Ebionite
Well-Known Member
My post wasn't only for him.Then wouldn't you be wasting your time using Isaiah 6:9 as a proof-text to a Jew if that text is included in the proof provided in that text?
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My post wasn't only for him.Then wouldn't you be wasting your time using Isaiah 6:9 as a proof-text to a Jew if that text is included in the proof provided in that text?
... a lamb which God did not provide. God instead provided a ram, but Abraham had to look again for it. That's the way the story is written.
Rabbi Hirsch is talking about a ram, not a lamb.
Agreed?
There's no reason to fluff up your thesis by misquoting Rabbi Hirsch, unless, your thesis is weak and you feel better fabricating a Rabbi's "blessing" for your work.
See, all serious input is valuable. I've gone back and changed the wording to "ram" not "lamb." And more than that, your being nit-picking about the distinction, forced me to try to figure out what's going on when Abraham and Isaac speak of a lamb, while the writer of the story says Abraham replaced his son (as a type of the lamb), not with an actual lamb, but with a ram (symbolizing, seemingly, not only an adult lamb, but a peace offering rather than a burnt offering).
See, all serious input is valuable. I've gone back and changed the wording to "ram" not "lamb." And more than that, your being nit-picking about the distinction, forced me to try to figure out what's going on when Abraham and Isaac speak of a lamb, while the writer of the story says Abraham replaced his son (as a type of the lamb), not with an actual lamb, but with a ram (symbolizing, seemingly, not only an adult lamb, but a peace offering rather than a burnt offering).
Next problem.
If the author had intended for Isaac to be the lamb then Abraham would not have said: "God will provide the lamb." He would have answered differently because, if Isaac was the lamb, that means God had already provided it.
See my dilemma?
Where is the lamb God provides?
If Isaac isn't the lamb, then it seems the narrative goes haywire.
It's not the animal Abraham actually sacrifices. That's a ram.
God doesn't provide a lamb. God provided a ram caught in a thicket, but, Abraham had to look again to see it. . . Have you considered that the significance of the word "lamb" is being exaggerated as a consequence of your religious beliefs?
When Abraham was about to slaughter Isaac, the latter's soul flew away to be replaced later by a holy spirit from the Celestial Regions. It follows then that Isaac's life after the עקדה, was the life of a human being who had not originated from a drop of semen. We must view Isaac as someone born-again in consequence of that experience: a totally new creature. G-d had applied the strictest yardstick to him by letting him die, and subsequently by infusing him with a new soul. He had also sanctified his body; from that time on Isaac's body resembled that of אדם הראשון, also not the product of a drop of semen. Now we understand also why the ram which Abraham sacrificed in lieu of Isaac was not the product of natural procreation, i.e. through semen, but was created during the period of dusk on the sixth day of Creation as reported in Avot 5,6.Ibid. Shenei Luchot HaBerit, Torah Shebikhtav, Vayera, Torah Ohr, 46 (bold emphasis mine).Justifying what's been said about Abraham's circumcision signifying the sacrifice of Isaac's birth, the Shelah HaKaddosh, that is, Rav Isaiah Horowitz, points out that spiritually speaking, the sacrifice of Isaac (ala Abraham's circumcision) means Isaac's body is "holy" for having come without the drop of semen that's cut off through ritual emasculation, brit milah. Rav Horowitz notes that the ram sacrificed in celebration of Isaac's sacrifice is also supra-mundane. It, too, the ram, is also produced without semen according to Horowitz. In the Shelah HaKadosh's reasoning, Isaac is born-again since he died, symbolically, ritually, at the circumcision of his father Abraham, and therefore receives a virgin soul associated with his virgin credentials, his conception through non-phallic means (since his father sacrificed the means of conceiving Isaac the old-fashioned way --a drop of semen ---when he circumcised himself).
