Author Topic: Faith Gone Bad : Cults and Avodah Zarah (Strange Worship)  (Read 360 times)

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Offline muman613

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Faith Gone Bad : Cults and Avodah Zarah (Strange Worship)
« on: August 12, 2014, 02:19:48 AM »
Shalom,

I mentioned that I watched a couple of interesting documentaries yesterday (Sunday) which I would like to share.

The common thread of these videos is that faith, one of the cornerstones of our Jewish belief, can become a nightmare when the human imagination is allowed to run wild. Faith in falsehood has led to great destruction of the world. The two examples which I post this evening are the 'Peoples Temple' mass suicide in Jonestown and the sordid life of 'the wickedest man in the world' Alastair Crowley.

Jim Jones was a carnival-type baptist faith healer who used his charisma to attract societies losers to follow a socialist/communist ideal sold as a new-age Christian religion using all the accouterments of Baptist ministering.  In the end he led his flock to mass suicide due to his indulging in drugs, sex (both hetero and homosexual), and paranoia. It is the most vivid example of faith being used to trick people into believing black is white, and wrong is right.



Alastair Crowley was a perverted man who sought power through erotic spiritualism which manifested itself by worshiping powers and spoken incantations. This crossed the line into 'Satanic' worship and sexual perversion and he spawned his own idolatrous religion. Mr Crowley had his 'fun' in the early 20th century (1902-1912) around the time of WWI but his influence on the 60s culture led to massive hedonistic perversions.


You shall make yourself the Festival of Sukkoth for seven days, when you gather in [the produce] from your threshing floor and your vat.And you shall rejoice in your Festival-you, and your son, and your daughter, and your manservant, and your maidservant, and the Levite, and the stranger, and the orphan, and the widow, who are within your cities
Duet 16:13-14

Offline muman613

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Re: Faith Gone Bad : Cults and Avodah Zarah (Strange Worship)
« Reply #1 on: August 12, 2014, 03:07:28 AM »
http://theyeshiva.net/Article/View/14/When-God-Becomes-an-Excuse-for-Fear

Every evening I turn my worries over to God. He's going to be up all night anyway. -- Mary C. Crowley

God loved the birds and invented trees. Man loved the birds and invented cages. -- Jacques Deval


Metal Gods?

“Do not make yourselves gods out of cast metal (1),” the Torah instructs us in the portion of Kedoshim.

How could an intelligent person believe that a piece of metal is god? We could perhaps appreciate how ancient pagan societies attributed divine qualities to powerful, transcendent forces of nature, like the Zodiac signs, the sun, the moon, various galaxies, the wind, fire, water, etc. But why would a thoughtful human being believe god could be fashioned out of cast metal?

Even if we can explain how in the ancient, pagan world such an idea could be entertained seriously, how does this commandment in Torah -- a timeless blueprint for human life -- apply to our lives today?

I once encountered a beautiful interpretation to these words (2). What this biblical verse – “Do not make yourselves gods out of cast metal” -- is telling us is not to construct a god of a lifestyle and a weltanschauung that has become like “cast metal;” one that is cast and solidified in a fixed mold.

A natural human tendency is to worship that which we have become comfortable with. We worship our habits, patterns, attitudes, routines and inclinations simply because we have accustomed ourselves to them and they are part of our lives. We worship the icons, the culture, the perspective, and the emotions we have been raised with and which have become the norm in our communities, schools and homes. People love that which does not surprise them; we want to enjoy a god that suits our philosophical and emotional paradigms and comfort zones. We tend to embrace the fixed and molten god.

This is true both of religious and secular people; both of believers and self proclaimed atheists or agnostics. “Don’t rock my boat,” is the call of our psyche. “I already have an established god; do not threaten it…” I have my patterns of thought and system of life which I am used to. Do not challenge it. If you do, I will have no choice but to dismiss you as a heretic or a boor.

Raw Truth

Comes the Torah and declares: Do not turn your pre-established mold into your G-d. Do not turn your habits, natural patterns of thought, fears, inclinations or addictions into a deity. Allow yourself to search for the truth. Real truth—naked, raw, and authentic, even if painful. Life is about challenge, not conformity. Allow your soul to be enchanted by mystery. Never say, “This is the way I am; this is the way I do things, I cannot change.” Never think, “This is the world view I am comfortable with; any other way must be wrong.” Rather, muster the courage to challenge every instinct, temptation and convention; question every dogma, including dogmas that speak in the name of open mindedness, and are embraced simply because you fall back on that which you have been taught again and again. Let your life not become enslaved to a particular pattern just because it has been that way for many years or decades. G-d, the real G-d, is not defined by any conventions; let your soul, too, not be confined by any external conventions.

Experience the freedom of your Creator.

