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Rabbi Arthur Segal’s love of people, humanity, and Judaism has him sharing with others “The Wisdom of the Ages” that has been passed on to him. His writings for modern Jews offer Spiritual, Ethical, and eco-Judaic lessons in plain English and with relevance to contemporary lifestyles. He is the author of countless articles, editorials, letters, and blog posts, and he has recently published two books:

The Handbook to Jewish Spiritual Renewal: A Path of Transformation for the Modern Jew

and

A Spiritual and Ethical Compendium to the Torah and Talmud

You can learn more about these books at:

www.JewishSpiritualRenewal.org
ALL ENTRIES ARE (C) AND PUBLISHED BY RABBI ARTHUR SEGAL JEWISH SPIRITUAL RENEWAL, INC, AND NOT BY ANY INDIVIDUAL EMPLOYEE OF SAID CORPORATION. THIS APPLIES TO 3 OTHER BLOGS (CHUMASH, ECO, SPIRITUALITY) AND WEB SITES PUBLISHED BY SAID CORPORATION.
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Thursday, July 2, 2009

RABBI ARTHUR SEGAL:JEWISH SPIRITUAL RENEWAL:JEWISH RENEWAL:JEWISH SPIRITUALITY

 
 
Jewish Spiritual Renewal:Shabbat 7/11/09 Torah,TaNaK,Talmud;Ethical,Spiritual Views
 
Shalom my beloved Chaverim v Talmidim:
 
I hope all is well. Before I jump into the class for Shabbat  7/11/09 I would like to announce that our fellow Talmid and Chaver Rabbi Louis Rieser and his chaverutah Rabbi Amy Scheinerman have started a Talmud study blog from a liberal view point. As you all know, for 15 years I have been promoting the study of Talmud in Reform and Liberal synagogues, with much joy and success in some and much resistance in others.
 
Many of you belong to congregations which at best have basic Torah classes meeting only monthly. Some of you come to my home to study Talmud.  Rabbis Schneinerman and Rieser are starting with the first Tractate of the Talmud Bavli, and are working thru the highlights daf (double sided page) by daf. They are on Daf 6a so its easy to catch up and learn a bit of Talmud each day. The link is :
NuViewTalmud  . Yasher koach to these Rabbanim.
 
I am writing this as usual a week before the Shabbat that we are studying so that when Shabbat comes you may have interesting dinner conversations, and can follow along with the Torah readings on Shabbat day (Saturday) and understand your rabbis' sermons. But this also allows you to know that a Jewish holiday is coming before the Shabbat of 7/11/09, and it is called the 17th of Tammuz, and it is a fast day.
 
Among other things it begins a three weeks of mourning for our people as this is the day the Romans broke through the walls of Jerusalem and days later, on the 9th of Av, destroyed the Temple.
 
On July 9, 2009 is the Holy Day known as the Fast of Tammuz 17. Tammuz is our 4th month, with Nissan being our first. Nissan has the holiday of Passover and as we have studied before is the true Jewish new year.
 
In reading this class, please keep the following Talmud quote before you: "If  a person sees that afflictions are befalling him, he should investigate his deeds to determine which of his sins he may have committed that would cause such suffering.'' ( Talmud Bavli Tractate Beracoth 5a). The same applies for a people.
 

According to the Talmud (Talmud Yerushalmi Tractate Taanit 4:5) five terrible things happened on this date:
1. The tablets of the law were broken.
2. The daily whole offering was canceled.
3. The city wall was breached.
4. Apostemos burned the Torah.
5. And he set up an idol in the Temple.

The Talmud Yerushalmi discusses how  Moses broke the tablets:

Rabbi Yishmael taught:  The Holy One, blessed be He, told him to break them and afterward said, "You did the right thing in breaking them."

Rabbi Shmuel bar Nachman said in the name of Rabbi Yonatan:  The tablets were six handbreadths long and three broad. Moses was holding on to two handbreadths and the Holy One, blessed be He, was holding on to two of them and there was a space of two handbreadths in the middle.  When the Israelites did their deed (worshiped the golden calf), the Holy One, blessed be He, wanted to grab them out of the hand of Moses. But Moses¹ hand was stronger and he seized them from Him.

