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Yemenite Weekly Torah Reading (Netzarim Israel)

ðÉçÇ
(bᵊ-Reish•it 6.9—11.32) áøàùéú å' è'—é"à ì"á
bᵊ-Reish•it 11.29-32 :(Ma•phᵊtir) îôèéø
TorâhHaphtârâhÂmar Ribi YᵊhoshuaMᵊnorat ha-Maor

Rainbow Rule
Setting: ca. B.C.E. 3075
Location: Mt. Ararat, Turkey
(39° 43' N, 44° 16' E;
see map below)
Map Ararat
Click to enlargeMt. Ararat, Turkey
Mt. Ararat, Turkey
Click to enlargeMt. Ararat, Turkey

Rainbow Rule

5775 (2014.10)

Lake Agassiz univ of sheffield
Lake Agassiz(Univ. of Sheffield in UK)

Postmedia News (for what it's worth), 2010.12.10:

A British researcher has published a startling new theory that the remains of untold ancient settlements from a 100,000-year stretch of human history were submerged by the rapidly rising waters of the Persian Gulf around 6,000 BC — the result, in all likelihood, of a catastrophic, planetwide flood triggered in Canada.

There's a consensus among scientists that the collapse of a kilometres-high glacial dam [containing the ancient glacial Lake Agassiz in central Canada – a remnant of which is today's Lake Winnipeg] at the end of the last ice age caused a massive outflow of meltwater into the Arctic or North Atlantic Ocean near Hudson Bay, generating a sharp rise in sea levels around the world and profoundly altering the Earth's climate…

But the new theory, advanced in the latest issue of the journal Current Anthropology by University of Birmingham archeologist Jeffrey Rose, offers the clearest picture yet of what may have been lost at the Middle East nexus of human civilization when Canada's super-sized Lake Agassiz — a remnant of which is today's Lake Winnipeg — suddenly burst its banks 8,000 years ago.

The resulting rise of the Indian Ocean flooded a Great Britain-sized expanse of the Arabian Peninsula that had previously been above water and was almost certainly inhabited by ancient peoples for as long as 100 millennia, Rose stated.

The rising water created the present-day Persian Gulf and drowned shorelines around the peninsula, along the northeast coast of Africa and elsewhere around the world.

And the flooding of those lands, Rose argued, would have submerged extensive archeological evidence of key moments in the evolution of the human race, of the initial stages of their eastward migration out of Africa, and of the cultural developments leading to the early civilizations of the Middle East.

Rose stated in a summary of the study that recent archeological discoveries along the Persian Gulf coast show relatively advanced cultures with no apparent precursor settlements to explain how they attained their level of cultural sophistication.

"These settlements boast well-built, permanent stone houses, long-distance trade networks, elaborately decorated pottery, domesticated animals, and even evidence for one of the oldest boats in the world," Rose noted.

"Perhaps it is no coincidence that the founding of such remarkably well-developed communities along the shoreline corresponds with the flooding of the Persian Gulf basin around 8,000 years ago," he added. "These new colonists may have come from the heart of the Gulf, displaced by rising water levels that plunged the once fertile landscape beneath the waters of the Indian Ocean." …

[Rose] also referenced groundbreaking studies by University of Manitoba geologist James Teller, whose reconstructions of the colossal drainage of ancient Agassiz — the meltwater basin that once covered most of Central Canada, and held a volume equivalent to 15 Lake Superiors — have initiated a wave of new research on outburst impacts ranging from global climate cooling to the origins of agriculture in southern Europe.

"There is now a critical mass of evidence to indicate that some significant flooding event greatly impacted an indigenous group that had been living within the (Persian Gulf) basin," Rose said. "Whether this was a gradual process over a few thousand years, or, as Teller suggested, happened relatively quickly due to a (meltwater outburst) in the North Atlantic at 8,200 years before present, is one of the questions to be addressed going forward." …

[Teller:] "But the floor of the Persian Gulf is really, really flat in the middle. And like dumping a cup of water on a table — or even a thimbleful — it will rush across the tabletop to the far end."

Rose, referring to recent archeological finds in Oman and Yemen, said there is now evidence suggesting a human presence in the southern part of the Arabian Peninsula as early as 100,000 years ago. (accessed 2014.02.02)

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Rainbow Rule

5767 (2007.10)

What's the difference between Jews and Israel?
The Ten Lost Tribes of Northern Israel
Twelve Tribes (map)
Click to enlargeTen Northern Tribes = Twelve Tribes - éÀäåÌãÈä (Yᵊhud•âh) and Bin•yâ•min (which was entirely absorbed into éÀäåÌãÈä).

