[8] This claim was mainly based on a passage of the Commentary on the prophet Daniel by Hippolytus of Rome, which was written around year 204.[9] However, even Pope Benedict has stated that “Christmas acquired its definitive form in the fourth century when it replaced the Roman Feast of the Sol invictus.” [10] [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sol_Invictus]

 

The First man to declare himself a god, was Nimrod. His mother, Semiramis, declared herself to be “The Mother of god”.  Together with their son, Tammuz, they replaced the worship of Jehovah God, with a  Triune – “trinity” mystery god.  Since Tammuz married his own mother – he was both – “God – the Father” and “God – the son”. [http://christmasxmas.xanga.com/633489653/item/]

 

Most people who do have statues of their gods know the difference between the god they worship and the statue which supposedly simply aids them in their worship. This has been the explanation given by Catholics whose cathedrals are full of images. Isn’t it better to simply OBEY the commandment? But how can catholics obey when this commandment is missing in their version of the Bible?  [Source: http://www.beginningcatholic.com/catholic-ten-commandments.html]

 

 

Here are the Catholic Ten Commandments:

    1. I am the LORD your God. You shall worship the Lord your God and Him only shall you serve.
    2. You shall not take the name of the Lord your God in vain.
    3. Remember to keep holy the Sabbath day.

 

 

AST:  Second Commandment: Prohibition of Idolatry,  This commandment comprises four negative injunctions:  

(1)  It is forbidden to believe in idols;  

(2) It is forbidden to make or possess them;

(3)  It is forbidden to worship them through any of the four forms of Divine service (prostration, slaughter, offering upon an altar, libations of wine or other liquids upon an altar) and

(4)  it is forbidden to worship an idol by a means that is unique to it.

5. you are not to bow to them,

for I,  YHWH your God, am a zealous God,

 

 

EF:  The Hebrew word (kanna) has a cognate meaning in Arabic, “red (with dye),” so an interesting English analogy expressing facial color changes, would be “livid” (from the Latin “color of lead”).

 

S6K:  Other translations use the word “JEALOUS”.  If the latter, here’s a puzzle: “a jealous ‘Elohiym.”  If there is None like Him, what is there to be jealous about? Apply the same to a married couple; unfaithfulness of one spouse causes doubt and jealousy on the part of the faithful spouse; even if the unfaithful one has changed, there is always that doubt.  But YHWH knows everything, even the secrets in men’s hearts, and perhaps that omniscience knows that half-hearted faith could so easily be diverted. EF’s  word “zealous” is the better word, our God YHWH is truly zealous about His being One, the only God, and ignorant humans should know Him, specially if He has taken the trouble to be KNOWN to all who care to know Him.

calling-to-account the iniquity of the fathers upon the sons, to the third and the fourth (generation) of those that hate me, 

 

6  but showing loyalty to the thousandth of those that love me, of those that keep my commandments

 

AST: Children are punished only if they adopt and carry on the sinful legacy of their parents, or if it was in their power to protest, but they acquiesced to the lifestyle that was shown them (Sanhedrin 27b).

 

 

S6K: We read this verse a bit differently, like a hyperbole, a figure of speech demonstrating the comparison between God’s anger at sin (visiting it upon the later generations, to the 6th degree—meaning, a long time) with His loving kindness to “thousands” (a much longer time compared)  that love Him and keep His commandments. His grace and mercy extends farther than His anger at sin.

 

 

7. You are not to take up the name of YHWH your God for emptiness, for YHWH will not clear him that takes up his name for emptiness.

 

 

AST: Prohibition of vain oaths.

You shall not take the Name of HASHEM, your God, in vain, for HASHEM will not absolve anyone who takes His Name in vain.”  

Just as it is forbidden to show contempt for God by using an idol, so it is forbidden to disgrace His Name by using it for no valid purpose.

 

 

S6K:  This commandment is where our Sinai 6000 group is not 100% together in agreement, as we have explained in previous articles.  Some of us feel that unless we use the Name and keep declaring it verbally and in writing, no one will ever know about it.  The others’ reluctance is more on the context of saying the Name without a title such as “Adonai Elohiym YHWH” (Lord God YHWH), not just saying YHWH by itself.  Jewish friends tell us they use it in the context of prayer only and still, with much reluctance.  Ultimately, each person has to decide for himself, how to apply this commandment. EF explains “emptiness” as “use for a false purpose” . . . sample . . . when “religionists” use His Name to elicit a response from hearers, usually to give donation or charity because he is supposed to be a YHWH-worshipper.  We met someone like that whom we helped to the hilt, and yet was disappointing because while he mouthed Torah and YHWH and even claimed to be a prophet of God, his behavior and bad-mouth negated all his life-work of working on the TNK. If anything, he was a ‘turn-off’ rather than a ‘turn-on’.

 

 

8  Remember the Sabbath day, to hallow it.  

 

9  For six days, you are to serve, and are to make all your work,

 

10  but the seventh day is Sabbath for YHWH your God:  you are not to make any kind of work, (not) your, nor your son, nor your daughter, (not) your servant, nor your maid, nor your beast, nor your sojourner that is within your gates.

 

 

11  For in six days YHWH made the heavens and the earth, the sea and all that is in it, and he rested on the seventh day; therefore YHWH gave the Sabbath day his  blessing, and he hallowed it.

 

AST:This day is a constant reminder that God is the Creator, who created for six days and rested on the seventh.  Sabbath observance testifies to this concept.

This is from http://www.the-ten-commandments.org/romancatholic-tencommandments.html.

The following from the Catholic Encyclopaedia Vol. 4, p. 153 also confirms the deletion of the second Commandment and the change of the fourth.

The church, after changing the day of rest from the Jewish Sabbath of the seventh day of the week to the first made the third commandment refer to Sunday as the day to be kept holy as the Lord’s Day.

This truth can also be found from the following URL which you will need to copy and paste into the address bar as links promote search engine ranking and I cannot promote what is not Biblical truth. The Catholic version is the column on the right hand side titled “A Traditional Catechetical Formula.” The URL is http://www.vatican.va/archive/ccc_css/archive/catechism/command.htm

In 1562 the Archbishop declared that tradition now stood above scripture.