Rabbi Yochanan said in the name of Rabbi Yose bar Abayye:  The tablets wanted to fly, but Moses was holding on to them.

It was taught in the name of Rabbi Nehemiah:  The writing itself flew off the tablets.  (Talmud Yerushalmi Tractate Taanit 4:5)
 
It is interesting to note that  from a modern historical perspective that Saddam Hussein's nuclear reactor, from which he planned to create a bomb to drop on Israel, was called "Tammuz 17."  This was the reactor that the Israeli Air Force destroyed. I wonder if Iran's reactor is named "Tisha B'Av?"
 
The Fast of Tammuz 17  is the beginning of the three weeks of mourning ending with Tisha B'Av.  Tisha B'Av is the 9th of Av. It is July 30, 2009. Tisha B'Av is when both Temples were destroyed.


Tammuz 17 is when the walls of Jerusalem were forced open by the Romans. During this period traditional Jews do not shave or get their hair cut. No marriages are performed. No court cases are held. There is no rejoicing with music or dance. The wearing of new clothes or eating a new fruit, which would require a "shehechiyanu" blessing, can not be done. (There are some exceptions with fruit if it will rot and not last 3 weeks as it is a mitzvah to eat a fruit one has never tasted before, but I will not bore you with halakah minutia.)


This fast is not a 24-hour fast like Yom Kippur. It starts at sunrise and ends at sundown.  Tisha B'Av is a ast like Yom Kippur however.

We are taught traditionally that many tragedies befell the Jewish people on the 17th of Tammuz. Moses returned from Mt. Sinai and witnessed the Golden Calf and smashed the Tablets. During the fall of the first Temple there was starvation. The animal sacrifices stopped as there were no animals left. The Romans breached the walls of Jerusalem (the Babylonians breached the walls on the 9th of Tammuz).

 

The Talmud in Tractate Ta'anit recounts that just before the story of Hanukkah a Syrian governor, Apostemus, publicly burned a Torah as well as placed a idol in the Second Temple. Historians think it was really a Roman officer, but the rabbis censored themselves to avoid the wrath of the Romans and called him a "Syrian." The Hebrew King Menashe placed an idol in the First Temple on this day.

 

Let us explore this Holy Day and the Talmud a bit.

 

Three of the 5 'terrible things' that happened on the 17 of Tammuz happened during the Roman siege.

 
Talmud Yerushalmi uses the name of a Syrian -Greek general, Apostemos. History  teaches  that this was a Roman general who burned a Torah and also placed an idol in the Temple.  As mentioned above, the Rabbis were afraid of Roman sword and censorship and made the story take place during the Hanukah time, with the Syrian-Greeks. 
 
''The city wall was breached'' by Romans.
"Apostemos burned the Torah" but it was a Roman general.
"The daily whole offering was canceled" because  the Jews were starving. The Jews were under siege in Jerusalem. There were no animals left  to eat and certainly none to sacrifice.
 
We are taught the Second Temple was destroyed because Jews had hatred to one another, sinat chinam .They treated each other horridly. They had cliques and excluded people  and were exceeding jealous. (Talmud Bavli Tractate Yoma 9b) .
 
The story is told of how one Jew got a party invitation. He showed up for the party. He was told the invitation was meant for another Jew with a similar name and was told to leave. He was publicly embarrassed.  He begged to stay.  He said he  would pay for his meal and was still refused. He said he would pay for the entire party but he was still told to leave.   He was very angry and humiliated. He went and  told the Romans that the Jews were plotting against Rome. (Talmud Bavli Tractate Gittin 55b-56a). The Romans now had a reason to breach the walls.
 
Being kicked out of a party, or being denied a seat in a Torah class, or being marginalized in a synagogue, is very hurtful especially when done by fellow Jews who are all supposed to be responsible for one another. (Talmud Bavli Tractate Shavuot 39a).  When we are hateful to each other, we are also hateful to God, who is Parent of us all.
 
