Revisit: The Afterlife: A Sober Look

Image from What If?

Image from What If?

[First posted in 2012, part of a series from one book.

 

This is the final chapter of the MUST READ book earlier recommended, entitled The Death of Death by Neil Gillman. When you read this concluding chapter, you will be curious enough to wish to read more, and hopefully you will secure a copy of this book, it is worth the buy! A post linked to this:

Reformatted for posting; highlighting ours.—Admin1]

 

 

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Chapter X:  What do I believe?

 

 

MOST OF THIS book has reviewed Jewish teachings on the afterlife from the Bible to our own day.  The tone was deliberately dispassionate; our goal was to study the most significant Jewish statements on the afterlife, to come as close as possible to unearthing their literal meaning, and to trace the evolution of the doctrine through the centuries.

 

 

That part of our task has been accomplished.  What remains is a very different kind of inquiry.  We now must ask:

 

 

  • What does all of this mean for us today?
  • How are we to understand it?
  • What are we to believe?

 

These questions demand not dispassionate objectivity, but existential testimony.  The believing Jew must present his or her own beliefs about the afterlife as clearly and coherently as possible and argue for their validity.  Others must then determine whether this personal statement works for them as well.

 

 

My Data

 

 

One of the unexpected results of my delving into this issue has been my growing awareness that the theological and philosophical literature on the afterlife by Jews and non-Jews in the past two decades is simply overwhelming.  No single volume can encompass it all.  Before I proceed to discuss my own conclusions, the reader deserves to know what data I have chosen to ignore—and why.

 

 

  • First, I have chosen to ignore many of the arguments for and against human immortality that are couched in the language of academic philosophy and psychology.  These arguments deal with an analysis of how moderns can speak meaningfully of the human soul, its possible relationship or non-relationship with the human body, its origins and its ultimate destiny, and the implications of all of this for notions of bodily resurrection and spiritual immortality.  This kind of argumentation, however interesting it may be in a scholarly setting, assumes a grounding in classical philosophical literature and is difficult to convey to readers without such a background.  It is primarily the intelligent and concerned lay reader that this volume hopes to reach.
  • Second, I have chosen, with a much greater sense of guilt, to ignore the literature that finds convincing arguments for immortality in the wide range of experiences commonly denoted as “New Age.”  I concede the value of being open to the entire range of human experience, yet I remain unconvinced by the evidence of parapsychology, near-death experiences, and alleged communications between the dead and the living.  I acknowledge the bias that leads me to be skeptical of these claims. But fortunately for the reader who does not share this skepticism, there is a wealth of easily accessible published material that does take this data seriously.
  • Third, I tend to minimize the popular notion that one’s immortality rests in the memories one leaves behind, in the impact of one’s life on friends, family and community, in children and grandchildren, in the institutions one helped build, the students one taught or the books one published.
    • I am fully aware that my identity has been shaped by biological factors that predate me by millennia.  I know that my more immediate ancestors had a decisive impact on my psychological make-up.  I also share a Jewish communal memory that dates back, at least, to the biblical Abraham and Sarah.  Some of those who succeed me on earth will in turn be shaped by who I was, by the life I lived and the values I affirmed.  This is a kind of immortality, and for many, it is quite sufficient.
    • It is not sufficient for me, however, largely because this view does not acknowledge my concrete individuality as I experience during my life here on earth.  According to the view that my immortality is fulfilled through succeeding generations, my immortality merges with that of the countless others who share in shaping the identity of those who follow us.  Judaism, on the other hand provides me with a doctrine of the afterlife that affirms that despite the influence on me of countless others, I remain a totally distinct and individualized human being.  It is precisely this individualized existence that is most precious to God and that God will preserve for eternity.  We shall quote below, the claim of the Mishnah that though we are all shaped in the image of the single person that God created at the outset, each of us is different from the other.  Each of us can say:  “For my sake was the world created.”  Moreover, when that individual person dies, he or she dies, and there will never be another precisely like him or her.  The burning question remains:  Is that death the final word on the destiny of that individual?  Judaism argues that it is not, and I agree.
    • I will reconstruct a Jewish understanding of the afterlife out of our classical sources, but one that is also congruent with our contemporary understanding of religious thinking and language.  Also, in much of what follows, I will be drawing on the work of the contemporary thinkers that I discussed in the previous chapter.

 

 

The Reality of Death

 

 

To deal with the question of the afterlife means, first of all, to accept the reality of death.  This may appear incongruous because, at least in the popular imagination, notions of an afterlife seem to be designed precisely to challenge the reality fo death.  Not so!  The very opposite is the case.  What doctrines of the afterlife do challenge is the finality of death, the view that death represents the end point of our individual destiny and of our individual relationship with God, not its reality.  The distinction between the reality of death and its finality may be subtle, but it is crucial.  It may even be argued that until we have fully accepted the fact that our death is real, there is no reason for us to even consider whether or not we have an afterlife.

 

 

Note that even scientists such as Dr. Sherwin Nuland (whose thinking we discussed in the first chapter) accept the reality of death, while rejecting its finality.  They believe that, like plants and animals, all humans live on in the broader ecosystem:  We die . . . so that others may live.  The tragedy of a single individual becomes, in the balance of natural things, the triumph of ongoing life.

 

 

I will never appreciate the full power of what Judaism says about my afterlife until I fully accept the fact if my death.  Not simply death in the abstract, not my all-too-human mortality, not simply the acknowledgement that all living things must eventually die, but precisely my death in all its painful concreteness.  If I never really die why worry about an afterlife?  It is precisely because I live daily with an impending awareness that I will soon live no more that the question of what will happen to me after I die presses upon me.  And that it does so with increasing urgency the closer I come to the end of my days.

All living things eventually die, but only human beings live with the awareness of their death.  This is the terrifying paradox at the heart of human existence:  We are animals who are yet conscious of our animal nature.  We live an animal-like existence:  We eat, drink and mate.  Yet, we have self-consciousness.  We are aware of our bodily functions and can control them.  And we think, value and feel.  We are capable of love and generosity, guilt and despair.  We can search the mysteries of nature and create great art.  We can even spin theories about our afterlife (as I am doing right now).  Yet we die the death of animals.

 

 

William James calls death “the worm at the core of all our usual springs of delight.”  The fact that we can die, that we can be ill at all, is what perplexes us . . . . We need a life not correlated with death, a health not liable to illness, a kind of good that will not perish, a good that flies beyond the Goods of nature.

 

 

To live with the constant awareness of that paradox is well nigh impossible, which is why most of us work desperately to deny it.  But such denial is increasingly difficult to maintain, as we age or become mortally ill.

How i deal with my death is crucial to how I deal with my life.  That is what lends the issue of my afterlife even greater urgency.  Discussing the afterlife is not simply determining what will happen to me in some indefinite future; it affects how I live today.  If my death is an integral part of the larger reality which constitutes my life, then to deal with my life demands that I deal with my death.  Of course, I can also avoid the larger issue of my life’s meaning; most of us do.  But one who is not satisfied with simply living day by day without a broader purpose, without a sense of what it means to live as a human being, or of how a human life-experience coheres and acquires significance, will eventually have to confront his or her death and integrate that fact into the broader structure that constitutes the life that one is living.

No more than any other human being do I know what will happen to me after I die.  But what I believe will happen to me after I die affects how I lead my life today.  That is why the issue of my afterlife presses upon me now.

 

 

[Next:  Religion and the Afterlife]

The Sinaite’s Liturgy – 5th Sabbath in November 2019

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Kindle the Sabbath Lights

 

As the TRUE LIGHT of the Universe

sends His powerful and far-reaching

sun-light to brighten darkness in outer space,

We kindle our Sabbath lights—

a Jewish tradition we,

Gentiles, Sinaites,

emulate to signify the beginning of our day of rest,

and to brighten the darkness of the evening.

The Sabbath,

a thoughtful and loving gift

from the Creator of Time,

YHWH, LORD of the Sabbath!

 

The Sabbath,

a day we are commanded to set apart from all other days,

so that  we might cease from our striving and toiling,

from our work, our labor, our worrying, and our cares,

that preoccupy six days of our 7-day week,

a Divinely-designed time frame

for the benefit and blessing of humanity,

and all of God’s creatures that have the breath of life.

For indeed, the tyranny of earthly time enslaves us,

because we fill it up with doings and un-doings,

unaware of the equal importance of REST

as a crucial requirement for survival,

not only for humans, His crown of creation,

but for all living creatures in whom,

instinctively, the principle of rest has been infused.

 

We thank our Creator for His Torah,

where we have heard, been taught, and learned—

all that He requires from the one creature

with whom He shared His Image,

Laws and life principles that regulate human behavior,

toward self, toward fellow-humans,

and toward all His Creatures,

animate and inanimate,

 

Indeed we thank our Creator,

the LORD of our Sabbath,

for His gift of the 4th Commandment:

 

Remember the sabbath day, to keep it holy.

Six days shalt thou labor, and do all thy work:

10 But the seventh day is the sabbath of the Lord thy God:

In it, thou shalt not do any work,

thou, nor thy son, nor thy daughter,

thy manservant, nor thy maidservant,

nor thy cattle,

nor thy stranger that is within thy gates:

11 For in six days the Lord made heaven and earth,

the sea and all that in them is,

and rested the seventh day:

wherefore the Lord blessed the sabbath day,

and hallowed it.

Exodus 20:8-11 King James Version (KJV)

 

And so be it . . . Amen.

 

 

thScripture Reading:

 

Ecclesiastes 12 New International Version (NIV)

12 Remember your Creator
    in the days of your youth,
before the days of trouble come
    and the years approach when you will say,
    “I find no pleasure in them”—
before the sun and the light
    and the moon and the stars grow dark,
    and the clouds return after the rain;
when the keepers of the house tremble,
    and the strong men stoop,
when the grinders cease because they are few,
    and those looking through the windows grow dim;
when the doors to the street are closed
    and the sound of grinding fades;
when people rise up at the sound of birds,
    but all their songs grow faint;
when people are afraid of heights
    and of dangers in the streets;
when the almond tree blossoms
    and the grasshopper drags itself along
    and desire no longer is stirred.
Then people go to their eternal home
    and mourners go about the streets.

Remember him—before the silver cord is severed,
    and the golden bowl is broken;
before the pitcher is shattered at the spring,
    and the wheel broken at the well,
and the dust returns to the ground it came from,
    and the spirit returns to God who gave it.

 

 

 

Image from www.lovethispic.com

Image from www.lovethispic.com

B L E S S I N G S

[Borrowed Prayers and Sayings]

 

This Thanksgiving—

For the beauties and abundance of the earth,

For family near and far,

For friends, old and new,

For the gift of each brand new day,

And the chance to make a difference,

Let us give thanks.

 

 

****************

 

 

For the bounty of the year;

For the friends that we hold dear,

For new blessings on the way,

Let’s be thankful, all, today.