 Judaism never articulated who G-d is and what G-d looks like. What it did teach us is what G-d does NOT look like: G-d ought never to be defined by any image we attribute to Him, hewn by the instruments of our conscious or subconscious needs, fears and aspirations. In Jewish philosophy, never mind in Kabbalah and Chassidic thought, we never speak of what G-d is; only of what He is not: G-d is not an extension of my being or imagination (3).

The common Yiddish term for G-d used by some of the greatest Jewish mystics, thinkers and holy men is “Oybershter,” which means “higher.” Not Creator, not Master, not All-Powerful, etc, but “higher.” What this term represents is this idea: I do not know what He is; all I know is that whatever my definition of truth and reality, whatever my definition for G-d -- he is “higher” than that. All I know is that I do not know (4).

Thus, to be open to the G-d of the Torah means to be open to never ending mystery, infinite grandeur, limitless sublimity and possibility; it is the profound readiness at every moment of life to open ourselves to transcendence. And what was transcendent yesterday -- can become a form of exile today. Transcendence itself must also be transcendent, for it too can become a trap.

 And that which remains of your ambitions and desires after you have faced all of your fears and challenged all of your defenses, that is where your will meets G-d’s will (5). At that point of complete humility and sincerity, you become truly one with yourself, one with the inner core of reality.

In the words of the Zohar (6), “No thought, no idea, can grasp Him; yet He can be grasped with the pure desire of the heart.”

1) Leviticus 19:4.
2) Mei Hasheluach by Rabbi Mordechai Yosef Leiner, Parshas Kedoshim, p. 118. The author was a brilliant and creative 19th century Chassidic thinker and master, and is known as the Rebbe of Ishbitz. He passed away in 1854.
3) This is a common theme in the writings of Maimonidies in his “Guide to the Perplexed.” See at length Likkutei Torah Parshas Pekudei and references noted there.
4) I heard this insight from the Lubavitcher Rebbe, Sichas Shabbas Parshas Toldos 5751 (1990).
5) See at length Mei Hasheluach ibid.
6) See Zohar Vol. 3 p. 289b. Hemshech 5666 (by Rabbi Sholom Dovber of Lubavitch) p. 57.

- See more at: http://theyeshiva.net/Article/View/14/When-God-Becomes-an-Excuse-for-Fear#sthash.OBFpeB7U.dpuf
You shall make yourself the Festival of Sukkoth for seven days, when you gather in [the produce] from your threshing floor and your vat.And you shall rejoice in your Festival-you, and your son, and your daughter, and your manservant, and your maidservant, and the Levite, and the stranger, and the orphan, and the widow, who are within your cities
Duet 16:13-14

Offline muman613

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Re: Faith Gone Bad : Cults and Avodah Zarah (Strange Worship)
« Reply #2 on: August 12, 2014, 03:12:40 AM »
As I stated originally, imagination is a powerful force in man. It is capable of bringing us pleasure (enjoying a movie or song) but it also has the potential to lead us astray...



http://www.chabad.org/library/article_cdo/aid/1449301/jewish/The-Power-of-Imagination.htm

Flip Side

We are taught that every phenomenon of holiness in the world has its flip side in the material world. Does the imaginary dreamworld to which Hollywood would like us to pay homage exist in holiness? Is there a golden path that we can follow to reach the authentic Holy-wood? The key to answering these questions is in rectified imagination.

No matter how rational we may like to think we are, imagination is the primary driving force in most people’s psyche. When properly oriented and refined, our rich and fertile power of imagination is a blessing, for it enables us to envision our ultimate life-goals and develop our G‑d-given talents. A healthy imagination makes an individual an inspired, vibrant and exciting person, and impels him to realize his dreams. Moreover, the power of imagination can actually facilitate the actualization of one’s dreams and goals, as in the famous saying of the Rebbes of Chabad: “Think good and it will be good.”3

Holy Wood

It was the illusions of their unrectified imaginations4 that brought the people to the rash conclusions that resulted in the sin of the golden calf. In fact, the numerical value (122) of the phrase eigel hazahav, “the golden calf,” is exactly equal to that of the idiom koach hamedameh, “the power of imagination.” The untamed imagination is the psychological base of the evil inclination, inviting fantasies that are aimed at gratifying the baser drives, while a rectified imagination is the key to true spirituality. (See Rabbi Yitzchak Ginsburgh, The Mystery of Marriage, pp. 48-50.)
You shall make yourself the Festival of Sukkoth for seven days, when you gather in [the produce] from your threshing floor and your vat.And you shall rejoice in your Festival-you, and your son, and your daughter, and your manservant, and your maidservant, and the Levite, and the stranger, and the orphan, and the widow, who are within your cities
Duet 16:13-14