From
http://www.torahanytime.com/rabbi_singer_oral_law_1_mp3.html I listened to all of it, because my first language is not english it was a bit hard to understand some things he said, I used “…” where I didn’t know what he said:
“If we want to know how to perform the written Torah, how to perform what it says, that’s what the Oral Torah tells us. As an example, let’s say today we picked out the today’s New York Times, … and we began to cut away all the headlines, we cut all the headlines out of the newspaper, and on a fresh piece of paper we scotchtaped all the headlines, one beneath the other. That’s what the written Torah would be like, all we have is we’d have the headlines but it really doesn’t tell us a whole lot about how to do it, how to perform it, what do we do? ”
That what he said is odd. You know, chrstian orthodox and catholics say a bit the same about the Tanakh, a kind of “very, very basics and very vague”, that it is not enough, and is quite ignored in the favour of the teachings of the ‘saints’, which are that many in number and a lot of text that they don’t even have the time for the Bible itself (of which, I think Tanakh is mostly ignored). But I think that even the most important thing is ignored, while the highlight is on the other books, which explain how you should understand the text.
About newspaper headlines: what is the good in reading the newspaper headlines? Shouldn’t one rather read the newspaper text? If so, then the newspaper headline is useless. Or, should one read a crypted text, if, because it is crypted, cannot be understood, or he should read the “explanation of the text” instead?
“The first reason is simply that christianity could not in any way embrace a body of divinly inspired literature that they did not have access to.” – how do you know it is a divinly inspired literature? I read above that they used their wisdom to get to a consensus and understand things. As I understood – without reading the Talmud – is that they did not even claim that “God said to me/us: go and do that!”, so that, if God said that to them, their work is to be trusted. Otherwise, it’s a man’s work.
Also, the author also said somewhere that the rabbies that made the Talmud were not anti-spiritual to “add things to God’s word” (as it is forbidden, commandment written in Deuteronomy). However, I don’t believe that this story is like muslims say about jews/christians, and said “ok… now, let’s change the Bible!” and started a project, “Changing of the Bible”. They [the jews] needed only to receieve themselves some erroneous teachings as “Oral Torah” (or, “there was always this teaching”), and all they did, they might have done with the thought that what they did was good. Some teachings might have started as simple understandings/views of some people, but they came to be understood as “God’s word”. There may also be deeds and rituals that started as some “teachings of the elders”, or just some people considering them to be that “it is good to do that”, but after some time, their value began to grow in time, and finally to be understood as “God’s ordinance”.
“And there’s a very funny thing you sould know, that when you’re dealing with christianity… it’s never said, but it’s understood that somehow, in the christian eye, in the christian view, all the rabbies that predated Jesus, all the rabbies that were born before the year 1, they’re somehow ok, and usually the church will say nice things about them. All the rabbies that came after Jesus were all very, very evil, and very corrupt and so on. Because the rabbies before Jesus never had the chance to reject Jesus, … and they’re somehow ok, but all the rabbies that were post Jesus … to christian literature… they are painted in the darkest … .”
I never asked people about this issue, maybe it’s a bit exaggerated, or maybe not most believe that in an exaggerated way. I’ll tell you my opinion: There are always different people, and there are always influences that give birth to sects/parties. If you look to the history of Israel as presented by the Tanakh, you don’t see the people remaining all on the “right path”, but went astray many times (this is how easy it is for any people/group to change from the original).
2 Kings 22.8-13: I suppose they speak about the books of Moses (scroll of Law), if the “Oral Law” was written only in Common Era. So, if God’s written law was so easy to be forgotten, how could the “Oral Law” have been preserved from generation to generation?
He explained why was needed an oral law.
So I have this question: Then why was it needed a written law? (if there was an “Oral Law” that fully explained the written law, and was oral) Then why was then needed to be a very short and vague and cryptic written law?
Now, he explained:
“why do we have an oral law? Why wasn’t all written down?”
“In reality the question is trully a silly question, because you can’t have even a language without an oral law. It’s impossible. Ask a christian who says “I don’t believe in an oral law”, ask them, you know, when you look to these hebrew letters, al they are, the hebrew letters, are consonants. The vowel that you see beneath it, the dots … is that system ancient? No, it’s modern, it was created by the masoretes. Milenia ago, sages came together and they actually recorded how to pronounce these letters, but that wasn’t there originally. So it’s our language, the hebrew language. Is it oral or is it written? In reality it’s oral. How do we know what vowel it goes beneath what consonant? How do you know? It wasn’t handed down with those vowels, everyone knows that.”, “the masoretes, did not create the vowel system, they were simply handing down.”, “you can’t even have a language without an oral law.”
