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Offline yahtruth

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How Yom Teruah Became Rosh Hashanah
« on: September 29, 2014, 06:20:52 AM »
How Yom Teruah Became Rosh Hashanah
Nehemia Gordon
http://www.nehemiaswall.com/yom-teruah-day-shouting-became-rosh-hashanah

Posted on September 26, 2014   

On the 1st day of the Seventh Month (Tishrei) the Torah commands us to observe the holy day of Yom Teruah which means “Day of Shouting” (Leviticus 23:23-25; Numbers 29:1-6). Yom  Teruah is a day of rest on which work is forbidden. One of the unique things about Yom Teruah is that the Torah does not say what the purpose of this holy day is. The Torah gives at least one  reason for all the other holy days and two reasons for some. The Feast of Matzot (Unleavened Bread) commemorates the Exodus from Egypt, but it is also a celebration of the beginning of the  barley harvest (Exodus 23:15; Leviticus 23:4–14). The Feast of Shavuot (Weeks) is a celebration of the wheat harvest (Exodus 23:16; 34:22). Yom Ha-Kippurim is a national day of atonement as  described in great detail in Leviticus 16. Finally, the Feast of Sukkot (Booths) commemorates the wandering of the Israelites in the desert and is also a celebration of the ingathering of agricultural  produce (Exodus 23:16). In contrast to all these Torah festivals, Yom Teruah has no clear purpose other than that we are commended to rest on this day.

Nevertheless, the name of Yom Teruah provides a clue as to its purpose. Teruah literally means to make a loud noise. This word can describe the noise made by a trumpet but it also describes  the noise made by a large gathering of people shouting in unison (Numbers 10:5–6). For example,

    “And it shall come to pass when the ram’s horn makes a long blast, when you hear the sound of the shofar, the entire nation will shout a great shout, and the wall of the city shall fall in its  place, and the people shall go up as one man against it.”  -Joshua 6:5

In this verse the word “shout” appears twice, once as the verb form of Teruah and a second time as the noun form of Teruah. Although this verse mentions the sound of the shofar (ram’s horn),  the two instances of Teruah do not refer to the shofar. In fact, in this verse, Teruah refers to the shouting of the Israelites which was followed by the fall of the walls of Jericho.

While the Torah does not explicitly tell us the purpose of Yom Teruah, its name may indicate that it is intended as a day of public prayer. The verb form of Teruah often refers to the noise made  by a gathering of the faithful calling out to the Almighty in unison. For example:

    “Clap hands, all nations, shout to God, with a singing voice!” (Psalms 47:2)

    “Shout to God, all the earth!” (Psalms 66:1)

    “Sing to God, our strength, shout to the God of Jacob!” (Psalms 81:2)

    “Shout to Yehovah, all the earth!” (Psalms 100:1)

In Leviticus 23:24, Yom Teruah is also referred to as Zichron Teruah. The word Zichron is sometimes translated as “memorial”, but this Hebrew word also means to “mention”, often in reference  to speaking the name of Yehovah. For example, Exodus 3:15; Isaiah 12:4; Isaiah 26:13; Psalms 45:18. The day of Zichron Teruah, the “Mentioning Shout”, may refer to a day of gathering in public  prayer in which the crowd of the faithful shouts the name of Yehovah in unison.

Today, few people remember the biblical name of Yom Teruah and instead it is widely known as “Rosh Hashanah” which literally means “head of the year” and hence also “New Years”. The  transformation of Yom Teruah (Day of Shouting) into Rosh Hashanah (New Years) is the result of pagan Babylonian influence upon the Jewish nation. The first stage in the transformation was  the adoption of the Babylonian month names. In the Torah, the months are numbered as First Month, Second Month, Third Month, etc (Leviticus 23; Numbers 28). During their sojourn in  Babylonia our ancestors began to use the pagan Babylonian month names, a fact readily admitted in the Talmud:

    “The names of the months came up with them from Babylonia.” (Jerusalem Talmud, Rosh Hashanah 1:2 56d)

The pagan nature of the Babylonian month names is epitomized by the fourth month known as Tammuz. In the Babylonian religion, Tammuz was the god of grain whose annual death and  resurrection brought fertility to the world. In the book of Ezekiel, the prophet described a journey to Jerusalem in which he saw the Jewish women sitting in the Temple “weeping over Tammuz”  (Ezekiel 8:14). The reason they were weeping over Tammuz is that, according to Babylonian mythology, Tammuz had been slain but had not yet been resurrected. In ancient Babylonia, the time  for weeping over Tammuz was the early summer, when the rains cease throughout the Middle East and green vegetation is burnt by the unrelenting sun. To this day the Fourth Month in the  rabbinical calendar is known as the month of Tammuz and it is still a time for weeping and mourning.