While Jews are popularly equated to Israel, there are important differences.

The Romans Hellenized the name of the Tribal Region of éÀäåÌãÈä (Yᵊhud•âh) to Ιουδαια and, similarly, its indigenous natives Ιουδαιος. Much more recently, English-speakers shortened Ιουδαιος to "Jew."

éÀäåÌãÈä (Yᵊhud•âh) comprised members of the tribe of éÀäåÌãÈä (Yᵊhud•âh), called éÀäåÌãÄéí (Yᵊhud•im), who, consequent to the Syrian expulsion of the Ten Northern Tribes in B.C.E. 722, absorbed the remnants of those ten lost tribes, which were thereby forever indistinguishably assimilated into éÀäåÌãÈä (Yᵊhud•âh), and forever after indistinguishable from other éÀäåÌãÄéí (Yᵊhud•im).

As a result, éÀäåÌãÄéí (Yᵊhud•im) were thereafter, and for all time, one and the same as Am Yi•sᵊrâ•eil.

After Shᵊlomoh ha-Mëlëkh until BCE 722, (Am) Yi•sᵊrâ•eil + (Ërëtz) Yi•sᵊrâ•eil = Yi•sᵊrâ•eil — the nation.

Forever after the forcible Syrian assimilation of the Ten Northern Tribes in BCE 722 and the consequent fleeing of the remnants of the Ten Northern Tribes into éÀäåÌãÈä (Yᵊhud•âh), éÀäåÌãÄéí (Yᵊhud•im) comprised the entirety of Am Yi•sᵊrâ•eil. Later, the Romans destroyed all of the yu•khas•in of Yᵊhud•im. Ergo, today and forever, éÀäåÌãÄéí (Yᵊhud•im) + (Ërëtz) Yi•sᵊrâ•eil = Yi•sᵊrâ•eil — the nation. Though no tribal (or priestly) origins are genealogically / halakhically distinguishable today, modern éÀäåÌãÄéí (Yᵊhud•im) = Yi•sᵊrâ•eil includes the surviving remnants of the Ten Northern Tribes. They are not lost! The surviving remnants of the Ten Tribes are, today, an indistinguishable essence that has genetically enriched today's éÀäåÌãÄéí (Yᵊhud•im).

The remainder of the "Ten Lost Tribes," by contrast, having been forcibly expelled by Syria from "Northern Israel" (today's Shom•ron), were further forcibly assimilated and absorbed into the surrounding goy•im. The Syrians thereby forcibly obliterated the identity of the former Ten Tribes, irreversibly (Ma•sëkët Qidush•in 70b) "mixing" them (genetically and every other means of distinct identification) to become, within one generation, Arabs (today's Shom•ron•im, "Palestinian" Arabs, Jordanian Arabs, etc.) — indistinguishable from other Arabs to the end of time. Arguments to the contrary are purely racist. éÀäåÌãÄéí (Yᵊhud•im) are defined by the bᵊrit of Tor•âh — namely, their practice of Tor•âh ("you shall know them by their works") – not genetics / race — which is Hitler's definition, in contradiction to Tor•âh's definition.

While the Ethiopian and Indian (Bᵊn•ei-Mᵊnash•ëh) Jews are routinely misidentified as a "Lost Tribe," this is no more the case than that of the Tei•mân•im Jews – the remnant of an ancient merchant colony of the Tᵊphutz•âh, not a genetic element of one of the "Ten Lost Tribes" of northern Israel. The principle difference between the Tei•mân•im and remnants of other ancient merchant colonies is that the Tei•mân•im lived in isolation, almost entirely unaffected by the surrounding civilization, remaining pristine. Other remote and isolated colonies of the Tᵊphutz•âh, also "lost" from tunnel-visioned European-Jewish radar, were more heavily influenced, contaminated and acculturated by their surrounding cultures.

