Showing posts with label Noahide Laws. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Noahide Laws. Show all posts

Thursday, May 23, 2013

Amen Yehe Shmei Rabbah!






Click Here For Download Link - Ger # 8: Gerim and The Many Mitzvot!

Don't Forget Parasha Shavua Class On Sat Night Israel 11 P.M.


  • Shem, Abraham, Amen - Yehi Shemei Rabbah
  • How many mitzvot?
  • Pshat and Pshuto...and Pardes
  • Deeper Look at 10 Commandments
  • Abraham and Noah
  • One Mazal





Sunday, May 19, 2013

Nasso: The Nazir The Kabbalist



Click Here For Audio Download To Parashas Nasso!


Click Here For Article:

[best results are to cover both forms of material]

notice new classroom link:  https://www.ivocalize.net/#room/YeshivatShemV'Ever



Friday, May 17, 2013

Gerim: Keeping The Holy With The Temple










                                                                     Parashas Nasso
                                                Serving God as Righteous and Holy Gerim
                                                                    Rabbi David Katz

In Parashas Nasso the Torah introduces its readers [Nasso 5:6] to a new Ger concept termed by the Talmud and Rabbinical writings, “Gezel HaGer” – the sin of trespass upon God’s Gerim. This is seen in the Torah as a very serious crime – to the extent that the proper restitution is a proper course of Torah defined repentance accompanied by confession of sin, full financial reclamation, etc. all to be in association with the Temple should the Ger become deceased. God clearly demonstrates His deep Love for the Gerim in this law, and not only does the institution of the Ger in Nasso set the tone of the entire Parsha as one with a Mazal triggered Ger-theme from beginning to end in the Parsha [as all of the topics are associated with the Ger by way of secrets and hints according to laws of Torah exegesis called, “Pardes” – simple, hint, expounding, and secret understandings in Torah], the law beckons the deep secrets of the Holy temple and Priesthood that are illuminated by God’s Gerim [i.e. the Gerim who are in nature to the Rechabites and Kenites; Holy Gerim who occupy Holy institutions amongst Israel].

The case of the Torah [as mentioned above] that sets the precedent for all such relationships with the Gerim in the mundane realm [and such that it lends its vessels by extension into the spiritual dimension of society as well] is the classically termed “Gezel HaGer” – stealing from the Ger, and as one could imagine, this obviously allows for investigating the nature of the Ger. As with any Ger [law-based] Torah, the range of Gerim can extend from the quite literal ranks of Toshavim who are “slaves”/indebted – servants, “” – to God while life’s dedication to the Temple, Gerim of the Gate, all the way northward to the Ger Tzedek, and venturing into Judaism proper as full converts. The Gezel HaGer then comes into focus in Nasso, as to provide focus and context into the nature and levels of Gerim within practical applications, such as theft.

[*Torah operates in “Mazal multi - tasking” called Pilpul (understanding the matter within the matter), thus as Chazal state that the repair of Adam/Man is rectifying theft, Gezel HaGer postures itself as a viable cog in analysis and methodology of how to perform the repair, through performance of this (Ger) opportunity under the premise of mazal and the Ger.]

The case of Gezel HaGer in its simplest form is the procedure of restitution of the Ger should he be wronged by an Israelite Jew. The standard law states that the Jew must repay the Ger in full along with other steps to assist in his repentance, and is in relation to the many cautions of the Torah that stress the guarding of the dignity and love of the Ger. 

Where the law becomes a “which – type - of - Ger - are - we - talking - about - discussion” is in relation to where the victimized Ger has passed on before the culprit was able to lend restitution. It is precisely this point that the Torah commands that the possessions shall be divvied up amongst the Priests on duty and to be considered under government of Law and gifts to the Priests and must follow the standard protocol as such. The reason for the Priest entering the discussion is that this stipulation of law is only enacted once the Ger is seen to have no kin, which is a common scene amongst all Gerim. One must deduct exactly which Ger [and in relation to the nature of kin /Gerim] has a complete association and relevancy to the law under fire, as to be precise in Torah law while avoiding a Chilul Hashem, and unnecessary backlash from misappropriated statutes emanating from carelessness and lack of astute scholarship within required practice of identifying Gerim.

Although the nature of carrying out this law to the upmost degree of accuracy would most probably require a Beit Din when ascertaining the finer points of the Ger [i.e. which exact blend of Toshav, as we conclude that the ideal Ger of the statute in a Ger Tzedek], the standard operative playing field would yield the Ger Tzedek, leaving the Ger Toshav as a possibility and subject to resolving doubt. The Ger Tzedek [Righteous Ger] is the primary agent in Nasso, as his righteousness is predicated on accepting the full and entire Torah, thus making him applicable and sensitive to Torah reality and all of the concurrent situations that come from Torah, as being in deep relation to the Jewish People and their daily government. The trigger point for the Ger Tzedek is that he is considered as absolutely having no kin, as he is technically [by his own volition] devoid of stranglehold in  both the Gentile and Jewish Worlds, making him a true by definition Ger Tzedek. The convert and Toshav are lacking in this degree namely because the Ger may have an easier acclamation process into the Jewish World while the gentile has kin, and are simply not Jewish, and not recognized under this law.

