Me Myself
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You are technically right, but many of us just refer to is as the Talmud anyway.
Could you clarify for me?
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You are technically right, but many of us just refer to is as the Talmud anyway.
How so?
Quote a verse please.For starters, ask any knowledgeable Jew if they think Jesus was teaching the same Torah their rabbis taught.
The Torah of the Tanakh says it is complete in every way and cannot be altered. Jesus said it needed perfecting.
And then in the Gospel of John Jesus makes statements about "your Torah" (speaking to the Jews) and "their Torah" referring to the Jews and thereby distinguishing between that and his Torah.
Quote a verse please.
For starters, ask any knowledgeable Jew if they think Jesus was teaching the same Torah their rabbis taught.
The Torah of the Tanakh says it is complete in every way and cannot be altered. Jesus said it needed perfecting.
And then in the Gospel of John Jesus makes statements about "your Torah" (speaking to the Jews) and "their Torah" referring to the Jews and thereby distinguishing between that and his Torah.
Could you clarify for me?
Dantech said:In the Talmud there is a certain layout. It starts with a mishna, which essentially is the oral law, followed by gemaras, which is basically debates between sages on what the mishna means, and then developed even more. This whole text is surrounded by comments from Rashi, and Tosfot. Since really, everything written in it is either mishna, or talks about the mishna, we call the Talmud, as a whole the "oral law". Though technically, the mishna is "the oral law", and the rest is 'commentary' of you will...
Orthodox Jews like CMike and I know the difference, but it's just the way we call it. We don't really make a distinction. We see it completely as the oral law.
Btw, these debates are where halakhots derive from. Other than the clear ones that are written in the written Torah, the sages of the Talmud decode the mishna to pull out the remainder of the Halakhot that we wouldn't otherwise be able to know about.
Who or what decided the Talmud is authoritative? The Sadducees didnt believe in the Oral Law.
Pharisees, Sadducees & Essenes | Jewish Virtual Library
The Sadducees disappeared around 70 A.D., after the destruction of the Second Temple.
Continue reading your link about the Sadducees, Roger.
The Sadducees are no more. They abandoned the whole law and they are no more. The Pharisees stayed true to Judaism and embraced the whole Law, Written and Oral. We Jews give authority to the Talmud because it ultimately came from G-d.
I see what you mean. It appears from those verses Jesus is separating himself from the Torah because of the use of the words your and their. I have to look into it. I think Ill consult with the great and powerful Yahoo Answers.I assume you mean for my last comment?
Jhn 8:17 It is also written in your law that the testimony of two men is true."
Jhn 10:34 Jesus answered them, Is it not written in your law, I said, You are gods '?'"
Jhn 15:25 But this happened that the word might be fulfilled which is written in their law, They hated Me without a cause.'"
Everyone thinks they are on the side of orthodoxy. Its always the other guys who are the heretics.
The Sadducees did not accept the Talmud.
The Sadducees were counted legitimate until they failed to thrive. They didn't pass the 'Live long' and 'Do well' tests, so that counts against them. It proves they weren't keeping the law? The commands say that if they had followed the laws they would still be around. Reasoning from the laws as I read them in English, the Talmud are proven safe to consult because their users are still around, doing things the same way as the writers of the Talmud. If the Talmud wasn't legitimate, then its followers would likely break the laws and fail to thrive. Either they would cease to be law-keeping and to do well or they would die. Since they are still here, doing well I presume, the Talmud is seen as a safety net for following the law properly.Akivah said:The Sadducees are no more. They abandoned the whole law and they are no more. The Pharisees stayed true to Judaism and embraced the whole Law, Written and Oral. We Jews give authority to the Talmud because it ultimately came from G-d.
The Sadducees were counted legitimate until they failed to thrive. They didn't pass the 'Live long' and 'Do well' tests, so that counts against them. It proves they weren't keeping the law? The commands say that if they had followed the laws they would still be around. Reasoning from the laws as I read them in English, the Talmud are proven safe to consult because their users are still around, doing things the same way as the writers of the Talmud. If the Talmud wasn't legitimate, then its followers would likely break the laws and fail to thrive. Either they would cease to be law-keeping and to do well or they would die. Since they are still here, doing well I presume, the Talmud is seen as a safety net for following the law properly.
Fascinating how many of them are still around huh?
Fascinating how many of them are still around huh?
Just like those Line-o-type operaters, huh?Roger said:After the Temple was destroyed the Sadducees didn’t serve any purpose.
I think they now go by "Reform".