The authority of the Church is illustrated most clearly by the scriptures, for on one hand she recommends them, declares them to be divine, and offers them to us to be read, and on the other hand, the legal precepts in the scriptures taught by the Lord have ceased by virtue of the same authority. The Sabbath, the most glorious day in the law, has been changed into the Lord’s day. These and other similar matters have not ceased by virtue of Christ’s teaching (for He says that He has come to fulfill the law, not to destroy it), but they have been changed by the authority of the Church.” — Gaspare de Posso Archbishop of Reggio, Council of Trent.

Most denominations you ask about the fourth Commandment will say the day is Sunday, otherwise you will receive as many as 1001 different excuses in avoidance of this one Commandment. Besides the five hundred plus denominations that have already rediscovered the truth about this Commandment, it seems the only other Church that acknowledges the truth is the one who changed the day without God’s approval. Since they believe their authority stands above God’s, they observe the wrong day also. If you ask the Catholic Church you will get a statement like the following,

Most Christians assume that Sunday is the biblically approved day of worship. The Catholic Church protests that it transferred Christian worship from the biblical Sabbath (Saturday) to Sunday, and that to try to argue that the change was made in the Bible is both dishonest and a denial of Catholic authority. If Protestantism wants to base its teachings only on the Bible, it should worship on Saturday.” — Rome’s Challenge www.immaculateheart.com/maryonline Dec 2003. Watch this short video to find out what happened to those who did not obey the commandment of the Catholic Church in the dark ages. You can also read more Sabbath Statements from the Roman Catholic Church from this website.

12  Honor your father and your mother, in order that your days may be prolonged on the soil that YHWH your God is giving you.

 

 

Jewish commentators explain that the 5th commandment immediately follows the first 4 that relate man toward God because parents, fathers are commanded to teach their children in the Shema (Deuteronomy 6:4:-9). It is ideal that parents pass on their faith to their children, otherwise who else will teach the child while his mind is still compliant, trusting of his parents. We are in our religions because our parents had us baptized, took us to church, perhaps taught us the Bible.  Some retain the same faith as their parents; others take off to a different direction; would that be honoring one’s parents? When children reach the age of responsibility, they are old enough to check out the faith they have inherited and make decisions for themselves. 

 

13. You are not to murder.  

 

[AST] Mechilla notes that the first commandment of the second tablet corresponds to the first of the other one, faith in God.  Someone with true belief in God as the Creator and Sustainer of human life will not commit murder.

EF: You are not too . . . : Closer to the Hebrew rhythmically would be a sequence like “No murder!/No adultery!” etc.  or “Murder not!/”Adulter not!” etc.

murder: Some interpreters view this as “killing” in general, while others restrict it, as I have done here.

adulter:  The English has been tailored to fit the Hebrew rhythm of the last five “commandments,” all of which began with lo (“no”) and a two-syllable command.

steal:  ancient Jewish tradition understood this as a reference to kidnapping .

Image from mymorningmeditations.com

flashing torches:  perhaps a poetic description of lightning

You are not to adulter.  

You are not to steal.  

You are not to testify against your fellow as a false witness.

14 You are not to desire the house of your neighbor,

you are not to desire the wife of your neighbor,

or his servant, or his maid, or his ox, or his donkey, or anything that is your neighbor’s.

15.  Now all of the people were seeing the thunder-sounds, the flashing-torches, the shofar sound, and the mountain smoking;  when the people saw, they faltered and stood far off.

 

 

16. They said to Moshe:  You speak with us and we will hearken, but let not God speak with us, lest we die!

 

S6K: What a privilege it is to be spoken to by the Creator God and yet these people “trembled” and “stood far off” and then begged Moses to be the one to speak to them and not this God they have just met “in person” so to speak, through audio-visuals of smoke, thunder, lightning, and . . . just how does a voice resemble a trumpet, perhaps in eardrum-splitting volume?  Again, it is easy to judge in hindsight, knowing what we know today but if we were there ourselves, we might have reacted in exactly the same way. Any experience of the supernatural, the unfamiliar, the unknown, is enough to strike fear in one’s heart. 

17 Moshe said to the people:  

Do not be afraid!  

For it is to test you that God has come,

to have awe of him be upon you,

so that you do not sin.

 

 

18 The people stood far off, and Moshe approached the fog where God was.

 

 

19 YHWH said to Moshe:  Say thus to the Children of Israel:  

You yourselves have seen that it was from the heavens that i spoke with you.

20.You are not to make beside me

gods of silver, gods of gold you are not to make for yourselves!

21  A slaughter-site of soil, you are to make for me,

you are to slaughter upon it

your offerings-up, your sacrifices of shalom,

your sheep and your oxen!  

At ever place where I cause my name to be recalled

I will come to you and bless you. 

Image from imgur.com

22  But if the slaughter-site of stones you make for me,

you are not to build it smooth-hewn,

for if you hold-high your iron-tool over it, you will have profaned it.

S6K:  Is it not odd that God prefers altar material as He has created it, un-improved by human hands . . . what is the message?  That nature as He designed it cannot be improved upon by humans?  Or that the best of human effort is not good enough? Or that between humanity and creation, the latter has performed according to His purposes while humanity with free will has misused it, against His revealed will? Look at the magnificent cathedrals, priestly garments, adorned altars of religious sects, while well intentioned and inspired by love for God, would these not be acceptable to YHWH?  What is His simple requirement?  Read vs. 22 again.

23  And you are not to ascend my slaughter-site by ascending-steps, that your nakedness not be laid-bare upon it.

 

 

EF: that your nakedness: To make sure that the priests’ genitals not be uncovered during the rites; the Egyptians wore rather short skirts (Palut).  Note again the desexualizing of religion.

The Sinaite’s Sabbath Liturgy in Celebration of Shavuot

Image from www.chabadmidtown.com

Image from www.chabadmidtown.com

 

 

[ Back in  year 2014, after much study and discussion of  the seven “My feasts” commanded in Leviticus 23,  Sinaites arrived at an understanding of which of the feasts apply to non-Israelites, that is, Gentiles like ourselves.  While all of the seven are in Israel’s national experience and historical roots, three of them are in the individual and community experience of non-Israelites/Gentiles. These are:  

(1) the weekly Sabbath modeled by the Creator Himself in Genesis 2;  

(2) Yom Kippur or the Day of Atonement which every Jew or Gentile should observe since everyone is prone to violate YHWH’s Torah and should sincerely repent; and

(3) Shavuot which commemorates the giving of the Torah on Sinai, an anniversary that all humankind should celebrate.