Some of the Babylonian month names found their way into the later books of the Tanakh, but they always appear alongside the Torah month names. For example, Esther 3:7 says:

    “In the First Month, which is the month of Nissan, in the twelfth year of King Achashverosh.”

This verse starts off by giving the Torah name for the month (“First Month”) and then translates this month into its pagan equivalent (“which is the month of Nissan”). By the time of Esther, all the  Jews lived within the boundaries of the Persian Empire and the Persians had adopted the Babylonian calendar for the civil administration of their realm. At first, the Jews used these Babylonian  month names alongside the Torah month names, but over time the Torah month names fell into disuse.

As the Jewish People became more comfortable with the Babylonian month names, they became more susceptible to other Babylonian influences. This is similar to the way that American Jews  observe  Hannukah as a Jewish version of Christmas. This influence began with the seemingly harmless custom of giving gifts on Hannukah. Until the Jews arrived in America this custom was  unknown and it is still a rarity in Israel where Hannukah does not need to compete with Christmas for the hearts and minds of the Jewish youth. Once Hannukah took on this relatively trivial  aspect of Christmas, it became ripe for more significant influences. Today, many American Jews have established the custom of setting up a “Hannukah bush” as a Jewish alternative to the  Christmas tree. These Jews did not want to adopt Christmas outright so they “Judaized” the Christmas tree and incorporated into Hannukah. This example shows how easy it is to be influenced  by the practices of a foreign religion, especially when there is some similarity to begin with. The fact that Hannukah often falls out around the same time as Christmas made it natural for  American Jews to incorporate elements of Christmas into their observance of Hannukah.

Just as the Jews of America have been influenced by Christmas, the ancient Rabbis were influenced by the pagan Babylonian religion. Although many Jews returned to Judea when the Exile  officially ended in 516 BCE, the forebears of the Rabbis remained behind in Babylonia where rabbinical Judaism gradually took shape. Many of the earliest known Rabbis such as Hillel I were  born and educated in Babylonia. Indeed, Babylonia remained the heartland of Rabbinical Judaism until the fall of the Gaonate in the 11th Century CE. The Babylonian Talmud abounds with the  influences of Babylonian paganism. Indeed, pagan deities even appear in the Talmud recycled as “Jewish” angels and demons.1

One field of Babylonian religious influence was in the observance of Yom Teruah as a New Years celebration. From very early times the Babylonians had a lunar-solar calendar very similar to the  biblical calendar. The result was that Yom Teruah often fell out on the same day as the Babylonian New Years festival of “Akitu”. The Babylonian Akitu fell out on the 1st day of Tishrei which  coincided with Yom Teruah on the 1st day of the Seventh Month. When Jews started calling the “Seventh Month” by the Babylonian name “Tishrei”, it paved the way for turning Yom Teruah into a  Jewish Akitu. At the same time, the Rabbis did not want to adopt Akitu outright so they Judaized it by changing the name of Yom Teruah (Day of Shouting) to Rosh Hashanah (New Years). The  fact that the Torah did not give a reason for Yom Teruah no doubt made it easier for the Rabbis to proclaim it the Jewish New Years.

It is outright bizarre to celebrate Yom Teruah as New Years. This biblical festival falls out on the first day of the Seventh Month. However, in the context of Babylonian culture this was perfectly  natural. The Babylonians actually celebrated Akitu, New Years, twice every year, once on the first of Tishrei and again six months later on the first of Nissan. The first Babylonian Akitu celebration  coincided with Yom Teruah and the second Akitu coincided with the actual New Years in the Torah on the first day of the First Month. While the Rabbis proclaimed Yom Teruah to be New Years,  they still recognized that the 1st day of the “First Month” in the Torah was, as its name implied, also a New Years. They could hardly deny this based on Exodus 12:2 which says:

    “This month shall be for you the beginning of months; it is first of the months of the year.”