Now that we have properly identified the Torah portion’s Ger [Tzedek] and eliminated the obvious and perhaps non – relevant, we can begin to gain  ground on just who is this Ger Tzedek and perhaps begin to understand his comrades under the heading Toshav, and what is the essence that ultimately drives the Ger.

The Ger Tzedek as we mentioned before is subject to analysis in Nasso for the primary reason that he has accepted the entire Torah [and has not converted; details as to why to follow] and thus he is a practitioner of Torah on a realistic scale and way of life. This dynamic has certainly left him as a true Ger, i.e. with no real kinsmen. The gentile World is philosophically opposed to Torah ways of life, and for this, the [“Head” of] Torah itself is called a Ger by rabbinic writings. The Ger is governed by a different law, court, and ultimately a different God – for the Ger is first defined as having renounced Idolatry.

Once idolatry has been renounced, the Ger Tzedek will fall under categorical distinction as having accepted all of the commandments [as valid and true Torah as understood by Jewish Law and tradition] along with the Seven Laws of Noach as Moses instructed at Marah and Sinai along with the appropriate Oral Torah [which is the basis of authenticity of Torah and its Law]. Among other qualities of the Ger Tzedek, is that he will be keeping some extent of the Torah upwards to its near entirety – save for eating exclusively kosher meat, as is the mandate for a Ger [Toshav – Tzedek]. By doing as such, he has sanctified the mystical significance of Moses’ breaking of the Ten Commandment Tablets, in that it is the “downfall” that is actually the ascent, as the Ger who eats “trief” [non-kosher meat] is expressing that he has accepted the entire Torah as seen by the Torah command as such to the Ger Toshav [Tzedek] and thus he is and isn’t a full Torah Jew at the same time. This is called in the mystical sense “coming from the Mouth of the Almighty as ‘I heard two from one voice’ and elicits a universal repair to the World when expressed on an ultra - macro platform.

Thus the Ger Tzedek plays and operates under Torah law, and is thus connected to the Jewish Nation, the Priests, the Land, etc. as he now knows no other reality. For the Ger Tzedek can grasp on an acceptance level any statute that comes his way as the operative measure of Torah governed society; he is clearly a member of the Jewish People as a proper Ger Tzedek. The liberties he enjoys come under such distinctions as aiding with the Red Heifer and association with matters of Temple – Purity & Offerings, Shabbat observance [w/indulging in “soul food labor”], etc. 

The best way to express the Love of the Ger on this level is by observing the letter “Shin” that grace a Jewish Man’s Tefillin [of which the Talmud states that this mirrors Hashem’s Tefillin, i.e. as seen in spiritual reality terms through Jewish Mazal – a spiritual emanation trail that ultimately connects to the Creator] that mystically has Four branches [paralleling the secret of the First tablets and the letters that can be seen on both sides; the two letter Shin’s of Tefillin accentuate the white and black fire woven together] representing the Righteous Gerim.

Of final note, the reason why there exists a term of “Ger Tzedek” for this type of person under the gentile distinction as opposed to the Jewish convert [of modern conception] is that in his root and essence he may not be able to ever convert; and this is where the Ger Toshav and Ger Tzedek actually meet and become inseparable. In basic law, all sources still consider him to be a Ger Toshav on some level and yet he reveals the secrets of the Holy Temple that shall stand for eternity, for he brings light to the whole Torah and Priesthood, while echoing the Shem – Abraham union that blueprints this concept as the pattern of Creation [and ultimately making “Yichud” (one-ness) with our Parasha Nasso].

The Ger Tzedek who can’t convert, suffers from the duress of his Toshav status; simply: he can’t function beyond his call of duty. Parashas Emor brings down a lesser known law of the “Toshav-Kohen”, one who is sold to the Priest as property. It is often understood that a Ger can in fact become destitute and be sold to the Jew as a servant like any other servant of this type, although the Ger is different; this is his calling and shall not convert.

The Ger Tzedek of the Temple is such that his soul utterly rejects all that is not God. He can’t convert, for Jews are required to provide a standard of successful living in this world as a basic tenet of Jewish Survival and comes with the territory of the Jewish soul, which any convert would ultimately have to recognize from within, as a signal that he is indeed converting. On the flip side of things, he doesn’t function as a gentile either, for the basic premise of derech eretz living [living off the land; craft and ingenuity] and a world of dollars and cents/sense is simply far too mundane to be involved with. Simply put: The Ger Loves Hashem and Hashem Loves [all] Gerim. To this extent, he is not impoverished by way of being inept, rather, he simply is intoxicated for Hashem and longs for a lifestyle that is dedicated to Temple Service.

The Torah comes with an entire infrastructure for the Gerim on this level, and he is essentially the blood that circulates from within the Holy Temple that lubricates God’s Divine Machine. This is easily explained and imagined when the Torah says a Ger who learns Torah is like the High Priest; as the Priests are the Torah’s authentic and preferred “rabbis” as per their Blessings in the Torah. The commentaries explain that the natural domain for the Ger is ironically “as a Priest” [while not coming from the seed of Aaron, rather Shem], and as such he is seen to grasp and absorb the teachings of the Priest [see Malachi 2:7] to the point of a performance level.