This liturgy expresses our joyful celebration of the giving of YHWH’s LAW, an act of grace and mercy from YHWH,

  • the God of Israel,
  •  the God Who spoke on Sinai,
  • our (Sinaite’s) God
  • and the God of all gentiles who choose Him and who choose to live in conformity with His revealed will.

We believe that all humankind are under grace AND law, for by YHWH’s grace, He shared with humanity what He expects of each individual!  How else would humanity live together had not the Law-Giver commanded what is just for all, through righteous living, for the good of the other, in community with one another, where the ends of justice is served equally.  The Torah is doable, not impossible to obey; the Law-Giver is a benevolent King Who best understands that those Who would choose to live under His Kingship are capable of doing all that He commands. He specially designed humanity with freedom of choice, endowed with free will to obey Him or not.

We maintain that faith is based on divinely given truth: YHWH’s Sinai revelation and no other. Deuteronomy warns, do not add or subtract!

Indeed there is cause for celebrating for Jew and Gentile.  Shavuot is one of YHWH’s “MY” feasts, and so we Gentiles today, relate to the Gentiles in the “mixed multitude” who stood with Israelites on Sinai—

  • to embrace the God who appeared on Sinai as our GOD,
  • to acknowledge His sovereign rule over us as our chosen KING,
  • and to accept His Law because He is our declared LORD!

Admin1]

 

——————————-

 

 Kindle the Sabbath Lights

 

Image from beithashoavah.org

Image from beithashoavah.org

Blessed be the Name of the Creator,

Master Designer of the universe,

Redeemer of Israel,

Revelator on Sinai,

our great and awesome God.

Blessed be Your Name,

O YHWH, the Eternal,

Who was, is, and will be,

Who chooses to be what You choose to be.

You manifested as a burning bush,

as Shekinah,

an Invisible Presence amidst thunder and lightning

at the giving of Your Torah,

though Your voice was heard by all.

 

Tonight as we kindle the sabbath lights,

 we join Your firstborn son Israel,  Your chosen people,

 in commemorating the giving of Your Torah, 

as part of Your covenant with Your chosen nation, 

a nation You formed through their patriarchs,

 Avraham, Yitzchak and Yaakov.

 

We claim our place with the Gentiles

among the mixed multitude gathered at Sinai,

 likewise delivered from bondage to Egypt

 seven weeks earlier, on the night of Passover.

We submit to You, YHWH as our LORD and our GOD;

We embrace Your TORAH as our Way of Life,

 for it is Your gift not only to Israel but to the nations, to all peoples; 

we celebrate with Israel this ‘feast of weeks’.

Image from cardiphonia.org

Image from cardiphonia.org

 

The Ten Commandments

 

EXODUS 20   

And God spoke all these words:

2   “I am the Lord your God, who brought you out of Egypt, 

out of the land of slavery.

3   “You shall have no other gods before  me.

4-6   “You shall not make for yourself an image

 in the form of anything in heaven above

or on the earth beneath or in the waters below.   

You shall not bow down to them or worship them; 

for I, the Lord your God, am a jealous God,

 punishing the children for the sin of the parents 

to the third and fourth generation of those who hate me,  

 but showing love to a thousand generations of those

who love me and keep my commandments.

7  “You shall not misuse the name of the Lord your God,

for the Lord will not hold anyone guiltless who misuses his name.

8 -11   “Remember the Sabbath day by keeping it holy.  

Six days you shall labor and do all your work,  

but the seventh day is a sabbath to the Lord your God.

On it you shall not do any work,

neither you, nor your son or daughter,

nor your male or female servant,

nor your animals,

nor any foreigner residing in your towns. 

 For in six days the Lord made the heavens and the earth, 

the sea, and all that is in them,

but he rested on the seventh day. 

Therefore the Lord blessed the Sabbath day and made it holy.

12   “Honor your father and your mother, 

so that you may live long in the land the Lord your God is giving you.

13   “You shall not murder.

14   “You shall not commit adultery.

15    “You shall not steal.

16    “You shall not give false testimony against your neighbor.

17   “You shall not covet your neighbor’s house.

You shall not covet your neighbor’s wife,

or his male or female servant, his ox or donkey,

or anything that belongs to your neighbor.”

18-19  When the people saw the thunder and lightning

and heard the trumpet and saw the mountain in smoke, 

they trembled with fear. 

They stayed at a distance and said to Moses,

“Speak to us yourself and we will listen.

But do not have God speak to us or we will die.”

20   Moses said to the people,

“Do not be afraid.  God has come to test you,

so that the fear of God will be with you to keep you from sinning.”

21   The people remained at a distance,

while Moses approached the thick darkness where God was.

 

Idols and Altars

22-23  Then the Lord said to Moses, 

“Tell the Israelites this:

‘You have seen for yourselves that I have spoken to you from heaven:   

Do not make any gods to be alongside me; 

do not make for yourselves gods of silver or gods of gold.

24 “‘Make an altar of earth for me

and sacrifice on it your burnt offerings and fellowship offerings,

your sheep and goats and your cattle.

Wherever I cause my name to be honored,

I will come to you and bless you. 

25 If you make an altar of stones for me,

do not build it with dressed stones,

for you will defile it if you use a tool on it. 

26 And do not go up to my altar on steps,

or your private parts may be exposed.’

 

 

BLESSINGS

Image from www.feldheim.com

Image from www.feldheim.com

There is no greater blessing than the knowledge of You, O YHWH,

and yet You bless us further with Your Torah, Your Tree of Life, our chosen Way of Life.

Further You bless us with one another—a small community of like-minded believers in Your Sinai revelation,

who hold steadfastly to Your declarations.

And more . . .You have blessed us with family —

beloved parents, spouses,

children, and extended relationships,

all loved ones—-

We thank You for each one of them,

and seek Your blessing upon them—

for protection, for provision, for Your saving grace,

 that they might seek You with all their heart

and all their mind and all their soul,

 and find You just as we have found You 

where You spoke Your words of life —

Your Sinai Revelation— 

may they find You in their lifetime.