The Roman identification of the primarily Hellenist population of the province of "Ιουδαια," coupled with the Roman preference for those Ιουδαιος who practiced Hellenism instead of Tor•âh, implied a Hellenist people practicing Displacement Theology — professing, while contradicting, Tor•âh—Hellenist "Jews," displacing Tor•âh essentials with their own cultural innovations – in the same tradition as non-Orthodox, Ultra-Orthodox (innovating Medieval European Hellenism) and Christian ("messianic") Jews today. It is only the moderate Orthodox, especially the Tei•mân•im (more particularly the No•sakh Ba•lad•i, Dor Daim), who are the mainstays of Tor•âh.

Like America and other countries, Yi•sᵊr•â•eil, by contrast to "Jews," is a landed-people. Thus, Yi•sᵊr•â•eil refers indivisibly to both the land and the people. Yi•sᵊr•â•eil cannot refer in its full sense either to a holy people without the holy land or to the holy land without the holy people. Either without the other is incomplete. Accordingly (though blurring Jews with Yi•sᵊr•â•eil), Tal•mud correctly defines Jews outside of the holy land as incomplete.

What is a "bᵊrit"?

Unlike Roman-defined "Jews," Israel is defined by a áøéú (bᵊrit) in Tor•âh. A bᵊrit is a contractual pact, a legal contract. A legal contract is defined by the Merriam-Webster Dictionary of Law as: "an agreement between two or more parties that creates in each party a duty to do or not do something and a right to performance of the other's duty or a remedy for the breach of the other's duty." The essentials are [a] an obligation on each party, [b] conditional upon performance by each party, and [remedy for breach of the contract.

What does it mean to be "chosen"?

The term áÌÈçÄéø is found in only 13 instances in the Bible and is never applied until AFTER the "chosen" has undertaken the conditions and obligations of the bᵊrit Tor•âh—which is stipulated in 283 instances in Tor•âh.

In 6.8, we read ":åÀðÉçÇ îÈöÈà çÅï áÌÀòÅéðÅé é--ä"

In Hebrew, there is no word for "liking" something or someone, in contrast to love. Instead, in Hebrew one says it (he or she) "îåÉöÅà çÅï áÌÀòÅéðÈé". In 6.8, Tor•âh is not conveying some supernatural – mythical – relationship that other humans cannot attain, simply that é--ä "liked" ðÉçÇ.

The thinking person will ponder: what about ðÉçÇ found çÅï in the metaphorical (not anthropomorphic) Eyes of é--ä? In other words, why did é--ä "like" ðÉçÇ?

The answer is right in the next pâ•suq (6.9): ‭ ‬ "ðÉçÇ àÄéùÑ öÇãÌÄé÷ úÌÈîÄéí äÈéÈä áÌÀãÉøÉúÈéå; àÆú-äÈàÁìÉäÄéí äÄúÀäÇìÌÆêÀ-ðÉçÇ (lit. ðÉçÇ1 a3 male-human-man6 just5 wholesome4 was2 in7 his8 generations;9 with10 the11 Ël•oh•im12 conducted-his-worldly-affairs14 ðÉçÇ13).

If Tor•âh had intended to convey "ðÉçÇ walked with God," just like ðÉçÇ walked with other humans, and English translations suggest, then it would have instead read: àÆú-äÈàÁìÉäÄéí äÈìÇêÀ-ðÉçÇ.

ðÉçÇ kept é--ä in his heart with every step. That this verb is formed from the same root as Ha•lâkh•âh is also not without its implications.

It was because "with Ël•oh•im walked-around ðÉçÇ" that é--ä "chose" ðÉçÇ!

This should not be even the least surprising. When an employer "chooses" an employee, a person "chooses" a spouse, a coach "chooses" an athlete, etc., (s)he never "chooses" a candidate whose prospects promise to be destructive, rebellious, contrary or generally cantankerous and belligerent. Of course, they "choose" the candidate who demonstrates a positive compatibility!!! No one should be in the least surprised that the "chosen," then, is the one who has demonstrated positive compatibility with the goal(s) of the "chooser"; that é--ä "chooses" those who have demonstrated love, faithfulness and obedience to Him!!!

