Religion and Science – "The best of enemies, the worst of friends?"

Image from www.theharbinger.org

Image from www.theharbinger.org

[First posted in 2014 under the title: The Great Partnership – 5 – Epilogue.  It was the last installment from our Category Must Read/Must Own book by Rabbi Jonathan Sacks.  Here are the previous posts:

Epilogue is the finishing touch that is just too good not to feature in one more post.  Please refer to earlier posts if you haven’t yet done so and learn much more from Rabbi Sacks by going to his website:  http://www.rabbisacks.org/.  Reformatted, images and highlights added; what we have omitted are footnotes/references; you will have to get a copy of the book to get those; this is just the ‘bait’.  If you can’t find a copy in bookstores, it is downloadable as ebook from amazon.com.Admin1.]

 

 

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Image from drvidyahattangadi.com

Image from drvidyahattangadi.com

Epilogue:  Letter to a Scientific Atheist

 

Dear Professor,

 

If you have followed me thus far, you will know I see science as one of the two greatest achievements of the human mind.  Its achievements in the past century have been frankly astonishing, revealing a universe on the macro- and micro-scale almost beyond comprehension in its intricacy, detail, variety and complexity, from the universe of a hundred billion galaxies each with a hundred billion stars, to the human body, containing a hundred trillion cells each with a double copy of the human genome with 3.1 billion letters, each enough, if transcribed, to fill a sizeable library of five thousand books.

 

How right Newton was when he said, ‘I do not know what I may appear to the world, but to myself I seem to have been only like a boy playing on the sea-shore, and diverting myself in now and then finding a smoother pebble or a prettier shell than ordinary, whilst the great ocean of truth lay all undiscovered before me.’  We have seen a little more of the ocean since then, and we have only the dimmest intuition of what we might still discover as Newtons’ heirs voyage yet further across strange seas of thought.

 

Science fulfills three functions that I see as central to the Abrahamic faith.  It diminishes human ignorance.  It increases human power.  and it exemplifies the fact that we are in God’s image.  God wants us to know and understand.  He wants us to exercise responsible freedom.  And he wants us to use the intellectual gifts he gave us.  These are not reasons why scientists should become religious.  They are reasons why religious people should respect scientists.

 

Yet with knowledge comes power, and with power, responsibility; and we know enough from history to be reasonably sure that responsibility is best exercised when diffused, when thoughtful minds from different disciplines and perspectives engage in respectful conversation as to how best to navigate our way as we travel to that one remaining undiscovered country called the future unknown because unknowable, unknowable because we who make it are free.

 

My aim in writing this book has not been to convince you.  As a Jew I do not believe we are called on to convert anyone.  Besides which I come from a religious tradition whose canonical texts are all anthologies of arguments, and which coined the phrase ‘arguments for the sake of heaven’.  I recall the public conversation I had with the secular Israeli novelist Amos Oz,  who began by saying, ‘I’m not sure I’m going to agree with Rabbi Sacks about everything –but then, on most things I don’t agree with myself.’  (The other typically Jewish remark I cherish is Sidney Morganbesser’s.  In reply to the theological question, ‘Why is there something rather than nothing?’ he said, ‘And if there were nothing, you’d also complain!’)

 

I have tried simply to show you that religious faith is not absurd, that it does not involve suspension of our critical faculties, that it does not and should not seek to inhibit free pursuit of science, that it does not rest on contradiction and paradox, that it does not force us to accept suffering as God’s will for the world, and that it does not ask us to believe six impossible things before breakfast.  It involves a mode of engagement with the world significantly different from that of science, but not incompatible with it.  Least of all does it presume to tell scientists when they are right and when they are wrong.  That is a scientific enterprise to be performed by scientific methodologies.

 

I do not regard atheism as an untenable stance towards the world.  I have known some of the great atheists of our time, admired them deeply, and — as I hope I have shown in one or two places in this book — learned much from them, not least about religion itself.  We disagreed, but I would not wish to live in a world in which people did not disagree.  Disagreement is how knowledge grows.  Living with disagreement is how we grow.

 

Yet I am troubled by the rancour that has entered the debate in recent years.  We seem to have moved into an era of extreme and angry voices, of vituperative atheists and militant religious extremists, of people who deny the world of the spirit and who challenge our very freedom, a clash of fundamentalisms that share a refusal to listen openly and intelligently to voices opposed to their own.  If carried further, the result will be a world in which, to take Matthew Arnold’s words from ‘Dover Beach’, there is

neither joy, nor love, nor light

Nor certitude, nor peace, nor help for pain;

And we are here as on a darkling plain

Swept with confused alarms of struggle and flight,

Where ignorant armies clash by night.

 

We can do better than that, even if there are fundamentals on which we disagree.

 
Image from gjismyp.wordpress.com

Image from gjismyp.wordpress.com

We are at the end of one chapter of history and are beginning to write the next with no idea of what kind of chapter it will be.  We know this, that the end of the Cold War did not bring about the global spread of liberal democracy, the conquest of tyranny in the name of human rights, a greater equality within and between societies, or greater tolerance between conflicting views of the world.

 

The new communications technologies are changing almost everything we knew and not so long ago took for granted:  the nation state, the idea of national cultures, the nature of politics and economics, the character of war and the fragility of peace, the structure of human groups, even, possibly, the architecture of the human brain.  We suffer from information overload and attention deficit.  The internet makes it hard for us to distinguish between truth and rumour and is the most effective disseminator of paranoia and hatred yet invented.

 

The challenges humanity faces in the twenty-first century are legion:  climate change, the destruction of biodiversity, the responsible use of bio- and nano-technology, the extreme vulnerability of the international economy, and the power of spectacular acts of terror to achieve that most sought-after commodity in an information-saturated age: the attention of the eyes of the world.  At almost every point, seemingly, we have moved from stable equilibrium to those complex conditions charged by chaos theory, where the beating of a butterfly’s wings can set in motion a tsunami.

 

We are in a desecularising and destabilising age.  That bring fear and few things are worse than the politics of fear.  It creates a sense of victimhood and a willingness to demonise those with and from whom we defer.  One of its symptoms is the new secularism, so much angrier and intolerant than the old.  Another is the new religiosity that claims to be, but is not, a continuation of the old.  The best thing to do in such circumstances is for moderates of all sides to seek and find common ground.

 

In an age of fear, moderation is hard to find and harder to sustain.  Who wants to listen to a nuanced argument, when what we want is someone to relieve us from the burden of thought and convince us that we were right all along?  So people mock.  They blame.  They caricature.  They demonise.  In an age of anxiety few can hear the still small voice that the Bible tells us is the voice of God.

 

Hence Sam Harris’s argument, mentioned in chapter 13, that the real villains are the religious moderates.  Get rid of the moderates, the argument goes, and we can have a fair fight:  scientific atheists versus religious Neanderthals.  If Sam Harris knew history, he would know the result of such encounters.  the barbarians win.  They always do.

 

You do not have to be an atheist to fear the new religiosity.  I am a believer, and I too fear it.  I fear angry people who invoke God and religion to justify their anger at a world that fails to meet their expectations.  I fear religion when it leads believers to brand as heretics anyone whose understanding transcends theirs; when it becomes adversarial, turning its followers against the world instead of trying to mend the world; when it becomes involved in partisan politics, dividing where it ought to unite; and when it leads to tyrannical or totalitarian societies where barbaric punishments are exacted and human rights denied.

 

There is a difference between righteousness and self-righteousness.  The righteous are humble, the slef-righteous are proud.  The righteous understand doubt, the self-righteous only certainty.  The righteous see the good in people, the self-righteous only the bad.  The righteous leave you feeling enlarged, the self-righteous make you feel small.  It is easy enough to befriend the former and avoid the latter.

 

We need moderates, that is, people who understand that there can be a clash of right and right, not just right and wrong.  We need people capable of understanding cognitive pluralism, that is, that there is more than one way of looking at the world.  We need people who can listen to views not their own without feeling threatened.  We need people with humility.

 

That is why I ask for your understanding.  E.O. Wilson wrote his lovely little book about nature conservation.  The Creation, as a series of open letters to a Southern Baptist pastor.  He explains why:

 

Because religion and science are the two most powerful forces in the world today, including especially the United States.  If religion and science could be united on the common ground of biological conservation, the problem would soon be solved.

 

Speaking personally, I do not think any real problems are soon solved.  The way is too long and hard.  But the only way is together.  Religion and science, believer and sceptic, agnostic and atheist.  For whatever our view of God, our humanity is at stake, and our future, and how that will affect our grandchildren not yet born.