We celebrate the life You have granted each generation of our family, 

may each of our beloved ones choose Your Life,

Your Torah Tree of Life, just as we have done.  

Amen.

L’chaim, to LIFE!

 

 

 

SHAVUOT MEAL/TORAH STUDY 

Image from Pinterest

Image from Pinterest

HAVDALAH

O YHWH, Revelator- God on Sinai,

Thank You for giving us

a glimpse of YOU

through Your revelation on Sinai.

Thank You for giving us Your Law, Your Torah,

and teaching us Your Way;

Without Your Revelation

on how humankind should live

with one another, in community,

We  tend to resort to our own chosen way,

ignorant of what is right in Your Eyes,

following our own self-centered instincts.

Thank You for being a GOD who speaks,

A LORD Who communicates Your Will

to the only creature You chose to bear Your Image.

May we be enabled, as we enable ourselves,

to bear Your Image

in a way that others will see You

in how we live our life, from day to day,

moment  by moment,

and be worthy to have our names written

in Your Book of Life.

Amen.

 

 

 

A joyful Shavuot celebration

to all who choose to obey YHWH’s Torah . . .

it is for all humanity,

Jew and Gentile.

SHABBAT SHALOM,

in behalf our Sinai 6000 Core Community, 

meet you at YHWH’s Spiritual Sinai — His TORAH!

NSB@S6K

AIbEiAIAAABDCNPkvrXuucmdeSILdmNhcmRfcGhvdG8qKGJkZTc0YTk3NmUxMGM4OTAzZjk5MDhkMjdkZDI2ODQ3OTliYmQ2MDkwAe5UdNp0lvYvCf8bjAFEJOY_fdsj

 

Image from ASK IDEAS

Image from ASK IDEAS

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

The Sinaite’s Musical Liturgy – 4th Sabbath in May

Witness of Sabbath from Pinterest

Witness of Sabbath from Pinterest

KINDLE THE SABBATH LIGHTS

 

O Source of Light, YHWH our God–

Before You created the heavenly lights,

the sun, moon and stars,

Your LIGHT shone in the dark emptiness of space.

Then You spoke LIGHT into existence

in words that reverberate from Day One of Creation

through the ages, on to our time:

“Let there be light,

and there was light.”

 

As we kindle these Sabbath lights,

we thank You for visual light

that brightens the darkness in our world,

and spiritual light that illuminates mind, heart, and spirit!

We welcome Your Queen of days, Your Holy Sabbath,

a day of rest at the culmination of our week.

Blessed are You, YHWH our God, Lord of the Sabbath,

King over our lives.  Amen.

 

 

Original Hymn: Immortal Invisible God Only Wise

Original Lyrics by Walter Chalmers Smith
Music: Welsh melody from John Roberts’s Canaidau y Cyssegr

[Original Lyrics]
1. Immortal, invisible, God only wise, 
In light inaccessible hid from our eyes,
Most blessed, most glorious, the Ancient of Days,
Almighty, victorious, thy great name we praise.
 
2. Unresting, unhasting, and silent as light,

Nor wanting, nor wasting, thou rulest in might;
Thy justice like mountains high soaring above
Thy clouds which are fountains of goodness and love.

 

 

3. To all, life thou givest, to both great and small;
In all life thou livest, the true life of all;
We blossom and flourish as leaves on the tree,
And wither and perish, but naught changeth thee.

 

 

4. Thou reignest in glory; thou dwellest in light;
Thine angels adore thee, all veiling their sight;
All laud we would render: O help us to see
‘Tis only the splendor of light hideth thee.

 

Watercolor art by Dan R., now based in Houston, TX

Watercolor art by Dan R., now based in Houston, TX

 

[ESV] Psalm 42
As a deer pants for flowing streams,
so pants my soul for you, O God.
My soul thirsts for God, for the living God.
When shall I come and appear before God?
My tears have been my food day and night,
while they say to me all the day long, “Where is your God?”
These things I remember, as I pour out my soul:
how I would go with the throng
and lead them in procession to the house of God
with glad shouts and songs of praise, a multitude keeping festival.
Why are you cast down, O my soul, and why are you in turmoil within me?
Hope in God; for I shall again praise him, my salvation and my God.
My soul is cast down within me; therefore I remember you
from the land of Jordan and of Hermon, from Mount Mizar.
Deep calls to deep at the roar of your waterfalls;
all your breakers and your waves have gone over me.
By day the LORD commands his steadfast love,
and at night his song is with me, a prayer to the God of my life,
I say to God, my rock: “Why have you forgotten me?
Why do I go mourning because of the oppression of the enemy?”
As with a deadly wound in my bones, my adversaries taunt me,
while they say to me all the day long, “Where is your God?”
Why are you cast down, O my soul, and why are you in turmoil within me?
Hope in God:  for I shall again praise him my salvation and my God.
 

 

The Sinaite’s Hymn based on Psalm 42
Revised Lyrics
Music: Composer: Marty Nystrom
 

 “As the deer panteth for the water” 

So my soul longs for You, my King;
You alone fill my heart’s desire,
Faith in You, love for You, I sing!
CHO:  You alone fill my heart, my mind;
In You alone, daily peace I find;
You alone give my life its meaning,
All my past do I leave behind!
 

I love You more than any other,
No one else matters more to me—
You’re the First, and You are the Last
the One who opens my eyes to see!
CHO:  May my deeds please You more each day,
O may my words reach You when I pray,
YAHUWAH, You’re the One and Only One
There ‘s  so much more  I can say.
 

You’re my Rock, You’re my Lord and Master,
You provide everything I need;
Manna, food for the soul and body,
On Your Torah I daily feed.
CHO:  Worship You, how I love to do,
Obeying You all my  lifetime,  too,
YAHUWAH,  how I long to see You
at the end of my life  . . .  just You!
 

 

BLESSINGS
 

Image from starneslifefamilylove.blogspot.com

Image from starneslifefamilylove.blogspot.com

 

 

Original Music:  Blest be the Tie that Binds /Revised Lyrics
 

“Blest be the tie that binds,”

In  Family, lives intertwined,
Dear father and mother
Dear sister and brother,
United in  heart, and in mind.
 

The roots in each family tree,

affect and infect all the rest;

So parents be mindful,

of values you pass on to branches

be none but the best.