It also follows from this that the "chosen" are those who have demonstrated love, faithfulness and obedience to é--ä according to His Tor•âh and Ha•lâkh•âh, not a racist, genetic, definition of "the chosen"!!! Ergo, if you do your utmost to practice Tor•âh according to Ha•lâkh•âh, then you are "chosen" – irrespective of your genetics, race or mother's genealogy!!! On the other hand, if you do not do your utmost to practice Tor•âh according to Ha•lâkh•âh, then you are not "chosen" – irrespective of your genetics, race or mother's genealogy!!! (Of course, if you are genuinely "chosen," then, by definition, you will love, be faithful and obedient to é--ä and His Tor•âh according to Ha•lâkh•âh in terms of doing your utmost to support, cooperate with and join the great bulk of "the chosen" – the moderate Orthodox Yᵊhud•im dât•im.)

Ur, Iraq Ziggurat (reconstructed facade)Kharan, Turkey - mudbrick houses with conic roofs unique to Kharan
Click to enlargeUr, Iraq – Ziggurat (modern facade reconstructed around the ancient Ziggurat); the ancient Ziggurat can be seen protruding from top.Click to enlargeKhâ•rân, southern Turkey near their Syrian border – mud-brick houses with conic roofs unique to Khâ•rân (Harran).

At 75 years old, Av•râ•hâm, who was originally from Ur, Iraq, left most of his family in Khâ•rân (Harran), southern Turkey, about 100k north of today's Syrian border, and set out with his wife and nephew south into Kᵊna•an (12.1ff)—because é--ä had led him to do so. Despite a famine that drove them into Mi•tzᵊr•ayim, they returned to Kᵊna•an (12.1ff)—because that's where é--ä had led him. He fought battles with hostile tribes there, because that's where é--ä had led him. Only after all this, in 15.6, are we finally told that Avrâm trusted é--ä, for which, very similar to ðÉçÇ, é--ä reckoned for him as tzᵊdâq•âh. First, one follows é--ä in practice and only then he or she is "chosen."

From birth, Ya•a•qov valued homo sapien civilization and learning, associated with the "tent," while Ei•sau pursued the more Neanderthal-like hunter life of the bush, intermarrying with two similarly uncivilized wives from neighboring tribes. Yet, only after living as é--ä led him all his life, we are finally told of Ya•a•qov's "chosen-ness," renamed Yi•sᵊr•â•eil by his brother whom he defeated (32.29). All his life, Ya•a•qov pursued a life that pleased é--ä; only after that was he "chosen" by the bᵊrit that described his life practice and goals.

Referring back to Dᵊvâr•im 27.11—28.69 & 29.6, pâ•râsh•at Nitzâvim sets forth the bᵊrit governing the Tor•âh of Har Sin•ai in 29.9—30.20. These passages make it crystal clear and explicit that one practices Tor•âh and, only then, is recognized as "chosen."

Har ha-Bayit and Ir DavidIr Dawid - City of David)
Click to enlargeIr Dâ•wid (l.) and Har ha-•Bayit (r.)Click to enlargeIr Dâ•wid – City of David.

Dâ•wid served haSheim for much of his life before he was "chosen" to found the eternal messianic bᵊrit (Shᵊm•u•eil Beit 7.16; Divrei ha-Yâmim Âlëph 17.7; Tᵊhil•im 89.27).

Thus, to be "chosen," one must first exercise his or her own free will to undertake the obligations of the bᵊrit and then, and only then, he or she is regarded as "chosen." One is "chosen" by the process of undertaking the obligations of the bᵊrit.

Since at least as early as 70 C.E., "the world" has hated the "chosen" Jews for rejecting "the world's" religion: first Roman Hellenist idolatry and later the Hellenist displacement theologies (Roman Hellenist Christianity and now Islam as well).

But if you accept the terms of the bᵊritTor•âh—then you don't even have to convert. You, too, can be hated along with the Jews! In fact, Orthodox rabbis refuse may refuse to convert you. Then you can even be hated by some of the Jews! So sign up today… you can be "chosen" too!

Think Inside the Box!!!
Noakh-size 137m barge 135m (shipwrecklog.com)
Click to enlargeModern akh-size (137 m / 450 ft) barge — the 135 m / 440 ft "Jade" (shipwrecklog.com).

Contrary to the English, ðÉçÇ didn't build an "ark." ðÉçÇ built a úÌÅáÈä, i.e. a barge, not an àÈøåÉï. In Israel, a post office box is a úéáú ãåàø (teivat doar, abbreviated .ú.ã).