 

Religion and science share much, but in particular they share faith.  This sounds odd.  After all, Richard Dawkins is on record as saying;

 

I think a case can be made that faith, the principled vice of any religion, is one of the world’s greatest evils, comparable to the smallpox virus but harder to eradicate.  Faith is a great cop out.

 

But that cannot be the full story.  Listen to Max Planck, the Nobel Prize-winning physicist and founder of quantum theory:

 

Anybody who has been seriously engaged in scientific work of any kind realises that over the entrance to the gates of the Temple of science are written the words:  Ye must have faith.  It is a quality which the scientist cannot dispense with.

 

Next, Einstein:

 

But science can only be created by those who are thoroughly imbued with the aspiration toward truth and understanding.  This source of feeling, however, springs from the sphere of religion.  To this there also belongs the faith in the possibility that the regulations valid for the world of existence are rational, that is, comprehensible reason.  I cannot conceive of a genuine scientist without that profound faith.  The situation may be expressed by an image, science without religion is lame, religion without science is blind.

Image from www.discoveringgodinscience.com

Image from www.discoveringgodinscience.com

 

 

 

Finally, this by Friedrich Nietzsche:

 

It is still a metaphysical faith upon which our faith in science rests — that even we seekers after knowledge today, we godless anti-metaphysicians, still take our fire,  too, from the flame lit by the faith that is thousands of years old, that Christian faith which was also the faith of Plato, that God is the truth, that truth is divine.

 
Image from quotes.lifehack.org

Image from quotes.lifehack.org

Clearly Dawkins means something different by ‘faith’ than do the others.  He thinks of faith as a refusal to ask questions.  But faith, as Planck, Einstein and Nietzsche understood it is the opposite:  the courage and principled determination to go on asking questions despite the fact that there is no easy or immediate answer.

 

Faith has driven the scientific and religious imaginations along their different paths, but with the same basic refusal to rest content with what we know — with the same non-rational but not irrational willingness to travel to an unknown destination beyond the visible horizon, to attempt dimly to discern an order beneath the seeming chaos, to hear the music beneath the noise.

 

It is that courage to begin a journey not knowing where it will lead but confident that it will lead somewhere, that there really is a destination, an order, a faint but genuine melody, that is the faith not only of the scientist but of Abraham himself who heard a voice telling him to leave his land, his birthplace and his father’s house, and did so confident that the voice was not an illusion and the destination not a no-man’s-land.

 

That restless faith, that sacred discontent, that principled iconoclasm, has driven the West to achieve what it has achieved.  It is not a cultural universal.  Many cultures, having achieved order, have not sought to move ever forwards.  The truth is that most religious expressions in the history of humanity have been intensely conservative — here we stand and here we stay.  God or the gods have been seen as endorsing the inevitability of the status quo.

 

The God of Abraham, the voice of the world-that-is-not-yet-but-ought-to-be, the God whose name (‘I will be what I will be’) means the unknowability of the future in a world constituted by freedom, is what scientists call a singularity, a one-off, a unique and world-changing event.  And we, whether we are religious or not, are in some sense his heirs.

 

What might that mean for us, here, now?  Oddly enough, the Bible tells us very little about Abraham that might explain why he was chosen for the mission he undertook.  It does not call him righteous, as it does in the case of Noah.  It does not portray him as a miracle worker, as it does Moses.  The only place in the Bible to explain why Abraham was chosen is this verse:

 

For I have chosen him, so that he will direct his children and his household after him to keep the way of the Lord by doing what is right and just.

 

This tells us three things about what it is to be an heir of Abraham.

 
  • First, it means that we are the guardians of our children’s future.  We must ensure that they have a world to inherit.  Today that means political, economic and environmental sustainability.
  • Second education — directing our children and our household after us — is a sacred task.  Teach children to love, and they will have hope.  Teach them ot hate, and they will have only anger and the desire for revenge.  Thinking about the past leads to war.  Thinking about the future helps to make peace.
  • Third, how do you keep the way of the Lord?  By doing what is right and just.  That is the test.  If religious people do what is right and just, they are keeping the way.  If they do not, then somehow they have lost their way.
 

I think we can agree on those principles whether we believe in the Lord or not.

 

 

In 1779 the German Enlightenment philosopher and art critic Gotthold Lessing wrote a play, Nathan the Wise, that neatly encapsulates the problem of religious conflict and its solution in a way that might be extended to the argument between believer and sceptic.

 

 

The play is set up in the twelfth century in the Middle East.  The Muslim Sultan Saladin has won a victory against the Crusaders, but it has cost him a great deal and there is an uneasy truce in Jerusalem, with Muslims, Christians and Jews all eyeing one another with suspicion.

 

 

Image from en.wikipedia.org

Image from en.wikipedia.org

He summons Nathan, a leading Jewish merchant, known for his wisdom.  ‘Your reputation for wisdom is great,’ says the Sultan.  ‘The great religions, Judaism, Christianity and Islam, all contradict one another.  They cannot all be true.  Tell me then, which is best?’

 

 

Nathan recognises the trap immediately.  If he says Judaism, he insults the Sultan.  If he says Islam, he denies his own faith.  If he says Christianity, he offends both.  Nathan therefore does the Jewish thing.  He tells a story.

 

 

There was once, he says, a man who possessed a priceless ring.  Its stone was a lustrous opal that refracted light into a hundred colours.  But it also had the mysterious power to make its wearer beloved of God and of man.  The man passed the ring on to his most cherished son, and so it was handed down, generation after generation.

 

 

Finally it was inherited by a man who had three sons, each of whom he loved equally.  Unable to choose between them, he secretly commissioned a jeweller to make to exact copies of the ring.  On this deathbed, he blessed each son separately, and gave each a ring.  Each son believed that he alone possessed the authentic ring.

 

 

The man died.  After the funeral, one after the other of the sons claimed to be the one to whom their father had entrusted his most precious possession, the ring.  There seemed to be no way of resolving the argument because no one could tell which was the original ring.  All three were indistinguishable.

 

 

Eventually they brought the case before a judge, who heard the story and the history, and examined the rings.  ‘The authentic ring, said the judge in his verdict, ‘had the power to make its wearer beloved of God and of man.  There is therefore only one way each of you will know whether you have the genuine ring, and that is so to act as to become beloved of God and of man.

 

 

‘Bravo,’ said the Sultan to Nathan, and let him go in peace.

 

 

Too simple, perhaps, too innocent an example of Enlightenment optimism.  But it contains a truth.  For if we believe in the God of Abraham, we know we cannot fully know God.  We can merely see the effects of his acts.  And that surely is true of the children of Abraham.  We can see how, given their beliefs, people behave.

 

 

If they love and forgive, if they are open to others, if they respect their opponents as well as honouring their fellow believers, if they work for a better world by becoming guardians of the heritages of nature and culture, if they care about the future our grandchildren will inherit but we will not live to see, then they will be beloved of their fellow humans, and they will become true ambassadors of the God who loves those who perform acts of love.

 

 

That surely is an act of faith on which religion and science can agree.

 

Let us join hands and build a more hopeful future.

 

Image from www.zougla.gr

Image from www.zougla.gr

The Sinaite’s Musical Liturgy – 3rd Sabbath in July

song-of-praise_3_10_367_227[For our musical liturgy,  we have no original music of our own so we borrow from Christian Hymnody and rewrite the lyrics unless the original reflects our Sinaite Creed.  

We thank Christian composers for their music, inspired no doubt by their love for God.  If you are not familiar with the music, just recite the liturgy like prayers in verse.  Have a peaceful and joyful Sabbath!—Admin1]

 

 

 

Kindle the Sabbath Lights

 

the-sabbath-of-the-lord-11-638

 

 

 

Original Tune: “WHEN MORNING GILDS THE SKY”
German Hymn/Composer Unknown, 1744

[Revised Lyrics]

 

As darkness overpowers,

and sun fades from our sight,

Prepare to face the night,

Bring out the Sabbath lights,

And kindle those two lights,

The Queen of Days is nigh!

 

With family and friends,

Celebrate the six-day’s end,

A day Yahuwah blest!

When He Himself did rest,

This Seventh Day attests,

Our Sabbath LORD is nigh!

 

So celebrate with joy

as we share this bread and wine,

a  feast for us to dine!

We thank the Lord of Hosts,

Prepare to make a toast,

And say, “to life”, “l’chaim!”

 

The Word of God, His Torah,

completes our Sabbath Rest,

all week we long and yearn,

for lessons that we learn,

as we each take our turn,

To praise YAHUWAH’s Name!

