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Charlie,
1.) Philological help. This is one of the biggest causes for the rise in Rabbinic studies.
2.) New Testament studies; understanding better the religion and world in which the NT was written; yes, the Mishnah, Talmuds, etc., did not come until a little after the NT era, but they reflect much thought from that earlier time.
3.) Especially among the older writings (Targums, etc), we have paraphrased and expanded readings of the texts; we may disagree with the interpretation, but having a native speaker from the time period giving a contemporary paraphrase of the text can be quite valuable. This is often the same reason that study of the LXX can be valuable.
Was the Oral Torah only communicated by word of mouth from the time of Moses to the time of the Mishnah(200 AD) as most Rabbis claim? Maimonides in his Mishneh Torah(Hilchot Yesodai Ha Torah) states that the Oral Torah was written during those years by disciples from their teachers only for their own personal use. Of course all these traditions of the Oral Torah eventually ended up under the editorial pen of Judah Ha Nasi who picked, chose and edited what became the Mishnah. As an illustration of what this type of editorship entailed, the Karaite Scholar Al-Kirkisani states that the Gemara portion of the Talmud (which is a discussion of the Mishnah) identified the Angel of the LORD as YAHWEH, which Al-Kirkisani charged was dangerously close to Christianity. This was over a thousand years ago. Subsequent editions of the Talmud have edited out this statement. Similiar editings of the Zohar deleted references to GOD as three persons and other Trinitarian statements. Refer to Yehuda Liebbes ----Studies in the Zohar. There is a whole chapter in that book on the censoring of the Zohar by Jewish Religious Scholars.![]()
Was the Oral Torah only communicated by word of mouth from the time of Moses to the time of the Mishnah(200 AD) as most Rabbis claim? Maimonides in his Mishneh Torah(Hilchot Yesodai Ha Torah) states that the Oral Torah was written during those years by disciples from their teachers only for their own personal use. Of course all these traditions of the Oral Torah eventually ended up under the editorial pen of Judah Ha Nasi who picked, chose and edited what became the Mishnah. As an illustration of what this type of editorship entailed, the Karaite Scholar Al-Kirkisani states that the Gemara portion of the Talmud (which is a discussion of the Mishnah) identified the Angel of the LORD as YAHWEH, which Al-Kirkisani charged was dangerously close to Christianity. This was over a thousand years ago. Subsequent editions of the Talmud have edited out this statement. Similiar editings of the Zohar deleted references to GOD as three persons and other Trinitarian statements. Refer to Yehuda Liebbes ----Studies in the Zohar. There is a whole chapter in that book on the censoring of the Zohar by Jewish Religious Scholars.![]()
I'm not willing to grant the assumption behind your initial question. There was no oral law, distinct from and supplementary to the written law. Therefore it could not be so passed down. Rather, the impetus for the oral law is given in Abot 1.1. And it is this impetus that Jesus calls the "commandments of men".
I have no patience for, and see no value in kabbalah. It is late, pantheistic, and has nothing to say to biblical studies, In my humble opinion. It says more about what happens to those who rebel against the covenant -- they are given over to a depraved mind.![]()
these studies absolutely have an important place in the church's studies, but perhaps it is better for the common man to simply receive the applicatory fruits of these studies by pastors and teachers as they relate to the scriptural texts
I will simply ask you to not assume the worst of a brother; and to go back, reread the statements, and see if they can be read as representing a less snobbish and more charitable idea. Hint: they can be.
Have a blessed Sabbath.
Lady Flynt, I do think you may be misreading Prufrock. I think his words are probably in line [KJV]Romans 16:19[/KJV], [KJV]Proverbs 19:27[/KJV] and [KJV]Titus 1:14[/KJV], among other texts that could be mentioned. Those verses do not support Rome in any way; but they do call upon us to be cautious and not swim beyond our depth.
I have found very little in them that is of use in biblical studies.
I was actually aiming at their role within Judaism. As I understand it they developed into a "force" after the destruction of the second temple. They appear to have moved into the vacuum left and deliberately "ousted" the cohen from their traditional role.
How strong a tradition do the rabbis have?
When did they develop and how?
Jesus speaks of the scribes and Pharisees and Saducees but not the Rabbis?
Are the rabbis the successors to the Pharisees? If so are not their claims to ancient traditions, well... ...second hand at best?
these studies absolutely have an important place in the church's studies, but perhaps it is better for the common man to simply receive the applicatory fruits of these studies by pastors and teachers as they relate to the scriptural texts
Let's keep the common people ignorant and just tell them what we want them to know and what they should believe? Only select people should extent their studies beyond a certain point?
Although i have not read more then a few hundred pages in these works i feel comfortable saying that there does not exist on this earth a more wicked, evil, blasphemous, scatelogical, porneographic, hateful, anti-Christ, collection of writings.
If you were to spend the next 5 years reading nothing but the litt. of the modern wicca movement, with no scripture, and no fellowship with the saints, no sacraments, no preaching of the word to restore you mind & spirit, then you would be better off spiritually then if you spet the next 6 days with the Talmud.
These books contain the vile speculations of people that have rejected God, and have turned themselves over to the evil one.
these studies absolutely have an important place in the church's studies, but perhaps it is better for the common man to simply receive the applicatory fruits of these studies by pastors and teachers as they relate to the scriptural texts
Let's keep the common people ignorant and just tell them what we want them to know and what they should believe? Only select people should extent their studies beyond a certain point?
JC, you have missed the point! i will assume for charity sake that you have never read the works in question.
Although i have not read more then a few hundred pages in these works i feel comfortable saying that there does not exist on this earth a more wicked, evil, blasphemous, scatelogical, porneographic, hateful, anti-Christ, collection of writings.
If you were to spend the next 5 years reading nothing but the litt. of the modern wicca movement, with no scripture, and no fellowship with the saints, no sacraments, no preaching of the word to restore you mind & spirit, then you would be better off spiritually then if you spent the next 6 days with the Talmud.
These books contain the vile speculations of people that have rejected God, and have turned themselves over to the evil one.
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That Steinsaltz volume is a good introduction. Better still is Rabbi Steinsaltz's New edition of the Talmud which is the only edition of the Talmud in print today which re-incorporates all the portions of the Talmud censored by the Papal Inquisition. Those portions many in the Sanhedrin Tractate(which has been Translated into English) refer to our Lord Jesus blasphemously.I have only read the short introduction by Lightfoot above. I have also read these books by Jews.
The Essential Talmud: Adin Steinsaltz: Amazon.co.uk: Books
The Torah for Dummies: Arthur Kurzweil: Amazon.co.uk: Books
It's clear there are some veiled and vilely blasphemous references to our Lord in the Talmud, and that we are confirmed in our reading of it how not to handle Scripture.
No Christian - unless they have a special reason e.g. an evangelistic ministry to the Hassidim - should wade through the Talmud which amounts to thirty large volumes of rubbish.