"And he set up an idol in the Temple" but this was really done by Hebrew King Menashe in the First Temple. King Menashe was one of our three worst Hebrew kings.  He was the son of King Chizkiahu. He killed his grandfather, the prophet Isaiah!! (Talmud Bavli Tractate Yevamot 49b). He extinguished Solomon's Ner Tamid, the always burning lamp, in the Temple. He became an avowed  pagan. He brought a giant idol on Tammuz 17 into the Temple (2 Kings 21).
 
So  4 of 5 'terrible things' derive from Jews being hateful to other Jews, and by Jews also not loving God.
 
Now we come to the fifth terrible event: the ''tablets of the law were broken.''
 
We learn that whole of Torah from Rabbi Akiva is to love our fellows and to love God.
 
God, Moses, and the living Torah itself, saw from the way the Hebrews were behaving that they had  no love for God. A few months before before, God did series of miracles with signs and wonders that they witnessed. They were the generation that saw it all. They were the generation that had it happen for them. God took  the Hebrews out from slavery with His outstretched arm. Yet the Hebrews had no belief, faith, trust, experience, with God, and no hope.
 
God, Moses and the living Torah  saw in the past the of the leaders of what was to become the tribes of Israel, casting Joseph into a well to kill him. They saw their compassion limited to compromising and selling Joseph  into slavery. God, Moses and the living Torah, could see into the future,and understand that the Hebrews were not yet ready to love their fellows or God, on the 17th of Tammuz 3300 years ago.
 
So whether it was God's, Moses's, or Torah's idea to deny the Hebrews the lessons of the Torah when they worshipped Golden Calf, the Hebrews were not ready to learn and needed to do teshuvah.
 
A bit further in Talmud Yerushalmi. we find  Menashe being so evil that when he is old and sick, he wanted to again pray and accept God...but just to get well.  The angels close the  windows to heaven so that God would not hear his prayers. God pleaded with the angels, but they would not listen to God! So God took a saw. God cut a hole under His  Heavenly throne. Menashe's prayers could now enter Heaven.
 
Now this is a wonderful passage and has juxtaposition with the Talmudic quote  with which we started. God allows all of us to do Teshuvah, even King Menashe.  The Talmud tells us that rabbi Ashei disrespected King Menashe when speaking about him to his students. In a dream, Menashe asks Ashei  Talmudic questions which Ashei could not answer. Ashei angrily call Menashe an '' idol worshipper.'' Menashe said: "If you had been in our times, you would have lifted up your garments and run after me to serve the idols." (Talmud Bavli Tractate Sanhedrin 102b).
 
Menashe, in this dream, was referring to a Talmudic point, (circa 700 years after his death!), that at the time of the Second Temple, the rabbis prayed to God to remove from the Jew's yetzer ha ra, (evil inclination) the urge to worship idols. So Ashei could not truly understand Menashe's worshipping idols.  We truly do not understand the Hebrews worshipping  the Golden Calf. (Sanhedrin  64b). This is why the  Mishna tells us in  Pirkei Avot (2:5) "Do not judge your fellow until you have reached his place."  We can never be in another's place.
 
As an aside, the rabbis also asked God to take away the urge from Jews to commit adultery. And God did. But then Jewish men also lost the urge to have sex with their wives and the children we not being born. So the sages pleaded with God to restore that urge.
 
The Talmud tells us that all Jews have place in Olam Ha Ba.(Talmud Bavli Tractate Sanhedrin 105a)  If God is willing to let all of us into Heaven, how can we be cruel to each other here on earth, especially in building which we call House of God?  
 
The Talmudic point is that we Jews make our own Tammuz 17s and make our own suffering. We frankly smash Torah's tablets. We treat the stranger among us without love. We treat our fellows among us without love. We treat fellow Jews without love. In business, we cheat. We treat animals that we say we are slaughtering via kosher means inhumanely. RABBI ARTHUR SEGAL:AGRIPROCESSORS:WHEN KOSHER IS TRAIF:HEKSHER TZEDEK'S NEED  We worship more Golden Calves and idols than King Menashe could have ever imagined schlepping into the Temple. We deny God yet curse Him when things do not go our way.
 