 

As children grow up and mature,
The Torah they learn will  ensure–
that goodness and  righteousness,
love for the ‘other’, 
bring harmony,  joy in hearts pure.
 

As time moves along in our lives,
We age and  mature  through the years,
The stages and phases 
that show in our faces,
are memories that we hold dear!
 

 

FAMILY PRAYER
 

 LORD of our Family,
the honored Guest in our Sabbath fellowship,
LORD of the Sabbath, God on Sinai,
YHWH,
We bless Your Name,
and we ask blessings upon all present at this gathering;
We remember with fondness those who are not with us:
[Name them:  parents, spouse, siblings,
children, relatives, 
dearly departed] 
As we continue our fellowship,
partaking of this Sabbath meal,
we raise our glasses to make a toast to You,
O YHWH, the Source of all Life,
Who has granted us breath of life,
on our borrowed time while on earth, 
from our birth,  to that moment
when our breath returns to You!
To LIFE,  L’Chaim!

Image from www.chabad.org

Image from www.chabad.org

 

HAVDALAH

Original Hymn:  Breathe on Me, Breath of God/Revised Lyrics

Image from www.askideas.com

Image from www.askideas.com

 1.  Breathe on me, breath of God,

Fill me with life anew,

That I may love all that You love

and do what You tell me to.

2.  Breathe on me, breath of God,

until my heart is pure,

May Your desires be my desires,

till my path to You is sure.

3.  Breathe on me, breath of God,

May I fit Your design,

May each and every part of me

be filled with Your LIFE  divine.

4.  Breathe on me, breath of God,

Be with me till the end,

Till it’s the time for one last breath,

Forever with You, I’ll spend.

 

 

 

SHABBAT SHALOM

 

from Sinai 6000 Core Community,

 

NSB@S6K

logo-e1422801044622

 

 

The Sinaite’s Musical Liturgy – 1st Sabbath in May

Image from fbcislands.com

Image from fbcislands.com

[The Sinaite’s’ musical liturgy 

borrows music from Christian hymnody

but our lyrics revision reflect our Sinaite creed.  

Imitation is the best compliment;  

so we salute the composers  of Christian hymns;   

no doubt they were inspired by the God

they love and serve, 

just as we are inspired by the God

we have chosen to follow,

to serve and to worship:

His Name is YHWH.  —Admin1

 

—————–

 

 

 

KINDLE THE SABBATH LIGHTS

 

Erev Shabbat by Laura Bolter

Erev Shabbat by Laura Bolter

Sing hallelu YAHUWAH LORD;   sing hallelu YAHUWAH LORD;

Sing hallelu YAH, sing hallelu YAH, sing hallelu YAHUWAH LORD!

 

[Original Tune:  Bread of the World, Revised Lyrics]

 

LIGHT of the world,  dispel the darkness

that makes men blind who see You not,

There’s unbelief, there’s skepticism,

‘There is no God’, or so they say.

Your LIGHT shines bright to all believers

who see You, listen to Your Voice,

You speak Your Word through all the ages,

from Sinai to our seeking hearts.

 

 

[Original Tune:  All Glory, Praise and Honor, Revised Lyrics]

 

1.  All glory, praise and honor, 

Yahuwah God our King!

To Whom our hymns of worship 

with loud hosannas sing!

Thou art the God of Israel,

of all humanity,

Who learn Thy guidelines in Thy Word, 

believe and worship Thee.

 

 

2.  The company of angels 

keep praising Thee no end;

We join their mighty chorus, 

our love to Thee we send!

Thy chosen people Israel, 

Thy firstborn son Thou led

As fire by night and cloud by day, 

with manna they were fed.

 

3.  To Thee they brought their offerings, 

they sang their hymns of praise.

Like them we sing our praises, 

our heartfelt thanks we raise.

Thou art the Source of all our joy, 

the source of our delight.

We thank Thee for Thy Sabbath rest, 

the day when we’re most blest!

 

 

Image from biblicalpreaching.net

Image from biblicalpreaching.net

Psalm 119:  1-16

 

1 Blessed are those whose way is blameless,

who walk in the law of the Lord!

2  Blessed are those who keep his testimonies,

who seek him with their whole heart,

3  who also do no wrong, but walk in his ways!

4  You have commanded your precepts to be kept diligently.

5  Oh that my ways may be steadfast in keeping your statutes!

6 Then I shall not be put to shame,

having my eyes fixed on all your commandments.

7  I will praise you with an upright heart,

when I learn your righteous rules.

8  I will keep your statutes;do not utterly forsake me!

9  How can a young man keep his way pure?

By guarding it according to your word.

10  With my whole heart I seek you;

let me not wander from your commandments!

11  I have stored up your word in my heart,

that I might not sin against you.

12  Blessed are you, O Lord;

teach me your statutes!

13  With my lips I declare

all the rules of your mouth.

14  In the way of your testimonies I delight

as much as in all riches.

15  I will meditate on your precepts

and fix my eyes on your ways.

16  I will delight in your statutes;

I will not forget your word.

 

Image from shalomesbooksandmagazines.wordpress.com

Image from shalomesbooksandmagazines.wordpress.com

[Original Tune:  Give Thanks/Revised Lyrics]

 

Give thanks for this Sabbath day,

Give thanks for this time, we pray,

Give thanks because He’s given

all we need, day to day,

Give thanks for our family,

For spouse, for our children dear,

For special friends we’ve chosen,  

All are gifts from His Heart,

And so let us celebrate our joys,

Let us celebrate our life,

As we sip our wine, partake of this bread,

All these are sweet blessings from our God, 

What an awesome loving God, 

and Yahuwah is His Name,

Praise His Name,

Give Him thanks,

Heed His Word,

Live His Life.

 

PRAYER

Lord of Life, God of Generations,

You have blessed us with beloved family–

[Name them] parents, siblings,

spouse, children, extended kin,

and special people.

As we partake of this bread and drink this wine,

symbols of Your provisions and the joy we derive

in celebrating the Sabbath,

We remember them all

and thank You for intertwining our lives—

to LIFE, L’Chaim, Mabuhay!

Image from Shutterstock/Illustration of Shabbat candles, kiddush cup and challah.

Image from Shutterstock/Illustration of Shabbat candles, kiddush cup and challah.

