When
speaking to mainstream orthodox rabbis, one gets the image of a Judaism that
believes in reincarnation as an explanation for seemingly innocent people
suffering in this world, and a burning hell and damnation for the evildoers who
prosper in this world. These become circular arguments which are so outrageous
that they make a mockery of logic, as well as the Torah itself.
But
it there is strong evidence that neither of these concepts were relevant to the
Torah of Moses. In fact, they were added much later on by Rabbis who imported
ideas from surrounding religions of Babylon, Persia and India.
In Deuteronomy Chapter 7 דְּבָרִים we see :
9 Know therefore that the LORD thy God, He is God; the faithful God, who
keepeth covenant and mercy with them that love Him and keep His commandments to
a thousand generations;
10 and repayeth them that hate Him to their
face, to destroy them; He will not be slack to him that hateth Him, He will
repay him to his face.
It is
v.10 that refutes reincarnation, since the sinners are paid to their face, and
God does not hesitate to do this. It is interesting that the rabbis see the term
וּמְשַׁלֵּם which means to repay, as referring to the
reward that the sinners have earned, so as to lose their entire future world! This
is not convincing, since the root of the verb is ShLM, which means perfect,
hence the verb is describing a compensation for the evil that these people have
done. Hence in Ch8, we see:
19 And it
shall be, if thou shalt forget the LORD thy God, and walk after other gods, and
serve them, and worship them, I forewarn you this day that ye shall surely
perish.
20 As the
nations that the LORD maketh to perish before you, so shall ye perish; because
ye would not hearken unto the voice of the LORD your God.
If
the punishment is the same as the other nations, then it does not mean success
in this world in order to be removed from the next!
Your hate for the Rabbis is stronger than your love of God and Torah. Why? in the very first sentence here you mock them,..you just can't wait. And there are few is any Rabbis who teach eternal hell as you claim.
ReplyDeleteYou have misread what I wrote. I didn't mention "eternal hell", but burning hell and damnation.
DeleteA problem that occurs in any rational discussion or debate with followers of the Rabbis is that they have certain dogmas, or many dogmas. One of them is that mevazeh talmidei chachamin, ain lo olam haba - one who is criticial or disparaging of the Rabbis has no place in the Next world. Even questioning a single rabbinic statement in the Talmud, eg Gezeira shava, takes away one's alleged "olam haba". So with this psychological fear inducing mechanism, the devoted rabbanite (as I once was) loses his ability to think logically.
There is no Olam haba mentioned anywhere in the Tanakh. False prophets are not acceptable in the Torah.