Let us try to recapture our Judaism and make our synagogues into spiritual loving places, opon on Shabbat, as an oasis in time away from the cruelties of the secular world. Let us repair the walls of our synagogues, restore our shuls, remodel our temples. not with brick and mortar, but with God's love for all of us equally Our actions have breached our own walls for Pagans to enter. And we have become the Pagans. We have lost our spiritual connection and we are suffering because of it, yet many of us do not know it. But the gates of teshuvah, renewal, are always open.{ Sha'arei t'shuvah l'olam p'tuchin - (Midrash Deut. Rabbah 2.12) }
 
When things are going bad in our lives, personally or as a people, the Talmud tells us not to look outside and have resentments, or snub someone, but to look inside, at ourselves and our own defects of character. When we say we do not like someone, the Talmud tells us we are painting our own defects of character that we refuse to acknowledge or work on removing, unto the other person.
 
Derech eretz kadma la Torah (Vayikra Rabba 9:3). Ethical behavior precedes the Torah. Jewish leaders,   it has long been taught, need the middot, character traits, of ethics. We are not talking about saints, but we are talking about people who if they err, do teshuvah, before they are caught. More than just those who are versed in teaching menstchlechkeit are leaders who are mensches.
 
Sin we all know intrinsically the Talmudic maxim that one sin leads to another.  When we have a leader with blatant character defects, we as a community are responsible for getting him/her spiritual aid. If we ignore these, and he/she for example, does a large act of lust or greed, it is our sin as well. (See the lesson from the fifth page of the entire Talmud above). Our response is not one of anger or confusion. It is one of prayer for the person and our own teshuvah.  We cause our own problems by not following God's rules for us.
 
While some of our brothers in Judaism are praying these 3 weeks for the restoration of the Temple and mourning its loss, I am praying for the return of Jewish ethics and spirituality for our people, and the final dissolution of sinat chinam, hatred among us, either interpersonal, or sect versus  sect. I am praying for the true establishment of Ahavath Israel, loving our fellow Jew, (along with loving our fellow...all of God's children).
 
Thank God for rabbis like Rieser and Scheinerman, talmidim and chaverim studying Jewish ethics, and those in     www.JewishSpiritualRenewal.org  who are transdenominational and trying hard to bring back God into peoples lives and repair those broken Tablets.
 
Shabbat Shalom and have and easy fast:
 
Rabbi Arthur Segal
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Parasha Pinchas: Numbers 25:10-30:01

Rabbi Arthur Segal
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"Pinchas Interruptus"

Parasha Pinchas continues with the story that began at the end of the last portion. To review, we learned how the King of Moab, Balak, hired the sorcerer Balaam, a hit man for hire, to curse the Jews. Balaam failed in his mission. In the last few verses of Parasha Balak (Num. 25:1-9) we read how Balaam, not to be outgunned by God, convinces Balak to take one last stab at the Jews. They send their daughters into the Israelite camp. An orgy begins, which includes worshipping the idol Ba'al P'or. The Midrash teaches that this rite involves defecation in front of this idol and cleaning one's self with this idol's nose.

God brings a plague onto the Jews. Pinchas, a grandson of the recently deceased high priest Aaron, follows the Jew Zimri and the Midianitess Cozbi, into Zimri's tent. (These two sinners are not named until Parasha Pinchas.) The name Cozbi means "voluptuous." Pinchas spears them in their stomachs, which the Talmud explains are actually their genitals, while they were belly to belly." The plague stops.

God rewards Pinchas for his zealotry with a promise of high priesthood for himself and his sons. The Jews are commanded to smite the Midianites. A new census is taken of the tribes and of the Levites. Moses rules on an inheritance involving fatherless sisters who have no brothers. Moses officially picks Joshua to be his successor. More priestly sacrifices are enumerated including those for Shabbat and the major holidays.

The rabbis of the Talmud had trouble trying to be apologists for Pinchas's actions. The law in Talmud Bavli Tractate Sanhedrin is clear. Before someone is put to death for a crime he is given a trial. There must be two witnesses. These two witnesses must swear that not only did they see the crime, but also that they both warned the defendant that what he was about to do was illegal and punishable by death. They even had to state which of the four legal means of execution would apply to this particular crime. If these specific legalities were not followed, the judges had to acquit the defendant.