We know that historically and in many law-based cases, the Gerim take part of the Temple services and practices. The love drawn Ger by means of his own mazal, will find himself immersed amongst the Priests, glued to Hashem and His Temple, and their scent [Vilna Gaon Shir Hashirim] will fill the halls of the Temple as the waters of intellect sweeten the bitter World beyond Israel’s boundaries. To put it in simple terms, the Ger Tzedek may very well simply be: a Ger Tzedek by every definition, and perforce his home is amongst the Priests in the Temple as opposed to being among the Judean lions. The Torah calls him [in parallel language] a Ger Toshav [implied Tzedek].

Parashas Nasso is unique in that we can find all of Israel amongst her words; as the Midrash points out in many flavors the various roots in subtle places of Torah personality amidst the Parsha. You may be a Ger, King, Prophet, Nazir, Priest, Warrior, etc. Everyone is in Nasso, and Hashem commands Moses to “Take a census of the Levites of Gershon” – a root in the Holy Tongue for marriage, while the end of the Parsha sees the Tabernacle standing erect by the hand of Moses, as the pivotal moment [of inauguration] in Creation where Hashem is fully bound to his marriage of Israel; all that came before and what will be after in the relationship were predicated on a dwelling for Hashem below in our Temple-driven/defined existence. 

How much sweeter will the anticipated Third Temple’s inauguration be, a reality built by the hands of God, as told through the additional merit of the Gerim, who properly are the underlying unified theme of Parashas Nasso. The Jewish People have never - not known the Ger Tzedek, yet it’s Parashas Nasso that aims to simply bring to light what we all intuitively know in hearts -  the Jew and the Ger are as inseparable as body and soul…which one is which, is then rendered a moot point, for on that level – [the Temple permeates] Hashem is one, and it is heard throughout ALL of Israel, and responded by Baruch Shem Kavod Malchuto Le’olam Va’ed. Amen.



Here is the New Link For The Classroom:  https://www.ivocalize.net/#room/YeshivatShemV'Ever

Class Times:

Motzie Shabbos 11 P.M. - Parsha Shavua
Wed 11 P.M. Torah of the Ger Series
classes are 1 hr. / please arrive a bit early to guarantee a seat

 

Monday, May 13, 2013

30 Laws, 7 Laws, 3 Laws, 1 Law - Be Normal

not normal

The Noahide Laws range from 30 to 7 and even to 3 [Chullin] - no gay marriage, honor the Torah, and no cannibalism. It is said that the correct connotation of the gay and murder issues are to not be too liberal with Torah and radical with Torah, so as to lose morality and to lose focus of a proper God fearing society.

As America goes further and further away from the 1950's into a free - for - all of tumah, the Islamic folks are doing their best too to impose radical Torah perversions of their Noahide Code onto society. I think it is safe to say that through Galus Edom the Jews aree being killed by the extermination of Gerim from indulgance, while the Galus Yishmael is attempting to show the World its personal blend of Noahidism, again, in attempt to finish of Jew-daism and eternally pervert Torah.

When will people get it right? There are 620 Commandments, the Jews were commanded in 7 at Marah, and again today, the 4th day at Sinai just before Hashem converted the people into Jews from Noahides with the 10 Commandments. The laws were binding, are binding, and serve as the impetus to do outreach in the Abraham / Noah program to bring Baatei Dinim to the World to make people Gerei Toshavim, forcing the Yovel and Moshiach to come.

The Gerim were given 7, God setteld for 3, hoping it would turn to 7, so that Moshiach could give 30 and opening the door for the Gerim to keep as many as 620 - gematria Keter.

May Hashem soon place his crown amongst man, as hashgacha pratit will become enclothed in the power of man as mazal. As Malchut wil return, so too will Moshiach ben David, showing us how to chase after the heart of God, a heart that loves Gerim, for Hashem has commanded - Love the Gerim. But for that one must honor Torah [as David did] and stop killing and polluting Gerim and their Torah point of view for the sake of an other non violent holocaust not just against Jews through proxy, but against Hashem and all of his peoples.





A video of a Syrian rebel commander cutting the heart out of a soldier and biting into is emblematic of a civil war that has rapidly descended into sectarian hatred and revenge killings, Human Rights Watch said on Monday. The New York-based group said an amateur video posted on the Internet on Sunday shows Abu Sakkar, a founder of the rebel Farouq Brigade who is well known to journalists as an insurgent from Homs, cutting into the torso of a dead soldier. The video has caused outrage among both supporters of President Bashar Assad and opposition figures. "I swear to God we will eat your hearts and your livers, you soldiers of Bashar the dog," the man says to off screen cheers of his comrades shouting "Allahu akbar (God is great)".



 ...one World no longer working to build the Tower of Bavel [abnormal], but the Beit Hamikdash
 - Gerim and Jews together.

messianic-temple.com

Monday, May 6, 2013

As David: The Ger Who Speaks The Truth






Click Here For Audio Link / Download!