The context of this verse speaks about the celebration of the Feast of Unleavened Bread which falls out in the First Month. In light of this verse, the Rabbis could not deny that the first day of the  First Month was a biblical New Years. But in the cultural context of Babylonia, where Akitu was celebrated as New Years twice a year, it made perfect sense that Yom Teruah could be a second  New Years even though it was in the Seventh Month.

In contrast to Babylonian paganism, the Torah does not say or imply that Yom Teruah has anything to do with New Years. On the contrary, the Feast of Sukkot (Booths), which takes place  exactly two weeks after Yom Teruah, is referred to in one verse as “the going out of the year” (Exodus 23:16). This would be like calling January 15 in the modern Western calendar “the going out  of the year”. the Torah would not describe Sukkot in this manner if it intended Yom Teruah to be celebrated as a New Years.

Some modern Rabbis have argued that Yom Teruah is actually referred to as Rosh Hashanah in Ezekiel 40:1, which describes a vision that the prophet had, “At the beginning of the year (Rosh  Hashanah) on the tenth of the month”. In fact, Ezekiel 40:1 proves that the phrase “Rosh Hashanah” does not mean “New Years”. Instead, it retains its literal sense of “the head of the year”  referring to the First Month in the Torah calendar. The 10th day of Rosh Hashanah in Ezekiel 40:1 refers to the 10th day of the First Month.

Yom Teruah is mentioned in the following biblical passages:

    “And Yehovah spoke unto Moses saying, Speak to the Children of Israel saying, In the Seventh month on the first of the month will be a day of rest (Shabbaton) for you, a Remembrance  Shouting, a holy convocation. You shall do no work and you will bring a fire sacrifice to Yehovah.” Leviticus 23:23-25

    “And in the Seventh month on the first of the month will be a holy convocation for you; you shall do no work, it will be a Day of Shouting for you…” Numbers 29:1-6

Q: What about Leviticus 25:9?

A: Some people have argued that Yom Teruah should be considered New Years because it is the beginning of the Sabbatical year. However, the Torah does not say that Yom Teruah is the  beginning of the Sabbatical year and all indications are that the Sabbatical year begins on the 1st day of the First Month. The Torah does say the following:

    “And you shall pass a shofar of blasting in the Seventh Month on the tenth of the month; on the Day of Atonement, you shall pass a shofar throughout all your land.” (Leviticus 25:9)

This verse is saying that a shofar should be used to announce the arrival of the Jubilee year, the 50th year in the Sabbatical system. It does not say that the Jubilee begins on the Day of  Atonement, only that the impending arrival of the Jubilee year is announced on the Day of Atonement. The shofar is to be passed throughout the land on Yom Kippur of the 49th year, six months  before the beginning of the coming Jubilee year. This interpretation is supported by the immediate context in Leviticus 25. Verse 8 says to count forty nine years, verse 9 says to pass the shofar  throughout the land, and verse 10 says to proclaim the 50th year as the Jubilee. This shows that the shofar announcing the coming Jubilee in verse 9 is passed through the land before the  Jubilee is actually proclaimed in verse 10.

Q: Isn’t the Seventh Month the beginning of the agricultural cycle?

A: In the Torah the middle of the Seventh Month is actually the end of the agriculture cycle, specifically of the grain cycle. In the Land of Israel, grains are planted in Autumn and harvested in  Spring. The new agricultural cycle would not actually begin until the plowing of the fields. This would not take place until the first light rains which moisten the ground enough to be broken by iron  and wooden plows. In the Land of Israel, this could be as early as the middle of the Seventh Month but is usually in the Eighth Month or later. By the above logic, the Eighth Month should be  considered the beginning of the year, not the Seventh Month.

1 Zvi Cahn, The Rise of the Karaite Sect, New York 1937, pages 98–101. Cahn’s central thesis is that the refusal of rabbinical leaders to repudiate the deep-rooted Babylonian paganism that had  infiltrated Babylonian Judaism led to the rise of the Karaite back-to-the-Bible movement in the early Middle Ages. In this context, Cahn gives a detailed list of various pagan influences in rabbinical Judaism.

