When Hashem gave Moshe the Torah he taught him everything that every generation would ever encounter and the solutions to it.
I apologise, and not to be rude, but that statement is not factual.
That included "lights on shabbos". There is no Jewish people without the Torah,
Also, not true. Hitler did not ask if a person followed the torah, he asked if they were jewish, and killed them. Judaism is a race IMO, not a religion. Our enemies have never made this distinction, and neither will I.
so if you don't follow the Torah because you don't believe it in it, then how could you believe anything it says, which includes your very Judaism?
As I mentioned above, I find religion as it is taught and practiced to be, to be polite, invalid.
The point of loving G-d is following things even if you don't understand it. There doesn't have to be logic to it. Religion isn't based on logic, it's based on faith.
Spoken like a true communist, or islamist, or...
I have spent my entire life fighting totalitarianisms, where you were supposed to accept and obey some authority figure's statements "on faith."
I am afraid at this time I am unable to accept a doctrine not supported by scientific evidence. I have been, like a ship at sea, steadily moving in this direction away from organized religion for quite some time now.
While I would never wish to negatively impact or prevent others from practicing what their "faith" provides them, I simply cannot accept a religion "because someone says so."
Faith can't be proven with science. To the believer, there are no questions.
There are those who believe that once you cease asking questions - meaning, you are unwilling to challenge and pursue truth - you are completely more lost than the religious here would believe me to be
To the non-believer there are no answers. It doesn't matter if we don't understand, we still have to follow, and THAT is TRUE faith.
No answers as presented by the religion, but it does not mean one cannot pursue and find them elsewhere.
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Look, as I get older and face my own mortality, it is certainly infinitely more comforting to think that should I pre-decease my children (hopefully, as all parents should) I will get to see them again in some kind of after-life.
My beliefs at this point operate in a grey area, where my innate, strong desire to find an inalienable "truth" is combatted by these feelings of mortality, and will probably require many more years of thought and reflection before the 2 sides can be resolved.