Fun fact: If you vaccinate yourself and your children, the moshiach will come faster
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Fun fact: If you vaccinate yourself and your children, the moshiach will come faster
Hi! I wanted to ask you, who exactly is Jesus in Judaism? Is he just a normal person? And if yes, does Judaism deny all the facts and miracles that are described in the gospels?
Hi there,
Thank you for writing to me!
Jews do not believe that Jesus was the Messiah, that Jesus had any sort of divine power, had any sort of special connection to God, or that he is/was a god. If Jesus existed, most Jews believe that he was just a Jewish man. That’s it.
Additionally, no Jewish person would argue that the miracles described in the Gospels were factual.Actually, some Jews deny Jesus’s existence completely for both theological reasons and due to rampant antisemitism ‘in the name of Jesus’ throughout the past nearly 2000 years.
On the subject of the Jewish use of the Gospels, they are actually pretty useful in academia. For many Christians, these are holy documents- but for those studying Judaism, we learn insights into how the Jewish world might have operated. In my Rabbinical School, we sometimes will draw from these texts to learn about this period in Jewish history.
So you might ask, so ‘why do you Jews believe in your miracles but not ours’? I would respond to this question with a question of my own, ‘why do you think that we Jews believe that all of the miracles described throughout the Tanakh and Rabbinic Literature happened exactly in the way that the text describes them?’
I would be happy to chat with anyone further on any of these topics if you would like. Feel free to send me a direct message!
PJ
In the Jewish prayer book, the siddur, there are references to an “end of days”: the Temple in Jerusalem will be rebuilt, the dead who were righteous will be resurrected, and a figure
Radical Blessings
לְכָה אִיעָצְךָ אֲשֶׁר יַעֲשֶׂה הָעָם הַזֶּה לְעַמְּךָ בְּאַחֲרִית הַיָּמִים (במדבר כד, יד)COME, I WILL ADVISE YOU… WHAT THIS PEOPLE WILL DO TO YOUR PEOPLE AT THE END OF DAYS. (BAMIDBAR 24:14)
Fearing that the Jews would wage war against him and conquer his land, Balak, the king of Moav, summoned the prophet Bilaam and asked him to curse them. Bilaam, however, knew that Balak had nothing to fear, for as a prophet, he certainly knew that G-d had commanded Bnei Yisrael, “Do not distress Moav, and do not provoke them to war, for I will not give you any of their land as an inheritance” (Devarim 2:9).
Nevertheless, Bilaam made no attempt to reassure Balak, because he himself was eager to harm Bnei Yisrael and was excited by this opportunity to curse them. As Rashi (on 22:11) notes, “Bilaam hated them more than did Balak.” Whereas Balak hated the Jews because he felt threatened by them, Bilaam hated the Jews fundamentally and irrationally—pure, simple, baseless hatred.
Despite Bilaam’s enthusiasm, things did not go to plan. “...Hashem, your G-d, did not want to listen to Bilaam. So Hashem, your G-d, transformed the curse into a blessing for you, because Hashem, your G-d, loves you” (Devarim 23:6). Not only did G-d force Bilaam to bless the Jews instead of cursing them, He transformed the curses themselves into blessings. And since Bilaam had hoped to unleash his unfounded hatred in his curses, the blessings G-d forced him bestow were extraordinary, reflecting G-d’s fundamental and unconditional love for His people.
This explains why Bilaam’s blessings also foretell the future and final redemption of the Jewish people. The Talmud (Sanhedrin 97a) says that Moshiach’s arrival will be b’hesech hadaas, which literally means “in absence of cognizance.” On a simple level, this means that the precise moment of the Redemption cannot be known in advance, so Moshiach’s arrival will automatically catch us off guard. According to the teachings of Chassidus (Tanya, Igeres Hakodesh 4), this Talmudic statement also means that the era of Moshiach will be characterized by an absence of daas—knowledge and cognizance. This will not be due to a lack of knowledge, but because a deep-seated, fundamental and super-rational connection to G-d will be revealed in the conscious mind of every Jew. It is therefore most fitting that the super-rational era of Moshiach is foretold in the radical blessings of the irrational Bilaam.
—Likutei Sichos, vol. 38, pp. 88-89