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General questions if that's ok?
Many options for redemption are given in scripture, to allow for people not having access to preferred options eg if you don't have a sheep then you can substitute with alternatives eg birds or grain or money etc. Is the Septuagint version of redemption of a donkey more likely than the Masoretic text? ie Septuagint says at Ex 13:13 & Ex 34:20 that if you can't redeem a donkey with a lamb then you can redeem it with money ... while Masoretic version says break its neck? (Breaking the neck of a donkey would be difficult and time-consuming & cruel and distressing for both the donkey and the person attempting to do the deed ... and seems not a kosher way to kill a quadruped?). Since God promotes speedy humane minimal-stress death of creatures (while calming patting head of creature), I personally can't imagine God promoting the extended stressful death of a donkey. What do other Messianics think?
God uses special people for special purposes. In his time, might Moses also have been used as 'the finger of God' to write the decalogue on stone?
Might 'the mountain of God' been a volcano?
Pharisees, Sadducees and Essenes were all recognised as legitimate sects of Judaism in the time of Jesus/Yeshua. If Sadducees were legitimate Jewish priests historically derived from Zadokites before Pharisees existed, and Sadducees rejected the oral law, shouldn't Karaites likewise be recognised as a legitimate sect of Judaism who likewise reject the oral law?
Thank you for responding to my wonderings. Much appreciated. No need to be sorry. Hope your week out of town was good.I'm out of town for this week, probably not be able to get on again. Sorry!
I like donkeys & glad there is a rescue resource for them there. Hope your visit there is a blessing.Interesting, as I will be visiting a donkey rescue facility soon...
Maybe some baby creatures which God commands are to be redeemed with alternatives aren't meant to be given to the priest? eg human babies?I can't imagine anyone doing that to a donkey foal, rather than give it to the priest.
Thank you for clarifying that a money substitute is kosher & I'm so glad to hear it.I'm pretty sure that a monetary substitute was kosher, not everyone has sheep.
I like that scripture clearly shows that the life of donkeys is valued by Heaven eg the angel intended to save the donkey while killing its wicked owner:Donkey was special, as it was the animal that came out of Egypt with us in the exodus,therefore gets special status. I can't see the Rashi on this ATM, but I'm sure I've seen this.
Thank you for sharing your thoughts on this. Appreciated.I don't think so...
I appreciate that times & circumstances were different, but Reform Judaism is fairly new and yet recognised as a valid sect of Judaism which loosely embraces Pharisee basics. If Karaite Judaism loosely embraces the alternative Sadducee basics, can't that be considered equally as a valid sect of Judaism, especially when Sadducee Judaism preceded the later Pharisee Judaism?Karaites were much later, eh? Seventh century or so. I don't think they can be compared with Sadducees, circumstances were different.
Sure! :yes:Another question if that's ok?
Scripture sometimes discusses non-plants as trees
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Also scripture discusses 'words' as a form of fruit,
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Since scripture discusses such non-plant trees and fruits, would you consider it possible that maybe the deadly fruit which Eve and then Adam swallowed was subtle 'lies' if words can be fruits? ('subtle' since it was mixed with a touch of truth to give it enough credibility to entice? Blatant lies usually don't trick anyone but mixed with a touch of truth is dangerous and the 'talking' serpent was crafty ... 'words' play a big part in Eden)
Couldn't that explain God's comment about 'who TOLD you that you were naked?' God's question specified 'words' being involved but I had previously overlooked this and assumed Adam & Eve simply became 'aware' of their nakedness.
Do you think it's possible it's discussing swallowing deadly lies which undermined God's truth?
For me it matters because I had previously swallowed subtle deadly mixed-message lies which undermined God's truth
"The woman said to the serpent, We may eat fruit from the trees in the garden, but G-d did say, You must not eat fruit from the tree that is in the middle of the garden, and you must not touch it, or you will die.
John 8:44?
Thank you. Much appreciatedSure! :yes:
a web search didn't help me find any similar considerations but I'm not very good at web-searchingInteresting thought, I'll have to look around see if this interpretation is found elsewhere.