Offline muman613

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Re: How Yom Teruah Became Rosh Hashanah
« Reply #1 on: September 29, 2014, 03:39:46 PM »
I do not agree with anything written here. It is anti-Talmud and anti-Rabbinical Judaism.

It must be written by a non-Jew and or a Karaite..

Rosh Hashanah is known by all Jews as Yom HaTeruah.... We blow the Shofar during both days of Rosh Hashanah and one of the Shofar notes is called Teruah.

Also this author uses the term "Yehovah" which is not the Jewish name for Hashem. We do not use that term although Christians do...

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

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Re: How Yom Teruah Became Rosh Hashanah
« Reply #2 on: September 29, 2014, 03:43:06 PM »
We know Rosh Hashanah is the beginning of the year. We just celebrated it last Thursday and the year is 5775...

And the Talmud explains that the Jewish people mark several 'New Years' :

 MISHNAH. THERE ARE FOUR NEW YEARS.1 ON THE FIRST OF NISAN2 IS NEW YEAR FOR KINGS3 AND FOR FESTIVALS.4 ON THE FIRST OF ELUL5  IS NEW YEAR FOR THE TITHE OF CATTLE.6  R. ELEAZAR AND R. SIMEON, HOWEVER, PLACE THIS ON THE FIRST OF TISHRI.7  ON THE FIRST OF TISHRI8 IS NEW YEAR FOR YEARS,4  FOR RELEASE AND JUBILEE YEARS,9  FOR PLANTATION10 AND FOR [TITHE OF] VEGETABLES.11 ON THE FIRST OF SHEBAT12 IS NEW YEAR FOR TREES,13 ACCORDING TO THE RULING OF BETH SHAMMAI; BETH HILLEL, HOWEVER, PLACE IT ON THE FIFTEENTH OF THAT MONTH.

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: How Yom Teruah Became Rosh Hashanah
« Reply #3 on: September 29, 2014, 03:44:39 PM »
Sukkot has nothing to do with New Year.... It is a remembrance of the Clouds of Glory when Hashem led us from Egypt.

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: How Yom Teruah Became Rosh Hashanah
« Reply #4 on: September 29, 2014, 03:48:51 PM »
yah? Are you a Christian or a Jew?

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 edu

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Re: How Yom Teruah Became Rosh Hashanah
« Reply #5 on: September 29, 2014, 03:53:42 PM »
This poster "yahtruth" has been posting anti-religious material before and should not be taken seriously by real Jews.

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Re: How Yom Teruah Became Rosh Hashanah
« Reply #6 on: September 29, 2014, 03:54:40 PM »
Notice also that this article has no sources or supporting evidence. It is all just one mans opinion. Also he brings some Karait footnote which just proves that this is a non-Jewish attempt to disprove the Talmud.

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: How Yom Teruah Became Rosh Hashanah
« Reply #7 on: September 29, 2014, 03:55:35 PM »
This poster "yahtruth" has been posting anti-religious material before and should not be taken seriously by real Jews.

I thought so...
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 edu

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Re: How Yom Teruah Became Rosh Hashanah
« Reply #8 on: September 29, 2014, 04:18:52 PM »
I don't even want to argue with the heretic "yahtruth" but to clear up a little bit of confusion to other readers of the Torah forum one should read the translation of the Ramban's commentary to Shmot/Exodus 12:2
Here is the Ramban in Hebrew hopefully someone else will take the time to copy from the existing Ramban translation in English or provide his own translation.
רמב"ן שמות פרק יב