Topics of the Ger:

  •  Jubillee - Essential Redemption
  • How many Ger Toshav Are There?!
  • Gerim of Israel
  • Ger Tzedek In Clear Light
  • The Lodger, The Slave, The Tzaddik
  • True Charity Fights Stealing
  • Four Regrets of God
  • ...and more







Click Here For Article 
[for best comprehension it is advised to read article before audio]

Don't Forget Class Times! [Israel Time]

  • Motzie Shabbat - Parasha Shavua 11 P.M.
  • Wed 11 P.M. - Gerim in Torah
  • ...Coming Soon! - Noahide Shabbat and Shem - Noah Series

Have a Great Week!

Simcha!



Friday, May 3, 2013

Living Amongst God's Gerim






Parashas Behar [& Bechukosai]
Shulchan Hashem – Living With Gerim In The Land
Rabbi David Katz


In this week’s double Parasha of Behar and Bechukosai, Hashem closes the Heart of the Torah, as Vayikra gives way to Bamidbar, and we can now properly focus on coming into the Land, coinciding with the holiday Shavuot. Yet as the famous analogy goes, a candle gives off its greatest light just before it fires off its last sparks; in Behar that candle is the Ger and the Light is his identity that shines forever. Again, the same as was with Emor, the Ger is richest in his revolution of the Sinai revelation, with the most essential Ger Torah pouring out before God, thus making the amount of Ger Torah in concentration a rare opportunity to know him in these few Parshiot. Of the essential elements, what stands out the most, each in a unique way would be the following four issues of Gerim in the Land: The Sabbath in the Land, The Yovel [in proximity of the Ger and the command to not taunt him], Jews in the Land, and where the Land identifies the Ger.

In Vayikra 25:6 the verse educates about the Sabbath of the Land where on a 7-year cycle, the seventh year is for Hashem, and the natural fruits will be for [amongst others] the Gerim. Rashi and commentators point out that the Ger reference can also suit workers of the Land, and the term “your dweller” [your – תושב Toshav] can come to include the Nachri who is doubly identified as a traveler – dweller. This bares significant identification as to the nature of the Nachri, as previously he was identified as a Ger Toshav under the quality of having rejected idolatry while in the Land, eating non-kosher meat, and still yet not having accepted the Seven Laws of Noach. This is hand in glove to the verse later on in  the Torah that bases the Jewish – Ger relationship to be based on  Tzedakkah in the form of giving non – kosher meat to the Ger [Toshav] and HAVING to SELL the meat to a Nachri.

This week provides the source that if the Nachri [not quite removed from idolatry abroad to qualify as a type of Ger] is on stay in the Land, he is termed a Toshav, would be able to be given the meat [as opposed to being sold], and he may enjoy Hashem’s fruits of the Land. Not only do we now have knowledge of a “who is who” in the Ger World, but even more important, the words “Ger” and “Toshav” have skyrocketed to ultra-complex! As we will see, the Land is very dynamic [especially when a Temple is erect], and the general term for people will be either Ger or Toshav or some combination. The task of the Torah scholar [Ger or Jew] is to know these terms, identify with them, and educate them, as the essence of the Oral Torah [within the Written Torah] is best expressed in a pure form through the Torah of the Ger, as Moses commanded at Sinai before Hashem spoke, in what was the purest expression of Torah, and served as the platform of post-Sinai exegesis.

The Ger Toshav in his highest form, one where he is legally a Ger in every sense, and all Torah Law concerning him is accepted [even to the stringent opinions, i.e. in a time where the Rambam would say we accept him (outright and not in a depressed state) as he enjoys full status] can only come about if there is a Jubilee Year in operation. Aside from the fact that this is a known halachic fact, the Torah gives clear definition of this reality by a close proximity of the Jubilee law contained in key verses that highlight the integrity of the Ger. 

The closeness of the two topics show just how literally they are both intertwined with each other. The current condition of the Ger Toshav [of exile] and attempts to usher in redemption are both contingent on the Jubilee, as it is this 50th year that serves as a common denominator that can produce an all-encompassing redemption for all peoples. As fate would have it, ironically to focus on the true nature of the Ger Toshav is to bring redemption under the rug called Jubilee, as the Ger Toshav technically fits on either side of the Jubilee; 
again showing just how mutually tight and eternally impacting these two really are.

The Ger is sandwiched into the Jubilee verses also contains a portion of the famous command to not taunt the Ger and your fellow man. The Talmud even states that a Jew who is a Baal Teshuva [a returnee to Judaism] is considered a Ger and to taunt him with his past is a violation of the Torah. The Ger is specifically mentioned [in clear terms, demonstrating that this is not always a Ger-Convert] in that one may not remind him [in regards of his Torah learning] of his non-kosher eating [commanded] habits. And finally on this point, the Torah compares a Jewish impoverished worker to a “Toshav” [yet another definition of Toshav] and thus forbids one to taunt him, as one would taunt the Ger [thus relating the Jew to a Ger]. One can easily see how broad and encompassing the Ger is, and how far – reaching his Torah flows, and once applied by association becomes a strong representative of the Oral Torah, even in the Written.