The very important thing is preservation. You can’t have a language without having sounds, yet the language changes in time (i.e. some minor gramatical differences, some different spelling, some differences in how you draw the letters, extern influences, some new neologisms, some words become archaisms, etc.), and if most of it is oral, when you get to the end, you don’t know from where you started.
About the language: he said that a language cannot exist without an oral law. What he said was a bit odd. First off, there are deaf people which – as far as I know – can read and write. So, if everybody was deaf, having all the text, would there be no language? Yet all is preserved in text. And about Hebrew language, there is no way of telling that the same spelling was in the time of masorettes as in the first years of Hebrew’s existence. So there is a great probability that the ‘oral law’ of the Hebrew language has CHANGED in time. And this is the great problem.
Rosetta Stone and Egypt hieroglyphs: there is no oral law here. There is only the understanding of symbols, which, if everyone was deaf, was able to understand, because of greek, the Egyptian hieroglyphs. So no ‘oral’ (sound) is required. Only text. Moreover, without even knowing to read Egyptian, one could learn what something is written in Egyptian hieroglyphs.
about the legal system (loyars, judge, a jury) – now that’s a good idea for me to explain.
It was said that the written law cannot exist without an oral law. Ok, so we have one judge, one jury, two lawyers, a written law, and one accused of breaking the law. If this oral law is correct, then it means that the accused one is always found guilty if guilty, or innocent, if innocent, and that, if guilty, he receives the proper punishment. But that is not true always (or mostly) which means that the oral law is unreliable. That because people use their reasoning for the written law and for the evidences they receive from both parts, and people are… imperfect and thus, unreliable.
This would be translated into scriptural sense as Malachi 2.9 “… according to how you do not keep My ways and [how] you show favoritism in the Torah.” – so it seems they understood/interpreted the Torah(oral law?) in a way in which they favored people.
“bible prophecy: in the end of the days all the nations will know the true God and they will acknowledge their error – which he added that when the true messiah comes, the nations will set aside their erroneous beliefs and will see that the Jews are right” and it gives as reference the verse Zechariah 8.23 “So said the Lord of Hosts: In those days, when ten men of all the languages of the nations shall take hold of the skirt of a Jewish man, saying, "Let us go with you, for we have heard that God is with you."”
I’ll give you a different view: First, there are many denominations in what is called ‘the religion of Christianity’ (which I’d rather call, many religions – but they are not called so), and my opinion being that most of all ‘Christians’ see things erroneous (maybe 95%+) and the fact that this is not the only existing religion (there are many atheists, muslims, hinduists, etc.) and we do not know how their number will change in time. Second, it is not said that people will get jews and ask from jews the law. Isaiah 2.3 “And many peoples shall go, and they shall say, "Come, let us go up to the Lord's mount, to the house of the God of Jacob, and
let Him teach us of His ways, and we will go in His paths," for out of Zion shall the law come forth, and the word of the Lord from Jerusalem.” – it says that God will teach them, not the jews. Also, in Zechariah 8.22 it is written “And many peoples and powerful nations shall come to entreat the Lord of Hosts in Jerusalem, and to pray before the Lord.” – the target is the place of Jerusalem, not the jews. And the target is the Lord of Hosts, not the jews.
As you might have noticed, I used “law” instead of Torah (as Torah means law), because 1. I believe in the rest of the bible there are teachings and commandments others than the law of Moses (not only commentaries about it) and I believe people need to take heed of them. 2. So you will not understand “Oral Torah”(Talmud) because nowhere is it written in the Bible – as far as I know – that your Talmud is the “Oral Torah”, therefore, it might have nothing to do with it.
It was spoken about this verse:
Lev 26.46 “These are the statutes, the ordinances, and the laws that the Lord gave between Himself and the children of Israel on Mount Sinai, by the hand of Moses.” – this is how I found translated in
http://www.chabad.org/library/bible_cdo/aid/9927 (yet I heard Thorahs in the audio, which is erroneous because the verse refers to the commandments, not to the books that came to be called so – actually if within the Torah it is written that the itself has been given, then it’s like telling whether this sentence is true or false: “This sentence is false.” = nonsense).
About the fact that the Oral Law is not known to Christians. Sorry, but the Christians are not aware of the Hadiths or many other religious books (even their own). Also, ye and the muslims do not have access to the story of each saint and each teaching of the orthodox Christians or the catholics. So that’s not something astonishing.
another part follows