 

Image from David Hunter | Set Apart Is Your Name YHWH Vol. 2

Image from David Hunter | Set Apart Is Your Name YHWH Vol. 2

 

 

Original Tune: REJOICE THE LORD IS KING

Charles Wesley, 1744

[Revised Lyrics]

 

Rejoice, our GOD is KING! YAHUWAH is His Name,
The God of Truth and Love, on Sinai Mount He came,

In wondrous sound,

With light and thunder did He speak on holy ground.

 

 

On tablets made of stone, His Fingers etched His Way,

to rule and regulate our lives from day to day;

TORAH, His ‘ Way’—if God is Lord and King, 

therefore, we must obey!

 

He is the God of Life, this truth we can’t deny:
The keys of life and death are in His Hands on high;

He gave us breath,

He gives us time on earth to live onto our death.

 

He is the God of Love, He is the God of Grace;

With Mercy and Compassion for the human race,

Return His love,

Just live your life submitting to His Rule above.

 

His Reign is over all His Universe and Man,

Creation follows His Design, and so should man—

Declare His Name!

Our God Who changes not,  forever is the same.

 

[ESV] Psalm 90

[Please Note:  Sinaites regard the Psalms

as the words of man and not the words of God;

we include them in our Liturgy

for exposure to Israel’s prayer tradition.]

A Prayer of Moses, the Man of God

1   Lord, You have been our dwelling place in all generations; 

2  Before the mountains were brought forth,

or ever you had formed the earth and the world,

from everlasting to everlasting you are God.

3  You return man to dust

and say “Return, O children of man!”

4  For a thousand years in your sight

are but as yesterday when it is past,

or as a watch in the night.

5  You sweep them away as with a flood; they are like a dream,

like grass that is renewed in the morning:

6   in the morning it flourishes and is renewed:

in the evening it fades and withers.

7   For we are brought to an end by your anger,

by your wrath we are dismayed.

8  You have set our iniquities before You,

our secret sins in the light of your presence.

9  For all our days pass away under your wrath;

we bring our years to an end like a sigh.

10  The years of our life are seventy,

or even by reason of strength eighty;

yet their span is but toil and trouble;

they are soon gone, and we fly away.

11  Who considers the power of your anger,

and your wrath according to the fear of you?

12  So teach us to number our days

that we may get a heart of wisdom.

13  Return, O LORD!  How long?

Have pity on your servants!

14  Satisfy us in the morning with your steadfast love,

that we may rejoice an be glad all our days.

15  Gladden us according to the days You afflicted us, the years when we saw evil.

16 Make us glad for as many days as you have afflicted us,

and for as many years as we have seen evil.

17  Let your work be shown to your servants,

and your glorious power to their children.

 

Image from LeaderImpact

Image from LeaderImpact

Original Tune:  Give Thanks

Henry Smith, 1978

[Revised Lyrics]

Give thanks for this Sabbath day,

Give thanks,  for His Torah Way,

Give thanks for He has spoken long ago,  for all time;

Give thanks for our family,

for friendship and harmony,

for graces freely given,

every day, day to day . . .

CHO:  

Give back all we can give as we obey,

It’s not enough for us to say,

‘We love You Lord’ and yet we live . . . our own way,

This God Whom we can’t  see, Whom we can’t feel ,

and yet we know that He is Real,

His Voice we hear, His Words we heed . . .

 as we sing . . . heartfelt thanks,

to our LORD . . .YAHUWAH!

 

 

[Pray for your loved ones:

parents, siblings, spouse, children, in-laws,

extended kin, friends, special people in your life.]


slide_1

HAVDALAH

 

“Sun of my Soul”

John Keble

1820

[Revised Lyrics]

 

LIGHT of the world ere the sun did appear,

Dispel our darkness wherever You’re near,
Just as our vision sees through night,
So does our mind in learning aright.

 

Far have we journeyed from where we’ve begun;

Long in life’s pilgrimage, much we’ve undone;

Striving for Truth, misled were we,

On the Right Path we needed to be.

 

How could humanity live their own way,

Not knowing there is a God Who did say:

10 Words and more, this God of Grace,

Revealed His Will for all human race.

 

How do we love back a God such as You?

Know how to serve You and know what to do?

Study and learn and live Your Way,

Lead others to You as we obey!

 

 

d14dd829c8e1adb535a59fd112a88a6b--torah-quotes-shabbat-shalom-images

 

 

 

 

Sig-4_16colors

 

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Oy Searchers, need help? – July 2017

Image from www.stlucasucc.org

Image from www.stlucasucc.org

Welcome to Sinai 6000! Please click Site Map  which lists over 1000 posts under specific categories.  If none of the articles address your particular question/topic, leave a message and we will answer it in this blog, or write us at: sinai6000@gmail.com.

 

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07/15/17 – Sinai 6000 is grateful to WORDPRESS which has been our internet ‘host’; they sent us an anniversary greeting:

 

3 Year Anniversary Achievement
 Happy Anniversary with WordPress.com!
You registered on WordPress.com 3 years ago.
Thanks for flying with us.
Keep up the good blogging.

 

07/15/17 – “image of torah” – The illustrative images we use in this website are available in the worldwide-web, so if the searcher landed here (among other sites), it is because we have used many images for the Torah of YHWH, not only in our Sabbath Liturgy but for specific articles focusing or citing the Torah.  We always include the original source of the image, giving credit where due.  Our visitors are welcome to copy-paste those images as long as the original source is included, again, giving due credit is ‘Torah’.

 

 

07/14/17 –  “the literary meaning of tob that jephthah flee to” [sic] –  The Bible as “Literature” – 3 – Jephthah as “literary art”

 

 

07/10/17 “sacrifice in temple judaism” 

 

 

07/09/17 – Some clicks by visitors are images we use; here are recents:

 

 

07/08/17 –  noahide-ancient-path.co.uk” – Here’s a post that mentions the Noachide movement: 

 

 

07/04/17 – We wish USA a joyful and peaceful celebration of their INDEPENDENCE DAY.  Some Sinaites are “dual citizens” with family based there. FYI: July 4 is now observed as US-RP Friendship Day, though it used to be RP’s Independence Day as well until that observance was moved to the more appropriate date June 12.

 

Image from fotolio.com

Image from fotolio.com

A bit of Trivia:   “God bless America!” is a beautiful hymn composed by the Jewish-American Irving Berlin, and guess what else?

 

“Heaven Watch The Philippines”

Irving Berlin song dedicated to Gen. Douglas C. MacArthur

Legendary American composer Irving Berlin wrote a song in 1945 dedicated to Gen. Douglas C. MacArthur in commemoration of his liberation of the Philippines. The song is Heaven Watch The Philippines, the notes and lyrics of which are reproduced in this column.

The music sheet is illustrated by boy scouts while camping, drawn by no less than Fernando Amorsolo, later (in the ‘70s) named National Artist for Painting. The Boys Scouts of the Philippines owns the local copyright to the song.

 

The lyrics of the song:

Heaven watch the Philippines.

Keep her safe from harm.

Guard her sons and their precious ones

In the city and on the farm.

Friendly with America.

Let her always be.

Heaven watch the Philippines.

And keep her forever free. —RKC

 

Source:  http://www.philstar.com/entertainment/565015/heaven-watch-philippines-irving-berlin-song-dedicated-gen-douglas-c-macarthur

 

Anybody interested in the original manuscript with Berlins’ signature: http://www.ebay.com/itm/IRVING-BERLIN-AUTOGRAPH-MANUSCRIPT-HEAVEN-WATCH-THE-PHILIPPINES-/330356844557

 

 

07/03/17 – Scrolling down Google’s Cluster Maps daily registry of visitors to this website is heartening to us, Sinaites, who can barely convince one more soul, whether family, friend or foe, to give us a hearing. There are people all over the world checking out what this website has to offer and in fact, some from our own country, specifically from Mariveles, RP seem to be downloading articles nonstop, day after day.  We sure would like to hear from them and from anybody who cares to drop us a line!  Please connect with us at:  sinai6000@gmail.com

 

Image from LoveThisPic

Image from LoveThisPic

07/01/17 – From the trend we’ve observed this year 2017, less and less search terms land on this website.  Whether that is good or not, and what it means, we don’t know.  All we care about is that our web visitors find the articles that address their queries and topics of interest.  We will continue this ‘search aid’ even if it turns out to be a blog and a way of updating, communicating with our web visitors, those one-time drop-ins as well as frequently-returning ones.

Image from Pinterest

Image from Pinterest

And while we’re waiting,  here’s to the month of 7th month, July,  a birthday month for two of our Sinaites (a septagenarian and an octogenarian);

we wish them —

♥many more birthdays to celebrate on earth;

♥ more time to serve our awesome God YAHUWAH;

♥more opportunities to declare His Name to ardent Truth-seekers who cross their paths, as divinely arranged.