Hashem makes it very clear in regards to the Land of Israel, that the Land is HIS and not to anyone else, even the Jewish People. What Hashem has decreed is that of the Gerim in the World, he has selected a Nation to be stationed on His land [as all Gerim are stationed on the Lands of the World, each being pulled after their prophetically given names, as King David said, “Hashem places names in the land, not desolation.”], and their job is to work it [i.e. the Land with a Temple on it for the peoples of the World to come to], much like Adam, Noah, and Shem before them; hence Abraham had to come by means of Lech Lecha [Go for you to the Land!]. The Jewish people for this reason [and from this angle] are Jews, and Hashem allows them a portion in the Seventh Year, as a way of uniting with the Creator vis a vis the Land.

In the Ger Torah commands such as don’t taunt him and even this law of the Jews on the Land, a famous saying of King David is called upon for context, when he says, “I am a Ger.” The interesting revelation of this iconic statement from King David is that he is not being cute or overly righteous, for as we have learned, King David is simply giving us Pshat, or the simple meaning of Torah. It just so happens that King David is also showing us just how deep Torah is, and the extent one must internalize it, to benefit from its wisdom. David has mastered the art of bringing Torah to life, as he is able to express on his own terms, real Torah concepts such as Jews in the Land that belongs to Hashem, and its implications of reality.

The rest of the Ger associations of the Parsha are equally monumental and illuminate the full scope of the Ger. Amongst the relatively many verses and commentary in Behar, the Ger may be any of the following scenarios that the verses detail.

The Sifsei Chachamim commentary gives the most authentic and direct account that a Ger Toshav and Ger Tzedek can be of the same quality, in contrast of the Ger Tzedek convert, and he explains the difference, and thus how to distinguish between the two. We learn about “Toshavim” which may sound like a [better] term of endearment to the Ger, but when investigated in Behar, this illuminates the vast bow of the Ger in different places of context. As a Toshav in the generic sense, he may be a Ger Tzedek, or [God Forbid] he may be a bred slave, an asset of equity seen as a movable! The Torah permits it, Toshav is the term, and now all the more so one must know which type of Toshav the Torah is in reference of at any time. This is not to speak ill of the Ger, quite the opposite, it comes to express the need to know him, in every way possible, and to prevent out of context relationships with him, for the sake of the Land and the People. The point to be taken from him is that he is a unique person, truly made in the Image of God, as his Torah gives testimony of this; one must Love the Ger.

The Parasha gives many proofs to lingering questions, such as who is the Nachri, Ger Tzedek, Toshav, Ger, Ger Toshav [in all forms], Jew-Ger, Jew-Toshav, etc. to the extent that if the Ger wasn’t physically at Sinai [schism for the sake of repairing schism], he certainly was the center of attention at any rate, based on the Parsha that implies Sinai [along with Parashas Jethro for the same reasons]. An interesting way to summarize this story, is that the only place in the Torah that spells out the word [to trust (God)] [Bitachon] in letter after letter is found in Behar, and in the place that it speaks of dwelling securely in the Land. I think Hashem’s message is loud and clear and does need too much explanation: To dwell securely in a Land that abandons its labor every seven years because it is God’s Land and thus one must have faith in God, one must realize the Ger. The Parasha makes it difficult with all of its pilpul of the Ger [such that Jews seemed to have avoided it until today], yet the message of Sinai is, was, and will always be clear: ladies and gentlemen, we need the Ger - all Ger, even the Jewish ones, even the one’s outside the Land. For you were Gerim too, all of you, whoever you are – urges Hashem.

Now is the time to start dwelling securely into what Hashem is engineering in front of our eyes, leading us all to his Land, to His Zion, to His Temple, to His Holy of Holies, in what will be the final transaction of possessions between the two Gerim, two Kings even, David and Aravnah, who picked up where Shem and Abraham left off, until the Moshiach will come and redeem the Gerim, may it be soon in our days. Amen.









Don't Forget Audio Shiurim - Parasha Motzie Shabbat  10 P.M.
                                           Wed 11 P.M. Torat Gerim / Noahide

Thursday, May 2, 2013

From The Mouth of Moses To Our Noahide Ears







Click Here For Audio Download Ger #6 - "The Ger Toshav Today From Chesed"

Don't Forget Class Times:
  • Motzie Shabbat 10 P.M. - Parsha Shavua
  • Wed 11 P.M. - Ger Series in Torah
Click Here To Access / Register For The Yeshiva

Enjoy!


Wednesday, May 1, 2013

Straight Marriages, Honoring the Torah, and NO CANNIBALISM - Noah's Laws






The Talmud Chullin says that when as long as the Nations are not keeping either 7 Laws of Noach or even the 30 Laws given with the Moshiach, the World is kept into existance by 3 Laws built in that maintain a World of Nature, of which Rav Hutner calls, "Derech Eretz."

These 3 Laws are:

  • Straight Marriages
  • No Cannibalism
  • Honor Torah
It is said that each ruling society is tasked with perfecting these 3 pillars into a viable society one that can grow into a 7 Law system that even allows for the 30 Messianic Laws that will aide in perfecting the World of the Ger Toshav.
 A ruling country like America then is built around these 3; for example, gun allowance keeps man from devouring man [see Pirkei Avos]. America's moral fabric made being gey tabboo until recently, etc etc. Thus the more elaborate [and Divine] the code becomes from the interpretation of three, it will yield Divine Bounty into a viable regime.