How did they explain Pinchas's actions and resulting reward? The rabbis of the Talmud say in Tractate Sanhedrin 82A that Pinchas remembered learning of a law that Moses heard from God, but had not yet taught the people. This law was, "He who has sexual relations with a heathen may be attacked by zealous people." This is why Pinchas skewered Zimri and Cozbi in their genitals while they were having sex. This is why he left them dead in this position. This would be proof that he had a God-given right to kill both of them. The Talmud teaches that the Hebrew word for spear is "romach." This word is numerically equal to 248, which is the number of positive mitzvoth in the Torah.

The Talmudic rabbis rule that this law is still in effect, but that a zealot must catch the two in the act of sexual intercourse and cannot punish the offenders when the act is over. This is called the law of Pinchas Interruptus. Now you are probably thinking to yourself that you have never heard of this law. You are correct – I made up the name. This is because the Talmudic rabbis decreed that if anyone asks about this law "we should not instruct him" about it or to follow it. This is why they teach that the Torah never mentions this law. It is part of the oral law, or Mishna, which they believe was also given to Moses when he was on Sinai. Unfortunately, either Zimri was not in chedar (Hebrew school) when this oral law was taught or he chose to ignore it.

The rabbis wanted to know why Moses didn't kill Zimri. They posit that maybe he forgot about the law that he taught Pinchas. Other rabbis argue that Moses knew that Zimri did idol worship to Ba'al P'or and that he would come to trial for this and be executed civilly. Regardless, the Midrash rabbis realize that Moses erred in allowing Pinchas to kill Zimri zealously without trial. They wrote, "Because Moshe did not kill Zimri, Moshe's burial place is not known." This is how God punished Moses for letting a zealot commit murder while on his watch.

The rabbis knew that they had to develop some wiggle room on this law. Keeping it hidden would not work. Therefore, they ruled that a zealot had the commandment to kill two fornicators caught in the act but that these lovers could defend themselves and kill the zealot. This would not be considered murder but rather self-defense. The lovers would be pardoned. This is because no judgment of a Beth Din (Jewish court) had been decreed upon them.

But then another rabbi asks, "Who is there that God would pardon, and yet we should kill him?" The rabbis come to an impasse as the Torah does state a punishment for sex with a heathen. It is "Karet." Karet is excision. It is carried out only by God. It means that one day God will cut the sinner's life short. But the rabbis say this punishment is for someone who has completed the sex act and did not get caught while doing it.

The rabbis then posit that forbidden sexual unions must be the gravest of sins. They state that sexual union involves the whole essence of man (women are not mentioned). They say this because a child may be born with great powers. So therefore a Jewish man could transmit his Jewish powers to a child of a non-Jewish woman, and hence create a non-Jewish powerful person. The rabbis go on to say, "Three partners produce a man: his mother, his father, and God who gives him a soul."

So if one has sex for pleasure in an illicit union, one is forcing God to watch. God is a jealous God, the rabbis remind themselves. The Torah says in Numbers 25:11 that Pinchas avenged God's jealousy with his zealotry. If Balaam in the previous parasha is the ultimate in evil, Pinchas is the ultimate party-pooper. There are no times today when kana'ut, zealous religious jealousy, is acceptable in a pluralistic society.

The Hebrew word for desire with an intense longing for physical pleasure regardless of its spiritual value is "tiva." Balaam sent the Moabite women to entice our men. Somehow there was a switch in the Torah, and they are now called Midianite women. Balaam was a Midianite. But so was Tzipporah, Moses' wife. The Midrash states that Zimri publicly defied Moses by having sex with Cozbi, saying to Moses that it was not fair that Moses could have sex with a Midianite when the rest of the Israelite men could not. The Talmud, in Tractate Sanhedrin 82A, says that Zimri was really Shlumiel ben Tzurishadia, the prince of Shimon, who offered his tribe's sacrifices to the Tabernacle (Num.7:36).

Tractate Bava Kama states that the Moabite daughters were forced by Balak to have sex with the Israelite men, but that the Midianite daughters of Balaam did so willingly. This is why God ordered that only the Midianites be slain and that the Moabite women be spared. Of course we must recall that Ruth - the maternal founder of the David kingship lineage - was a Moabitess. If Moses ordered that all of the Moabites be killed, how would King David and his scion, the Messiah, be born?