**************

The warmth of good friends,

and the joy of celebration,

For these,  we give thanks.

******

 

COUNT Your BLESSINGS

Count your blessings instead of your crosses,

Count your gains instead of your losses,

Count your joys instead of your woes,

Count your friends instead of your foes,

Count your smiles instead of your tears,

Count your full years instead of your lean,

Count your kind deeds instead of your mean,

Count your health instead of your wealth,

Count on God instead of yourself.

 

*******

 

A Prayer for Thanksgiving

 

Loving God,

We turn our hearts to You this day

for giving thanks,

mindful of your many gifts.

For each one, we are grateful.

For each one, we are blessed.

For each one, we are opened

to the abundance of Your love.

May this Thanksgiving Day

offer a reminder to be

generous with others,

just as You are with us.

We praise You,

We rejoice in You,

We give You thanks.

Amen.

 

*******

 

Thanksgiving Prayer by Ralph Waldo Emerson

 

For each new morning with its light,

For rest and shelter of the night,

For health and food,

For love and friends,

For everything Thy goodness sends.

 

For flowers that bloom about our feet,

For tender grass, so fresh so sweet,

For song of bird and hum of bee,

For all things fair we hear or see.

Father in heaven,

we thank Thee.

 

*******

 

To all my family and dear friends 

that I am honored and blessed

to have in my life:

 

May this holiday season bring you—

love to your heart,

health to your body,

and peace and joy to your house

throughout the year.

Image from www.chabadstanford.org

Image from www.chabadstanford.org

 

 

                            HAVDALAH

            [A Jewish Prayer of Gratitude]

 

[Individual: ]

Blessed are You, Lord our God, Ruler of the world,

Who rewards the undeserving with goodness,
and Who has rewarded me with goodness.

[To each other: ]

May He who rewarded you with all goodness

reward you with all goodness for ever.

 

 

A blessed Sabbath of Thanksgiving

to all our family and friends 

spread out over this wonderful world,

 

In behalf of Sinai6000 Core Community,

 

NSB@S6K

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Does the Torah prohibit belief in “ghosts”?

[First posted in 2016; reposting in time for Halloween, the day of spooks and spirits!–Admin1]

 

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We have a whole series debunking the belief in the devil,  fallen angels, demonic spirits—yes, despite the teaching of Paul of Tarsus and their existence, prominence and predominance in the life of the Christian Savior Jesus in-the-flesh in the gospels and the resurrected triumphant Jesus in battle with Satan in the last book of Revelation.

 

Now we are tackling the belief in “ghosts” or the spirits of the dead coming back to earth to appear to the living.

 

Image from lisamorton.com

Image from lisamorton.com

Besides talk about women in white showing up in certain ‘haunted places’ because they supposedly died in an accident or were murdered, there are the ‘haunted houses’ where spooks ‘show up’ as see-through whitish shapes on camera.  Our devout Mormon friend who attends erev Shabbat with us  repeatedly recounts how, while driving at dusk, she saw a woman in white floating with feet in white socks hardly touching the ground.  Why should she see something like that, she asks?

 

She also believes in the account of her Spanish friends, two sisters, one of whom was hospitalized.   The other sister came to visit and while approaching her sister’s room, she met an elderly couple walking out of the adjacent room and recognized the female as the patient occupying it for the time she had been previously visiting her sister.  When the nurse came to administer medication to her sister, she remarked that the neighboring patient seemed to have fully recovered and had left the hospital with her husband.  The puzzled nurse corrected her saying that the woman had died in the night and that her husband had been long dead.

 

She also believes the story relayed by the children of another friend that the daughter who had been taking care of the mother ‘saw’ the spirit of her long-dead father picking up the spirit of her mother while she was dying.  When I clarified this story with the brother, all he said was the sister recounted that the mother in her last moments before dying was pleading to their father to pick her up because she was ready to join him.

 

At our Torah discussion about the non-existence of devils and ghosts where we share similar stories that have been passed around among the superstitious,  including Christians (because the New Testament scriptures do mention them), our Mormon friend continues to challenge us to explain the strange encounters people have had with what they believe are spirits of the dead.

 

Without casting doubt as to the reality of these experiences, our standard answer is:

 

What would YHWH’s  purpose  be

for allowing the living to witness

the reappearance of dead people

either as seemingly in-the-flesh or as spectres?

 

Think about it, why would the God of Israel who gives specific commands against superstitious beliefs allow any of us to see the dead . . . ?  And why do they appear only to some people and not to all?

 

Let us recall Isaiah 8:20

 

To the law and to the testimony! if they speak not according to this word, surely there is no morning for them.

 

 

What does YHWH, the Revelator on Sinai  and Law-Giver say?

 

6 And the person who turns-his-face to ghosts or to familiar-spirits, to whore after them,
 I will direct my face against that person 
and will cut him off from amid his kinspeople! [Leviticus 20:6]

 

 

The context of this, strangely, is a whole series of prohibitions relating to dishonoring parents, adultery, homosexuality, incest or sexual relations among kin, child sacrifice, and bestiality.  The Law-Giver would not be so specific in His prohibitions if these were not rampant practices normal to the conduct of the ‘nations’ or the ‘gentiles’ among whom Israel had lived or had been exposed to.  Israelites most likely were just as guilty,  for ALL humanity at that time were still ignorant of what is RIGHT and WRONG in the eyes of the Creator God of the universe who sets the STANDARD of conduct for all people.  In His wisdom, His strategy was to start with His chosen nation to be His model for the whole world.  His guidelines for living are enshrined in the Torah.

 

Here’s the chapter to study for this:

 

 

 

Sig-4_16colors

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A Sinaite’s “Thanksgiving” Liturgy – 4th Sabbath of November

www.myjewishlearning.com

www.myjewishlearning.com

KINDLE THE SABBATH LIGHTS 

As we kindle these two Sabbath lights,

embracing this visual symbolic Jewish tradition,

we relate one to Your servant Israel,

Your light to the nations, to us gentiles.

We relate the other to Your Revelation on Sinai,

which the recipients and custodians

have enshrined in the Torah,

a way of living Your Way,

a source of spiritual illumination and divine wisdom

for all peoples and all nations,

for each individual who discovers You

in it and through it.

 
We thank You, YHWH, God of Freedom,
for returning remnant Israel 
back to the Promised Land in our times.
“Who has heard such a thing?
Who has seen such things?
Can a land be born in one day?
Can a nation be brought forth all at once? 
 (Isaiah 66:8/NASB)
Yet, You have brought them back
to the very same Land You promised to their Patriarchs,
to which You Yourself led them 
after You liberated them from Egyptian bondage
and lived among them at the beginning of their nationhood.  

 

What an awesome God You are,
O Lord YHWH,
and how fortunate and blessed could a chosen people be,
to have You as their God,
their Liberator, Law-Giver, Defender, and King!

 

Truly, Israel’s existence and survival is a living testimony
that there is a God Who has spoken
through the prophets of Israel 
of marvelous things yet to be,
which we in this day and age, witness in amazement!

 

Yet, we discover in the Hebrew Scriptures
that You are not only the God of Israel
but God of all the Nations!
We bless You for blessing us,
and thank You for including us—
Gentiles who are not of ethnic Israel—
for bringing us out of our own ‘Egypt’
where we in our ignorance were also in bondage;
lacking in understanding of Your True Scriptures,
the TORAH.
We thank You for redeeming us from our own slavery
to false doctrines and false teachings,
false beliefs, false religions, false churches,
false gods.

 

We thank You for Your Torah
where we have discovered
all the commandments
You intended for all mankind,
to regulate our conduct in community,
to direct us to always do what is right and just,
to be Your instruments in dispensing
lovingkindness, goodness and mercy toward others,
in this our journey through life.

 

May that day arrive

when all peoples from all nations

will see these two reflections of Your Light

and finally embrace You

as the One and Only True God!

May they, as we all,  hearken to and heed

the life-giving words of your Torah,  

for it is only when we live Your Way

that this earth will be as You envisioned it,

truly a heaven on earth.

 

 

Image from heartwhispers.weebly.com

Image from heartwhispers.weebly.com

Reading from Isaiah  40:10-26 [JPS]

Behold your God!

10 Behold, the Lord God comes in might,
And His arm wins triumph for Him;
See, His reward is with Him,
His recompense before Him.
11 Like a shepherd He pastures His flock:
He gathers the lambs in His arms
And carries them in His bosom;
Gently He drives the mother sheep.

12 Who measured the waters with the hollow of His hand,
And gauged the skies with a span,
And meted earth’s dust with a measure,
And weighed the mountains with a scale
And the hills with a balance?
13 Who has plumbed the mind of the Lord,
What man could tell Him His plan?
14 Whom did He consult, and who taught Him,
Guided Him in the way of right?
Who guided Him in knowledge
And showed Him the path of wisdom?

15 The nations are but a drop in a bucket,
Reckoned as dust on a balance;
The very coastlands He lifts like motes.
16 Lebanon is not fuel enough,
Nor its beasts enough for sacrifice.
17 All nations are as naught in His sight;
He accounts them as less than nothing.

18 To whom, then, can you liken God,
What form compare to Him?
19 The idol? A woodworker shaped it,
And a smith overlaid it with gold,
Forging links of silver.
20 As a gift, he chooses the mulberry — 
A wood that does not rot — 
Then seeks a skillful woodworker
To make a firm idol,
That will not topple.

21 Do you not know?
Have you not heard?
Have you not been told
From the very first?
Have you not discerned
How the earth was founded?
22 It is He who is enthroned above the vault of the earth,
So that its inhabitants seem as grasshoppers;
Who spread out the skies like gauze,
Stretched them out like a tent to dwell in.
23 He brings potentates to naught,
Makes rulers of the earth as nothing.
24 Hardly are they planted,
Hardly are they sown,
Hardly has their stem
Taken root in earth,
When He blows upon them and they dry up,
And the storm bears them off like straw.

25 To whom, then, can you liken Me,
To whom can I be compared?

— says the Holy One.

26 Lift high your eyes and see:
Who created these?
He who sends out their host by count,
Who calls them each by name:
Because of His great might and vast power,
Not one fails to appear.

 

 

BLESSINGS

Image from www.comtodovino.com.br

Image from www.comtodovino.com.br

From seed to vine to grape to wine,

This drink brings joy, a delight and a sign

that we started as seeds, matured into vine,

bore fruit like grapes, ripened into wine.

We continue to age gaining wisdom and truth,

What more could we ask from our gracious Lord?

More life, long life, Your Life,

O Giver of Life.  L’Chaim!

 

From seed to stem to grain of wheat,

from flour to dough and baked in heat,

this bread is food that came from seed,

just like the drastic change we need,

from phase to phase of life indeed.  