(ב) החדש הזה לכם ראש חדשים - זו מצוה ראשונה שצוה הקדוש ברוך הוא את ישראל על ידי משה, ולכן אמר בארץ מצרים, כי שאר מצות שבתורה היו בהר סיני, או שבא לומר בארץ מצרים, לא בעיר מצרים, כמו שאמרו רבותינו (מכילתא כאן) חוץ לכרך. והיה ראוי שיאמר תחלה דברו אל כל עדת ישראל לאמר החדש הזה לכם וגומר הפרשה, אבל משה ואהרן הם במקום ישראל, ואמר "לכם" כנגד ישראל לדורותם, וחזר ואמר דברו אל כל עדת ישראל, שיצום במצות שעה לקחת פסח מצרים מבעשור:
ולפי מדרשו "לכם" לומר שקדוש החדש צריך בית דין מומחין (ר"ה כה ב). ולכך לא נאמר בתחלה "דברו אל כל עדת ישראל", שאין בקדוש החדש אלא משה ואהרן וכיוצא בהם. וטעם החדש הזה לכם ראש חדשים, שימנו אותו ישראל חדש הראשון, וממנו ימנו כל החדשים שני ושלישי עד תשלום השנה בשנים עשר חדש, כדי שיהיה זה זכרון בנס הגדול, כי בכל עת שנזכיר החדשים יהיה הנס נזכר, ועל כן אין לחדשים שם בתורה, אלא יאמר בחדש השלישי (להלן יט א), ואומר ויהי בשנה השנית בחדש השני נעלה הענן (במדבר י יא), ובחדש השביעי באחד לחודש וגו' (שם כט א), וכן כלם:
וכמו שתהיה הזכירה ביום השבת במנותינו ממנו אחד בשבת ושני בשבת, כאשר אפרש (להלן כ ח), כך הזכירה ביציאת מצרים במנותינו החדש הראשון והחדש השני והשלישי לגאולתינו, שאין המנין הזה לשנה, שהרי תחלת שנותינו מתשרי, דכתיב (להלן לד כב) וחג האסיף תקופת השנה, וכתיב (שם כג טז) בצאת השנה, אם כן כשנקרא לחדש ניסן ראשון ולתשרי שביעי, פתרונו ראשון לגאולה ושביעי אליה. וזה טעם ראשון הוא לכם, שאיננו ראשון בשנה, אבל הוא ראשון לכם, שנקרא לו לזכרון גאולתינו:
וכבר הזכירו רבותינו זה הענין, ואמרו שמות חדשים עלו עמנו מבבל (ירושלמי ר"ה א ב, ב"ר מח ט), כי מתחלה לא היו להם שמות אצלנו, והסבה בזה, כי מתחלה היה מניינם זכר ליציאת מצרים, אבל כאשר עלינו מבבל ונתקיים מה שאמר הכתוב (ירמיה טז יד - טו) ולא יאמר עוד חי ה' אשר העלה את בני ישראל מארץ מצרים כי אם חי ה' אשר העלה ואשר הביא את בני ישראל מארץ צפון, חזרנו לקרא החדשים בשם שנקראים בארץ בבל, להזכיר כי שם עמדנו ומשם העלנו הש"י. כי אלה השמות ניסן אייר וזולתם שמות פרסיים, ולא ימצא רק בספרי נביאי בבל (זכריה א ז, עזרא ו טו, נחמיה א א) ובמגילת אסתר (ג ז). ולכן אמר הכתוב בחדש הראשון הוא חדש ניסן, כמו הפיל פור הוא הגורל (שם). ועוד היום הגוים בארצות פרס ומדי כך הם קוראים אותם ניסן ותשרי וכלם כמונו. והנה נזכיר בחדשים הגאולה השנית כאשר עשינו עד הנה בראשונה:


Offline Ephraim Ben Noach

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Re: How Yom Teruah Became Rosh Hashanah
« Reply #9 on: September 29, 2014, 06:31:22 PM »
I do not agree with anything written here. It is anti-Talmud and anti-Rabbinical Judaism.

It must be written by a non-Jew and or a Karaite..

Rosh Hashanah is known by all Jews as Yom HaTeruah.... We blow the Shofar during both days of Rosh Hashanah and one of the Shofar notes is called Teruah.

Also this author uses the term "Yehovah" which is not the Jewish name for Hashem. We do not use that term although Christians do...
I was looking at Karaite today and it looks like they say HaShem as JHVH too
Ezekiel 33:6 But if the watchman see the sword come, and blow not the horn, and the people be not warned, and the sword do come, and take any person from among them, he is taken away in his iniquity, but his blood will I require at the watchman's hand.

