Torah and Jewish Idea > Torah and Jewish Idea
Is it permitted for a man to marry his dead wife's sister?
Tag-MehirTzedek:
Dude I glanced through it, all from the Talmud they mentioned was some ideas and then they injected their own beliefs into it. Most of the quotes I saw was from the Zohar. Bring me clear quotes from the Talmudh. I dont want to read article after article you bring only to find extremely short things NOT having to do what I even discussed or asked.
Ephraim Ben Noach:
Elijah is who I meant. Isn't Elijah suppose to come before the Messiah? Doesn't the Messiah need to be here before the dead can be resurrected? How would Elijah get here?
muman613:
--- Quote from: אפרים בן נח on July 08, 2013, 03:07:05 PM ---Elijah is who I meant. Isn't Elijah suppose to come before the Messiah? Doesn't the Messiah need to be here before the dead can be resurrected? How would Elijah get here?
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Elijah never died....
http://www.chabad.org/library/article_cdo/aid/84902/jewish/What-is-Prophecy.htm
--- Quote ---Does prophecy exist today?
The era of prophecy officially came to an end some 23 centuries ago. The last generation of prophets were those who began to prophecy before the First Holy Temple was destroyed in 423 BCE, though a number of that generation survived the 70-year Babylonian exile and lived to see the building of the Second Temple. Most famously, Ezekiel prophesied in Babylonia, and three prophets, Chaggai, Zachariah and Malachi, were members of the "Great Assembly" that led the people in the first years of the return from Babylon. Mordechai and Esther were also members of the long-lived generation that mourned the destruction of the First Temple and witnessed the building of the second. With the demise of that generation, "prophecy departed from Israel."
Nevertheless, the principle that "G-d communicates to mankind through prophecy" remains a foundation of the Jewish faith. A lesser form of prophecy, known as ruach hakodesh (divine inspiration), remains the province of the tzaddikim, the righteous men and women of all generations. According to tradition, one of the greatest prophets, Elijah, never died, and will herald the coming of the Moshiach. Moshiach himself is a prophet ("approaching the prophecy of Moses" according to Maimonides), and in the messianic era, prophecy will become a universal phenomenon -- in the words of the prophet Joel, "And it shall come to pass afterwards that I will pour out My spirit upon all flesh, and your sons and daughters shall prophecy; your elders shall dream dreams, your young men shall see visions." And in a letter to the Jews of Yemen, Maimonides recounts an age-old tradition that "shortly before the messianic era, prophecy will return to the Jewish people."
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Binyamin Yisrael:
--- Quote from: IsraeliHeart on July 07, 2013, 01:57:07 AM ---Yes, Torah Judaism. I like to use that, Halahic Judaism too.
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Or real Judaism. Or just plain Judaism. If something is not Torah or Halachic, it can't be Judaism.
ChabadKahanist:
--- Quote from: Binyamin Yisrael on July 09, 2013, 12:05:47 AM ---
Or real Judaism. Or just plain Judaism. If something is not Torah or Halachic, it can't be Judaism.
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Or else Authentic Judaism.
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