Image from freewebs.com

Image from freewebs.com

[Original Tune:  Gracious Spirit, fill thou me/revised lyrics]

1.  Lord Yahuwah, lead the way, 

through each moment, each new day.

Help me navigate my way, as I study, learn, and pray,

Thank You for Your Torah life, may I live my life Your way.

 

2.  Truthful prophets of my God, how can I as truthful be?

And with wisdom speak as clear, may my Torah mind appear,

Followed with good deeds to all, may Thy Truth in me not fall.

 

3.  Torah Words inspire my soul,  make my actions bare to all.

That my life might speak as loud as the words that make me proud,

Words about Your mighty deeds, may I sow Life-giving seeds.

 

4.  God invisible to me,  I know You though I can’t see.

Your Creation testifies, Israel still verifies,

Torah is Your legacy, meant for all humanity.

Image from chongsumkim.blogspot.com

Image from chongsumkim.blogspot.com

Sig-4_16colors

logo-e1422801044622

AMEN – 6 – Prayers for Peace

peacepic

Photography by Kulbir Thandi
Must Own: AMEN – Prayers and Blessings from Around the World – 1

[First posted in 2013;   Source:  Must Own: AMEN – Prayers and Blessings from Around the World – 1

Do we need prayers for peace?  ALL THE TIME! And the human spirit constantly yearns for peace, for peaceful relationships between people, whether it be  married couples, family, friends, enemies, communities, nations!  These are samples of prayer traditions collected from all over the world. 

On the 70th anniversary of Israel’s rebirth as a nation, here’s a special prayer for the  heart of Israel, straight from the Hebrew Scriptures:  

Psalm 122:6 .

Pray for the peace of Jerusalem:

they shall prosper that love thee.

AMEN!—Admin1.]

 

————————

 

 

God is creator.

Glory be to Thee, O GOD, and praise.

Blessed is Thy Name and transcendent Thy majesty.

There is no GOD but Thee.

I turn my face to Him

Who gave being to the heavens and the earth in true devotion.

Not for me the fellowship of false worship.

Truly my worship and my obligation,

my living and my dying,

are GOD’s alone, the LORD of all being.

For there is not GOD beside HIM.

So is it laid upon me as one who is surrendered.

ISLAM:  SALAT

 

 

———————————————————

 

 

May the heads of all countries and races

be guided to understand that men of all nations

are physically and spiritually one:

physically one, because we are the descendants of common parents —

the symbolic Adam and Eve;

and spiritually one, because we are the immortal children of our Father,

bound by eternal links of brotherhood.

Let us pray in our hearts for a league of souls and a united world.

Though we may seem divided by race, creed, color, class, and political prejudices, still, as children of the One GOD

we are able in our souls to feel brotherhood and world unity.

May we work for the creation of a united world

in which every nation will be a useful part,

guided by God through man’s enlightened conscience.

In our hearts we can all learn to be free from hate and selfishness.

Let us pray for harmony among the nations,

that they march hand in hand through the gate of a fair new civilization.

 

PARAMAHANSA YOGANANDA

 

——————————————-

 

 

This we know, all things are connected,

Like the blood which unites one family,

All things are connected.

Whatever befalls the earth, befalls the sons of the earth.

Man did not weave the web of life;

He is merely a strand in it.

Whatever He does to the web,

He does to himself.

 

CHIEF SEATTLE OF THE DWAMISH TRIBE

 

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Weave for us a garment of brightness;

May the warp be the white light of morning,

May the weft be the red light of evening,

May the fringes be the falling rain,

May the border be the standing rainbow.

Thus weave for us a garment of brightness,

That we may walk fittingly where birds sing,

That we may walk fittingly where grass is green,

O our Mother the Earth,

O our Father the Sky.

 

NATIVE AMERICAN

 

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The wolf shall dwell with the lamb,

and the leopard shall lie down with the kid,

and the calf and the young lion and the fatling together,

and a little child shall lead them.

The cow and the bear shall feed;

their young ones shall lie down together;

and the lion shall eat straw like the ox.

The suckling child shall play over the hole of the asp,

and the weaned child shall put his hand on the adders den.

They shall not hurt or destroy in all My holy mountain;

for the earth shall be full of the knowledge of the LORD as the waters cover the sea.

 

ISAIAH 11:6-9

 

ABOUT US

About Us

HISTORY of SINAI 6000

 

Sinai 6000 emerged as a faith community in Tishrei 5772.

 

The year 2010 in the Gregorian calendar, was marked by a series of “awakenings” about the foundations of Christianity to which most— if not all— of our affiliates were exposed through books and articles, information never before accessed but are now readily available through the internet.

 

The result in the life of each God-seeker was a major decision each one made to start unlearning, if that was at all possible, his/her previous religious doctrinal orientation and to start learning from the Torah, the foundational Scriptures of Israel.

 

Crucial to this turnabout is the question: WHO is your God?

 

The Sinaite’s answer: YHWH.

 

 

MISSION:

 

 

To learn as much about the One True God as one can from His Original Revelation– the TORAH in the Hebrew Scriptures—and to declare Him to others who are seeking the right path that leads to Him.

 

 

VISION:

 

We share the same vision of our God YHWH: that the whole world will know Him and worship Him.

 

 

 

Psalm 67

[AST/We have substituted YHWH for ‘God’ in the original text.]

May YHWH favor us and bless us,
May He illuminate His countenance with us, Selah.
To make known Your way on earth,
among all nations Your salvation.
The peoples will acknowledge You—all of them.
Regimes will be glad and sing for joy,
because You will judge the peoples fairly
and guide with fairness the regimes on earth, Selah.
The peoples will acknowledge You, O YHWH;
the peoples will acknowledge You — all of them.
The earth will then have yielded its produce;
May YHWH, our God, bless us.
May YHWH bless us,
and may all the ends of the earth fear Him.
 

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]

 

 

————————–

 

 

 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.

The hand that rocks the cradle . . .