Speaking of birthdays, here’s a poser:

Should we celebrate birthdays of the deceased?

 Isn’t a birthday an annual count-up to years measuring length of life on earth?  

We normally post in personal profiles of those no longer living:  beginning and end, date of birth and death.  Once gone, there are no more birthdays to celebrate and in fact, the final glimpse of the deceased is what is etched in our memory, they don’t age anymore, their physical image is frozen at the time of their death.

Birthday celebrations of the dearly departed abound in different cultures.  The common thread that runs through them is the sense of sentimental connection of the living with their dead;  the ardent wish that the memory of the person would continue through generations and so understandably, celebrations even in the absence of the honoree serve that purpose.

It is so with national heroes who are honored on both their birth and death anniversaries.  It is much the same with persons of significance to particular groups — founders of establishments, club leaders, pioneers of movements, etc.  Noticeably, it is more understandable that the death anniversary is the date celebrated, for the individual has not accomplished anything at birth but would have a profile to speak of, whether good or bad, at the end of life.  So why celebrate a dead person’s birthday?  Well, why not?

While attending the death anniversary of a VIP who was given the title of  “Chairman for Life” because he contributed much to the growth and expansion of a country club,  the celebration included a worship service where prayers for the deceased constantly focused on “the repose of the soul of the dearly departed” and that “eternal rest be granted unto him”.  Catholics believe in a place called ‘purgatory’ where the living can pray them out of that spiritual halfway house, until they’re purified enough  to merit entry to heaven.

Hell is a permanent destination in the Christian belief system for the evil and unsaved, so no amount of praying can get a condemned soul out of that place of “eternal fire” where no soul ever gets burned up!  There is no prayer wasted for those in hell;  and actually no ‘prayor’ presumes the deceased is in hell or, for that matter,  in heaven,  so the ‘safe’ presumption is that the soul is ‘on the way’ to eternal bliss regardless of how many birthdays on earth he/she has already missed celebrating.  As to the title “Chairman for Life”, chew on that for now.

Is such thinking biblical?  Perhaps the question should be:  What does the Revelator on Sinai say in the Torah about ‘life after death’?

Here’s a post that clarifies the Sinaite’s position:

Q: What is the Sinaite view on what happens to us after we die?

Hoy Searchers, need help? – July 2017

Image from www.stlucasucc.org

Image from www.stlucasucc.org

Welcome to Sinai 6000! Please click Site Map  which lists over 1000 posts under specific categories.  If none of the articles address your particular question/topic, leave a message and we will answer it in this blog, or write us at: sinai6000@gmail.com.

 

—————————–

apology07/28/17 – We apologize for the difficulty some of our web-visitors might have encountered in the past week; our website has been hit by a virus.  Not only was it inaccessible for a few days,  the virus wiped out all articles posted since the last entry here — July 15, 2017.   We continue to have difficulty in formatting, uploading images and music; hence, we did not feature a Musical Liturgy this Sabbath.  Hopefully we can get back to normal soon; meanwhile please bear with us.

 

07/15/17 – Sinai 6000 is grateful to WORDPRESS which has been our internet ‘host’; they sent us an anniversary greeting:

 

3 Year Anniversary Achievement
 Happy Anniversary with WordPress.com!
You registered on WordPress.com 3 years ago.
Thanks for flying with us.
Keep up the good blogging.

 

07/15/17 – “image of torah” – The illustrative images we use in this website are available in the worldwide-web, so if the searcher landed here (among other sites), it is because we have used many images for the Torah of YHWH, not only in our Sabbath Liturgy but for specific articles focusing or citing the Torah.  We always include the original source of the image, giving credit where due.  Our visitors are welcome to copy-paste those images as long as the original source is included, again, giving due credit is ‘Torah’.

 

 

07/14/17 –  “the literary meaning of tob that jephthah flee to” [sic] –  The Bible as “Literature” – 3 – Jephthah as “literary art”

 

 

07/10/17 “sacrifice in temple judaism” 

 

 

07/09/17 – Some clicks by visitors are images we use; here are recents:

 

 

07/08/17 –  noahide-ancient-path.co.uk” – Here’s a post that mentions the Noachide movement: 

 

 

07/04/17 – We wish USA a joyful and peaceful celebration of their INDEPENDENCE DAY.  Some Sinaites are “dual citizens” with family based there. FYI: July 4 is now observed as US-RP Friendship Day, though it used to be RP’s Independence Day as well until that observance was moved to the more appropriate date June 12.

 

Image from fotolio.com

Image from fotolio.com

A bit of Trivia:   “God bless America!” is a beautiful hymn composed by the Jewish-American Irving Berlin, and guess what else?

 

“Heaven Watch The Philippines”

Irving Berlin song dedicated to Gen. Douglas C. MacArthur

Legendary American composer Irving Berlin wrote a song in 1945 dedicated to Gen. Douglas C. MacArthur in commemoration of his liberation of the Philippines. The song is Heaven Watch The Philippines, the notes and lyrics of which are reproduced in this column.

The music sheet is illustrated by boy scouts while camping, drawn by no less than Fernando Amorsolo, later (in the ‘70s) named National Artist for Painting. The Boys Scouts of the Philippines owns the local copyright to the song.

 

The lyrics of the song:

Heaven watch the Philippines.

Keep her safe from harm.

Guard her sons and their precious ones

In the city and on the farm.

Friendly with America.

Let her always be.

Heaven watch the Philippines.

And keep her forever free. —RKC

 

Source:  http://www.philstar.com/entertainment/565015/heaven-watch-philippines-irving-berlin-song-dedicated-gen-douglas-c-macarthur

 

Anybody interested in the original manuscript with Berlins’ signature: http://www.ebay.com/itm/IRVING-BERLIN-AUTOGRAPH-MANUSCRIPT-HEAVEN-WATCH-THE-PHILIPPINES-/330356844557

 

 

07/03/17 – Scrolling down Google’s Cluster Maps daily registry of visitors to this website is heartening to us, Sinaites, who can barely convince one more soul, whether family, friend or foe, to give us a hearing. There are people all over the world checking out what this website has to offer and in fact, some from our own country, specifically from Mariveles, RP seem to be downloading articles nonstop, day after day.  We sure would like to hear from them and from anybody who cares to drop us a line!  Please connect with us at:  sinai6000@gmail.com

 

Image from LoveThisPic

Image from LoveThisPic

07/01/17 – From the trend we’ve observed this year 2017, less and less search terms land on this website.  Whether that is good or not, and what it means, we don’t know.  All we care about is that our web visitors find the articles that address their queries and topics of interest.  We will continue this ‘search aid’ even if it turns out to be a blog and a way of updating, communicating with our web visitors, those one-time drop-ins as well as frequently-returning ones.

Image from Pinterest

Image from Pinterest

And while we’re waiting,  here’s to the month of 7th month, July,  a birthday month for two of our Sinaites (a septagenarian and an octogenarian);

we wish them —

♥many more birthdays to celebrate on earth;

♥ more time to serve our awesome God YAHUWAH;

♥more opportunities to declare His Name to ardent Truth-seekers who cross their paths, as divinely arranged.

Speaking of birthdays, here’s a poser:

Should we celebrate birthdays of the deceased?

 Isn’t a birthday an annual count-up to years measuring length of life on earth?  

We normally post in personal profiles of those no longer living:  beginning and end, date of birth and death.  Once gone, there are no more birthdays to celebrate and in fact, the final glimpse of the deceased is what is etched in our memory, they don’t age anymore, their physical image is frozen at the time of their death.

Birthday celebrations of the dearly departed abound in different cultures.  The common thread that runs through them is the sense of sentimental connection of the living with their dead;  the ardent wish that the memory of the person would continue through generations and so understandably, celebrations even in the absence of the honoree serve that purpose.

It is so with national heroes who are honored on both their birth and death anniversaries.  It is much the same with persons of significance to particular groups — founders of establishments, club leaders, pioneers of movements, etc.  Noticeably, it is more understandable that the death anniversary is the date celebrated, for the individual has not accomplished anything at birth but would have a profile to speak of, whether good or bad, at the end of life.  So why celebrate a dead person’s birthday?  Well, why not?

While attending the death anniversary of a VIP who was given the title of  “Chairman for Life” because he contributed much to the growth and expansion of a country club,  the celebration included a worship service where prayers for the deceased constantly focused on “the repose of the soul of the dearly departed” and that “eternal rest be granted unto him”.  Catholics believe in a place called ‘purgatory’ where the living can pray them out of that spiritual halfway house, until they’re purified enough  to merit entry to heaven.