The actions of Pinchas lead to him and his children being granted the priesthood. The rabbis are concerned with this Torah statement as well. Why? God is contradicting Himself. God said that Aaron's descendants (who had not yet been born) would carry the Kohan name. Pinchas was already born. Pinchas was a Levite. He was only Aaron's grandson on his mother's side. Pinchas was originally left out of the Kohanim and spent 39 years as a Levite. He did, however, study Torah directly from Moses according to the Midrash. Pinchas was not one of the Levites who rebelled with Korach. The Talmud says he was content being a Levite. His maternal great uncle was Nachshon ben Aminadav. The Midrash says that Nachshon was the first to jump into the Sea of Reeds when Moses gave the command. The rabbis posit that this situation also was an example of an unwritten law that Moses already knew.

 The rabbis of the Zohar remind us about the sons of Aaron, who would be in line for the priesthood. They were killed by God for offering "strange fire." These two sons were named Nadav and Avihu. Their souls jumped into Pinchas body so that he could be a Kohan legally without God having to change His immutable law. This also allows God to break His own law by allowing a man who has killed to become a high priest. Pinchas is no longer Pinchas, but really two other men. So this new law is not a new law but actually a continuation of the old law, the sages say. We will read of a third example of this later on in this parasha.

The rabbi known as the Ba'al ha Turim writes that Pinchas also received another reward. He received Elijah's soul. Traditionally we are taught that Elijah was not born of flesh and blood parents. The idea of God being a parent is not a foreign idea to Judaism. His soul came down from heaven and lived in Pinchas's body. It was Elijah's soul that made Pinchas into a zealot. Eventually Elijah's soul found its way into Elijah's body, but Elijah never died. His soul went back to heaven in a fiery chariot. We invite Elijah, who made Pinchas into a zealot, into our homes on Passover and also when we perform a Brit Milah (circumcision). During these occasions we remember Eliyahu HaNavi (Elijah the Prophet) as the loving helper of Israel. We forget that he too was a fiery zealot who confronted the evil monarchs of his generation.

There are some striking similarities between the story of the Golden Calf in Exodus and the worship of Ba'al P'or in Numbers. In Ex. 32:06 and Num. 25:02, the Jews brought offerings to the idol, and they ate. Moses both times let each man kill his brother (fellow tribe member) who sinned. Both times Moses tried to appease God by calling for some punishment. Moses was successful in this in Exodus but it was Pinchas who took action in Numbers and appeased God. This theme of Moses no longer being a capable leader, which was addressed in Parasha Chukat when he struck the rock, is continued here. It culminates with Moses naming Joshua as the new leader.

A close reading will reveal that Joshua will be a different kind of leader. He will not be allowed to rely on his own intuition in making decisions. He will have to be dependent on the priests and their divine dice, called the Urim and Thummim, for leadership. This parasha established firmly a specific grandson of Aaron as the high priest and sets up the priesthood for a major role in leadership. It also tells of more offerings to be made, which sets up the priesthood to be wealthy. This is all done under the backdrop of the story of instant death without trial by a priestly zealot in the case of one who misbehaves.

The third new law that Moses teaches has to do with inheritance. The daughters of Tzelofchad have no brothers and their father is dead. The way the Torah law was given originally; their inheritance would go to their male cousins or uncles. Moses reveals a new law, which was part of the oral law that he learned from God. This law now becomes part of the written Torah law. A Midrash states that Moses might have been a bit overconfident when he told the Israelites to bring all questions of law to him.

The Talmud written by rabbis who were Pharisees had a different agenda than the obvious pro-priest authors of this portion. They do not want to see zealots abound especially for political reasons. The Jews were an occupied people and saw the destruction the Romans heaped upon them after Bar Kochba's failed rebellion. Tractate Kiddushin 70B states, "If you see a Kohan who is arrogant, be assured that his lineage is genuine." Hoshea 4:04 writes, "Your nation is argumentative like a Kohan." Tractate Bava Batra 160B teaches, "Kohanim are bad-tempered." The Maharal says that they think that the "fire of holiness" is in them and their blood boils. The Talmud records how Kohanim would kill each other in the Temple courtyard while arguing over who would perform the Temple services. Certain services yielded better cuts of sacrificed meats.

