ABOUT REPENTANCETeshuvah and Repentance
"Repentance" in Hebrew is not teshuvah but charatah. Not only are these two terms not synonymous. They are opposites.
Charatah implies remorse or a feeling of guilt about the past and an intention to behave in a completely new way in the future. The person decides to become "a new man." But teshuvah means "returning" to the old, to one's original nature.
Underlying the concept of teshuvah is the fact that the Jew is, in essence, good. Desires or temptations may deflect him temporarily from being himself, being true to his essence.
1. You either imply that all men are, in essence, good, or you imply racism (a good race and a bad race).
Also
The Jewish soul has a bond with G-d. But it also inhabits a body, whose preoccupation with the material world may attenuate that bond.
I'd call you a nazi, but because the nazi were also enemies of the jewish people, I cannot.
2. If all men are, in essence, good, then it means that "charatah" was always meaningless, because all are, in essence, good. So that means that you actually believe in the "pure race". And saying such things also means you are conceited. But:
a. G-d hates conceited men. Amos 6.8.
b. G-d hates the man who gives credit to himself for what he is (a king, a powerful man, a jew, jewish, etc.) or what he has accomplished. Amos 6.13 (well, this means that he is conceited).
c. You seem to believe that because you 'are' good in essence, G-d is more willing to care for you and answer your prayers, but, besides of being conceited by this, you do in contradiction to what the prophet Daniel did: he said "because not for our righteousness do we cast our supplications before You, but for Your great mercies" (Daniel 9.18) and Daniel, along with other Jews, was a righteous man.
So this brings the question: don't you fear G-d to say that you are superior in nature?
3. Some things I don't see that sound right with people being, in essence, good:
Well, we know that Adam and Eve were in essence good, because G-d said that what He has done was good. And that meant that Adam and Eve could have not sinned against G-d, as long as they did not want to. Also the angels: I guess we all agree that they, unlike us, don't need atonement for their sins, because they do not commit them. But it seems that now we do unintentional evil, which the
good angels don't. We are susceptible to evil things - evil things are more a temptation than the good things: to do good things you must
struggle, while to do evil things is easy, and they even come themselves without us noticing! So, if we are in essence, good, than how can we be, in essence, also evil (sinners)? And the fact that we cannot stop doing evil/sin, no matter how much we struggle, proves that we are, in essence, sinners (not
good).
Also, the fact that the Jews are in essence good, contradicts the Tanakh:
for I knew that you would deal treacherously, and you were called transgressor from the womb
The
Jewish people and
Jews of that time were, in essence, transgressors. How could the events turn in such a way that all Jews would become, in essence, good?
Charatah implies remorse or a feeling of guilt about the past and an intention to behave in a completely new way in the future. The person decides to become "a new man." But teshuvah means "returning" to the old, to one's original nature.
This difference sounds very odd. Though, in a sense, becoming a new being is the same as a
strong decision to be in a completely new way in the future, than wicked as you are in present, you cannot call it oposite to
But teshuvah means "returning" to the old, to one's original nature because your nature, not matter what you do, remains your nature: one cannot change/transform himself from John(original person) to Alexander (a different person), and one cannot transform from a man to an angel.
This missunderstanding is also visible, when you said:
And the wicked, however distant they are from G-d, can always return, for teshuvah does not involve creating anything new, only rediscovering the good that was always within them.
1. Every man has good in him. Though many don't struggle to focus on it and don't make it grow. Though many make the evil grow in them.
2. A man for whom no one cared, most surely will never be able to care for someone else, if no one cares for him first. That's because we
learn to be good, and we need to see good to know what it is and how that is, to be able to perform it. So this is a kind of good from outside, not from within.
3. Due to the fact what you said is odd, I'll have to guess what the author actually believed by that, and comment that: Of course every wicked man that decides to change actually uses his own potential of doing good to do good. I can't see how it would possible be otherwise!
So
becoming a new man cannot be put against
"returning" to the old, to one's original nature, because, in the
good sense, it is odd. But in the bad sense, our nature is, evil, selfish, etc.: You can see it even from the little children who's selfishness is evident (they believe that all is for them, you can hardly convince a little child to give something he has to another little child to play with, etc.). Anyway, satanists claim the same: a man must
"return" to his original nature, only that they add that he must reject religion and other theories that tell him how to behave and puts restrictions on him.
Anyway, becoming a "new man" is a requirement for Jews & Jewish people in the Tanakh:
Cast away from yourselves all your transgressions whereby you have transgressed, and make yourselves a new heart and a new spirit, and why should you die, O house of Israel!
And I will give you a new heart, and a new spirit will I put within you, and I will take away the heart of stone out of your flesh, and I will give you a heart of flesh.
These verses says clearly about becoming a
new man, for Jews/Jewish people.