Hell is a permanent destination in the Christian belief system for the evil and unsaved, so no amount of praying can get a condemned soul out of that place of “eternal fire” where no soul ever gets burned up!  There is no prayer wasted for those in hell;  and actually no ‘prayor’ presumes the deceased is in hell or, for that matter,  in heaven,  so the ‘safe’ presumption is that the soul is ‘on the way’ to eternal bliss regardless of how many birthdays on earth he/she has already missed celebrating.  As to the title “Chairman for Life”, chew on that for now.

Is such thinking biblical?  Perhaps the question should be:  What does the Revelator on Sinai say in the Torah about ‘life after death’?

Here’s a post that clarifies the Sinaite’s position:

Q: What is the Sinaite view on what happens to us after we die?

The Sinaite’s Musical Liturgy – 1st Sabbath of July

Image from sayingimages.com

Image from sayingimages.com

[Every other Sabbath,

we sing our Liturgy;

we have no original music of or own;

our roots are Christian

and we are familiar with their hymnody,

 so we borrow their music.  

When the lyrics reflect our belief system,

we leave them as originally written;

otherwise, we make minor revisions,

if not do a total rewrite,

reflecting the Sinaite’s Creed.  

Needless to say,

but we’ll say it anyway,

we are grateful to Christian composers

for their music. —Admin1]

 

———————-

 

Kindle the Sabbath Lights

 

Immortal, Invisible God,

Blessed are You, the Source of Light!

As we kindle our Sabbath candles

on the eve of Your Holy Day,

We thank You for being the source of our spiritual illumination.

Your blessed Torah, Your instructions for life, Your guidelines for living,

lights up our pathway in our life’s journey.

Blessed are You, YHWH our God,

King of the Universe,

Who has blessed us with Your Torah

for knowledge, understanding and wisdom,

if we would partake of its fruit!

Blessed are You, YHWH, our God,

King of the universe,

true Lord of the Sabbath,

Who has gifted us with the Queen of days, 

Your set-apart Sabbath, our day of rest.

 

Image from www.pinterest.com

Image from www.pinterest.com

 

 

[O God our Help in Ages Past,

Music by Isaac Watts/Lyrics by William Croft

Original Lyrics]

1. O God, our help in ages past,
our hope for years to come,
our shelter from the stormy blast,
and our eternal home.

 

2. Before the hills in order stood,
or earth received her frame,
from everlasting, thou art God,
to endless years the same.

 

3. A thousand ages, in thy sight,
are like an evening gone;
short as the watch that ends the night,
before the rising sun.

 

4. Time, like an ever rolling stream,
bears all who breathe away;
they fly forgotten, as a dream
dies at the opening day.

 

5. O God, our help in ages past,
our hope for years to come;
be thou our guide while life shall last,
and our eternal home.

Image from vimeo

Image from vimeo

 

 

Praise the Lord Ye Heavens Adore Him,

Music by Prince Albert (Gotha)

[Revised Lyrics to reflect the Sinaite’s Creed]

 Praise YAHUWAH, magnify His Name;
Praise Him, angels, in the heights;
Sun and moon, shine bright, make known His Fame,
Sparkle all ye stars at night;
Listen to His voice thunder to our days,

He hath spoken to humankind,

Rules, commandments, life instructions,

For our guidance all His Laws He hath made.

 

2. Praise YAHUWAH,  He is glorious;
Never shall His promises fail:
Over all He is victorious;  evil, never shall it prevail.
Praise YAHUWAH, Lord God Almighty;
Hosts on high, His power proclaim;
Heaven,  earth and all creation,
Laud, magnify His Name, His awesome Name!

 

3.  Worship, honor, glory, blessing,

Lord we offer these unto Thee!

Young and old Thy praise expressing,

In glad homage bend the knee!

All creation bow, worship only Thou,

Thus do we, before Thy Throne.

As in heaven, where Thou rulest,

So on this earth we pray

‘Thy Will shall be done’!

 

 

prayerSweet Hour of Prayer,

William W. Walford,

[Revised Lyrics

to reflect

the Sinaite’s Creed]

 

Sweet hour of prayer! Sweet hour of prayer!
That calls me out from a world of care,
And bids me at YAHUWAH’s throne
Make all concerns and all wishes known.
In seasons of distress and grief,
My soul has often found relief,
In knowing that my God does care

to hear me during my time of prayer!

 

 

The joy I feel, the bliss I share,

When I thank Him and when I declare:
His NAME to those who never heard,

from teachers, preachers who teach His Word.

YAHUWAH is the NAME I know,

He knows how much I love Him so . . . 

I lift my loved ones to His Throne,

In doing so, I am not alone.

 

Sweet hour of prayer! Sweet hour of prayer!

Its wings shall soar, my petition bear–
To Him whose Truth and Faithfulness

engage the waiting soul to bless.

And since He bids me seek His face,
Believe His Word, accept His Grace,
I long to meet Him everywhere,
but mostly in my sweet hour of prayer!

 

 

[Pray for your loved ones, name them individually:

parents, spouse, children, siblings, extended kin, friends, special people.]

 

 

Image from Pinterest

Image from Pinterest

Image from freewebs.com

Image from freewebs.com

 

 

HAVDALAH

 

Lord, Dismiss Us with Your Blessing

Music by Jean-Jacques Rousseau, 1712–1778

 [Revised Lyrics to reflect the Sinaite’s Creed]

LORD, dismiss us with your love, Your blessing,
Fill our hearts with Your joy, Your peace.
Let each one of us, Your love possessing,

live Your Way, never let it cease;

Would You please inspire us;  strengthen us, refresh us,
Journey with us through our earthly wilderness.

 

Thanks we give with heartfelt adoration

for Your Presence this Sabbath day.

May this week before next celebration,

prove us fruitful in every way!

Ever ever fruit-full, always ever faithful,

from Your Torah Life and Truth,

may we not stray.

 

YAHUWAH, if ever You shall call us now,

 from our pilgrimage, on this day;

Let not fear of death deter us, show us how,

all your summons must we obey!

May we ever be with, finally to be with,
You and only You on our last Sabbath Day.

 

 

Image from Pinterest

Image from Pinterest

 

logo-e1422801044622

Sig-4_16colors

Image from pinterest.com

Image from pinterest.com

A Sinaite’s Liturgy – 2nd Sabbath in July

Image from www.bethimmanuel.org

Image from www.bethimmanuel.org

 

KINDLE THE SABBATH LIGHTS

 

O Creator of all existence,

of all things visible and invisible to our naked eye,

the Eternal, YHWH,

God of Israel and the nations!

 

We welcome Your Presence once again

to our celebration of this holy and blessed day,

unique and set apart by You Yourself,

when You rested

after the completion of Your creative work,

all of which You declared ‘good’ and ‘very good’.

 

As our Lord and Master and our God,

we bless You back for blessing us and all humankind

with your Gift of the Sabbath day;

a day to rest from our labors,

a time of refreshment,

an occasion to connect in spirit with  Sabbath-keepers all over this world,

a joyful time to gather family and friends,

to break bread and study Your Words for Life.

 

Your TORAH is the Truth that we believe in;

it is our guide, our wisdom,

our pathway to knowing

as much as we can possibly know about You,

for what You have revealed of Yourself

and Your will for all humankind.

 

Your TORAH is the way of life we embrace

and have appropriated for ourselves and our community.

By Your grace,

You have imparted instructions,

laws, precepts, commandments

to regulate human relationships

with a focus on the “other” instead of the “self”.

We pray that all peoples would learn to live Your Way;

for then and only then

will there be long-lasting peace,

justice and righteousness.

 

Indeed, your TORAH

is the Tree of Life that nourishes us

physically, mentally, and spiritually —

a guide for all aspects of living

amidst family, society, community.

 May it be Your will—

that we live the length of the lifetime

you have allotted to each of us,

bearing fruit,

using time well,

to the blessing of family and fellowmen,

for we best serve You

through how we live our lives

for the benefit of others

and not simply for ourselves, 

understanding that other-consciousness,

other-centeredness and consideration of the other,

is the key to moving forward this world

toward the end of the age,

when Your Messiah will be ruling Israel

and the Nations in peace and prosperity,

living in harmony with Your Torah,

all people finally acknowledging You

as God, Lord, and King,

and worshipping in Your Holy Temple

in the City of Shalom, Yerushalayim.

Indeed, may it be so!

