In order to believe in Christian doctrines, someone must completely ignore logic and just depend on the "Holy Spirit" to enlighten them with a special knowledge as to why Torah says something it really doesn't say--and end up practicing idolatry.
In order to believe in Hasidism/Kabbalah, someone must completely ignore logic and depend on the fact that kabbalist proponent rabbis are just so dog gone smart that they somehow have a special knowledge as to why Jews should believe things that are contrary to what the Torah says--and end up practicing idolatry.
Same thing, different package.
You are completely ignorant.
There is nothing illogical in the idea that G-d has told us of a mystical dimension to the universe. And that we have a tradition on these matters. And that some rabbis have had heavenly teachers that have taught them these things.
Judaism is full of rituals, that only have any meaning if there is a mystical realm that these rituals impact.
No kabbalists are idolators, unless it is correct that some small group of lubavitchers believe their dead rabbi is G-d. And they are a tiny number that only existed since around 1990!
Most great rabbis .. The RAMBAN, the vilna gaon, the arizal , Rabbi Yosef Kairo, almost all of them, believe in kabbalah, and many of them have been great kabbalists.
Now.. Not all rabbis have been. Some following the RAMBAM very strictly or those trying to go back to just what we have in the talmud.. they may reject it. Or any new mysticism or anything new since the talmud. That's fine..
They may be right , Kabbalah may be wrong. But an large % of great rabbis have been master kabbalists, and it is certainly not idolatry.
Why don't you entertain us and tell us what aspect you think is idolatry?
See, this is what I'm talking about. Since Hasidism and kabbalah have supposedly been the practice of some "great" rabbis, who were supposedly smart, I'm "ignorant" because I criticize it. That's similar to a Christian regarding Jews who don't accept Jesus as "hard-hearted" or "resisting the Holy Spirit". These are both ideologies that require some special "inner knowledge" of sorts in order to justify the doctrines that are contradicted by the plain meaning of the Torah. Hasidism was a late innovation within Judaism, and it was opposed when it first began by the Mitnagdim. There was no divine revelation of Hasidism/kabbalah, it was just extrapolated back by its inventors kind of like Mormons extrapolate some of their scriptures back to Avraham. And the reason it is idolatry is for the same reason that other religions who teach reincarnation, astrology, pantheism, etc. are idolatry. It also seems to attract women in a witchcraft-esque way.
you are confusing things here.
Kabbalah existed long before Chassidut. Chassidut was 1700s.
(so forget chassidism, and your attack on that is clearly getting people upset anyhow.. unnecessarily. Since you are meant to be opposing kabbalah , not just one later kabbalistic movement)
RAMBAN was a kabbalist, and lived in the 1200s. Long before Chassidut.
What you also have to realise, is the concept of weight..
Certainly, revelation of kabbalah ... where the claim is that a rabbi has had a heavenly teacher, or a small number of rabbis have learnt a tradition from their rabbi, e.t.c.
It is nowhere near as strong as the revelation of the Torah at sinai, which was to the whole nation of Israel
The thing with other religions with their one man revelations, that could be made up. contradict the torah. So we know they are wrong.
Judaism does not base its truth on the revelation of kabbalah. You can be skeptical, but it is not idolatry.
And your argument was ridiculous. Just because an idolatrous religion teaches X , and kabbalah teaches X, does not make kabbalah idolatrous. In the same way that hinduism(which is idolatrous) teaches belief in the soul, and judaism does. But that does not make judaism idolatrous.