Rabbi Mordecai Kaplan wrote in his Judaism as a Civilization: Toward a Reconstruction of American-Jewish Life: "A religion is as much a progressive unlearning of false ideas concerning God as it is the learning of the true ideas concerning God." Hadith of Tiridhi said, "one true scholar of religion is more annoying to Satan than a thousand of the faithful who perform only their ceremonial duties."

Zealotry did not stop with Pinchas. Until recently Jewish communities could perform the act of excommunication on those with whom they disagreed. Rabbis in Israel zealously call immigrants disease carriers and abominations. They compare liberal Jews to Amalek and Satan. They pray that our memory be wiped out. They pray to God that the head of the liberal Meretz party be "uprooted from the seed of Israel. Just as revenge was wrought on Haman, so will it be wrought on him."

Recently Rabbi Yosef of Shas protested the Israeli Supreme Court's decision finding Shas political leader Deri guilty of taking bribes. He called the justices goyem who were "led astray by Satan." Unfortunately, it appears that both Aryeh Dari and Rabbi Ovadia Yosef forgot about the Torah law forbidding the taking and giving of bribes. Perhaps they missed this lesson at their chedar.

Our rabbis wrote in Pirkei Avot (3:21) that if there is no Torah there is no proper behavior. But they also said that if there is no proper behavior there is no Torah. Our synagogues and our Jewish communities do not need zealots acting like Pinchas spearing us with their tongues, calling us names, and criticizing our actions. This type of behavior only serves to push one away from Judaism.

 Rabbi Lawrence Hoffman in the Summer 2000 edition of Reform Judaism writes: "the needs of the Jewish community have fundamentally changed" in the past 100 years. At the turn of the last century our synagogues were like a "general store in a tiny farming community." By the 1950s our synagogues were organized as enterprises. "Dues were exchanged for programs and services." Jews joined but it occupied only a small corner of the congregants' lives.

Our synagogues in the twenty-first century need to be transformed into spiritual centers. The last 20 years have shown how society is fragmented and fragile. People feel alienated from each other. Our synagogues need to be places where all are welcome and are welcomed. Our synagogues really need to be a place of sanctuary where inner peace and tranquility can be found.

This God-centered place needs to teach people actively how to connect spiritually to God and to each other. Rabbi Hoffman continued: "A transformed synagogue reveals the profound mystery of the universe of which we are in integral part, connected to each other, to the cosmos, to eternity and to God."

Jewish Spiritual Renewal  www.jewishspiritualrenewal.org  opens doors to all who seek to enter in peace and in search of God. We do not rebuke those who have married out of the faith. Nor do we call their children anything but Jews. We accept people on whatever spoke of the Judaic dharma wheel they wish to place themselves – as every spoke is equidistant to God's love. We will not allow zealots or chastisers into our midst who speak of knowing what God wants but act as if they have no clue.

I was positively struck by Newsweek magazine's July 17, 2000, edition. After 60 years, writer Tom Ross decided to legally take back his last name of Rosenberg. He had attended a temple for years where he was not harassed for his mixed marriage or for celebrating both Christmas and Hanukkah in his home. For 60 years he denied his family heritage and now he is learning to embrace it. In undergoing a true Jewish Spiritual Renewal he picked out his new Hebrew name. Mr. Rosenberg said the following to his children: "Every time I step into a temple, I'm reminded that Judaism has survived for 4,000 years. It survived because it is a positive religion. My parents, your grandparents, changed their name out of fear. I'm changing it back out of pride. I chose the name Tikvah because it means hope." The Hope of Israel, Ha Mickve Israel, rests with a loving, open compassionate way of being and not with hateful, exclusive, malevolent bigotry disguised as religious zealotry.