What your Rebbi said raises a host of other considerations ... the 1st being the time frame ... the first shabbat had already passed by the time the snake incident happened (God made humans on the 6th day then there was the 1st shabbat before the snake incident) and it would have taken a number of sabbaths for a grape to turn to wineAll I can offer is what my Rebbi told us. He said it was an actual fruit, but unlike what popular culture depicts it was not an apple. It was the grape. See, there was a purpose why G-d forbid them to eat of it... it was meant to be turned into wine for the very first kiddush of the very first shabbat! It would have been permitted... at the proper time. They where not being tested, it was for a practical reason it was forbidden. For everything, G-d has a reason, even if the man and woman could not understand it.
Yes, I do see that thank you. You are right that is NOT what God said, which is why the grape issue disturbs me because it doesn't accurately reflect what God says (don't eat it or you will die vs don't eat it now or you will die) even if it's a man-made law with good intent.Sometimes, it's not outright lies but those 'little white lies' which are the most dangerous. See here:
See the lie? It's subtle. 'Must not touch it'. That's NOT what G-d said, he said nothing about touching, only eating. It's a man-made law. (or woman-made, we don't know) Made probably with good intent. But, when the serpent heard it, he pushed the woman into the tree. Then serpent said 'See? did you die? No.'
Thank you for your input. Much appreciatedJohn 8:44?
What your Rebbi said raises a host of other considerations ... the 1st being the time frame ... the first shabbat had already passed by the time the snake incident happened (God made humans on the 6th day then there was the 1st shabbat before the snake incident) and it would have taken a number of sabbaths for a grape to turn to wine
2nd, a grape comes from a vine rather than a tree
3rd, why wouldn't God test Adam & Eve since God does not change ... and God always grants and tests human free will. God always gives life-giving instructions and then places the alternative in front of us to choose from ... life & death, good & evil and tells us to choose life. God has been consistent with this habit right through human history, beginning in Eden. Why would Adam & Eve be excluded from the free will test and why would God place life and death before them?
4th, why would God tell Adam & Eve that eating the fruit would result in death if God didn't mean it? 5th, why would God curse the ground and curse the snake and evict Eden residents for a minor misdemeanor? Timing of trees is a kosher issue (fruit from young trees are to be treated as uncircumcised) but not cause for cursing
I hadn't considered that. Thank youI am of firm belief that the days of creation are not solar days. A 'day' exists before the sun. A 'day' is a complete cycle, of which our solar day is only a similar echo. So, the shabbat had not occurred yet.
Please don't be sorry since we are in the same boat since I'm no expert (or even novice!) in Hebrew and checking that against expert opinion would take time which neither of us has to spare at present.I'm no expert in Hebrew, I need translations; so I don't know if was only a tree or if it could also be a vine in the original text. Without looking into it, but sorry have no time now.
why not ... I'm now diminished and need supportPerhaps, it was also diminished, and now needs support.
According to what God said, death certainly did exist otherwise God would not have warned Adam and Eve about its reality and their danger of experiencing death if they ate from the tree.I don't know if such a test would have been needed for Adam & Eve. Adam was perfect, why would there need to be a test? Death & evil did not exist yet. Why test for something that does not exist?
The outcome then was death as God had warned and the curses were surely punishments?It also seems to bestow knowledge that they were not prepared for, besides just being grapes for wine. In their incomplete state of learning, getting that knowledge prematurely meant that they would have to be evicted from the garden, and if that happened being in the natural world meant they would eventually die. A consequence, not a punishment.
Nothing to forgive ... I'm an old woman and the older I get the more questions I have and you have been consistently kind and patient with my queries and I'm very grateful.I may not have remembered everything, and I may have been a bit confused about some things. Forgive me, I'm an old man and this was long ago, in a different world. My Rebbi was a Tsaddik, and blessed. But he spoke english not all that perfectly, and I had trouble sometimes.
...According to what God said, death certainly did exist otherwise God would not have warned Adam and Eve about its reality and their danger of experiencing death if they ate from the tree.
Free will existed and God was allowing them to exercise is by testing that.
I don't think it had anything to do with them being perfect ... I think it had to do with God proving He grants free will and seeing what they would choose ... otherwise why would God place both plants in the garden under their noses and tell them which to avoid?
The outcome then was death as God had warned and the curses were surely punishments?
Zardoz, I really like your responses on this thread. Great thoughts!