Offline Israel Chai

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Re: How Yom Teruah Became Rosh Hashanah
« Reply #10 on: September 29, 2014, 09:59:19 PM »
I was looking at Karaite today and it looks like they say HaShem as ---- too

Yeah half of them are on their way to become Xtians.

As for the poster, utter nonsense from an obvious missionary troll. Ban.

"In this context, Cahn gives a detailed list of various pagan influences in rabbinical Judaism."

YS"V to both liars, Cahn and poster.
The fear of the L-rd is the beginning of knowledge

Offline kyel

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Re: How Yom Teruah Became Rosh Hashanah
« Reply #11 on: September 29, 2014, 10:02:43 PM »
Yeah half of them are on their way to become Xtians.

As for the poster, utter nonsense from an obvious missionary troll. Ban.

"In this context, Cahn gives a detailed list of various pagan influences in rabbinical Judaism."

YS"V to both liars, Cahn and poster.

How are they on their way to become Christians? Why would you say this?

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Re: How Yom Teruah Became Rosh Hashanah
« Reply #12 on: September 30, 2014, 12:21:56 AM »
Rambam considers those who deny Talmud to actually Deny the entire Torah...


http://www.torah.org/learning/mlife/LORch3-8c.html

Maimonides on Life

The Torah of the Rabbis, Part I

Chapter 3, Law 8(c)

"There are three [types of] deniers of the Torah.

(1) One who says the Torah is not from G-d. Even if he claims Moses composed a single verse or single word [of the Torah] on his own, he is [considered] a denier of the Torah.

(2) So too one who denies [the Torah's] explanation, namely the Oral Torah, or he rejects its bearers (lit., 'its tellers') as [did] Tzaddok and Bysos.

(3) One who says the Creator exchanged one commandment with another one, and that this Torah has already become annulled -- even though it was [originally] from G-d, such as [believe] the Christians and the 'Hagarites' (i.e., Muslims).

Any one of these three [is considered] a denier of the Torah."


The Rambam this week continues to enumerate the very short list of exceptions to the principle that all Israel is granted a share in the World to Come. Only people who reject Judaism's most basic principles or who are sinful beyond repair are denied a place in the hereafter.

For the most part, this week's topic clearly follows from the previous. Earlier in this law the Rambam required that we accept the concept of prophecy and Moses' prophecy in particular. Now we are told to additionally accept the specific words of the prophets of Israel -- the Torah, its commentary, and its bearers.

Before we go in for a deeper look, a few of the Rambam's references may be unfamiliar to the reader. In example two, one who rejects the Oral Law, the Rambam illustrates with the examples of Tzaddok and Bysos. They lived in the early period of the Mishna. They were errant students of Antignos of Socho (mentioned in Pirkei Avos 1:3). As a result of a misunderstood teaching, they came to reject the entire Oral Law, only accepting the written Scripture as sacred. (For a lengthier treatment of their heresy and the reason behind it, please see the referenced article above.)

Secondly, the Rambam refers to Muslims in a very roundabout manner -- as "Hagarites". Hagar was Sarah's maidservant. After realizing she was unable to bear children (naturally), Sarah offered her maid Hagar to Abraham as concubine. Together they were granted the son Ishmael, considered the progenitor of the Arab nations (see Genesis 16). Being that the Jews of the Rambam's time and place lived within Muslim societies -- often tenuously so -- in his rejection of their theology the Rambam was forced to make the most oblique reference to them.

The three principles of this week form a very clear procession. We are first told that the entire Torah of Moses is divine. Every word of the Torah is equally sacred and the word of G-d. Moses' role was only in recording it; he took no part or liberties in its authorship. The Rambam elsewhere sees this hinted in Moses' own assertion. Right before the earth swallowed up Korach and his cohorts, Moses proclaimed, "With this [miracle] you will know that G-d sent me to do all these acts, for it was not from my own accord" (Numbers 16:28).

The Rambam continues that we are likewise taught that the entire "Oral Torah" is the word of G-d. The Oral Torah is the collection of explanations to the written Torah. When the Torah was given, a portion of it was recorded in writing. The vast majority of it, however, was taught orally and committed to memory. At a much later period, when the Sages recognized Israel was no longer up to memorizing the entire body of the Oral Law, it was put to writing -- first in the more abbreviated form of the Mishna, then more extensively as the Talmud. Likewise, several other basic works of scholarship, also explaining the Written Law, were authored during this period.