 

As it is Your Will for all humanity

that You will be known by all,

may it be the will of our loved ones,

most specially our family —

[name them]

parents, siblings, children, extended kin —

that they all will come to know You,

YHWH, the One True God,

while they have breath and life,

during their time on earth.  

 

May the book of life

that each one of us has lived

and written for ourselves, 

be in harmony with Your Book of Life.  

May those who read our ‘book of life’

be led to Your Tree of Life, the Torah.

And in our end of days,

may our names be written

in YHWH’s Book of Life.   

Amen.

 
 

 SABBATH MEAL 

Image from toriavey.com

Image from toriavey.com

      

Image from www.haruth.com

Image from www.haruth.com

 

 

 

 

THANKSGIVING at HAVDALAH
[Source: GATES OF REPENTANCE,
Songs and Transliterations]

 

 

We gratefully acknowledge that
You are our Eternal God
and God of our people,
the God of all generations.
You are the Rock of our life,
the Power that shields us in every age.
We thank You and sing Your praises:
for our lives, which are in Your hand;
for our souls, which are in Your keeping;
for the miracles which are daily with us;
and for Your wondrous gifts at all times,
morning, noon, and night.
You are Goodness:
Your mercies never end;
You are Compassion:
Your love never fails.
You have always been our hope.
For all these things, O Sovereign God,
let Your name be forever exalted and blessed,
and let life abundant
be the heritage of all the children of Your covenant.
O God our Redeemer and Helper,
let all who live affirm You
and praise Your name in truth.
Eternal God, whose nature is Goodness,
we give You thanks and praise.

 

 

Image from www.brainyquote.com

Image from www.brainyquote.com

Greetings to Sabbath-keepers

all over the world,

to our Jewish friends,

and to all Gentile Truth-seekers

who have given us a ‘hearing’

by visiting this website frequently!

We embrace the American tradition

of celebrating Thanksgiving this week; 

we are thankful to YHWH

for all and each of you.

 

 

 

Shabbat shalom,

NSB@S6K

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Sig-4_16colors

 

The Sinaite’s Liturgy – 3rd Sabbath in November

              Kindle the Sabbath Lights

 

Image from Fine Art America

 

Blessed are You,

YHWH,

our God, King of the Universe!

God of Israel,

God of Sinaites,

God of all world religions.

Whether or not they acknowledge You as God,

You, YHWH, are God!

Creator,  Revelator on Sinai,

God of Your Chosen Nation, Israel!

God of Gentiles who choose you as their God, such as we, Sinaites!

 

Whether individuals,  peoples, and nations

recognize or refuse to recognize,

acknowledge or fail to acknowledge

You as God,

You, O YHWH, are God!

God of our great planet earth,

God of the world, God of the Universe,

All-Existent, Omnipresent,

Immortal, Invisible,

All-Wise, All-knowing, Omniscient!

Almighty, All-Powerful, Omnipotent!

You, O YHWH,

are God and Lord

over all Creation,

over all Humanity!

LORD OVER ALL!

 

We are privileged, and honored,

to have found You and now know Your Name,

so that we may proclaim THE NAME to all

who would hear and heed and acknowledge that —

You, YHWH, are God!

You, YHWH, are our Lord,

our Master, and our King!

All that You have commanded humanity to do,

we obey!

Thank You for not keeping silent about who You are!

Thank You for revealing Yourself

on a mountain in the wilderness of Sinai,

to a people You formed

from their Patriarch, Abraham!

Thank You for giving them Your Torah,

indeed, Your prescribed Way of Life

not only for them but for all humanity!

Without Your Instructions for Life,

we would be left guessing,

inventing man-made laws

to regulate our lives,

lacking the wisdom and knowledge

about humanity that only You,

O Creator,

would know and understand!

Thank You,

for being an all-wise Judge,

knowing and understanding and forgiving

those among humanity

who recognize and acknowledge

that there is a God,

but do not have the opportunity

to know You,

through Your Revelation to Israel;

Resorting, therefore, to  laws

that regulate their way of life,

to govern the behavior of members of

their community, society,

for without laws to live by,

there would be disorder and chaos,

because of the assertion of SELF

by the strong over the weak,

by those in power over the powerless,

by the superior over the inferior.

For, while You as Creator,

saw fit to create humanity after Your Image.

O God of Diversity,

In Your Wisdom,

You created homo sapiens

into two genders,

two separate beings, equal,

who would always be attracted

to one another, and function together,

yet assume different roles according to Your design,

for the propagation of the human species,

a sacred duty, divinely-ordained.

You did not leave them ignorant

of Your desired Will and Way for humanity,

Surely You would have instructed them

as You did . . . with a test for obedience.

And You have done the same for all the generations,

down to our times.

May those of us today who have been Torah-educated,

Having learned the lessons of disobedience,

Make the right choice:  to simply obey!

And so we obey today, Your 4th Commandment!

 

Blessed are You,

YHWH, our God,

For blessing us with this day of rest,

Your Holy Sabbath,

Our Sabbath, our day of rest,

Amen.

 

 

Exodus 20:8-11 King James Version (KJV)

8 Remember the sabbath day, to keep it holy.

9 Six days shalt thou labor, and do all thy work:

10 But the seventh day is the sabbath of the Lord thy God:

in it thou shalt not do any work, thou, nor thy son, nor thy daughter,

thy manservant, nor thy maidservant,

nor thy cattle, nor thy stranger that is within thy gates:

11 For in six days the Lord made heaven and earth, the sea,

and all that in them is, and rested the seventh day:

wherefore the Lord blessed the sabbath day, and hallowed it.

 

Deuteronomy 5:12-15 New International Version (NIV)

12 “Observe the Sabbath day by keeping it holy,

 as the Lord your God has commanded you. 

13 Six days you shall labor and do all your work, 

14 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 ox, your donkey or any of your animals,

nor any foreigner residing in your towns,

so that your male and female servants may rest, as you do. 

15 Remember that you were slaves in Egypt

and that the Lord your God brought you out of there

with a mighty hand and an outstretched arm. 

Therefore the Lord your God has commanded you

to observe the Sabbath day.

 

REMEMBER THE SABBATH

 [Music composed by Dr. Zork of Andrews University in the US.
Lyrics were rewritten reflecting Sinai6000 Theology.]

 

1.  Remember the Sabbath to keep it holy,
honor the day:
Our great LORD commands us to sing songs holy,
and we obey–
That we may praise Him and live His sacred ways,
Keeping His Sabbath holy in all our days.

 

2.  The Lord God Creator ceased from creating
on the 7th day,
He blessed it, declared it the 4th Commandment,
never changed the day!
So why does the world today observe another day?
They forgot God’s Sabbath, the 7th day.

 

3.  But we who’ve discovered the ancient pathway,
where Jews have led the way;
Where Sabbath is sacred and still kept holy,
from all the other days.
We’ve come to worship the God Whose Day is blest,
Being His Sabbath-keepers, in Him, we rest!

 

4.  So enter His Temple with hearts thanks-giving,
worship our Lord!
And fill up His House with our voices ringing,
let us be heard!
For we are longing to lift our hearts in praise,
Keeping the Sabbath holy, in all our days.
YHWH is LORD of Sabbath,
in Rest — be Blest!

 

Blessings-Count-Them-One-By-One

 

We thank You, O YHWH,

God of our Family,

For the special individuals You have placed in our lives–

Our Parents [name them],

Siblings [name them]

Children [name them]

Extended kin [name them]

We thank You for birthing us in our individual family,

for the love and care,

we have received from our parents,

for the camaraderie, we have enjoyed

in growing up with our siblings,

for the love and devotion,

we have shared with our spouse,

for the joys, our children have brought into our lives.

We especially remember those who have moved on

from our midst—[name them].

Thank You for the blessing they have been to us!

 

                SABBATH MEAL

Image from www.pinterest.com

Image from www.pinterest.com

 

HAVDALAH

 

May the LORD of the Sabbath,

be pleased with our obedience to–

“Remember the Sabbath to keep it holy”

And to enjoy the rest He has provided

by adding the seventh day

specifically for Rest!

 

May He be pleased with all Sabbath-Keepers

who recognize Him

and call on His Name,

YHWH,

Lord and  God—-

and King over us,

over our Family,

and over our fellow-worshippers!

 

May our God, YHWH,

continue to bless each one of us,

today and beyond this Sabbath day,

as we face the beginning of yet another week,

on our blessed life on earth,

to be useful to others and fruitful for Him,

as we remember His commandment

to be Other-conscious,

and not live simply for self.

 

May our choices for each day, each moment,

be according to TORAH,

For that would be beneficial to our fellowmen,

and glorifying to

the Author and Giver of the Torah,

YHWH is His Name!

Amen.

 

Image from plus.google.com

 

Image from plus.google.com

 

 

Shabbat Shalom

to all Sabbath-Keepers

among our Sinaite, Messianic, Christian,

Jewish, Moslem, and Unaffiliated friends —

 

In behalf of Sinai6000 Core Community

spread all over YHWH’s world,

 

 

   NSB@S6K

logo-e1422801044622

A Sinaite’s Sabbath Liturgy – 2nd Sabbath in November

Image from galleryhip.com

Image from galleryhip.com

KINDLE THE SABBATH LIGHTS

 

As sundown is once again upon our earth, 

signaling the beginning of Your 7th Day,

our anticipated Day of Rest,

our Shabbat —-

As  earthly time continues to march on,

moving from season to season,

according to Your natural design

in forecast-able weather patterns

and predictable climate changes–

We reflect on You “WHO CHANGES NOT”

and thankfully depend

on Your UNCHANGING NATURE:

not wondering and guessing

according to the limitations of our imagination

which brings You down to our level of understanding.

 

Forgive us, LORD YHWH,

for recreating YOU in our image,

for truly,  how could we even begin to fathom 

what You the One True God are like—

when all we could go by

is our experiential knowledge

and limited understanding of 

how humanity could possibly be created in Your ‘image’?

 

Forgive us for failing to understand

that none of Your Omni-attributes

are shared with humankind, 

and yet You chose to take the risk

to grant us

what You in Your Divine Wisdom

determined as an attribute

that best reflects You as GOD —

that precious gift of CHOICE, 

indeed, of FREE WILL!

 

Could humanity responsibly wield this gift,

within our human limitations,

with no foreknowledge such as Yours,

but with full control only

over our very use of this Divine gift—

Truly a Godly prerogative,

which no other created living breathing being

has been endowed with;

certainly none of the beasts,

and down to the tiniest life-form,

have any more than instinct and natural inclination, 

by Divine Design.

How privileged is humankind, 

to be created in Your Image!

 

Indeed, You are GOD, there is no other —

GOD Who has declared Yourself in no uncertain terms,

so that no one need remain in ignorance,

except by choice,

in this day and age

when knowledge is so readily available, 

if any earnest seeker of You wishes to know and learn

and be certain beyond this world full of man-sourced belief systems,

imagining and inventing gods made in the image of man . . .

