Author Topic: Seven Colors of the Rainbow  (Read 2620 times)

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Offline Ephraim Ben Noach

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Seven Colors of the Rainbow
« on: February 25, 2013, 06:45:33 PM »
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 Seven Colors of the Rainbow"Chapter III"
 
After the Jews were exiled, it became much more difficult for Gentiles to gain instruction on the Seven Laws or to keep them. Conditions for Jews became dangerous, even the teaching of the Torah sometimes being banned, and it was almost impossible for Gentiles to leave the surroundings where these penalties originated and find Jews willing to teach them. The Seven Laws had gone into exile also; some of the Godfearers actually became Jews, but most found the difficulties of their position too great without a secure Jewish community to support them. Like other non-Jewish people, they or their children tended to assume that Christianity, with its admixture of Torah concepts, would offer at least a little satisfaction.
Through the fall of the Roman Empire and the rise of the kingdoms of the Middle Ages, these conditions continued. Only a few exceptionally courageous people were willing or able to find the Seven Laws for themselves.
The Christian and Moslem kingdoms came into armed conflict with each other, with war loss and danger an everyday occurrence, and Jews were unable to fulfill their duty of teaching in circumstances of open risk to their lives. A non-Jew who converted to Judaism in full would surely have to flee from danger, but at the end he would have the Jewish society to join. One who remained content with his non-Jewish identity under the Seven Laws would face just as much risk without any such solution.
However, on many occasions, the church and its officials were called upon to deal with “Judaizing” tendencies among the population. Similar phenomena also occurred in Moslem countries. A preacher would recommend that people abandon the official religion in favor of conforming to Jewish belief or practice in some way. Some would listen to him and do as he said, and soon the inquisitional machinery would be mobilized with terrible effect, often also against the Jews themselves for allegedly spreading contrary ideas.
The Albigensian or Cathar movement in early France tried to purge the prevailing non-Jewish religion of idolatry. Later, the Taborite and Hussite campaigns in Bohemia were motivated by the same basic principle. In nineteenth-century Russia, when the presence of Jews first began to attract the attention of the people at large, the Subbotniki were persecuted by the tsars for “Judaizing.” Learned Jews understood that the root of these misguided movements lay in the instinctive desire of non-Jewish people to observe the Seven Laws. Unfortunately, in the threatening surroundings of exile, there was nothing Jews could do to help. They had to attend to their own safety.
Only when the wars of the Reformation began to discredit the crusading outlook altogether did the atmosphere begin to improve. Ideas of bettering the government and extending individual freedom gained ground among kings and citizens who had no more time or money for such expeditions. When the Thirty Years War destroyed the old Catholic order, plunging Europe into an almost mindless chaos of bloodshed and illegality, the church and the governments were left without prestige. A new basis for law had to be found from morality itself. And so the burnings of Jewish books, which took place in the Middle Ages, gave way to a new interest in Hebrew learning among non-Jews. It was not long before the leading thinkers began to encounter the Seven Laws once more.
This dialogue took place mostly in Holland, where Jewish refugees from Spain became close to the Dutch citizens who had fought to expel the Spanish governors from their tiny country. Rabbinic scholars discussed with the Dutch all the issues that confronted them in establishing their small state and securing its prosperity. Artists such as Rembrandt joined in this discussion also, painting many portraits of the rabbis themselves. Great legal minds assembled at the universities. They taught and wrote on the principles and philosophy of law, and they began to codify the legal tradition out of the mass of legal precedents that had come down from the Middle Ages.
Among these were the English jurist John Selden (1584-1654) and the Dutch legal philosopher Hugo de Groot (1583-1645), known by the Latin name of Grotius. Selden was a Hebraist, a non-Jew who knew the Hebrew language and read the Jewish source-books in the original to learn their contents. He was not a Talmudic scholar, but he knew the works of the rabbis well, and he accepted their moral authority. He wrote a complete exposition of the Seven Laws for the scholars of his time in his Latin work, "De jure naturali et gentium, juxta disciplinium ebraorum" ("On natural and Gentile law, compared with Hebrew principles").
Selden began the seventh chapter of his book:
"Sextum juris Noachidarum...quod de judiciis est, atque enumerationem ex Talmudicis aliquot."
"Quod igitur in enumeratione illa Septumum est, “eber min ha-chai,” quo crudelitas immanis in animalia cetera vetatur."
Six of the Noachide laws, those of judicial significance, are enumerated first in the Talmud among other sources.
The seventh is therefore the prohibition of “the limb of a living animal,” which forbids cruelty to animals.
 Grotius laid the foundations of modern international law in his "De jure belli ac pacis" (“On the rights of war and peace”), where he quoted the leading Rabbinic writers extensively as sources for the universal morality. He wrote:
 In the Hebrew sources we find of the “pious ones of the Gentiles,” as the Talmud describes them. These, as the Jewish teachers themselves declare, are bound to observe the laws given to Adam and Noah, to abstain from idols, from blood, and from other things which will be mentioned further.
 In this way the Seven Laws were brought once more into the foundations of non-Jewish life, helping to form the ideas with which the western world led humankind into the modern era. Men of learning became the founders of states based on morality, owing little to the prejudices which had gone before. Their assimilation of Torah concepts made it inevitable that the Jews themselves would later be emancipated and freed from legal segregation.
Dutch rabbis also negotiated the readmission of the Jews into England on terms involving the Seven Laws. The leaders of the English republic were less committed to the principles then the Dutch had been, but they reached an agreement satisfactory enough to begin Jewish life in the west as we know it today.
When the United States of America was established, as the first new state designed according to these principles from the outset, non-Jewish people began to sense the new conditions and to show renewed interest in the Jews who, though now free from official hostility, were still exiled among them.
Questions began to be asked of the Jews: why do you maintain your separate identity? what interests do you serve? where do you go from here if this is not where you truly belong? and what is your purpose here if your destiny is only to leave?
These were legitimate questions, and they needed answers. Because the Jews, only newly released from restrictive ghetto surroundings, were often eager to pass undistinguished from their non-Jewish neighbors, the answers were often hard to find. But some were able to find them. The nineteenth-century German Rabbi Samson Rafael Hirsch, who was then the leader of the only large Jewish community living in free and affluent circumstances, gathered non-Jews quietly around him for study and wrote on the concept of the Seven Laws in his books and letters. Other questing personalities also managed to reach the goal. One of these was a young Frenchman named Aimé Pallière, who in the year 1900 had a series of conversations with the Rabbi of Leghorn (Livorno) in Italy on what religious path he should choose. They corresponded by letter, exchanging questions and ideas, and between them they set out the whole path for the rediscovery of the Seven Laws in modern times. We ourselves can begin to understand our own situation in its truth when we read the words that passed between Rabbi Elijah Benamozeg and his pupil Aimé Pallière.
"From* *"*Seven Colors of the Rainbow: Torah Ethics for Non-Jews" by Yirmeyahu Bindman © 1995 Resource Publications, Inc. Published on this website by special arrangement with Resource Publications, Inc. Material may be downloaded for individual use but not otherwise published or distributed without the written permission of Resource Publications, Inc., 160 E. Virginia St. #290, San Jose, CA 95112."*
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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 Ephraim Ben Noach

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Re: Seven Colors of the Rainbow
« Reply #1 on: February 25, 2013, 09:04:31 PM »
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.