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That's your opinion. It is not the traditional way that revelation and text is approached in Judaism, and it is not the way that revelation and text is approached in liberal Judaism today. We have a number of different ways of doing so, but none rely on this kind of rigid literalism.
Shekinah wiki:
The Talmud also says that "the Shekhinah rests on man neither through gloom, nor through sloth, nor through frivolity, nor through levity, nor through talk, nor through idle chatter, but only through a matter of joy in connection with a precept, as it is said, But now bring me a minstrel. And it came to pass, when the minstrel played, that the hand of the Lord came upon him". [2Kings 3:15] [Shabbat 30b][
citation needed]
The Shekinah is associated with the transformational spirit of God regarded as the source of prophecy:
After that thou shalt come to the hill of God, where is the garrison of the Philistines; and it shall come to pass, when thou art come thither to the city, that thou shalt meet a band of prophets coming down from the high place with a psaltery, and a timbrel, and a pipe, and a harp, before them; and they will be prophesying. And the spirit of the LORD will come mightily upon thee, and thou shalt prophesy with them, and shalt be turned into another man.
—
1 Samuel 10:5–6
The prophets made numerous references to visions of the presence of God, particularly in the context of the Tabernacle or Temple, with figures such as thrones or robes filling the Sanctuary, which have traditionally been attributed to the presence of the Shekinah.
Isaiah wrote "I saw the Lord sitting upon a throne high and lifted up, and his train filled the Temple." (Isaiah 6:1).
Jeremiah implored "Do not dishonor the throne of your glory" (
Jeremiah 14:21) and referred to "Thy throne of glory, on high from the beginning, Thy place of our sanctuary" (
Jeremiah 17:12). The
Book of Ezekiel speaks of "the glory of the God of Israel was there [in the Sanctuary], according to the vision that I saw in the plain." (Ezekiel 8:4)[
not in citation given]
I honestly have no idea what you're talking about here.
Might behoove you to know how a pentecostal Christian thinks, in order to debate, yeah?
Rabbis are not prophets. We don't expect them to be "communicators of God," or to speak for God, nor do we have the concept of "testimony" as it exists in Christianity, because that's not how Torah works. Authority to interpret Torah, judge, and make law based on Torah was given to the Jewish People along with the Written Torah: those authorities are part of the Oral Torah, and represent a segment of our role as partner in the Covenant with God.
Being a member of Judaism, authorizes one to TEACH Judaism? Huh?
Most Jews do not believe the messiah will be a prophet. There is not even general agreement about whether there will once again be prophets in the messianic age.
And I don't pine for anyone to tell me the contextually present will of God, because that's not how Torah and halachah work. See above.
Not either the FACE of YHWH, either pleasant and full of blessing as opposed to hateful and judgemental, OR the flexible (to us) WILL of God in the here and now, sir? Sad.
Just tell me your own oddball paradigms, I don't have to sift through a COMPENDIUM of data in order to figure out which is your own, sir.
Uh...yes? It is true, I find nothing in anything he said which persuades me to change anything in my theology, and I also find nothing in the Christian scriptures that affirms Judaism. Because they're Christian scriptures. They belong to another religion. They have nothing to do with Judaism. Or me.
Well then what are we here for, BUT to change your attitude, youngun? I change you change we all change for the better.
If I can't change enough to make you think, then what are we here for? I already learnt some stuff here. I ain't an old dog can't learn new tricks, sir...can even do a backflip ifn the reward is good.
[/QUOTE]I endeavor to proclaim the first two gen saints of Jesus to be the true Christianity. AND of our shared Judeo-Christian religion.[/QUOTE]
We do not have a shared Judeo-Christian religion. There is no such thing. We have Christianity and Judaism, two different religions. I am a Jew. You are a Christian. We can speak to each other as members of two different religions, but we cannot speak as members of a shared religion, because we don't share a religion.
You not my brother, brother even from anudder mother, brudder? I don't know your mother's udder, but as a brother would not even know THIS udder, udder brudder?
Whether the first generation or even two of the disciples of Jesus and their followers were still functionally and effectively Jewish even amidst their devotion to Jesus as alleged messiah (if nothing more) is irrelevant. That was 1800 years ago and more. We don't live then. That ship sailed a long time ago. It's done. The moment passed long before either of us were ever born.
Maybe we should go back to pristine and original FAITH then, udder brudder?
And it cannot be reinstated. You have no direct teachings of Jesus to go by, you are not Jewish (he would have been speaking to Jews), your patterns of theology and intepretation have been massively shaped by the last 1800 years of Christian thought, and in addition to the wide theological gulf that separates us, there is 1800 years of Christian oppression of Judaism, which makes us a little less sympathetic to Judaizing Christians that we might have been 1800 years ago.
Ifn you was Buddhist or Meganuevo Hippy Gnostic, then maybe. The Judeo-Christain faith is inextricably linked for all time.