The Torah also says Hashem doesn't make land desolate, rather Names are the Land - and for that America's past has yielded a history that may play against its 3 Law format, one we see crumbling every day. Does America attract those who consume flesh [a breach in not only the 3 Laws but 1 of the 7 Laws as well - eating flesh of the living]?

America is crusading for gay rights, they are abandoning Torah, and as for cannibalism - it would not be a good sign if the Land itself has a history of such behavior. The Caananites got thrown out of Israel for being repulsive to Hashem, thus going against the Law of God means extermination.

It seems America is on thin ice if we are to grade as per these 3 Laws and America's standing with them.

YahooNews:



Scientists revealed Wednesday that they have found the first solid archaeological evidence that some of the earliest American colonists at Jamestown, Va., survived harsh conditions by turning to cannibalism. For years, there have been tales of people in the first permanent English settlement in America eating dogs, cats, rats, mice, snakes and shoe leather to stave off starvation. There were also written accounts of settlers eating their own dead, but archaeologists had been skeptical of those stories.

But now, the Smithsonian's National Museum of Natural History and archaeologists from Jamestown are announcing the discovery of the bones of a 14-year-old girl that show clear signs that she was cannibalized. Evidence indicates clumsy chops to the body and head of the girl, who appears to have already been dead at the time. Smithsonian forensic anthropologist Douglas Owsley said the human remains date back to a deadly winter known as the "starving time" in Jamestown from 1609 to 1610. Hundreds died during the period. Scientists have said the settlers likely arrived during the worst drought in 800 years, bringing severe food shortages for the 6,000 people who lived at Jamestown between 1607 and 1625.

The historical record is chilling. Early Jamestown colony leader George Percy wrote of a "world of miseries," that included digging up corpses from their graves to eat when there was nothing else. "Nothing was spared to maintain life," he wrote.

In one case, a man killed, "salted," and began eating his pregnant wife. Both Percy and Capt. John Smith, the colony's most famous leader, documented the account in their writings. The man was later executed. "One amongst the rest did kill his wife, powdered her, and had eaten part of her before it was known, for which he was executed, as he well deserved," Smith wrote. "Now whether she was better roasted, boiled or carbonado'd (barbecued), I know not, but of such a dish as powdered wife I never heard of." Archaeologists at Jamestown and Colonial Williamsburg in Virginia were somewhat skeptical of the stories of cannibalism in the past because there was no solid proof, until now. "Historians have questioned, well did it happen or not happen?" Owsley said. "And this is very convincing evidence that it did."

Owsley has been working with William Kelso, the chief archaeologist at Jamestown, since their first burial discovery in 1996.

The remains of the 14-year-old girl, discovered in the summer of 2012, mark the fourth set of human remains uncovered at Jamestown outside of graves. Researchers named her "Jane" to give her an identity for a book explaining her story. Her remains were found in a cellar at the site that had been filled with trash, including bones of horses and other animals consumed in desperation, according to archaeologists. The discovery detracts from the happier mythology of John Smith and Pocahontas that many associate with Jamestown. The vice president of research at nearby Colonial Williamsburg, which oversees excavations of the original Jamestown site, said visitors will have a fuller view of a terrible time in early American history. "I think we are better served by understanding history warts and all because I think it gives us a better understanding of who we are as a people," James Horn said. "It gives us a better sense of the sacrifices that people made, ordinary people like Jane, to survive in the new world."

Owsley, who has also done forensic analysis for police investigations, analyzed the girl's remains and how the body had been dismembered, including chops to the front and back of the head. The girl was likely already dead at the time. There was a cultural stigma against killing someone for food. But it was clear to Owsley immediately that there were signs of cannibalism.

"It is the evidence found on those bones that put it within the context of this time period," he said. "This does represent a clear case of dismemberment of the body and removing of tissues for consumption." It was the work of someone not skilled at butchering, Owsley said. There was a sense of desperation. The bones show a bizarre attempt to open the skull. Animal brains and facial tissue would be considered accepted and desirable meat in the 17th century, Owsley said.

The human remains will be placed on display at Jamestown to explain the horrid conditions early settlers faced. At the Smithsonian, curators will display a digital reconstruction of the girl's face in an exhibit about life at Jamestown.

Owsley said archaeology is helping to fill in details from a time when few records were kept — details that won't likely be found in history books. Kelso, whose archaeology team discovered the bones, said the girl's bones will be displayed to help tell a story, not to be a spectacle.

"We found her in a trash dump, unceremoniously trashed and cannibalized, and now her story can be told," Kelso said. "People will be able to empathize with the time and history and think to themselves, as I do: What would I do to stay alive?"

The Smithsonian and Jamestown archaeologists are publishing their findings in a new book but decided against waiting to announce the discovery through a peer-reviewed journal. "In a lot of ways, I say Jane is us," Kelso said. "She brings the past to the present."

On Krypton the "S" stands for Hope - Let's hope for hope!
Where is [our Superman like] Moshiach - and these 3-7-30 Laws for the World to progress into a World of the Ger Toshav!