Image from www.sirc.org

Image from www.sirc.org

[First posted in 2014.  Mother’s Day follows Labor Day —- wonder if the holiday planners made an unconscious connection between the two? We are resurrecting this post which analyzes how women in scripture fared in their roles as individuals with free choice, as wives, as mothers, and other roles they were limited to in their culture. Not surprisingly even in patriarchal narratives, women actually had a ‘voice’ and in fact ‘led’ men (husbands, sons) in decision making. It didn’t always go well, but the record of their counterparts—male biblical figures—were just the same, all humans are prone to committing mistakes and making unwise decisions when they follow their will over and above the revealed Divine Will in any circumstance. So here’s a short list of notable women, named or unnamed.—Admin1]

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When we look for role models for mothers in the Bible, the track record for the women who are mentioned for what they did or did not do, is not all that impressive in some cases though surprising in others.  

 

Consider Eve. Not the best role model for the first woman nor the first mother.  Her name in Hebrew is Hawwah, for “living one” or “source of life”.  “Eve” is from the Greek Eua, heua.  She was named by Adam, who was given by the Creator the assignment and hence privilege of naming all the animals and all things living.  Hebrew names are usually descriptive, but to non-Hebrew speakers these descriptive words are taken for names.  Eve is rightly named, for it is she, the woman, and not the man, who is given the privilege [and later after the curse of painful childbirth] of carrying to full term and birthing humans.  

 

Having had no role model of a mother to teach her how to mother and raise her children, we see her firstborn, Cain, turn into everything a mother would not wish for — a murderer of her other son.  Was she a failure?  We keep forgetting that while one son made wrong choices, another son seemed to have done right, at least in the only act for which he is commended by the Creator HImself — a pleasing offering.  And there’s yet another son, Seth, from whom the line of other biblical figures like Noah and Abraham supposedly descended.

 

The next mother figure is practically invisible in the flood narrative, this would be Mrs. Noah.  And yet she figures in birthing and mothering three sons — Jepthah, Shem, and Ham —-who would repopulate the earth again after all mankind has been wiped out.  The wives of these sons are mentioned only in connection with their husbands, just like Noah’s wife.  

 

Mrs. Abraham —Sarai later changed to Sarah [princess]—could not be a mother without God’s help and promise to her husband Abraham.  She, like Eve, is not the best role model to emulate. For one, her faith in God’s promise to Abraham was weak, so she convinces Abraham to father a child through her maid Hagar.  Then she sends off Hagar not once, but twice.  She holds the track record, as far as we know, of birthing a son in her old age, something she herself could not believe and laughed when she first heard the promise.  To her credit, she did produce an obedient son, Isaac.  It has been speculated that her death was a result of Abraham’s willingness to sacrifice Isaac because the narrative mentions her death thereafter.

 

Rebecca is next in line.  She is sought out not by Isaac but by Abraham through his servant Eliezer.  She marries Isaac, bears him twins, and since Isaac favored the older twin Esau, she favored the younger twin Jacob.  She teaches Jacob to be conniving and together they manage to fool Isaac into giving the birthright and blessing to the younger twin. The rest of the story is recorded in Genesis 25-33.

 

The mothers of the 12 sons of Jacob get to be confusing, if one reads casually.  There are two sisters, Leah and Rachel, and two servant-concubines Bilhah [Rachel’s servant] and Zilpah [Leah’s servant]. From these four women are born the 12 sons of Israel:  

 

  • Reuben, Simeon, Levi and Judah [Leah]; 
  • Dan and Napthali [Bilhah]; 
  • Gad and Asher [Zilpah]; 
  • Issachar and Zebulun [Leah]; 
  • Joseph and Benjamin [Rachel]. 

Such an extended family from the patriarch Jacob renamed Israel shows some complicated relationship between the sisters:

  • Rachel is more loved than Leah, 
  • one is fertile while the other is barren, 
  • maidservants get into the picture due to the rivalry. 

 The effect on the next generation is not discussed, but trouble in a family such as this is to be expected.  Two last tidbits related to this generation: there is one daughter born to Jacob and Leah, this is Dinah who is raped by Hamor, the prince of Shechem.  Simeon and Levi, her brothers, exact vengeance and this has consequences on their future. Then there’s the firstborn of Jacob, Reuben, he defiled his father’s bed with Bilhah so he loses his birthright as firstborn to the sons of Joseph born in Egypt from an Egyptian mother.  Read all about it in Genesis 34 and 35.

 

By the time we get to the Moses narratives, women are key to the early years of this greatest of biblical figures.  He owes his being born first to YHWH of course, then the midwives who did not obey Pharaoh’s orders to kill all the male babies, then to Jochebed who gave him birth and put him on a floating cradle with sister Miriam watching closeby when the Egyptian princess discovers him and claims him as her adopted son.  Midwives, mother, sister, princess—save the life of the man to whom YHWH not only reveals His Name, but His plan of redemption for His yet-to-be-formed nation.  And then there’s Zipporah who connects Moses with the Midianites.

 

One more mother worth mentioning would be Naomi in the story of Ruth.  Bereft of husband and two sons who die in the land of Moab, she turns bitter and releases her daughters-in-law before returning to her homeland but one, Ruth, chooses to return with her, giving one of the best quotes for gentile proselytes:  “Your people will be my people, your God will be my God.”  Ruth marries Boaz and mothers Obed who is the ancestor of David.  

 

Next in line would be Bathsheba who became David’s wife under most sinful circumstances [adultery and murder] and yet she mothers the third king of Israel, Solomon, to whom is given the privilege of building the magnificent Temple in Jerusalem. Unfortunately, despite the wisdom Solomon is given which he himself asked for, he hardly applied that wisdom as King, having ended up with 700 wives and 300 concubines.  The united monarchy which he inherited from his father David split into two, not the greatest legacy for a supposed “wise” king.  

 

So  . . . what is the influence of women and motherhood in a patriarchal society?  Did they make a difference in the lives of Israel’s patriarchs and their progeny? Yes, of course . . . though it appears, at least in this short list of stories where some women contributed to making life complicated for their husbands and their sons, that unfortunately, some hands that rocked the cradle also rocked the boat!  

 

 

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A Sinaite’s Liturgy in Celebration of Motherhood – 2nd Sabbath in May

KINDLE THE SABBATH LIGHTS

Image from www.chagim.org.i

Image from www.chagim.org.i

O CREATOR of LIGHT,

in the meaningful family tradition of Your chosen people,

the matriarch of the family kindles the Sabbath lights and recites the blessing:

 

Blessed art Thou,

O LORD [YHWH],

our God, 

King of the Universe,

Who hast sanctified us by Thy commandments 

and hast commanded us to “kindle  the Sabbath-Lights.”