The Shelah HaKaddosh (Horowitz), channeling these truths (in the very next tractate of his exposition ---46), points out that the holiness of Isaac’s unique birth is put into effect by its not coming about by means of a single drop of semen. There was no semen contaminating Isaac's birth, which semen is the catalyst, the transfer-mechanism, contaminating all phallic pregnancies with the toxic masculinity Isaac’s birth aborts through a pregnancy conceived without a drop of semen: "It follows then that Isaac's life . . . was the life of a human being who had not originated from a drop of semen."
If this be the case, then in Rabbi Hirsch's logic, the greatness of the offering of the ram is that in some sense it equates to Abraham and Isaac "seeing," the self-same theophany (a vision of Jehovah), and in the same place, that David saw a theophany of Jehovah (2 Chronicles 3:1). This puts the difficulty that causes Jewish tradition to not want to see what Abraham and David saw on this mountain (so that they translate "the Lord saw," rather than that the Lord is seen) in the crosshairs of this examination: in what way is seeing the ram offered at the Akedah tantamount to seeing God?
Someone will say, But the text literally says: "Abraham went and took the ram and offered him up for a burnt offering instead of his son" (Genesis 22:13). Case closed! ----Nevertheless, Rashi notes that some translations omit an important word found in Genesis 22:13: תחת. In the KJV, the Hebrew word "tahat" תחת is translated "instead," as in "instead of his son." Rabbi Hirsch briefly notes this oddity too, since in truth the word means "beneath." Abraham offers the ram beneath his son. The word probably implies "after" his son (he offers his son as a burnt offering such that one could say he goes up in smoke, and then beneath that smoke Abraham offers the ram as a peace offering, a thank you to God for accepting the offering of Isaac. As Rabbi Hirsch argues, the offering of the ram can't be "instead" of Issac since it would be absurd and blasphemous to think that rather than offering something so precious and important as Isaac, it will suffice to "instead" offer a wild beast, caught in a thicket, as though it would have the same value.
Appreciating the sacrifice of the ram as a peace offering directs the focus back to the sacrifice of Isaac as the "lamb" (i.e., the burnt offering). The offering of the ram isn't a replacement for the sacrifice of Isaac, but a celebration of the fact that God accepts Isaac as a burnt offering such that when Abraham names the place "Jehovah they see" (יהוה יראה) the narrative naturally draws the reader into the question of how the Akedah equates to seeing the Lord?
Genesis 6:12
12 And God looked upon the earth, and, behold, it was corrupt; for all flesh had corrupted his way upon the earth.
Matthew 18:18
18 Verily I say unto you, Whatsoever ye shall bind on earth shall be bound in heaven: and whatsoever ye shall loose on earth shall be loosed in heaven.
Christian Gnosticism is the Original Teaching of Yeshua Messiah/Jesus Christ that the Earth/Flesh is Corrupt.
Gnosticism
"...Gnostic cosmogony generally presents a distinction between a supreme, hidden God and a malevolent lesser divinity (sometimes associated with the biblical deity Yahweh)[1] who is responsible for creating the material universe. Consequently, Gnostics considered material existence flawed or evil, and held the principal element of salvation to be direct knowledge of the hidden divinity, attained via mystical or esoteric insight...."
Galatians 5:17The first verse you quoted appears to imply that the "flesh" was (ala prelapse ha-adam) not originally corrupted? Secondarily, in traditional Christian doctrine, Jesus is, because of his virgin birth (which eliminates the seed of the serpent) not yet corrupted. In both cases, the flesh isn't originally corrupt. Lastly, in traditional Christianity, even the devil/serpent was originally an angle of light. It wasn't until he decided he would be like the most high that he fell from his lofty perfection.
Which is all to point out that to the degree Gnosticism considers the binary duality between good and evil, material versus spiritual, original, rather than something come about because of the serpent coming, so to say . . . to that degree Gnosticism might be, notwithstanding much that's clearly correct, somewhat contrary to the natural reading of the word of God.
John