Living in an age of information technology

when no one can claim any more excuse

not to know of You,

not to know You,

not to know Your Name,

O YHWH!

 

Your Sinai Revelation enshrined in the TORAH,

has long been  recorded

and made known to the nations,

beyond the nation-custodian Israel,

thanks to the recognition given to its Divine Source

by three major world religions —

Judaism, Christianity, and Islam.

 

Thank You, Lord YHWH, 

for being patient with any and every individual,

born in ignorance of You,

yet aware and acknowledging

that a Creator God exists,

and chooses to start a search for

the One True God,

though diverted by man-made religions,

but eventually, according to Your promise,

finds You,

because he/she  seeks You with all heart and soul:

“I will be found by you.”

Image from pastormikescorner.blogspot.com

Image from pastormikescorner.blogspot.com

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

WORDS OF THANKSGIVING

FROM THE PSALMS

[Take turns reciting the following excerpts.]

 

Open for me the gates of the righteous;

I will enter and give thanks to the Lord.

Psalm 118:19

 

Come, let us sing for joy to the Lord;

let us shout aloud to the Rock of our salvation.

Let us come before him with thanksgiving

and extol him with music and song.

Psalm 95:1-2

 

Let them give thanks to the Lord for his unfailing love

and his wonderful deeds for mankind,

9 for he satisfies the thirsty

and fills the hungry with good things.

Psalm 107:8-9

 

I will give thanks to the Lord

because of his righteousness;

I will sing the name of the Lord Most High.

Psalm 7:17

 

I thank you, Lord, with all my heart;

I sing praise to you before the gods.

I face your holy Temple, bow down, and praise your name

because of your constant love and faithfulness,

because you have shown that your name

and your commands are supreme.

Psalm 138: 1-2

 

I will extol the Lord at all times;

His praise will always be on my lips.

I will glory in the Lord;

let the afflicted hear and rejoice.

Glorify the Lord with me;

let us exalt his name together.

Psalm 34:1-3

 

Give praise to the Lord, proclaim his name;

make known among the nations what he has done.

Sing to him, sing praise to him;

tell of all his wonderful acts.

Glory in his holy name;

let the hearts of those who seek the Lord

rejoice!

Psalm 105:1-3

 

Here are the top 10 Biblical verses about Thanksgiving:

 

When you have eaten your fill,

give thanks to Hashem your God

for the good land which He has given you.” 

 – Deuteronomy 8:10

 

“In that day, you shall say:

‘I give thanks to You, Hashem!’”

– Isaiah 12:1

 

“The living, only the living

can give thanks to You.

Fathers relate to children

Your acts of grace.”

– Isaiah 38:19

 

“Gladness and joy shall abide there,

Thanksgiving and the sound of music.”

– Isaiah 51:3

 

“From them shall issue thanksgiving

and the sound of dancers.” 

– Jeremiah 30:19

“Give thanks to God of Hosts,

for Hashem is good,

for His kindness is everlasting!”

– Jeremiah 33:11

 

“I wash my hands in innocence,

and walk around Your mizbayach,

Hashem,

raising my voice in thanksgiving,

and telling all Your wonders.”

– Psalms 26:6

 

“I, with loud thanksgiving,

Will sacrifice to You.” 

 Yonah 2:10

 

“I acknowledge and praise You,

O God of my fathers,

You who have given me wisdom and power.

 Daniel 2:23

 

“Praise Hashem for He is good;

His steadfast love is eternal.” 

 Chronicles 16:24

 

 

Image from quotesaboutloveweb.blogspot.com

Image from quotesaboutloveweb.blogspot.com

 BLESSINGS

 

Lord God YHWH,
In this season of ‘Thanksgiving’,
we simply repeat the prayer we recite every Sabbath—
Thanking You for our knowledge of You,
for discovering Your Name, YHWH,
and having the privilege of declaring Your Name
to all who would listen and believe
and join us in worshipping You,
as the One and Only True God!

 

We thank You for birthing us in our individual family —
[name them] —
father, mother,
sisters-brothers,
extended kin.
We thank You for the family
we each participated in recreating—with our spouse,
and the gift of children — sons and daughters,
and on to the generations that issued from us:
grandchildren, great-grandchildren.
We thank You for friendships
we have cultivated in our lifetime–
for those who have gone ahead of us,
for those who are still with us.
We thank You for working relationships–
in our occupations,
our employers
and employees,
our co-workers—
Please bless them all
in the ways that matter to them,
meeting their specific needs.
But most especially,
please bless them
the way You have blessed us:
with  knowledge of You,
and Your blessed Name, O YHWH!
May all of them discover You
in the same way that we have,
first in Your Created world,
and ultimately in Your TORAH.
Amen!
Image from www.messianicjudaism.me

Image from www.messianicjudaism.me

HAVDALAH
How abundant are the good things
that you have stored up for those who fear you,
that you bestow in the sight of all,
on those who take refuge in you.
In the shelter of your presence
you hide them from all human intrigues;
you keep them safe in your dwelling
from accusing tongues.
— Psalm 31:19-20

 

 

 

O nations of the world,

recognize the Lord,

recognize that the Lord is glorious and strong.

Give to the Lord the glory he deserves!

Bring your offering and come into his presence.

Worship the Lord in all his holy splendor.

Let all the earth tremble before him.

The world stands firm and cannot be shaken.

Give thanks to the Lord, for he is good!

His faithful love endures forever.

– 1 Chronicles 16:28-30,34.

 

 

Yours, O LORD,

are the greatness

and the power

and the glory and the majesty

and the splendor,

for everything in heaven and earth is Yours.

Yours, O LORD, is the kingdom;

you are exalted as head over all.

– Chronicles 29:11-13.

Weve-Much-To-Thank-God-For-The-Blessed-Life

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Shabbat Shalom to all Sinaites

and our Messianic/Christian/Unaffiliated friends,

worshippers of the One True God,

YHWH is His Name!

 

In behalf of Sinai 6000 Core Community,

   NSB@S6K
logo-e1422801044622

 

 

 

 

 

 

logo-e1422801044622

 

A Sinaite’s Liturgy – 1st Sabbath of November 2019

Image from www.farmgirlfollies.com

Image from www.farmgirlfollies.com

Kindle the Sabbath Lights

 

Oh YHWH,

God of Israel,

We bless You for blessing the nations

with knowledge of You

and Your Torah,

the true Revelation that Israel was privileged

to be given

as part of its Covenant with You

on Sinai.

 

 

 

We bless Israel for sharing with the nations,

the Hebrew Scriptures

which record both their failures and successes,

their losses and their victories,

for us to learn from.

 

Through Your Revelation on Sinai,

and Your interaction with Your chosen people,

 we have gained knowledge of You—

the One True God,

the God of Israel,

the God of the nations.

 

May Israel’s ‘servant light’ continue to shine

that the whole world may be illumined

by the Light of Your Torah,

and may we Gentiles who have seen Your LIGHT,

through Your servant’s light,

become sparks and lamps ourselves

to help dispel the darkness

in the minds and hearts of humankind.

 

Oh YHWH, Revelator on Sinai,

God of our Sinai community . . . .

God of all those who acknowledge You as the One True God,

The One and Only God, none before and none after,

YHWH, self-revealing God in the Hebrew Scriptures!

As we come together to delight

in this 1st Sabbath of this month,

We remember all the miracles

You wrought in Israel’s behalf.

And yet it is evident to all

who have eyes to see,

that you continue to work miracles

for one nation and one nation only,

to which You committed Yourself

to see them through

from their birth on Sinai 

to the end of the age.

 

Outside of the timeline of the canon of the TNK,

the feasts celebrated by the nation of Israel

recorded in the Hebrew Scriptures though surely,

recorded in the mind, heart, and spirit of every Jew,

who look back on their national history,

when they reclaimed the Temple in Jerusalem for You,

their God, their Liberator not only from Egypt,

but from all other nations that have since oppressed them

over six millennia of their existence on Your earth;

and yet they have survived to this day

to be a Nation-Witness to the Covenant

You made with them on Sinai.

 

We kindle our Sabbath lights

and join this weekly celebration of Israel,

Your chosen people, Your  ‘Sabbath people’, 

who continue to be sustained

by Your grace and mercy,

and Your prophetic utterances

through your human mouthpieces,

not because they have successfully obeyed Your Torah,

but because You are faithful to Your declaration:

“You will be My people,

and I will be Your God.”

 

We are not of Israel,

but we count ourselves among Your people,

for we embrace You as our God,

O Creator, Revelator, God of Israel,

Who revealed Your Name as YHWH, the Eternal,

Who changes not, but will be as You choose to be.

 

We love Your Torah, we love Your chosen people,

We count ourselves truly blessed

to be counted among those who pray for them,

who pray for peace in Your land of promise,

for You have said,

“I will bless those

who bless you” . . . .

 

As these Sabbath lights

illuminate the darkness around us,

May we be as lamps for Your sake,

and for Your Torah,

by the very life we live,

which we rededicate to You,

on this culminating day of the week, the Sabbath.

O LIGHT of the world, YHWH,

Israel’s Adonai and Elohim,

God of the Nations,

Our LORD and our GOD.

 

Image from www.juliesanders.org

Image from www.juliesanders.org

Psalm 33 [NIV]

Sing joyfully to the Lord, you righteous;
    it is fitting for the upright to praise him.
Praise the Lord with the harp;
    make music to him on the ten-stringed lyre.
Sing to him a new song;
    play skillfully, and shout for joy.

For the word of the Lord is right and true;
    he is faithful in all he does.
The Lord loves righteousness and justice;
    the earth is full of his unfailing love.

By the word of the Lord the heavens were made,
    their starry host by the breath of his mouth.
He gathers the waters of the sea into jars[a];
    he puts the deep into storehouses.
Let all the earth fear the Lord;
    let all the people of the world revere him.
For he spoke, and it came to be;
    he commanded, and it stood firm.

10 The Lord foils the plans of the nations;
    he thwarts the purposes of the peoples.
11 But the plans of the Lord stand firm forever,
    the purposes of his heart through all generations.

12 Blessed is the nation whose God is the Lord,
    the people he chose for his inheritance.
13 From heaven the Lord looks down
    and sees all mankind;
14 from his dwelling place he watches
    all who live on earth—
15 he who forms the hearts of all,
    who considers everything they do.

16 No king is saved by the size of his army;
    no warrior escapes by his great strength.
17 A horse is a vain hope for deliverance;
    despite all its great strength it cannot save.
18 But the eyes of the Lord are on those who fear him,
    on those whose hope is in his unfailing love,
19 to deliver them from death
    and keep them alive in famine.

20 We wait in hope for the Lord;
    he is our help and our shield.
21 In him our hearts rejoice,
    for we trust in his holy name.
22 May your unfailing love be with us, Lord,
    even as we put our hope in you.