Shabbat Shalom:

Rabbi Arthur Segal
Via Shamash Org on-line class service
Jewish Renewal
Jewish Spiritual Renewal
Hilton Head Island, SC, Bluffton, SC, Savannah, GA
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Rabbi Segal is the author of three books and many articles on Torah, Talmud and TaNaK and Jewish history. His books are : The Handbook to Jewish Spiritual Renewal: A Path of Transformation for the Modern Jew, A Spiritual and Ethical Compendium to the Torah and Talmud, and  Spiritual Wisdom of our Talmudic Sages. The first two are published by Amazon through their publishing house, BookSurge.
For information on how to purchase these, please contact RabbiSegal@JewishSpiritualRenewal.net and visit WWW.JewishSpiritualRenewal.org.  OR CLICK ON THE IMAGES BELOW. 
 Todah Rabah and Shalom uvracha. Rabbi Arthur Segal ,( Dr. Arthur Segal )RabbiASegal@aol.com
 
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THE HANDBOOK TO JEWISH SPIRITUAL RENEWAL:
A Path of Transformation for the Modern Jew

Rabbi Dr. Arthur Segal distills millennia of sage advice into a step-by-step process to reclaim your Judaism and your spirituality in a concise easy-to-read and easy-to-follow manner.

If you find yourself wishing for the strength to sustain you through the ups and downs of life; if you want to learn how to live life to its fullest without angst, worry, low self-esteem or fear; or if you wish that your relationships with family, friends and co-workers were based on love and service and free of ego, arguments, resentments and feelings of being unloved...this book is for you.

Price: $19.99
254 Pages
Published by: Amazon's BookSurge

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A SPIRITUAL AND ETHICAL COMPENDIUM
TO THE TORAH AND TALMUD

Rabbi Dr. Arthur Segal dissects each of the Torah's weekly sections (parashot) using the Talmud and other rabbinic texts to show the true Jewish take on what the Torah is trying to teach us. This companion to The Handbook to Jewish Spiritual Renewal: A Path of Transformation for the Modern Jew brings the Torah alive with daily relevance to the Modern Jew.

All of the Torah can be summed up in one word: Chesed. It means kindness. The Talmud teaches that the Torah is about loving our fellow man and that we are to go and study. The rest is commentary. This compendium clarifies the commentary and allows one to study Torah and Talmud to learn the Judaic ideals of love, forgiveness, kindness, mercy and peace. A must read for all Jews and deserves a place in every Jewish home.

Price: $24.99
494 Pages
Published by: Amazon's BookSurge

Welcome to Rabbi Arthur Segal's Jewish Spiritual Renewal bookstore. We invite you to create an account with us if you like, or shop as a guest. Either way, your shopping cart will be active until you leave the store.

You can purchase each book individually, but if you purchase them together as a set with the Tzadakkah Bundle, I will donate a portion of the sales price in your name to a tzadakkah of your choice, such as your synagogue.

Simply provide the donation information in the "Special Instructions" box during checkout. When doing so, please include the following:

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(001) The Handbook to Jewish Spiritual Renewal

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In The Handbook to Jewish Spiritual Renewal: A Path of Transformation for the Modern Jew, Rabbi Dr. Arthur Segal distills millennia of sage advice to reclaim your Judaism and your spirituality.

  • Price : $19.99

(002) A Spiritual and Ethical Compendium to the Torah and Talmud

http://www.shop.jewishspiritualrenewal.net/product.sc;jsessionid=D63E50225C81C04275934EB69E00F6C1.qscstrfrnt04?categoryId=1&productId=2

A Spiritual and Ethical Compendium to the Torah and Talmud dissects each of the Torah's weekly sections (parashot) using the Talmud and other rabbinic texts to show the true Jewish take on what the Torah is trying to teach us.

  • Price : $24.99

(003) Tzadakkah Bundle

http://www.shop.jewishspiritualrenewal.net/product.sc;jsessionid=D63E50225C81C04275934EB69E00F6C1.qscstrfrnt04?categoryId=1&productId=3

The Handbook to Jewish Spiritual Renewal and A Spiritual and Ethical Compendium to the Torah and Talmud. Purchase both books as a set, and I will donate a portion of the sales price in your name to the tzadakkah of your choice. -- Rabbi Segal

  • Price : $44.98