Foreshadowing the future Ei•sau, Tor•âh tells us (6.1-4) that, in the days of ðÉçÇ, there were äÇðÌÀôÄìÄéí and the áðé-äàìäéí (Bᵊnei-hâ-Ël•oh•im) saw the áðåú äàãí ( Bᵊnot-hâ-âdâm), that they were good, and took them as wives… and the áðé-äàìäéí (Bᵊnei-hâ-Ël•oh•im) mated with the áðåú äàãí ( Bᵊnot-hâ-âdâm), bearing mighty warriors.

Everyone in the world that ðÉçÇ knew (which, almost certainly, insinuated the local or regional "world"; not the entire planet) was a wrong-doer (6.5). It was so bad that é--ä decided to destroy everyone in ðÉçÇ's world. Although ðÉçÇ was permitted to take his wife and immediate family into the teivâh (barge), this was necessitated in order to reproduce and replenish the earth, not because his wife and family supported his ways as the person in Tor•âh recognized as a tza•diq (Khâ•sid?).

Those who become an isolated luminary of Tor•âh as a geir or Yᵊhudi Nᵊtzâr•im often feel isolated and alone Lonesome but you can't imagine the isolation and alone-ness of ðÉçÇ, the lone tza•diq in a world of wrong-doers—even before he went into the barge to emerge later all alone in his world except for his family. So, when you feel alone, think of ðÉçÇ. Additionally, you have an internet lifeline to the Nᵊtzâr•im and, if you can eventually convert, the opportunity to make âliyâh.

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Rainbow Rule

5766 (2006.10)

Everywhere I look, I see the brightest and most highly educated youths, young men and women raised in dati families and educated in dati schools, assimilating into the secular world. During Khag ha-Suk•ot, a dati friend of mine who teaches at Tel Aviv University related to me about an old schoolmate of his. His schoolmate was also raised in a dati home, and they both went through the entire dati school system. His old dati schoolmate is now the Catholic priest who advises the pope about Vatican relations with Israel. If you think your children are safe from Christianity or secular assimilation because they go to Orthodox schools in Israel, then you are fooling yourself.

In the Tᵊphutz•âh, the polls are so hard up to brighten the grave picture that they have to pad their polls by defining "highly committed Jews" as a person who identifies himself or herself as a Jew and belongs to two Jewish organizations. This means that a gentile Christian who identifies himself or herself as a Jew (all Christians identify themselves as "spiritual Jews") and belongs to the Jewish Community Center (gentiles can join the JCC) and, say, an organization for Jewish homosexuals and lesbians, is identified by major polls as a "highly committed Jew." It's nearly impossible to find a Jew among Tᵊphutz•âh "Jews." In the Tᵊphutz•âh, assimilation is nearly complete when polls have to go to such lengths to avoid reporting impending extinction.

Fish don't notice that they're wet. Often, those who are most vociferous and hateful about fighting assimilation are, themselves, the most assimilated. The most pristine of all Jews are the Teimân•im. Even most Teimân•im, however, cannot say that they are like their grandparents in Teiman. How much more so are all other Jews assimilated—Europeanized or Americanized?

Logic NOR gate
Logic NOR gate

Is your practice founded on reasons that withstand your children's education? Rambam didn't mindlessly regurgitate the sages before him, which is all that we hear from rabbis today. Rambam respected logic, and he thought—logically—about Tor•âh. In the Mish•nâh, Ram•ba"m, using PBH, not MH, advocated the principle, ãÄéðÄéí ùÑÀçÄéãÀùÑåÌ òÇì ôÌÄé ñÀáÈøÈà – "laws are to be restored according to logical argument".

Moreover, those who neglect (much less deny or refuse) science "are making themselves blind to the handiwork of é--ä" (Ma•sëkët Sha•bât 75a).

Between the time of Ram•ba"m and the later Medieval, church-dominated European era, the Jews' perspective of (church-imposed) "logic," and grasp of true logic, deteriorated to "supposition, conjecture, opinion, view" – the church's "logic." However, there is a great difference between a modern, logical, historically documented and scientific, perspective on Tor•âh of Har Sin•ai and Medieval European, ritually correct, perspective of Ultra-Orthodox Costume Jewry on Tor•âh of Har Sin•ai.

We must apply the same method as Rambam: logic, not mindlessly regurgitate his Medieval and European perspectives. Do you think Rambam would have made no progress since medieval times? Do you think Rambam would approve of us making no progress since medieval times?