 

 

Blessed are You, O YHWH,

Creator, Giver of the TORAH,

Lord of the Sabbath, God of Israel,

God of the Nations,

 

May Your Name YHWH be known to all!

May all people worship You as the One True God!

That is our desire as Sinaites,

and that is our prayer until our last breath. 

Amen.

 

Image from auditingfaith.wordpress.com

Image from auditingfaith.wordpress.com

PSALM 146

 

Praise YHWH, O my soul.

I will praise YHWH all my life,

I will sing praises to my God YHWH,

as long as I live.

 

Do not put your trust in princes,

in mortal men, who cannot save.

When their soul departs,

they will return to the ground;

on that very day their plans come to nothing.

 

Blessed is he whose help is the God of Jacob,

whose hope is in YHWH, his God,

the Maker of heaven and earth, the sea,

and everything in them —

YHWH, who remains faithful forever.

 

He upholds the cause of the oppressed

and gives food to the hungry.

YHWH sets prisoners free.

YHWH gives sight to the blind,

YHWH lifts up those who are bowed down,

YHWH loves the righteous.

YHWH watches over the alien

and sustains the fatherless and the widow,

but He frustrates the ways of the wicked.

 

YHWH reigns forever,

your God, O Zion, for all generations.

Praise YHWH.

 

 

 

 

BLESSINGS

 

Image from www.shutterstock.com

Image from www.shutterstock.com

We thank You, O YHWH, for birthing us in the context of family:  

parents who raised us,

siblings  with whom we grew up and matured,

spouses we’ve partnered with to procreate new life,

in precious gifts of children,

down through generations

that continue our family lines:

[Name your loved ones]

We ask for Your blessing upon them all.  

 

 

And as we break bread that symbolizes Your Divine Providence,

and drink wine, symbol of the joy we delight in

as we celebrate Your Holy Sabbath,

as we celebrate Your gift of Life,

not only our life,

but each life that You have added to our family,

to their blessing as well as ours.

 

May it happen in our lifetime—

that all our loved ones will come to know You

as the One True God ;

that they will acknowledge You as Lord over their lives;

that they will endeavor to learn Your TORAH

and more importantly, live it-

so that they will be greatly blessed

by their growing knowledge of You,

just as we continue to be blessed

everytime we study Your Words of Life.

 

To LIFE,

To Your Life in those who live the Torah Life, 

To the life we have been given on earth,

l’chaim and mabuhay!

 

SABBATH MEAL

Image from kolamifrederick.org

Image from kolamifrederick.org

TORAH STUDY

 

1855

 

 

 

HAVDALAH

 

[Source: Gates of Repentance:

The New Union Prayer Book,for the Days of Awe.]

 

 

THE LORD OF ALL

 

 

The God of all, who reigned supreme,

Ere first creation’s form was framed;

When all was finished by Your will,

Your name Almighty was proclaimed.

 

When this our world shall be no more,

In majesty You still shall reign,

Who was, Who is, Who will remain,

Your endless glory we proclaim.

 

Alone are You, beyond compare,

Without division or ally;

Without initial date or end,

Omnipotent You rule on high.

 

You are my God, my Savior You,

To whom I turn in sorrow’s hour–

My banner proud my refuge sure,

Who hears and answers with Your pow’r.

 

Then in Your hand myself I lay.

And trusting sleep, and wake with cheer;

My soul and body are Your care;

You are my guard, I have no fear.

 

Image from certainsoundministry.com

Image from certainsoundministry.com

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

SHABBAT SHALOM

Dear Sinaites, Israel,

and all Gentile Torah-observers!

 

Sig-4_16colors

logo

"We have heard it said" – A Sinaite’s Apologetics – 4

[First posted in 2012, part of a series where Sinaites tackled point by point, the questions raised by former Christian colleagues who were—as we anticipated/expected—dismayed, flabbergasted, shocked, angry at our declaration that we were leaving Christ-centered religion and in fact, dumping ALL religion, and retracing our way to the direct source of Truth, so that we might finally live the True Faith in the True God.  

Here are other related posts: 

So sorry, we can’t find posts #2,3,7, though there’s enough to learn here.—Admin1.]

 

——————————-

 

We have heard it said —-

 

  • How deceptive teachers can be when they reject “The Way, The Truth, and The Life”!!!!!!!!!!!!  
  • They do not have spiritual enlightenment, only academic ability.

 

Surprisingly, the source of these disparaging words is a Christian missionary turned Messianic, who has been the bible teacher of our core group of Sinaites for decades.  As expected, he was totally dismayed at the gradual breakaway, one after another, of about 30 students who have been among the most enthusiastic and active in supporting his ministry if only by their regular attendance at his bible study classes, seminars and conferences.

 

The general tenor of his verbal and written adverse reaction is this: only Christ-believers, Jesus-worshippers are “saved” and given spiritual enlightenment because of the indwelling Holy Spirit.  Without this connection to Jesus Christ, no one can understand the New Testament and the whole doctrinal package emanating from it.

 

We have heard him say that many seekers of God and Truth are indeed sincere, but unless they believe and understand and accept the gospel of Jesus Christ, they are sincerely wrong.  Evidently, we now belong to that category of the  sincerely wrong.


At least, he concedes that while we no longer have spiritual enlightenment, we still have “academic ability.”  Calling us “deceptive teachers” is uncalled for but never mind, at least he qualifies why—because we have rejected “The Way, The Truth, and The Life” followed by multiple exclamation points for emphasis!!!!!!!!

 

In the gospel of John, whoever authored the gospel placed those words in the mouth of Jesus.  In fact, the same gospel writer chose as his opening salvo an echo of Genesis1:1 “In the beginning . . .” except this time he chose “Word” instead of “God.”  The New Testament which is written in Greek uses the word “Logos” for “Word.”  

 

The dictionary defines “logos” in connection with John’s gospel:

“the Word of God, or principle of divine reason and creative order, identified in the Gospel of John with the second person of the Trinity incarnate in Jesus Christ.”

The thought progression goes from “Word” which was “with God” which “was God” and moves on to equating this “Word” with the “Creator of the universe.”  And of course the whole gospel is perfectly organized to present a series of sevens in the life and ministry of its Man-God protagonist.

 

New converts to Christianity are told to read this gospel, if nothing else in the New Testament. Bible teachers set this gospel aside, separating it from the other three [Matthew, Mark, Luke] which are called the “synoptics.” When the Jesus of John makes that claim “I am the Way, the Truth and the Life,” nobody questions it.

 

Well, let us question it here.  Jesus is the Way to what or to where or to whom? Supposedly, the Way to the Father, because he follows that up with “No one comes to the Father except by me.”  Within the context of Christian theology, that would be true, because there are many other teachings connected with that bold controversial claim.  In fact it is what gets Jesus in trouble in his Jewish context, that’s why the gospels depict him debating constantly with the Pharisees and Sadducees who accuse him of blasphemy.  We used to think blasphemy meant speaking sacrilegiously of God and sacred things until we understood it in Jewish thinking —blasphemy is equating oneself with God, claiming to be God.    

 

That bold claim is tied up with all other Christian teaching, such as:  because of original sin, every person is born separated from God, totally unable to connect with God, helpless in his depravity, hopeless and damned, unless one connects with the proclaimed Savior of Christianity.  There is no way one can approach the Father; there is a cordon sanitaire of sorts that makes Him unreachable by man. He requires a blood sacrifice of a perfect man who has never sinned, so Jesus fills the bill since he’s God himself. So God fulfills His own requirements. And so on.  It does get confusing to deal with a Trinity. So let’s review the basics. 

 

The Hebrew Scriptures —the Christian Bible’s “Old Testament” is supposedly foundational for the New Testament. The God who reveals Himself in the Hebrew Scriptures comes through as a totally different God from the Father of the Christian Trinity. We cannot deal with the differences here but will save it for another article.  

 

Suffice it to say for now that YHWH, the God of Israel and of all mankind, spells out THE WAY to Him and that is His TORAH.

 

In the TORAH, man meets the ONE TRUE GOD.   HE defines HIMSELF. In the beautiful simple prayer of Jews, they recite what YHWH through his mouthpiece Moses declares to His chosen Light-bearers:  

 

The Shema:

 Shema Yisrael, Adonai Eloheinu, Adonai Echad.   

Hear O Israel, God is our Lord, God is One.

 

Perhaps if Jews were not so awed and supremely respectful of HaShem, the Name, they would declare the Shema this way:  Hear O Israel, YHWH is our Lord, YHWH is One.  How else can other people know the True God’s Name if the generic word in English is used? 

 

YHWH spells out THE TRUTH and that is IN His TORAH.  