Friday, April 26, 2013

Gerim and The House of Prayer At Sinai




 Parashas Emor
 Sechel Is a Ger In This World
 Rabbi David Katz

Parashas Emor is literally ground breaking in the realm of exciting and even Messianic Torah that highlights the richest flavor of the World of Gerim. Inside we find many enlightening topics such as the heavily prophesied Third Temple, nature of conversion, giving gifts to the Ger, and much much more. To choose one topic over another would literally be highway robbery as each of these topics rightly deserve ample airtime; with that said the scope of this article will break protocol and classic form, in attempt to illuminate in a terse style the essence of each fascinating topic relating to the World of Gerim. The goal in mind is that this should satisfactorily outline each revelation, and provide a proper foundation that can be expounded upon in the audio accompaniment that is issued with each written article employing the subject of Gerim / Noahides in Torah.

The first highlight in the Parsha that really resonates with essential Ger Torah is the law that the Torah enforces concerning the daughter of the priest who endures illicit behavior. The Torah recognizes her behavior as falling under extreme punishment and as such she is to be burned alive at the stake. What would certainly seem as extreme in nature the Torah has divine logic in carrying out punishment in such matters; interestingly enough in all of the inherent intensity of this command is buried in the heart of the Ger.

The Torah’s first and quintessential Priest was one who can be seen as a father of sorts of the Gerim, and this is none other than Shem the son of Noah, also known as Malki Tzedek, he who was a priest to God above.  Shem had five sons, including a firstborn son and there is not to leave out his daughter Tamar, who would embody the concept of the “Daughter of the Priest.”

Shem’s son would go on to bring out this illustrious lineage [of priestly and kingly nature] through such nobleman as Ever [of whom he would engage his Yeshiva with] and even onwards towards Abraham, Isaac, Jacob, and Sons [i.e. Judah for example, one of the Twelve Tribes].

Running parallel to this framework was Tamar his daughter who married two [and was promised a third] sons of Judah, who both died in perversion of wasting their seed so as to avoid placing pregnancy upon Tamar and her deep beauty. Before Judah’s third son could be given privilege of Tamar through Levirate Marriage, Tamar took matters into her own hands and seduced Judah, the Tribe’s patron, through perceived harlotry. Judah succumbed to Tamar’s plot, she conceived, Judah was unaware of their actions from lack of intent, and suddenly his daughter in law was being found of harlotry – punishable by burning at the cross, for her father was Shem.

The story does have a happy  ending however, as Judah repented due to Tamar’s scheme at seeking repair to the fruit of her womb, and they bore together twins who would resurrect the souls of their dead brothers who came before them. “Zerech and Peretz” would go on to find the Messianic Kingdom, and Shem’s mission [as a priest that produced the incentive of Tamar] was a success of imparting the Priesthood into the new creation of Israel. Tamar was able to achieve all that she set out to do, and she is ironically identified by her association with Emor’s intense statute of the illicit daughter of the priest who is burned from corruption. However that’s where the stories differ; Tamar was perfectly righteous and in accordance with her father who happened to father Gerim, as opposed to Emor’s daughter of the priest who in under a wicked influence.

The next three topics revolving around the Ger are in relation to the Holy Temple, found on the site that was originally designated as the Place of God by Shem who was a Priest to God Above, Zion. The three specific Ger categories are: the Zar [stranger; slightly different in connotation from Ger, as in Avodah ZAR-ah], the Temple Offerings by the non-Jew, and the Temple of Messiah – Ezekial’s Temple that is destined to come to Earth built and from the Hands of Heaven.

In Israel there are three main distinctions that classify the Israelite Nation: Priest, Levite, and Israelite. The Hebrew letter shin that carries three “heads” portrayed by the letter “vav” – three times joined by a point depicted by the letter “yud” demonstrates a viable map of Israel under these terms. However unique to the letter Shin as the mysterious four-headed shin that symbolizes the Gerim who join with Israel. In Temple terms anyone who is not a Priest, ironically is called “zar” – strange or foreign.

The novelty of this item is that under these terms even a Levite [and all the more so every non-priest] is called a stranger/foreigner in regards to the Temple. Often in Torah law, text will come to permit a zar to perform priestly tasks when the occasion calls for such intervention. Our Parsha, Emor is one of the locations where a Zar is called to duty in the performance of particular offerings. Yet Emor even goes a step further in relation to various other verses, and that there are even times when  the non-Jew [associated with idolater] is allowed to offer to Hashem in the Temple, to which the commentaries realize, “then even all the more so a Ger!” Thus future potential Gerim and the Gerim themselves have a function in the Temple, and embody the makeup of the powerful illumination that graces a Man’s head tefilin, the counterpart to the regular Shin [that stands for God’s Name] , the mystical four-headed Shin that alludes to future status’ of Gerim amongst Israel.


The Temple of which is spoken here has been any of the previous forms of worship of Hashem, while there is yet another unknown level of revelation – God’s Third and final temple.

The Parsha speaks about the holiday season from Passover to Shavuot symbolized by the waiving ceremony of barley [the Omer] in the Temple, followed by a Meal Offering that ushers in Shavuot proper. However the Talmud takes issue with this concept in the midst of the current exile [of which we are devoid of the Temple and God’s Presence], and explains the ceremony under the rabbinic code of which there is no Temple. This begs the obvious question amongst the Rabbis as to what is the nature of the law change when the Holy Temple will be built by the sons of Shem on Zion. The Talmud explained by Rashi offers a brilliant answer, one that stands eternal until the moment we receive revelation of the End.