To succeed with our children, we must also recognize that the secular world is NOT identical to the modern world. There is a secular view of Tor•âh as foolish legend, interpreted by medieval rabbis to conform to their, usually European, world-view and frame of reference. But there is also a modern view of applying the principles of logic and science to understand Tor•âh.

Those who perpetuate Medieval perspectives rather than modern logical and scientific perspective place their children at risk of being persuaded by logic and science that Tor•âh is a mere fable.

Logic, historical documentation, archeology and science are not threats to Tor•âh. To the contrary, they illuminate Tor•âh. Logic and science threaten only modern interpreters who mindlessly regurgitate Medieval interpretations. To immunize your children against secularism, as well as against Christianity, you must apply yourselves to learning how logic and science reconcile with Tor•âh; and be prepared to discard interpretations that conflict with the Creator of logic and science in our universe—in other words, interpretations of Tor•âh that actually conflict with Tor•âh. If we are to preserve Tor•âh in our children, then logic and science, not traditional interpretations, must guide our understanding of Tor•âh, just as logic and science of his day guided Rambam.

Ancient cosmology, celestial sphere
Click to enlargeAncient cosmology, celestial sphere

In ðÉçÇ, we find that hâ-ârëtz was drowned in the Ma•bul. Our children learn in science that no flood could have covered the entire world with water; it's scientifically impossible. So, they begin to doubt Tor•âh because the rabbis flunk physics, because they tell our children that their Medieval perspectives are identical to Tor•âh. That is our fault, not Tor•âh's fault.

Today, we know the world is globular. But, in the time that the account of akh was first related, hâ-ârëtz referred to "the civilized world"—of a family: âdâm, then akh. The account in Tor•âh relates akh's perspective, not our modern perspective.

Mabul Black Sea 3D map (historum.com)
Click to enlargePrevailing Theory: sediment and shellfish evidence indicate that the Black Sea water basin turned from fresh to salty about 7600 years ago. The natural levee stretching from today's Dardanelles Strait (via the Sea of Marmara) through Istanbul was breached, apparently the result of flooding by deluge rains, ca. BCE 5,600, enabling the Aegean Sea, backed up by the Mediterranean Sea, to deluge the coastal settlements of northern Turkey (Mabul Black Sea 3D map, historum.com).

Not surprisingly to me, scientists have found the area where the Ma•bul occurred. We know this area as the Black Sea. Scientists know that it was once landlocked, with far less water. The natural land bridge to the west formed a dam against the Mediterranean. It fragmented over time, due to tectonic shifting. Finally, during a torrential rain, the natural land dam, between what is now the Black Sea and the Mediterranean burst; and the Mediterranean flooded the Black Sea. Corroborating this, the ark came to rest on the nearby Ararat Mountains in Turkey. Even if we find this phenomenon wrong one day; nevertheless, it is this type of logical and scientific explanation that has the potential to prove correct one day. No less importantly, it is also this type of explanation that your child can rely on, and relate to, their intelligent and educated peers when they encounter questions in and after high school.

Further, logical explanations can in this way retrieve the 95% of the flock that regurgitating Medieval interpretations, instead of thinking, has alienated from Tor•âh.

In summary, turning to logic, historical documentation, archeology and science to understand Tor•âh results in Tor•âh becoming respected by everyone from scholars to your children. It results in your children being protected from inability to deal with questions that would otherwise destroy their love for Tor•âh. No less importantly, it results in the ability to retrieve those who have strayed from Tor•âh.

You can achieve this by first learning to answer questions about Tor•âh yourself; NOT unthinkingly, from medieval perspectives regurgitated by clerics, but by thinking through the issues, and applying a modern logical, historically documented and scientific perspective. Shᵊm•a Yi•sᵊr•â•eil:

Dᵊvâr•im åÀùÑÄðÌÇðÀúÌÈí ìÀáÈðÆéêÈ(6.7); åÀìÄîÌÇãÀúÌÆí àÉúÈí (11.19)

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Rainbow Rule

5760 (1999.10)

The Bᵊrit akh

9.11 beReishit –
åÇäÂ÷ÄîÒúÄé àÆú-áÌÀøÄéúÄé àÄúÌÀëÆí‫,
åÀìÉà-éÄëÌÈøÅú ëÌÈì-áÌÈùÒÈø‫, òåÉã îÄîÌÅé äÇîÌÇáÌåÌì‫;
åÀìÉà-éÄäÀéