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Is it true in Judaism, that Jesus was not born by immaculate conception but rather a natural birth? What are you opinions on this?
Is it true in Judaism, that Jesus was not born by immaculate conception but rather a natural birth? What are you opinions on this?
To my knowledge, there is not a single clear and direct reference to Jesus in a single Jewish text.
Another mention in the Talmud, and this is also extremely unclear and debated, mentions a person named yeshua who did the same thing as what Jesus was said to so. But it takes place before Jesus was said to have existed. It mentions his father being a roman soldier and mother being a whore.
Doesn't Moses convey Gods punishment to the 4th generation for sinful behavior? Is that the same as inherited sin?
The sacrificial offerings for Yom Kippur were the apex of the process of repentance. As I mentioned above, they only worked if one had already done the real work of repentance: changing one's behavior and ways, and apologizing and making reparations to those whom one has wronged. The sacrifices were the ritual seal on the process of repentance. Today, since we have no sacrifices (nor have had any for 2000 years), it is the prayers of confession and ritual repentance that we offer on Yom Kippur that are the ritual seal to the process. But all the real work of repentance still has to be done for oneself.Wasn’t the sin of man, tribe and nation the reason for all the sacrifices and the scapegoat?
Why didnt our repentance remove the curse (result of some transgression) from the land or childbirth? ... Why would God place animal skins on the vegetation wearing Adam/Eve after the transgression. Why not just a better vegetable suit, or a good wool or cotton blend?
Why is the sacrifices not pertinent now, versus 2000 years ago? Is it because 2000 years of no temple? Is it possible that you are in this belief system since there is no alternative? What if the Temple is built in 2011, just in time for the 2012 fireworks. Will sacrifices begin again, along with the priests and their significance?
Thanks for the answers. I know its unrelated to topic, but since I love the study of origins, I have to ask.
Do you think it is possible in the first 31 verses of Genesis that it actually describes a scientific synopsis of our origin. It is phenomenally accurate with a timeline that is relative. Consider the 1st verse, ex nilo creation the torah describes, tohu then bohu. Darkness was over the surface of the deep. Science has an eerily similar description: Sizzling sea of Quarks that had all the universe potential expanded out of a tiny spec, an inflationary epoc , darkness for 700 k years then light broke free. Creepy to find only one tribe which believes that night then day is Day One.
My point of this: dont sell God short, he is sly and full of surprises for kings who seek out treasures.
I have just been reading the English translation of the Great Isaiah Scroll
Isaiah 1.11 To what purpose is the multitude of your sacrifices unto Me? saith HaShem; I am full of the burnt-offerings of rams, and the fat of fed beasts; and I delight not in the blood of bullocks, or of lambs, or of he-goats.
Isaiah 1.13
Bring no more vain oblations; it is an offering of abomination unto Me; new moon and sabbath, the holding of convocations-- I cannot endure iniquity along with the solemn assembly.
This was written about 700 years before the fall of the temple, I don't understand why you would carry on with sacrifices
Is it true in Judaism, that Jesus was not born by immaculate conception but rather a natural birth? What are you opinions on this?
My opinion on this is that the question is not compatible with Judaism, as Jesus is not part of Jewish theology or scripture.Is it true in Judaism, that Jesus was not born by immaculate conception but rather a natural birth? What are you opinions on this?
My opinion on this is that the question is not compatible with Judaism, as Jesus is not part of Jewish theology or scripture.
We should probably rename the whole DIR.
Not "Judaism DIR" - "Jesus and Mohammed are not part of this faith DIR"
Or something like that...
***Moderation: This is the Conservative Judaism area. Only Jewish people should post [answers] in it. ***
Might I ask why do you think Yom Kippur was established?There are two aspects to the Jewish response to this.
First of all, Judaism does not have doctrine of Original Sin (or of Salvation from said Sin). The idea that any kind of sin could be somehow inherited is foreign to Judaism, much less the idea that every human being is somehow born in a condition of sin that requires salvation. Therefore, there is no such thing as a birth that is miraculously free of sin, because they all are. Nor is there any need for God to have a miraculous divine Savior born, because human beings require no such salvation to begin with. Each person is responsible only for their own sins, and they need no external mechanism to be cleansed of those sins: they need only to do the process of teshuvah (literally, "returning," although sometimes translated "repentance"), wherein one abjures the sin, and commits oneself to not do it any more, confesses the sin to God, apologizes to any person harmed by the sin, and offers them reparations. No need for priests, saints, or Saviors.
Second of all, Judaism does not have room for the concept that God reproduces. God is One, indivisible, eternal, aphysical, transcendant. Since God is indivisibly One, and incapable of being contained by a physical body, there is no need for a miraculous birth that allows God to self-incarnate, because that can't happen. And since God is One and eternal, there is no need for God to reproduce in order to somehow have more God(s) or what have you. And in any case, since God is omnipotent, why would He reproduce by magically impregnating a human woman? Why would He not just create Himself an offspring? The only justification for adding the human element is to have a divine human Savior, which we already have established that, according to Jewish beliefs, there is no need for, anyhow.
So, from the Jewish perspective, not only could it simply never happen, but there would never even be a need for it to happen.
Might I ask why do you think Yom Kippur was established?