 

 

strivingfortruth.com

strivingfortruth.com

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Blessed are You, 

O YHWH,

Creator of the universe,

 the Source of all Joy in our lives.

For all the years we sought You,

the One True God,

Even as we did not know You

like we know You now,

Still the joy of seeking You

and serving You

and loving You

was always the purpose of our lives.

As we partake of this fruit of the vine

we drink to Your Life in us,

and Your Light that shines upon us,

and hopefully through us.

We drink this wine,

symbol of the sheer joy

of finally knowing You.

L’Chaim, to Life, Mabuhay!

 

Blessed are You, YHWH,

Adonai our Elohim,

for sustaining us all our years on this earth,

with the staff of life,

for food on our tables,

 the nourishment of our bodies,

food for the soul, Your Torah,

the true nourishment of our spirit.

 

 

[OriginalTune:  ‘Give Thanks’/revised lyrics]

Give thanks with a grateful heart

Give thanks to Yahuwah God,

Give thanks because He’s given

His TRUE WORD, His TRUE WAY,

Give thanks for the LIFE we live,

Give thanks for the LOVE He gives,

Give thanks for His provisions

every moment, every day—

And now, may we give back to our Lord,

all that He requires from us,

to simply live His Life, His Torah life,

Make known, Who He is, declare His Name,

so that all might come to know,

how He revealed Himself to Israel,

Give Him thanks . . . heartfelt thanks . . .

endless thanks.

 

[Lift up in prayer your loved ones — name them one by one, remembering those who have moved on from this life — parents, spouse, siblings, children, extended kin, friends, special people, co-workers, etc.]

 

Image from bibletalkbydave.com

Image from bibletalkbydave.com

Image from Beth Moshe Congregation

Image from Beth Moshe Congregation

 

HAVDALAH

 

As we each go our separate ways

looking forward to celebrating 

the next Sabbath in seven days, 

May the Light of YHWH,

the light of Israel,

and the lamp of Torah

illuminate our way

throughout our continuing spiritual pilgrimage

on the one true pathway toward Sinai,

the Mountain of Revelation

the Site of the One and Only Covenant,

the Source of Torah Light. . .

Toward YHWH,

the True LIGHT of the world,

the One and Only True God.

 Amen.

Image from www.pinterest.com

Image from www.pinterest.com

 

Shabbat Shalom

In behalf  of Sinai 6000 Core Community,

 

Sig-4_16colorslogo

Isaiah 14:12-15 is not about the Devil

[First posted in 2012 — it has been seven years, so time for a timely repost on the day of spooks, ghosts, goblins, witches — Halloween! BOO indeed! We have a series of articles in this website questioning the existence of a “fallen angel” which has spawned a category of imaginary creatures (devil, demons, witches, goblins, ghosts, vampires, etc.).   Related posts:

———————————–

 

 

Hebrew translation:  [AST] ArtScroll Tanach/The stone Edition

Christian Translation:  [NASB] New American Standard Bible

ISAIAH 14:12-15

 

 

Image from boymeetsworldilluminati.tumblr.com

Image from boymeetsworldilluminati.tumblr.com

[AST] 12 How you have fallen from the heavens, O glowing morning star; been cut down to the ground, O conqueror of nations? 13 You said in your heart, “I will ascend to the heavens; higher than the stars of God I shall raise my throne; I will sit at the Mountain of Meeting, on the northern side; 14 I will ascend over the tops of the clouds; I will liken myself to the Most High!” 15 But to the nether-world have you been lowered, to the bottom of the pit!’

 

[NASB] 12 “How you have fallen from heaven, O star of the morning, son of the dawn!  You have been cut down to the earth, You who have weakened the nations!  “But you said in your heart, ‘I will ascend to heaven; I will raise my throne above the stars of God, And I will sit on the mount of assembly In the recesses of the north.  I will ascend above the heights of the clouds; I will make myself like the Most High.’ “nevertheless you will be thrust down to Sheol.  To the recesses of the pit.

 

Reading through the Hebrew translation and the Christian version, the rendering is much the same. Taken out of its literary context, the subject could indeed apply to any “fallen being” because of the metaphoric language.  This is why reading the larger context and the development of the theme in previous verses and preceding chapters are important when checking out any prooftext presented for doctrinal interpretation.

 

These verses in the book of Isaiah are usually cited together with Ezekiel 28 as proof texts among others, to explain how the “fallen angel” who is referred to as the “Devil” of Christianity supposedly fell from grace, sometime in eternal past, but mentioned in the “Old” Testament.  However, let us take a closer look to see to whom these verses are actually referring, at least in context, devoid of infusion of Christian interpretation.  Remember, CONTEXT is key to understanding anything written to be read.  The author, unless he does not want his reader to understand, will provide the background for any verse, so never read out of context. 

 

First, one key phrase:  “Glowing morning star”, “son of the dawn”, “star of the morning”. 

 

 

  • Of the three languages to which the TNK was translated, the term for “morning star” is [Hebrew] helel, [Septuagint/Greek] heosphoros, and [Vulgate/Latin] lucifer, we can see why Lucifer from the 4th century on was applied to this Christian figure Satan/Devil.  
  • According to the Catholic encyclopedia, originally Lucifer denotes the planet Venus because of its brilliance; the Roman Catholic Latin translation Vulgate uses the word for “the light of the morning” in Job 11:17, “the signs of the zodiac” in Job 38:32, and “the aurora” in Psalm 109:3. 
  •  Strangely enough, the phrase “bright morning star” is also used in the last book of the New Testament, referring to Jesus.   Revelation 22:16: I, Jesus, have sent My angel to testify to you these things for the churches.  I am the root and the descendant of David, the bright morning star.

 

Secondly, in the context of Isaiah 14 and previous verses leading up to it, we can see that the language is metaphorical; the bright planet is said to have fallen from the sky or heaven but obviously it is referring to a figure:

 

Who is this unnamed figure?  

  • O conqueror of nations
  • You destroyer of nations
  • You who have weakened the nations
 

So why would this figure fall from the heights where he was?

 
  • You said in your heart, “I will ascend to the heavens; higher than the stars of God I shall raise my throne; I will sit at the Mountain of Meeting, on the northern side; 14 I will ascend over the tops of the clouds; I will liken myself to the Most High!” 
  •  “But you said in your heart, ‘I will ascend to heaven; I will raise my throne above the stars of God, And I will sit on the mount of assembly In the recesses of the north.  I will ascend above the heights of the clouds; I will make myself like the Most High.
 

Where will this figure initially fall?

  • down to the ground; 
  • cut down;
  • to the earth;
 

And further?

 
  • But to the nether-world have you been lowered, to the bottom of the pit!
  •  nevertheless you will be thrust down to Sheol.  To the recesses of the pit.
 

Isolated from the rest of the chapter, these verses could apply to anyone who comes to mind, and specially to a Christian who believes in a fallen angel called Lucifer/Satan, it is easy to conclude “AHA, who else!” And while Sheol and ‘the pit’ is understood to be the grave, when a reader believes in a place called ‘hell’, then he reads it predictably as Christians normally do.   Preconceived ideas inherited from teachers with a particular orientation, easily lead to the same connection. The reader strives no further because he has been . . . well, brainwashed to think a certain way. But one should never read any verse, specially ‘prooftexts’ in isolation, without checking the verses before and after.  Bible teachers should emphasize that basic rule of thumb for reading any text and specially scripture.

 

But if one reads from the beginning of Chapter 14, it is very clear that the figure being referred to is the king of Babylon, so let’s read the verses leading up to the “prooftext”:

 

[AST] Isaiah 14:1-27

 

 For HASHEM  [YHWH] will show mercy to Jacob [Israel]. He will choose Israel again and grant them rest upon their land.  The proselyte will join them and be attached to the House of Jacob.  The nations will take them and bring them to their place, and the House of Israel will possess them as slaves and maidservants upon the land of HASHEM [YHWH]; they will be captors over their captors and they will rule over their oppressors.

 

It shall be on the day when HASHEM [YHWH] grants you relief from your distress and your anxiety and from the hard labor with which you were worked:  You will recite this parable about the king of Babylonia:

 

How has the oppressor come to an end, the arrogance been ended?  HASHEM [YHWH] has broken the staff of the wicked, the rod of rulers who would strike peoples with fury, with unrelenting blows, who would oppress nations with wrath [the nations] were pursued [by them] without respite.  The entire land is at rest and tranquil,’ they broke out in glad song.  Even the cypresses rejoice over you, the cedars of Lebanon [saying,] ‘From the time that you were laid low, the woodcutter would not come up against us.’  The nether-world from below trembles for you to greet your arrival; it has awakened the giants for you, all the leaders of the world, it has roused all the kings of the land out of their thrones. They will all proclaim and say to you, ‘You also have been stricken as we were; you are compared to us.  Brought down to the nether-world were your pride and the tumult of your stringed instruments; maggots are spread out under you, and worms are your covers. How have you fallen from the heavens, O glowing morning star; been cut down to the ground, O conqueror of nations?  You had said in your heart, “I will ascend to the heavens; higher than the stars of God I shall raise my throne; I will sit at the Mountain of Meeting, on the northern side; I will ascend over the tops of the clouds; I will liken myself to the Most High!”  But to the nether-world have you been lowered, to the bottom of the pit!’  Those who see you will take note, they will contemplate you carefully: ‘Is this the man who made the land tremble, who made kingdoms quake; who made the world like a wilderness and tore down its cities; who never released his captives to go home?’  All the kings of the nations, all of them, like in honor, each in his place, but you have been flung from your grave like a detested tree shoot; like the garment of corpses pierced by the sword, which are lowered into the stones of the pit, like a trampled carcass.  You will not join them in burial, for you have destroyed your land and killed your people; your evil offspring will not be called [by your name] for long.  Prepare a slaughter for his sons for their father’s iniquity; let them not arise and inherit the land, lest the world become full of enemies.

 

I will rise up against them —the word of HASHEM [YHWH]Master of Legions —- and I will cut off for Babylonia name and remnant, child and grandchild — the word of HASHEM [YHWH]. And I will make it an inheritance for the hedgehog and marshes of water, and I will sweep it clean with the broom of destruction —the word of HASHEM [YHWH] Master of Legions.

 

HASHEM, Master of Legions, has sworn, saying: ‘Surely as I have conceived, so shall come about; and as I have devised, so shall be established:  To break Assyria in My land; I will trample him on My mountains; his yoke will be removed from upon [Israel] and his burden will be removed from upon [Israel’s ]shoulder.  This is the plan that is devised against all the land, and this is the hand that is outstretched against all the nations.  For HASHEM [YHWH] Master of Legions, has devised, and who can annul?  His hand is outstretched, and who can turn it back” 

 

 

Image from www.pinterest.co

Image from www.pinterest.co

Outside of the biblical text, the historical context places this at a time the Babylonian empire was the most powerful nation under Nebuchadnezzar and yet it was overtaken by the Medo-Persians, the Greeks, and Romans. There is mention of Assyria, another nation under judgment.