 

YHWH spells out THE LIFE and that is the TORAH-lifestyle He requires of all believers in HIM.

 

YHWH says He is the SAVIOR, the ROCK, the SHEPHERD, the CREATOR, the ONE and ONLY GOD, there is NO OTHER.

 

All He requires of man is knowledge of HIM through His self-revelation in the Scriptures of Israel, as well as obedience to His TORAH.  Man is not hopelessly depraved, each is responsible for his choices in life, since he has been endowed with that aspect of God that no other created being has been given — free will.  

 
Understanding of YHWH’s TORAH is within the reach of anyone who endeavours to seriously study it in order to understand it and apply it to his life.  But it is not enough to apply it, one must preserve it and pass it on to the next generation or to others who would diligently listen, not just casually hear, and intelligently—not blindly—obey, out of love for this God Whose Name is YHWH.

 

In behalf of Sinai 6000 Core Community,

 

Sig-4_16colors

 

logo

 

 

A Sinaite’s Liturgy – 4th Sabbath in June

KINDLE THE SABBATH LIGHTS

Image from leonidafremov.deviantart.com

Image from leonidafremov.deviantart.com

O YHWH,

Creator God,

Revelator on Sinai,

God of Israel,

God of all nations, 

Lord of the Sabbath!

 

How we cherish sundown on Friday, 

truly the highlight of our week.  

How we relish hour after hour from erev to havdalah,

taking refuge in Your Sanctuary in time,

leaving behind a world of cares,

withdrawing into the comforting peace and blessing 

derived from simply obeying Your Fourth Commandment.  

How can we not respond to Your call

to cease from our strivings and enter Your Sabbath Rest?  

How can we resist a gracious invitation

from the King of kings and the Lord of lords?

How can we refuse a gift freely bestowed

and designed for our benefit and enjoyment?  

How can we ignore Your fourth commandment

which is the easiest of all commandments to obey:

to simply set apart a day to cease all striving

and discover the big difference it would make in our life?

 

O YHWH,  Lord of the Sabbath, 

How we love You and desire to please You

 by living according to Your Torah.

You are our God, our Lord, our Master, our King!

We choose to serve You and worship You,

for there is no other God but You.

We declare Your Name to as many as would listen and believe that—

‘YHWH is God, there is no other!’

Hear O Israel, hear O nations of the world:

YHWH is One, the One True God.

Hear and heed, come and worship,

YHWH is His Name!

 

Image from dwellingintheword.wordpress.com

Image from dwellingintheword.wordpress.com

Psalm 135

Praise YHWH.

Praise the name of YHWH; 

praise him, you servants of YHWH,
you who minister in the house of YHWH,  

in the courts of the house of our God.

Praise YHWH, for He is good; 

 sing praise to His Name, for that is pleasant.

For YHWH has chosen Jacob to be His own,  

Israel to be His treasured possession.

I know that YHWH is great, 

that our Lord is greater than all gods.

6  YHWH does whatever pleases him,  

in the heavens and on the earth,

 in the seas and all their depths.

He makes clouds rise from the ends of the earth;
    He sends lightning with the rain 

and brings out the wind from His storehouses.

He struck down the firstborn of Egypt, 

 the firstborn of people and animals.

He sent his signs and wonders into your midst,

Egypt, against Pharaoh and all his servants.

10 He struck down many nations and killed mighty kings—

11 Sihon king of the Amorites,  Og king of Bashan,
    and all the kings of Canaan—
12 and He gave their land as an inheritance, 

an inheritance to His people Israel.

13 Your name, YHWH, endures forever,  

your renown, YHWH, through all generations.

14 For YHWH will vindicate His people  

and have compassion on His servants.

15 The idols of the nations are silver and gold, 

made by human hands.

16 They have mouths, but cannot speak, 

eyes, but cannot see.

17 They have ears, but cannot hear,

nor is there breath in their mouths.

18 Those who make them will be like them, 

and so will all who trust in them.

19 All you Israelites, praise the Lord; 

house of Aaron, praise the Lord;

20 house of Levi, praise the Lord;  

you who fear him [Gentiles], praise the Lord.

21 Praise be to the Lord from Zion,

to him who dwells in Jerusalem.

Praise the Lord YHWH!

BLESSINGS

O YHWH, from Whom all blessings flow,

we thank You for all the good

that have been part of our lives

that we continue to enjoy,

whether deserved or undeserved.

Image from www.myjewishlearning.com

Image from www.myjewishlearning.com

We are mindful that the opposite of blessings

are curses resulting from disobedience to Your Torah. 

For experiences in our lives 

that come in the guise of negatives—

the difficult and painful,

accidents and regrettable incidents—

we thank You nonetheless, O YHWH,

for reminders that consequences do result,

whether in the form of illness from lifestyle abuse or excess,

or rifts in relationships resulting from sinful behavior,

or accidents that could have been avoided

had we been more cautious and focused.  

We thank You even for these difficult lessons in life,

for that is what they are —

lessons to learn from,

 that we might repent and change direction,

habitual sins we know we should desist from continuing,  

so that we might examine ourselves in areas that matter most —

particularly when others are affected and are hurt 

because of our indifference and apathy,

carelessness in word and in deed,

or sins of omission—

when we fail to do what we should,

promises we failed to keep,

duties and obligations we neglected.

 ‘Curses’ could be disguised ‘blessings’

but only if they lead to valuable personal lessons,

positive changes in ourselves and others  

hard lessons that are not wasted —

even for these, we thank You,

Lord YHWH, Who disciplined Israel

for their own good and for Your greater glory.  

 

We, Sinaites, as Gentiles,

expect no less from Your disciplining Hand,

for we know better and have learned from Your Torah

the difficult lessons that Israel learned only in hindsight,

though never too late  for them, 

in Your timeline of world history.

 

As we delight in our Sabbath fellowship,

being with one another not only every Sabbath,

but throughout our common quest for Truth,

in this lifetime journey of faith,

together seeking the One True God—

  we fondly remember others on this pilgrimage to Sinai–

who were once with us but have left our company,

those have suffered limitations in mobility,

others who have travelled to distant lands,

and beloved who have entered their eternal Sabbath.

 

We lift up to you our loved ones —[name them]

parents, spouse, children,

extended kin, special friends.

 

With all of them in mind and heart,

we now sip this wine and break bread,

for this is truly the highlight in our week,

a special occasion we look forward to every seven days.  

Indeed You have taught us to delight in Your day of rest,

O YHWH, Lord of the Sabbath.

 

We join Jewry in making a toast—-

“to LIFE!” L’CHAIM, MABUHAY!

 

Image from loveforhispeople.blogspot.com

 

images

 

 

HAVDALAH

 

As we end our Sabbath fellowship,

we thank one another for the pleasure we derive

from each other’s company

and the wisdom each one has contributed

to our Torah discussion.

We thank the Giver of the Torah,

the God we have chosen to serve, 

for giving instructions in every aspect of life —

personal, family relationships,

social life, living in community,

health, conflict resolution,

and so much more.

We resolve as we do each week,

to reflect on the lessons we learned,

to apply them to our daily living,

and share with as many as are interested

in learning from us.

Image from kjmasters.com

Image from kjmasters.com

May we be not simply readers and students of Torah,

May we live it and never forget

that as we claim to be worshippers of YHWH,

When we fail to live as we should according to His Torah,

Then we fail to be true reflectors of His Light and His Life.

Thank You, Lord YHWH,

for Your lovingkindness and mercy,

for Your daily provisions not only for us,

but also for our family.

We love You and will endeavor show it best

by obeying Your guidelines for living.

Amen.

 

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Image from www.pinterest.com

 

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A Sinaite’s Musical Liturgy – 3rd Sabbath in June

Image from www.youtube.com

Image from www.youtube.com

 

KINDLE THE SABBATH LIGHTS

Blessed are You, YHWH, our God,

King of the Universe,

Who commanded all humanity

to set aside the Sabbath as a day of rest,

And as we Sinaites, Gentile Sabbath-keepers,

follow the symbolic act in Jewish tradition,

of lighting the Sabbath candles,

We welcome Your Queen of all days,

Your Holy Sabbath at sundown Friday.

 

[Source: 7th Day Adventist

Remember the Sabbath/Revised Lyrics]

1.  Remember the Sabbath, the 4th commandment, 

it’s the seventh day;

The day when we cease from our daily strivings,

in all and every way—

The Lord of the Sabbath,

Yahuwah is His Name,

He rested on His Sabbath,

we do the same.

 

2.  Let’s enter the Sabbath,  His Sanctuary . . . 

in the realm of time;

Take joy and delight in each passing moment, 

it’s His special time . . .