Rashi says the Third Temple, Ezekiel’s Temple is prophesied to descend from the Hands of Heaven at the time Passover’s first night of Yom Tov exits into Chol Moed [intermediary days of service]. This Temple is built by God Above, and descends completely built and functional, miraculously, and is sacred beyond destruction. Once this condition comes to be, it is called a House of Prayer, one of which the Gerim will be present in standing as One with Israel as prophesied by Isaiah, in the sanctification of God having created the World under the account of Shabbos lore. This Third Temple [that is built in the image below by the hands of Messiah and Shem as the Righteous Priest] represents the repair of schism between Gerim and Jews and is the unity expressed in the World before God forever.

The final revelation of the Ger in the Parsha worth noting is that of the blasphemer who is born of a Jewish Mother and an Egyptian father and the nature of his status in Israel in regards to the nature of his sin in relation to Noahide Laws of divine rebellion.

The Torah gives account a youth born of a Jewish mother and an Egyptian father, [the one that Moses killed] who went out speaking ill of the Divine. After the Torah delves into the matter briefly, Hashem declares the boy worthy of death penalty for blaspheme, a din that carries weight for the entire World. The Talmud Sanhedrin takes up this matter [amidst the Noahide Laws] and renders that for all intents and purposes the Ger and Jew share the same severity for blaspheme, and the death penalty in evoked. The law in uniquely rendered by the Torah verse that seems to suggest both the Ger and Jewish points of view should be taken into account, and the Ramban explains exactly why.

Rashi goes on record as saying that this youth “converted” which seems superfluous being that his mother is Jewish while only his father is foreign, thus no need to convert. The Ramban then takes liberty in showing the nature of conversion in the negative – as per Sinai.
At Sinai all Jews underwent proper conversion, as Sinai was the biggest mass conversion in the history of the World, designed by God since the days of Abraham and Shem had conspired to achieve the Sinai Revelation upon their fateful meeting at Zion. Thus the youth converted as everyone else, but the revelation is that he chose to go after his mother and forsook his father, clinging to his mother and is a standard Jew by law and without any lesser quality of a Sinai experience.
The point to notice here is that Rashi says he converted, and therefore every usage of conversion is derived from “Ger”, leaving us to analyze if this was a Ger convert or Ger Gentile. Since we are shown that he actually converted in face of the idea that perhaps he was a Ger [which is aligned with the fact the law rendered from this applies particularly to the Gerim], we are now in position to see the difference between types of Ger process.

The Ger undergoes a shortened process than that of the convert, with the ramifications being that of the status is now either Jewish or non-Jewish. From this youth and the commentary it is illuminated that a convert is someone who literally binds his soul/nefesh withIN the Jewish People, whereas the Ger is bound with Israel, either as a one off [Ger Tzedek Vadai] or as a gradual entrance to Israel [Ger Tzedek] as opposed to the convert [Ger Gamur].

The Torah shows the Ger how he is able to tangle his soul in realistic terms with greater or lesser intensity in a realistic fashion that decides the fate of the person for the remainder of his years and eternal spiritual implications. Neither can go back to idolatry as it once was, yet one is an entirely new creation [and Jewish] as opposed to renewed [and a Ger]. The subject and frequency in the Torah of each mention of Ger outlines the new spiritual path for both, aided by the ways of the Ancient, i.e. Pre Sinai, and the tradition from Adam to Noah that was perfected and implemented into “Israel” [Abraham] by Shem [and Ever academies of learning].  

Thus we see Parashas Emor truly is the threshold before Sinai, as Parashas Behar will actually begin with the greetings from Sinai. The Mission of the Torah is clearly expressed in Emor through the lens of the Ger, one that depicts precedence within the Temple, permanent presence of all Gerim, and how the ultimate expression of Israel will appear before God, one that includes Jews and non-Jews, working in harmony under One common Torah in the World [which the Parsha calls “Mishpat Echad” - one law (where common)].

How ironic it is, that Sinai can be defined as the build-up of Gerim that composes reality, while today there should be greater focus on the portion of Torah that emphasizes “for you too were Gerim in a Land not of your own” [in face of the protection and Love of Gerim commands throughout the Torah]; how easily we have seemed to have forgotten, and sadly, it comes at the expense of Sinai. Yet Sinai forever shall stand as the Kindness Hashem endures for His creation(s), and what better kindness has Hashem been involved with [and invested in] since Sinai, than his preservation and love for the Gerim –who as the fourth head of the Shin, take a stand in aiding Hashem in delivering redemption.

Some might take the [redemptive] gifts of Emor for granted much like Sinai, [like the corners of the field that are preserved for the Gerim], but rest assured, the Ger sees Parashas Emor as not only his birthright, but as a destiny, and date with reality. In times where all other pulses have run dry, the Ger rages on like a return to Glory Jordan River, only this time, they will bring Moses in, even if by his payot [side curls] symbolic of Hashem’s abundant Kindness that clings to the Ger in Parashas Emor.




Don't Forget Audio Shiur - Parasha Motzie Shabbat  10 P.M.
                                           Wed 11 P.M. Torat Gerim / Noahide

 
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