 

 

Powerful leaders of nations through the centuries continue to fall into the same pitfalls; just look at the heads of the nations being dislodged by the recent phenomenon in the Middle East referred to as the “Arab Spring”.  Look at the fall of Saddam Hussein of Iraq (modern Babylon) who, ironically, was in the process of reconstructing those ancient ruins which was completely deserted by the 7th century, C.E.  The fate of Saddam Hussein is the fate of all leaders who abuse their position of prominence and misuse their power.  History truly repeats itself because those in power do not learn from the lessons of history.

 

As we keep emphasizing over and over in this website, read verses in context! The literary context explains a lot if you read through the chapter alone, but more so if you read it in the context of the whole book of Isaiah and in the general context of the Hebrew Bible which does not at all teach the existence of a fallen angel who can lead a rebellion against God and dominate the earth and oppress mankind. That Devil, Lucifer of Christianity appears more powerful than YHWH Himself, how can that be?

 

 The consistent message of the TNK is:  Adonai Elohim YHWH is ALONE.  To borrow a doxology from the NT book of Revelation, “to Him (YHWH) be the glory and the dominion forever and ever. Amen.”

 

NSB@S6K

The Afterlife – A Sober Look – 4

[Continuing the final chapter of Neil Gillman’s book The Death of Death: Resurrection and Immortality in Jewish Thought; this is an ebook downloadable on the kindle app from amazon.com, it is worth adding to your personal library; reformatted for posting; highlights ours–Admin1.]

 

 

———————-

 

 

THE ARGUMENT FROM ANTHROPOLOGY – I: MY BODY

 

 

The death of death is the ultimate eschatological promise.  Judaism came to affirm that expectation because, certainly beginning with the middle of the 2nd century BCE and possibly somewhat earlier, some Jews believed that in the foreseeable future, at least some of the dead would live again.  Eventually, that promise was expanded to include all Jews who had ever lived.  That doctrine soon achieved quasi-dogmatic status in the Jewish system of beliefs.  Begin with that premise and the inevitable conclusion is that in such an age, death itself would be no more.

 

 

But what are we to make of that premise?

 

 

What does it mean to say that God has the power to bring the dead to life?

 

 

We saw that this doctrine began as two separate doctrines that later merged.

 

 

  • The first teaches that, at the end time, bodies will be resurrected from their graves.
  • The second, that there is a non-material “something” in every human called the “soul” which never dies, which departs the body at death and returns to God.

 

 

The later conflation of the two doctrines led to the belief that, at the time of resurrection, the soul would be restored to the resurrected body, and that each individual human, with body and soul united as they were on earth, would come before God for judgment.

 

 

This scenario is profoundly true.  Even more, it is indispensable for us if we are to make sense of our lives here on earth–as long as we accept it, not as crude biology, but as classic Jewish religious myth.

 

 

To characterize this phase of my argument as “anthropological” is to suggest that it stems from the Jewish view of the human person as a psycho-physical unity.  The “psycho” part of that entity is what I call my “soul”; the “physical,” my body.

 

 

To speak of “my body” is to capture a relationship that is totally unique, a relationship between something that is “me” and something else that is a “body.”  But what is that relationship?  In what way is it unique?

 

 

One possible way of construing that relationship is to suggest that my body is something that I “have” much as I “have” a watch.  But surely the relationship with my body is far more intimate than my relationship with my watch.  What I “have” I can dispose of.  I can give you my watch and I remain myself, just as I was when I wore it on my wrist.  But I cannot give you my body (except in some crude, sexual sense) without disposing of myself, of “me.” When my body is born, I am born; when my body gets sick, I am sick; when my body dies, I die.  I can dispose of my body by committing suicide, but I can only do that once.  When I do that, I have also disposed of my “self,” of me in my totality.  To say that I simply “have” my body, then, is to miss that dimension of my relationship with my body which makes it a unique relationship.

 

 

A much more accurate way of capturing that relationship between me and my body is to claim that “I am my body.”  That formulation captures the felt relationship between whatever it is that “I” am and my body.  It affirms the indissolubility of that bond, the fact that without my body, I am no longer me.  I feel quite differently toward “my” body than I do toward “a” body.  Were I a surgeon, the patient’s body that lies before me on the operating table is simply “a” body; it could be “any” body, and after completing the surgery on this body, I will move on to another body.

In fact, medical ethics insists that the body on which a surgeon operates must be simply “a” body, certainly not his own body nor even the body of someone the surgeon feels particularly close to.  Similarly, the mortician embalms “a” body.  Even in the most intense of interpersonal, sexual relationships, what I feel toward the body that lies next to me is qualitatively different than what I feel toward my own body.  The latter relationship is even infinitely more intimate than the former.  I can divorce my wife and move on to a new, intimate relationship with someone else and with that person’s body.  But I cannot divorce my body.

 

 

That comparison is suggestive.  We can posit a range of relationships between me and someone or something else which reveal a progressively diminishing sense of intimacy: Between me and my body, me and my wife, lover and children, me and my cat, me and the superintendent of my building, me and the people who share my bus trip, me and my watch, etc., etc., etc. . . . To use Buberian terminology, this range of relationships takes me progressively from the realm of the I-Thou to that of the I-It, from intimacy to detachment.  My relationship with my body is the paradigmatic I-Thou relationship.  I can enter into other I-Thou relationships because of the paradigmatic I-Thou relationship I have with my body.

 

 

Even more, it is because of my body that I am inserted into time and space, into history and society.  If I were not embodied, I would not be sitting at my word-processor on this very day.  Nor would I be teaching my class or playing with my children.  My body is the landmark which connects me with everything else that exists physically, specifically with all of history and society.

 

 

The thrust of these reflections is to suggest,

 

 

  • first, that my body is indispensable to my sense of self.
    • Without my body, there is no “me.”
    • Whatever my ultimate destiny, then, whatever God has in store for me at the end, must include my body.
    • That is why any doctrine of the afterlife must deal with my body as well.
    • Belief in bodily resurrection is, then, indispensable to any doctrine of the afterlife.
  • It is indispensable for another reason.
    • If my body inserts me into history and society, then the affirmation of bodily resurrection is also an affirmation of history and society.
    • If my bodily existence is insignificant, then so are history and society.
    • To affirm that God has the power to reconstitute me in my bodily existence is to affirm that God also cares deeply about history and society.

 

But we know that God does care deeply about history and society.  Will Herberg is one of many thinkers who claim that it is Judaism that contributed “the sense of history” to Western culture.  Every people and nation had their historians, but only in the Bible is history viewed, not as a series of random events, nor as an endless cycle without an ultimate goal, but rather as “a great and meaningful process.”  Herberg quotes the biblical scholar, J.P. Hyatt, as contending that the prophets conceived of God as a God of history, manifesting himself on the stage of time and controlling the destiny of men and nations.

 

 

History, in Judaism, has a beginning, an end, and a purpose.  History is linear, and it understands the past as manifesting promises which would be fulfilled in the future.

 

 

Biblical historiography also takes time seriously.  Herberg writes:

 

 

God’s ends are effected with time, in and through history; the salvation that is promised as the ultimate validation of life lies indeed beyond history but it lies beyond it as its fulfillment and consummation . . . . From this point of view, earthly history takes on a meaning and seriousness that are completely absent where the Hebraic influence has not been felt.

 

 

To take time seriously is to take the mundane events of everyday life seriously.  Among the Greeks, Herberg notes, humanity had no destiny.  “The strivings and doings of men, their enterprises, conflicts and achievements, led nowhere.  All, all would be swallowed up in the cycle of eternal recurrence that was the law of the cosmos.”

 

 

To shape “the strivings and doings of men” in minutest detail is the central purpose of biblical legislation, and in biblical prophecy, Israel’s loyalty to God’s moral law becomes the decisive factor in its national history.  The purpose of the whole is to create a distinctive social structure, a unique community, an “am kadosh,” a “people” that is “holy” or “set apart.”

 

 

Torah is suffused with this concern for Israel’s social polity.  It is implicit in every piece of legislation in the Torah affecting interpersonal relationships, but it is explicit in Leviticus 25, an entire chapter devoted to regulating the social life of the community.  The legislative details pertain to the Sabbatical and Jubilee years, and to the redemption of land, of indentured servants and of slaves.  In each case, the text begins with the phrase, “If your kinsman is in straits . . . .”  The whole chapter is permeated with such admonitions as “fear your God,” or “I am the Lord your God who brought you out of the land of Egypt” or “for they [the indentured servants] are My servants . . . ; they may not give themsleves over into servitude.”

 

 

The repeated emphasis on God’s redemption of Israel from Egyptian servitude provides the equally explicit grounding for this legislation.  Indeed, why were our ancestors enslaved in Egypt for 400 years if not to provide them with an object lesson about the evils of social oppression, if not to teach them how to create a social structure in which no one will be oppressed?

 

 

In the writings of the prophets, this emphasis on the primacy of morality reaches its apogee.  Witness Amos’ cry to  . . .let justice well up like water, Righteousness like an unfailing stream. (5:24) or Isaiah’s Learn to do good, Devote yourself to justice; Aid the wronged. Uphold the rights of the orphan; Defend the cause of the widow. (1:17)

 

 

Yehezkel Kaufmann, the noted Israeli biblical scholar emphasizes that it is precisely—

 

the commonplace ‘venial’ sins that offend the prophets: bribe-taking, biased justice, false scales, extortion from the poor and defenseless, raising prices, and the like.  For such sins they prophesy destruction and exile . . . . God made Himself known to Israel, made with it a moral-religious Covenant, intended it to be a holy nation dedicated to do His will.  But a people perverting justice, practicing violence, drunken and debauched, is no people of God! For the prophets, justice and righteousness are not a private affair.  The entire nation is responsible for the moral state that prevails in it. Hence it will be judged as a whole both for idol worship and for moral sin on the day of reckoning.

 

 

God’s engagement both with human history and with Israel’s social polity come together in prophetic eschatology.  The prophets do more than rebuke and call for repentance.  They also envision a future age when paganism will end and monotheism will become the heritage of all peoples, when war will be no more, and when all humankind will recognize God’s moral law as absolute.

 

 

To affirm that vision is effectively to affirm the value to God of human history and society as we participate in them during our lifetime.  But that participation demands our embodied existence here on earth.  That is why any Jewish doctrine of the afterlife must also affirm the significance of that dimension of my being.

 

 

II.  MY SOUL

 

 

But as clear as it is that “I am my body,” it is also clear that “I am not only my body.”  The impulse behind all theories of the human soul is the sense that there are dimensions of my self that resist being reduced to mere bodily functions.