Let’s kindle the Sabbath lights,

break bread and drink the wine,

Take time to read His Torah,

His Tree of Life.

 

3.  Remember to praise the Lord of Sabbath, 

Yahuwah is His Name,

For six days He spoke “let there be” existence,  

and all things  came ‘to be’,

The crown of creation,

 the first humanity,

 Formed from existing matter,  

a perfect ‘BE’.

 

4.  Remember the Source of all Life and Being, 

Yahuwah is His Name,

On Sinai the God of Creation descended 

to speak His Words of Life;

Today we still hear Him,  

and heed His Words for Life,

He is the Lord of Sabbath,

the Source of Life.

Praise Him, the Lord of Sabbath, 

Our God for Life.

Image from ptl2010.com

Image from ptl2010.com

Psalm 19  (ESV) / A Psalm of David.

The heavens declare the glory of God,  

and the sky above proclaims His handiwork.
Day to day pours out speech,  

and night to night reveals knowledge.
There is no speech, nor are there words, 

whose voice is not heard.
Their voice goes out through all the earth,  

and their words to the end of the world.
In them he has set a tent for the sun,
5which comes out like a bridegroom leaving his chamber,
    and, like a strong man, runs its course with joy.
Its rising is from the end of the heavens, 

 and its circuit to the end of them,
    and there is nothing hidden from its heat.

The law of the Lord is perfect, reviving the soul;
the testimony of the Lord is sure, making wise the simple;
the precepts of the Lord are right, rejoicing the heart;
the commandment of the Lord is pure, enlightening the eyes;
the fear of the Lord is clean,  enduring forever;
the rules of the Lord are true, and righteous altogether.
10 More to be desired are they than gold, even much fine gold;
sweeter also than honey and drippings of the honeycomb.
11 Moreover, by them is your servant warned;

 in keeping them there is great reward.

12 Who can discern his errors?  

Declare me innocent from hidden faults.
13 Keep back your servant also from presumptuous sins;  

let them not have dominion over me!
Then I shall be blameless, and innocent of great transgression.

14 Let the words of my mouth and the meditation of my heart 

be acceptable in your sight,
    O Lord, my Rock and my Redeemer.

 

Image from plus.google.com

Image from plus.google.com

 

[Original Tune:  In His Time/Revised Lyrics]

 

Bless this home, bless this time;

Bless each one who celebrates in YOUR TIME,

Sabbath-keepers, such are we,

heard Your call for us to be,

Live Your Life for all to see, in our time.

Bless the bread, bless the wine,

Bless our loved ones where they are,

pray they’re ‘fine’,

May they know You more each day,

Show their love for You their way,

Live their lives so that they may . . .  just obey.

Bless our loved ones always Lord,

in YOUR TIME.

A Father’s Day reminder to Dads:

Deuteronomy 11:19-21

You are place these my words upon your heart

and upon your being;

you are to tie them as a sign on your hand,

let them be as bands between your eyes;

You are to teach them to your children,

by speaking of them in your sitting in our house,

in your walking on the way,

in your lying-down, in your rising-up.

You are to write them upon the doorposts of your house,

and on your gates,

in order that your days may be many,

along with the days of your children. . . .

[Take time to pray for all fathers,

thanking YHWH for their role in in your life].

Image from www.mysarshalom.com

Image from www.mysarshalom.com

 

Image from bishopprince.wordpress.com

Image from bishopprince.wordpress.com

 

[HERE I AM, LORD

Original Words and Music are by Daniel L. Schutte,

copyright 1981/Lyrics Revised according to Sinaite Creed]

 

1.  I, the Lord of earth and sky,

I have heard the people cry.
All who dwell in darkness they . . .

will see My Light,
I who made the stars of night,

I can make the darkness bright.
Who will bear My Light to them,

whom shall I send?

CHO:  Here I am Lord, is it I Lord?
I have heard You calling all my life.
I will share all that You teach me,
They will hear from me,

Your Words of Life.

2.  I,  the God of Israel ,

I am LORD of all as well,
I have Law for humankind,

to live in peace—
I will write it in their minds,

and impress it in their hearts,
Who will spread my Word to them,

whom shall I send?

CHO:  Here we are Lord,

we have sought You,

We have heard You calling all our life,
We have followed where You’ve led us,
We will be Your witness where we are.

 

Image from www.davidicke.com

Image from www.davidicke.com

Shabbat Shalom

from the Sinai 6000 Core Community,

 

 

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Shavuot – Anniversary of Giving of the TORAH on Sinai

[Reposting an article from 2013, by Sinaite VAN (In Memoriam), on the occasion of the universal celebration of Shavuot/Pentecost which is not for Jews only, but for Gentiles as well.  As we keep reiterating, LAW or the Torah is not obsolete nor passe; in fact, contrary to some teaching that we are no longer under law but under grace, we Sinaites insist that LAW IS GRACE!  By the Grace of Divine Providence, YHWH the Law-Giver, the Revelator on Sinai gave humankind laws to apply how to live with one another and how to relate to Him.  Law IS grace indeed!—Admin1]
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The Scriptural support for the feast of Shavuot is found in Vayikra (Leviticus) 23:15-16,21).

 

15 Now you are to number for yourselves, from the morrow of the Sabbath, from the day that you bring the elevated sheaf, 

seven Sabbaths-of-days,

whole (weeks) are they to be;
16 until the morrow of the seventh Sabbath you are to number-fifty days, 

then you are to bring-near a grain-gift of new-crops to YHVH.

17 From your settlements you are to bring bread as an elevation-offering,

two (loaves of) two tenth-measures of flour are they to be, 

leavened you are to bake them, 

as firstfruits to YHVH.

 

18 And you are to bring-near along with the bread seven sheep, wholly-sound, a year old, 
and one bull, a young of the herd, and rams, two, 
they shall be an offering-up for YHVH, 
with their grain-gift and their poured-offerings, 
a fire-offering of soothing savor to YHVH.
19 And you are to perform-as-sacrifice: one hairy goat for a hattat, 
and two sheep, a year old, for a slaughter-offering of shalom.

20 The priest is to elevate them, together with the bread of the firstfruits 

 as an elevation-offering before the presence of YHVH,

 together with the two sheep;

 they shall be a holy-portion for YHVH, for the priest. 

21 And you are to make-proclamation on that same day, 

a proclamation of holiness shall there be for you, 

any-kind of servile work you are not to do- 

a law for the ages, throughout your settlements, into your generations.
22 Now when you harvest the harvest of your land, 

you are not to finish-off the edge of your field when you harvest (it), 

the full-gleaning of your harvest you are not to glean;

for the afflicted and for the sojourner you are to leave them,

I am YHVH your God!

 Shavuot, the Festival of Weeks, is the second of the three major festivals: the other two are:
  • Passover and
  • Sukkot.

 

It commemorates—

  • the time when the first fruits were harvested and brought to the Temple
  • and is called the Festival of First Fruits
  • or Hag Bikkurim.

 

We count each day,

  • from the 2nd day of Passover to the 49 days
  • or 7 full weeks,
  • hence the name Festival of Weeks.

The counting of the days is also called the Counting of the Omer.

 

Shavuot falls on the 50th day which commemorates the giving of the Torah on Mount Sinai.  Shavuot falls on the 50th day.

Shavuot is sometimes known as “Pentecost”;  Shavuot is the only biblical festival between the Spring and the Fall festivals that has no obvious “symbols” of the day — i.e., no shofar blowing, no Sukkah, no waving  of palms.
Pentecost is a Greek word meaning “the holiday of 50 days”.

(Shavuot, however, has no connection to the Christian holiday).  The focus is purely on the reading and the study of the Torah.  It is however treated as a Sabbath.
On the same day, as part of the traditional Jewish celebration, the Book of Ruth is read.   Now, why the Book of Ruth on Shavuot, the holiday when we celebrate the giving of the Torah?  Shavuot commemorates the acceptance of the Torah, not only by the Israelites but also the non-Israelites

 

 

(Shemoth/Exodus 12:38):

 

“And a mixed multitude also went up with them . . . ” 

 

—hence the significance of this book.

 

 

It is a reminder for all that the Torah is for everyone who accepts it — Israelite or non-Israelite, Jew or non-Jew.  And  Ruth is an example of a true Torah seeker, a model of a proper Torah acceptance.
It signifies one who sincerely is seeking for the truth.
This is the real significance of Shavuot — the act of Torah acceptance, the act of Divine service.

[For this year 2017, Shavuot is celebrated May 30-June 01.]

 

 Receiving the Torah is the assurance of redemption from IDOLATRY.
 

 

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