The Rambam adds that one who rejects the Torah's bearers is too included in this category of heretic. We will explain below the definition of the Torah's "bearers" and some of the ramifications of this principle.

Finally, the Rambam lists those who accept the Torah as Divine in origin, but who claim that G-d later "changed His mind" and replaced one or more commandments with others -- or just dropped them altogether as no longer relevant (or having had successfully run their course or whatever) -- as do the Christians and Muslims. We discussed last week that this too was one of the ramifications of the acceptance of Moses' prophecy. Moses attained the highest level of prophecy achievable -- and the entire nation witnessed it personally. And Moses told us specifically in the name of G-d that the commandments are eternal. Thus, no one could possibly claim at any later time that he knows better than Moses what G-d wants of us. G-d does not change His mind. At best, a person could theoretically equal Moses' level of prophecy. To "know better" than Moses and disagree with his prophecies is theologically impossible.

This week's installment raises two important issues. First of all, the Rambam stated that the Torah was given in two parts, one written and one oral, and that we are obliged to accept both halves as sacred. Why was the Torah broken down into two parts? Why did G-d leave the vast majority of it oral, obligating Israel in the enormous task of memorizing it? (The Torah forbade writing down the oral parts of the law (implied by Exodus 34:27). Only later, when the Sages feared the Torah would be distorted or forgotten altogether did they realize that law would have to be waived -- a case of forgoing the specific in order to preserve the whole.) Why require Israel to memorize so much of our heritage, leaving G-d's wisdom dependent upon the flawed and biased medium of human memory? Why not just write the entire thing down?

Actually, I won't answer this today because we dealt with it at much greater length in different classes (see especially Pirkei Avos 3:17). In a nutshell, the principle we discussed is that G-d specifically wanted much of the Torah to be oral because it had to be in a dynamic state. The world is far too complex to write down every possible situation and every possible law which would conceivably be relevant for all future generations. Rather, the Torah would have to be in a state in which man would interpret it and continually apply it to new situations. We would be the bearers of the Torah and would be both responsible and authorized to explain and interpret it. In doing so, not only would the Torah's wisdom be eternal and applicable to all future generations, but Israel itself would become sanctified in its role as the Torah's custodian and interpreter. We would join with G-d, so to speak, in bringing His Torah down to the world of man.

The second issue which requires clarification is the Rambam's reference to the Torah's bearers. One who rejects them is too considered a scoffer and receives no share in the World to Come. Who exactly are the Torah's "bearers"? Was the Torah entrusted to a certain caste of people above others? Isn't the Torah the possession of all Israel? And even assuming some great rabbis were awarded the position as the Torah's bearers, how could one be considered a *heretic* for disagreeing with them? Aren't they human being who can make mistakes as the rest of us? We can understand that denying Moses' prophecy -- which transmitted the precise word of G-d -- is heretical. But how can I be dubbed a heretic for questioning the decision of Rabbi X? Couldn't it be possible that Rabbi X simply made a mistake and I happen to be right? Presumptuous it may be to argue with rabbis so much greater than me, but how can debating them be tantamount to rejecting the Torah?

G-d willing next week we will attempt to address these issue. Stay tuned!

http://www.torah.org/learning/pirkei-avos/chapter1-3.html
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 Israel Chai

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Re: How Yom Teruah Became Rosh Hashanah
« Reply #13 on: September 30, 2014, 11:18:57 AM »
How are they on their way to become Christians? Why would you say this?

On the missie infested Jewish FB pages, there always was an army of karaites, and they get along with them on most points, and you can watch their conversion efforts go successfully, because any argument you make they'll be able to say "oh well that's just the Talmud", since it ties into everything, and I was watching them get converted. The group already has gone though plenty of processes of being converted off, which is why there's around 20k left, and they keep converting more and more mostly I think because they're out there speaking lashon hara against Jews who keep the oral laws, and then after they find they have a hatred in common with xtians, they tend to buddy up and become them.
The fear of the L-rd is the beginning of knowledge