 

 

  • First there is my self-consciousness.
    • I am aware of my “self,” of some overarching dimension of my being that unifies the various pieces of my life, that organizes my thoughts, feelings and experiences and identifies them as mine.
    • Much of the work of this part of me operates within the range of my consciousness; I feel or am aware of this part of me doing its work.
    • I am even aware of the fact that I am related to my body, and I ponder the nature of that relationship.
  • I am also aware of myself as a thinking being, and I can think about my thinking and wonder about my thoughts and about the nature of thought itself.  I also have feelings, values, hopes, visions of what I can accomplish in my lifetime.
    •  I have, in short a personal myth, an overarching image of who I am and where I belong in the world.
    • If asked, I can articulate what this larger image looks like and, thereby, tell you who I, distinctively, am.

 

It is this sense of an “inner” life that has led philosophers from antiquity onward to speak of human beings as possessing a “soul.”  Plato understood the human soul as a distinct ontological entity which pre-exists its insertion into the body and will continue to exist after the death of the body.  We saw that this view of the soul leads to a sharply dualistic understanding of the human person as a composite of two distinct elements, body and soul.  Ultimately it also leads to the doctrine of the immortality of the human soul which, as we have also seen, persists in philosophical and theological thinking to this day.  Souls are immortal because they are non-material and, thus, indestructible.  That’s just the way souls are.

 

 

The problem with this sharp body/soul dualism is that it is counter-intuitive, that having created this sharp distinction between the body and the soul, we are at a loss to connect them again.  Yet we feel that connection.  We feel ourselves to be a single, indivisible psycho/physical individual.  We feel an intimate relationship between our inner lives and our bodily functions.  We are aware that each affects the other, that our feelings and thoughts influence our bodily functions; we feel tension and we perspire.  We know that aspects of our bodily faculties, such as our ability to see and hear, generate feelings and thoughts.  We also feel, intuitively, that these two dimensions of our being from one concrete individuality.  But once they are separated from each other, how can they be reunited?

 

 

The further implications of Platonic thinking are equally problematic.  Plato identifies the soul as the “real” me, as that which makes me distinctly human and unique.  The development of my soul is redemptive.  It is my uniquely human mandate, my ultimate accomplishment.  Plato understands my bodily existence to be an obstacle to that fulfillment, the “prison” in which my soul is incarcerated and from which I must try to liberate myself by philosophical reflection.

 

 

These implications of Platonic dualism pose insurmountable obstacles to any thinker who speaks out of the Jewish tradition.

 

 

  • First, Judaism has never demeaned the body and its functions.
    • Jewish liturgy speaks of the body as a miraculous piece of God’s creation.
    • Judaism has never affirmed the religious value of sexual abstinence.  Indeed, the very first commandment to Adam and Eve is to procreate, and the value of sexual fulfillment has never been questioned by Jews.  We celebrate all significant ritual moments with food and drink.  Before burial, we wash and purify the body as we recite prayers that affirm the glory and the beauty of the human body.

 

One of the most striking affirmations of the value of the human body is a liturgical passage recited daily, together with the passage that praises God for having created and preserved my soul, in the early morning worship service.  This passage, also of Talmudic origin (Bab. Talmud, B’rakhot 60b), reads:

 

 

Blessed are You, Lord our God, Sovereign of the universe, who has fashioned the human being with wisdom and created within him many openings and cavities.  It is obvious to You  . . that should one of them be ruptured or one of them be blocked, it would be impossible to survive and stand before You.  Blessed are You, God, Who heals all flesh and acts wondrously.

 

 

The human body is of ultimate value and significance because it too is a manifestation of God’s wondrous power.  Would you discover God’s presence?  Look at the human body!

 

 

As we saw earlier, the Bible knows nothing of a Platonic entity called the soul.  It understood the Hebrew terms nefesh or neshamah as a way of speaking of the living human person, or as the spark of life that vivifies the clod of earth out of which God formed the first human.  Eventually, Greek thought did shape later Jewish thinking on the nature of the soul, but even then, Jewish tradition rejected its more extreme dualistic implications.  For example, it saw the soul as created by God, and its immortality as a gift from God Who rules even over the world of human souls.  At least until modernity, Judaism continued to insist that at the end of days, human bodies too would live again.

 

 

John Hick sharply rejects any sense of the soul as a distinct metaphysical entity and dualistic implications of that view. He understands the soul as “an indicator of value.”  In his view, the soul—–

 

 

will express that sense of the sacredness of human personality and of the inalienable rights of the human individual which we have . . . seen to be the moral and political content of the western idea of the soul . . . . To speak of man as a soul is to speak mythologically, but in a way which is bound up with important practical attitudes and practices.  The myth of the soul expresses a faith in the intrinsic value of the human individual as an end in itself.

 

 

Hick, here, echoes one interpretation of the biblical claim that human beings were created “in the image of God” (Genesis 1:26-27). The literal meaning of that claim is not at all clear, but to some later Jewish thinkers, preeminently Maimonides, it establishes the unique value of the human being among all of creation.  It leads Maimonides to insist that true human perfection is intellectual.

 

 

This is in reality the ultimate end; this is what gives the individual true perfection, a perfection belonging to him alone; and it gives him permanent perdurance; through it man is man.

 

 

It also leads him to insist that ultimate human immortality is for the soul alone.  But of all Jewish thinkers, Maimonides espouses the sharpest body/soul dualism.

 

 

Note that, for Hick, to speak of a human soul is to speak mythically.  It refers to one more “beyond.”  This time, it is the various manifestations of what we call our “inner” life and which elude direct, overt apprehension.  Another way of saying this is to view the soul as a construct, an imaginative unification of the dimensions of that inner life which pulls together all the dimensions of our awareness that do not explicitly reflect our bodily functioning.  This, we identify as “soul.”

 

 

In this view, the term “soul” is similar to the term “mind” with which it is often confused.  But to speak of my mind is not to speak of a distinct entity buried deeply in my brain.  I can hold a brain in my hand, but I cannot hold a mind.  Though “mind” is a noun, it really functions as an adverb, a term which qualifies or describes modes of behavior.  When I behave intelligently, when I deliberate what to do or not to do, when I think, I say that I am “using” my mind.  But again, a mind is not something I “have” or “use.”  I cannot dispose of or surrender my mind, except in a metaphorical sense.  “Mind,” too, is a construct which unifies and identifies one dimension of my behavior.

 

 

The precise relationship between the mind and the body (or the brain) is one of the perennial problems of philosophy.  It raises many of the same issues suggested by the relationship between body and soul.  Is the distinction between the two a valid one?  Are there existing entities to which we can apply each of these terms?  If yes, what is the relationship between the two?

 

 

Philosophers’ answers to these questions fall into two groups.  One set of theories tend to reduce one reality to the other: Either there is only body, and references to mind are covert references to bodily functions.  This view is called materialism.  Its alternative, idealism, reduces all bodily references to mental events.  In contrast, dualistic theories maintain not only that the distinction is a valid one, but that there are two distinct realities.  All dualist theories are then forced to explain how body and mind are related to each other.

 

 

There has been no satisfactory resolution of that issue throughout the history of philosophy.  But it remains clear that what precipitates the issue in the first place is the intuition that we function in these two distinctive ways, and that somehow or other, each affects the other.

 

 

When I affirm that “I am not only my body” I affirm that apart from my sense of my bodily existence, I am also aware of a dimension of my self which eludes identification with my bodily functions, but which remains as intrinsic to my identity as is my body.

 

 

In what sense is this soul immortal?  For me, not in any Platonic sense, not as a distinct entity which survives my death and the burial of my body.  If I am a psycho/physical entity, then when I die, all of me dies, my body together with my inner life.

 

 

The notion that the soul enjoys an intrinsic immortality denied to my body is also troubling because it takes God out of the eschatological picture.  If the soul is intrinsically immortal, then God has nothing to do with my soul at the end of days, other than reuniting it with my body.  But the whole point of Jewish thinking on the afterlife is that it affirms God’s ultimate power, the final manifestation of God’s unfettered sovereignty.  The doctrine of bodily resurrection preserves that affirmation.  the doctrine of the intrinsic immortality of the soul does not.  When the Gevurot benediction affirms that God is mehaye hametim, that God “revives the dead,” I believe it means the entire scenario:  God gives new life to the dead, to the totality of me, to my body together with my soul.

 

 

This is the ultimate meaning of the Talmudic doctrine that at the end of days, God will bring my body and my soul together again and that I will be reconstituted as I was during my life on earth.  The mythic thrust of this doctrine is that it is this totality in tis concrete individuality, as manifest during my lifetime, that God treasures and that God will therefore preserve for all time.

 

 

I insist that my resurrection must affect all of me in my concrete individuality because i understand the central thrust of the doctrine of the afterlife as establishing the everlasting preciousness to God of the life I led here on earth.  I lived that life as a concrete individual.  A doctrine of the afterlife that has my soul merging into some cosmic soul after my death would defeat the entire purpose of the myth.  The mishnah that records the court’s admonition to witnesses in a case of capital punishment reminds me that God created but one single person from whom all of mankind descended.

 

 

Therefore but a single person was created in the world, to teach that if anyone has caused a single soul to perish from Israel, Scripture imputes to him as though he had caused a whole world to perish; and if any person saves a single soul from Israel, Scripture imputes to him as though he had saved a whole world. (Mishnah Sanhedrin 4:5)

 

 

Again, why did God create one single person?

 

 

To proclaim the greatness of the Holy One, blessed be He; for a person stamps many coins with the one seal and they are all like one another; but the King of Kings, the Holy One, blessed be He, has stamped every person with the seal of the first person, yet not one of them is like the other.  Therefore every one must say, “For my sake was the world created.”

 

 

There is no more powerful testimony to Judaism’s insistence that it is precisely the single human being in all his or her individuality that is most precious to God.  It is that individuality that God will preserve forever.

 

 

I insist, as well, that God’s economy of salvation knows no religious distinctions.  We are all descendants of “one single person,” and it is precisely our individual “person-hood” that makes each of us worthy of God’s ultimate concern.  Judaism has always had its partisan nationalists and its generous universalists, but it is invariably the latter group, with its opinions on the place of the non-Jew in God’s salvational plans, that has triumphed.  I am proud to appropriate that tradition.

 

 

The one distinction that Judaism does make in this regard pertains to that between the righteous and the evil-doer.  The Jewish doctrine of the afterlife did originate, as we have seen, in the need for some notion of ultimate divine retribution beyond whatever transpires during human life on earth.  Though in time, the emphasis passed from life after death as a manifestation of God’s justice to one of God’s power, the notion that we are all ultimately accountable for the lives we live on earth never totally disappeared from Jewish teachings on the afterlife.  That dimension of Jewish eschatology remains important for me.  It teaches me that the moral quality of life I lead here on earth is of importance to God, and that God will hold me responsible for that life.  But moral issues are complex, and human motivations are obscure.  I then forego my right to pass judgment on my fellow human beings.  That judgment I am prepared to leave in God’s hands, convinced as I am that, in the words of the liturgical formula I recite upon hearing of a death, God’s judgment is always true.