 

As children of all ages celebrate Motherhood, 

We reflect on the special role of woman

to the assigned function of childbearing: 

You designed the propagation of the human race

through the re-creation of new life

to include the participation of both male and female,

but granting woman–

 the unique privilege of hosting an embryo,

designing her to be the suitable vessel 

to carry and nurture a developing life to full maturity.

 

On ‘birthing’ day

 when the unborn is ready to leave the dark security of the womb,  

to finally see the light of day,

Mother continues to nurture her child with selfless dedication,

until it is time to release and entrust this beloved part of her ‘self’

 to the teaching of Your TORAH, Your guidance for life.,

divinely assigned to father.

Just as Your Words through Isaiah speak of Israel Your Firstborn,

a mother could say to each child that she births, 

 

15 Can a woman

forget her suckling child,

that she should not have compassion

on the son of her womb

yea, they may forget,

yet will I not forget thee.

 

Bless all Mothers, O GIVER and SOURCE of LIFE,

for their special place in the lives of children,

for providing never-ending unconditional love to them.

May children young and old,  see in Mothers 

that very IMAGE of You, a loving GOD Who cares

that each child fulfills the purpose for which he was created:

to know You first and foremost

yet freely choose his destiny,

with You or without You in it.

It is our prayer that our children will choose ‘Life’,  

YOUR LIFE,  for in doing so,  

their destiny is rightly directed and ultimately blessed,

and that brings great comfort to a mother’s heart.

 

It is our prayer that, while fathers are assigned

the primary responsibility of teaching Your WAY of Life, 

to our children and our children’s children,

that mothers will step in, if and only when—

fathers fail to dispense their duty and responsibility

that You have clearly commanded in the SHEMA,

initially to Israel, though intended for all humanity:

 

Hear, Israel, [O Nations],

YHWH our God, the LORD is one.

And you shall love YHWH your God

with all your heart

and with all your being

and with all your might.  

And these words that I charge you  today

will be upon your heart.  

And you shall rehearse them to your sons

and speak of them

when you sit in your house

and when you go on the way

and when you lie down

and when you rise.  

And you shall bind them

as a sign on your hand

and they shall be as circlets

between your eyes.  

And you shall write them

on the doorposts of your house

and in your gates.

[Deuteronomy 6:4-9]

 

 

Image from www.treatmetoafeast.com

Image from www.treatmetoafeast.com

Proverbs 31:28-31

 

Her children have risen and praised her;

her husband and he extolled her:

“Many women have amassed achievement,

but you surpassed them all.”

Grace is false, and beauty vain;

a woman who fears YHWH, 

she should be praised.

Give her the fruits of her hands;

and let her be praised in the gates

by her very own deeds. 

 

 

Image from Berean Ministries

Image from Berean Ministries

 Original Tune:  ‘O Mighty Cross’

[Revised Lyrics]

1.  Oh Lord of Life, Who knew my name

before I came to know Your Name,

Your very breath gives me my soul,

my very being, spirit, mind and heart, my all.

 

2.  Oh God of Truth, how could we know

the way through life, the way to You,

Your guiding Light, your Words of life,

have led me through the path, the only path to You.

 

3.  O loving God of humankind,

teach us Your Way, show us Your Mind,

Torah says all we need to know,

there is no other Source of Truth, it is just so.

 

4.  Immortal God, Who was and is,

from now through all eternity,

You are the First, You are the Last,

no other God is there on earth or heaven above.

 

 

 

BLESSINGS

 

Image from www.sirc.org

Image from www.sirc.org

O YHWH, 

You perfectly designed the world we live in

to sustain all life—

with sunshine and air,

water and a variety of  nourishment

and provisions for every need, 

to sustain plant, animal and human life.

 

We bless You for blessing us 

with fruit from the vine

and food from Your bountiful nature,

 ‘manna’ that nourish body, mind and spirit.

 

 In Your Tabernacle in the wilderness, 

You consistently stressed two items together:

 the Ark of the Covenant 

which contained Your revelation on two tablets of stone, 

and the table of shewbread 

which was replaced every Sabbath.

How could we miss the connection:  

that as we delight in nourishing our physical life, 

we nurture our spiritual life by ‘feeding’ on Your Torah, 

both, a joy and delight not only on Sabbath, 

but as often as we desire food for body and soul.

 

We celebrate motherhood, 

and ask for blessings upon all women  

who deliver Your gift of life to each of their children.

May they be rewarded in the desires of the heart,

that their children no matter how old, 

will find joy from the Source of all joy, 

YOU,  O YHWH, our Lord and our God,

their Creator the Source of all life.

 

Image from www.accessgenealogy.com

Image from www.accessgenealogy.com

We ask for blessings upon our family:

 

[name them] fathers, mothers,  

sons and daughters, their spouses, 

grandchildren, extended kin.

 

We thank You for the blessing of lives 

that are not only well-lived but rightly-lived,

because of a special connection with You,

Who determines length of life 

and gives meaning to our being born,

to our being,  to our existence, 

and even to the ending of our lifetime.

 

May none of us waste precious time,

 for every second and every minute is forever gone,

 and none of us know the length of life 

You have allotted each of us on this earth.

 

For the precious gift of TIME, O YHWH,  we are grateful,

and we are thankful for the time we have spent

with the woman who gave birth to us, (name your mother).

We are just as thankful for surrogate mothers (name them),

and grandmothers (name them),

and all mothers among our friends and acquaintances, 

and single mothers, by choice or circumstance,

We ask for blessings upon  ‘mother figures’ among men,

whether single or married, who have undertaken a ‘mothering role’

to children who are not their own,

to their siblings, extended kin, orphans.

 As we celebrate motherhood,  we say —-

Mabuhay, to Life, L’chaim!

 

 

SABBATH MEAL

Image from www.jewishsxm.com

Image from www.jewishsxm.com

TORAH STUDY

Image from www.wunderland.com

Image from www.wunderland.com

 

 

 

 

HAVDALAH

 

Image from www.123greetings.com

Image from www.123greetings.com

Shabbat shalom

in behalf of Sinai 6000 core community,

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