Posted on 12/07/2005 2:36:38 PM PST by Charles Henrickson
I gather you keep kosher as well?
Happy Hannukka!
Happy Hannukka!
Kosher is a Rabbinical Tradition it is not scriptural.
We will be celebrating the LIGHT entering the world.
b'shem Y'shua
"Kosher is a Rabbinical Tradition it is not scriptural."
Re-read Leviticus, please: no pork, no shellfish, no eating meat boiled in its mother's milk. No eels.
Dietary Kashrut is deeply Scriptural.
Isaiah 12:1 In that day you will say: I will praise you, O LORD.
Although you were angry with me, your anger has turned
away and you have comforted me.
Isaiah 12:2 Surely God is my salvation; I will trust and not be afraid. The LORD,
the LORD, is my strength and my song; he has become my salvation.
Isaiah 12:3 With joy you will draw water from the wells of salvation.
Isaiah 12:4 In that day you will say: Give thanks to the LORD, call on
his name; make known among the nations what he has done,
and proclaim that his name is exalted.
Isaiah 12:5 Sing to the LORD, for he has done glorious things; let this be known to all the world.
Isaiah 12:6 Shout aloud and sing for joy, people of Zion, for great is the Holy One of Israel among you.
b'shem Y'shua
"Kosher is a Rabbinical Tradition it is not scriptural."
All of that is wonderful and beautiful.
But dietary kashrut is in Leviticus and Deuteronomy.
The same place as the Saturday Sabbath on which you've been so dramatically focused.
dietary kashrut LAWS are is in Leviticus and Deuteronomy
Yes the seventh day is Saturday
"dietary kashrut LAWS are is in Leviticus and Deuteronomy"
Yes, they are.
And a handful of posts up, you said that they were traditions, not Scripture.
You are correct, here, that they ARE Scriptural.
So, now that we have that point of Law settled, and we agree that the dietary laws are Scriptural, I return to my original question: Do you keep kosher?
Happy Hannukka!
Actually I would say we do He stated he would rise in three Day's
He died on Friday before sundown that why that were going to break his leg(but didn't because he was already dead) to speed up up his death to get him down before sundown before the Jewish Sabbath on Saturday (Jewish day run sundown to sundown Saturday Sabbath starts our Friday sundown)
And because no work can be done on the Saturday Sabbath there wasn't time for the all the body prep work and that why Mary was going to the tomb first thing Sunday morning
What about the concept of other high holy days also being a "Sabbath" among ancient Jews? Could there have been a High Sabbath, on Thursday, which would also have no work done in it, followed by the regular Saturday Sabbath?
A little insight as to how there could (or could not be) additional Sabbath days in ancient Judaism would be most helpful.
Not the thread to make that case. Just wanted you to be aware there are other options.
That puts it on Monday. By why quibble when none of the other Disciples believed He would rise by Sunday morning.
There are aspects of "Kosher" that are not "Rabbincal" tradition. Such as refraining from pork and shellfish.
some dietary laws fall under the tradition of Kosher.
I'm still not aware of any other options.
I gave ya one in my first post. Embellishment. Jews believe NT writings are uninspired and embellished. So there you have another option. Obviously you don't believe that but it is another option.
"There are aspects of "Kosher" that are not "Rabbincal" tradition. Such as refraining from pork and shellfish."
More than just aspects!
Practically all of it.
No shellfish.
No fish without scales (i.e., no eels) no animal without a cloven hoof that chews the cud (i.e.: not just pork, but also virtually all mammalian predators, rabbits, etc.).
No meat boiled in its mother's milk (the tradition builds a fence around the Torah and thus requires no meat and dairy together, but the basis of that lies in the prohibition of coddled meat).
No blood. The preparation this requires is important.
Abstention from certain portions of the fat of meat and certain tendons.
No leaven in the house during certain high holy days.
The tradition builds many fences around the Torah and embellishes these rules, to make sure nobody inadvertently breaks them, but God was quite concerned with Jewish dietary practices.
He was also concerned, in the Torah, with Gentile dietary practices. According to the Law given to Noah for all mankind Gentiles can eat meat, but no blood (Maimonedes glosses this to mean no flesh torn from a living animal, per the old Orphic rites).
Now, this is enough for Gentiles to satisfy the Lord, for most Gentiles are descendants of Japheth, and "Japheth is blessed" according to the Torah. So, Japheth may be eating pork, which a Jew under the law of Moses may not, but as a Gentile, it is licit to eat such pork, so long as it does not have the blood in it.
Of course, a strict literalist will point out that ALL meat, however well drained, has blood it it. Ergo, if we are to be strict literalists about the literal words of the Bible, mankind is required to be a vegetarian. Given that God allows man to eat meat, and gives strict rules to Moses for the preparation thereof, the Bible's literal words are in direct contradiction. The solution is to not interpret the first NO BLOOD literally, but take it more figuratively. Once one does that, however, one has departed from Scriptural literalism. And if one does it there with impunity, to resolve a conflict, then one does not have standing any longer to be a priggish literalist in preference to one's own interpretation in some other conflict.
The man who wishes to never be a hypocrite must take the harder rule, and that would force vegetarianism, because God says explicitly that man is not to eat blood.
No, he died on wednesday and rose on sunday. (3 days)
Thats looking at "three days" as he whold rise after being dead 72+ hours
I would look at "in three days" as
he died on Fri. some time before sunset (day 1 / the Day before the Jewish Sabbath)
then Sat.(day 2 / Jewish Sabbath/ end of thet week)
And rose on Sun.(any time after sunset Sat.) (day 3 / the Day after the Jewish Sabbath/first day of the week)
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