 

 

That is my hope.  That is my expectation.

The Afterlife – A Sober Look – 3

[Continuing the final chapter of Neil Gillman’s book The Death of Death: Resurrection and Immortality in Jewish Thought; this is an ebook downloadable on the kindle app from amazon.com; reformatted for posting.–Admin1]

 

——————-

 

 

The Theological Argument:  God is more powerful than Death

 

 

Ask the typical Jew to describe the nature of God and he or she will immediately tell you that God is omnipotent. No doctrine is more central to popular Jewish religion.  Of course, God can do whatever God wants to do.  That is what makes God, God!  But even a brief glance at the image of God as it emerges in our classic texts will reveal that our ancestors understood God’s omnipotence to be far from absolute.

 

 

Read the Bible carefully and the overwhelming impression is of God’s dismal failure in accomplishing God’s central purpose:  The creation of a sacred people who will be unquestioningly loyal to God’s will.  God’s very first interaction with human beings, with Adam and Eve in Eden, is a paradigmatic narrative since Adam and Eve are everybody.  They disobey God’s command with tragic results.  The Bible recapitulates that pattern again and again with the role of Adam and Eve taken up by the people of Israel.  Israel, too, rebels, with equally tragic results.  God tries to re-establish a relationship with Israel, is challenged yet again, and the cycle continues.  The whole is a poignant record of frustration suffused with hope and infinite yearning.

 

 

In much of the Bible, the main impediment to the full manifestation of God’s power is human freedom.  That God created human beings free even to rebel against God is never questioned.  Adam and Eve were free to eat the forbidden fruit; Cain to kill his brother; the Israelites to build a golden calf.  God had to live with the fruits of that freedom.  The only significant exception to that rule is Pharaoh.  God hardened Pharaoh’s heart, we are told, so that God’s eventual redemption of Israel would be a striking manifestation of God’s power:

 

 

 I will harden Pharaoh’s heart, that I may multiply my signs and marvels in the land of Egypt.  When Pharaoh does not heed you, I will lay My Hand upon Egypt and deliver My ranks, My people the Israelites, from the land of Egypt with extraordinary chastisements.  And the Egyptians will know that I am the Lord . . . .(Exodus 7:3-5)

 

 

The Bible goes out of its way to show that God deprived Pharaoh of his freedom to choose to release the Israelites.  That is a clear signal that Pharaoh’s inability to act freely is the exception that proves the rule.

 

 

Sometimes God’s power is limited by God’s own commitments.  When God threatens to destroy the Israelites for having built the golden calf, Moses intercedes, pleading that God remember the covenant with Abraham, Isaac and Jacob:

 

You swore to them by Your Self and said to them:  “I will make your offspring as numerous as the stars of heaven, and I will give to your offspring this holy land of which I spoke, to possess forever.” And the Lord renounced the punishment He had planned to bring upon His people.  (Exodus 32:13-14)

 

 

In this instance, the limitations on God’s power are not intrinsic, but rather result from God’s decisions about the destiny of Israel.  There is no question that God has ultimate power.  There is also no question that God chose not to exercise that power.

 

 

In other texts, the reasons for God’s impotence are far more mysterious.  The author of Psalm 44 has been told (by his ancestors) that in days of old, God had led Israel to victory over its enemies, but in his own day, 

 

You have rejected and disgraced us; You do not go with our armies, You make us retreat before our foe; our enemies plunder us at will.  You let them devour us like sheep; You disperse us among the nations . . . . You make us a byword among the nations, a laughingstock among the peoples . . . .

 

 

The psalmist would understand God’s abandonment of Israel if it had been disloyal to God.  But this is not the case now:  

 

All this has come upon us, yet we have not forgotten You, or been false to Your covenant . . . . 

 

 

Indeed, the very opposite is the case:  

 

It is for Your sake that we are slain all day long, that we are regarded as sheep to be slaughtered.  

 

 

It is precisely for Israel’s loyalty that it has been persecuted.  Finally, the coda to the psalm:  

 

Rouse Yourself, why do You sleep, O Lord?  Awaken, do not reject us forever! . . . . Arise and help us, redeem us, as befits Your faithfulness. (44L10ff)

 

Is Israel’s vulnerability before its enemies a commentary on God’s lack of power?  Or is it a matter of God’s will? There is not explicit answer to this question in the text.  It may be the result of a deliberate decision by God.  But it may also be the result of intrinsic divine impotence, some inherent limitation on God’s power.  That conclusion is certainly the implication of the psalmist’s claim that Israel has not been unfaithful to God.  Why then would God choose to abandon God’s people?  The psalmist is left to wonder, as is the author of Psalm 13:

 

 

 How long, O Lord, will You ignore me forever?  How long will You hide Your face from me?  How long will I have cares on my mind, grief in my heart all day?  How long will my enemy have the upper hand? (Psalm 13:2-3)

 

 

The setting of this psalm is personal not communal as in Psalm 44.  But the experience of God’s withdrawal is the same.  In neither case is God’s absence a form of punishment.  Indeed, in the first of these, the author insists that Israel suffers not only despite, but paradoxically because of its loyalty to God.

 

 

However limited God’s power may be in historical time, it is Judaism’s overwhelming testimony that these limitations will vanish in the Age to Come. The central thrust of Jewish eschatology is that this Age will mark the ultimate manifestation of God’s sovereignty over all creation.  That promise forms the climax of one of the earliest Jewish eschatological visions on record:

 

 In all of My sacred mount Nothing evil or vile shall be done; For the land shall be filled with devotion to the Lord As water covers the sea. (Isaiah II:9)

 

 

A far more elaborate statement of that vision is the concluding paragraph of the Aleinu liturgy which dates from the 2nd century of our era and now is the concluding prayer of every Jewish service of worship.

 

 

We therefore hope, Lord our God, soon to behold Your majestic glory, when the abominations will be removed fom the earth and the false gods exterminated; when the world will be perfected under the reign of the Almighty, and all mankind will call upon Your name, and all the wicked of the earth will be turned to You.  May all the inhabitants of the world realize and know that to You every knee must bend, every tongue vow allegiance . . . May they all accept the yoke of Your kingdom and reign over them speedily forever and ever.

 

 

It is also expressed in the High Holiday Amidah.

 

 

Now, Lord our God, put Your awe upon all that You have created . . . . Grant honor to your people, glory to those who revere You, hope to those who seek You . . . . May the righteous see this and rejoice, the upright exult, and the godly delight.  Iniquity shall shut its mouth, wickedness will vanish like smoke, when You will abolish the rule o tyranny from the earth.  You will reign over all whom You have made, You alone, O Lord, on Mount Zion the abode of Your majesty, in Jerusalem Your holy city, as it is written in Your Holy Scriptures, “The Lord will reign forever, Your God O Zion, for all generations.” (Psalm 146:10)

 

 

This is the very same impulse that leads the tradition to forecast God’s eschatological triumph over death as well.

 

 

The expectation that death itself will eventually die assumes that death was perceived to challenge God’s power manifest in history.  How we understand that expectation depends on how we deal with Judaism’s differing accounts of the origins of death.

 

 

Earlier, we reviewed four biblical explanations for the presence of death in the world.  Death may be part of God’s original creation, it may be retribution for Adam and Eve’s disobedience, it may be a trade-off for human self-awareness and our powers of discrimination; or it may represent a remnant of a pagan notion of death as a power that God did not or could not subdue at creation and that persists independently of God’s will and power.

 

 

In reverse order, if death is a power that resisted God’s ordering work of creation, it will banish in an age when God’s sovereignty will be complete.  If death is understood as the fruit of the full flowering of our humanity, it becomes one of the many tensions that mark the nature of human life within this age of history, and which will be abolished when history has come to a close.  If death is retribution for sin, it will disappear in an age when loyalty to God will be intuitive on the part of all humanity.

 

 

But if death is part of God’s creation from the outset, we find ourselves in more difficulty.  If from the outset, God created us to die, why then the eschatological promise to banish death?

 

 

The clue to understanding this paradox lies in the message of Psalm 44 and 13.  Their authors despair at God’s mysterious abandonment of Israel or of the psalmist.  Where is God’s power now? But history is replete with instances of God’s apparent withdrawal, both in the communal sphere and also in the life of individuals.  The psalmists make no attempt to account for God’s withdrawal; they bemoan it and plead for God’s renewed engagement.  The psalms end with a pleas that God’s presence and protection be manifest once again, but also with no explicit assurance that this will, indeed, take place.

 

 

That God’s presence is sometimes inexplicably eclipsed is the central paradox of the life of faith.  this is what led Martin Buber to suggest the notion of “moment gods,” and Rabbi Irving Greenberg to write of “moment faiths.”  The immediate context of Greenberg’s discussion is our theological response to the Holocaust.

 

 

After Auschwitz, faith means there are times when faith is overcome.  Buber has spoken of “moment gods”; God is known only at the moment when presence and awareness are fused in vital life. This knowledge is interspersed with moments when only natural, self-contained, routine existence is present.  We now have to speak of ‘moment faiths,” moments when the Redeemer and vision of redemption are present, interspersed with times when the flames and smoke of burning children blot out faith—though it flickers again.

 

 

For Greenberg, in the light of the Holocaust, the dichotomy of theist and atheist is impossible to maintain.  Instead, faith exists in a dialectic, it is a life response of the whole person to the Presence in life and history.  Like life, this response ebbs and flows.  The difference between the skeptic and the believer is frequency of faith, and not certitude of position.

 

 

It is not the Holocaust alone that challenges faith.  History is replete with holocausts, communal and personal.  They represent an enduring challenge to God’s power.  But the believer’s response to that challenge is nourished by the assurance that the dialectic of faith is endemic to our historical situation alone, and that it will be resolved in an age when, in the words of the High Holiday liturgy:

 

 

Iniquity shall shut its mouth, wickedness shall vanish like smoke, when You will abolish the rule of tyranny on earth.  You shall reign over all whom You have made, You alone O Lord . . . .

 

 

Death may well be an inexplicable part of God’s created world, as inexplicable as the other manifestations of anarchy we see about us.  But if Jewish eschatology views history as moving from chaos to cosmos, then God’s victory over death is part of that broader mythic pattern.

 

 

On theological grounds, then, Judaism demands the death of death.  If God is truly God, if God’s will and power are absolute, then God must triumph over death as well.  The death of death marks the final step in the triumph of the monotheistic God.

 

 

Next:  The Argument from Anthropology:  I. My Body, II. My Soul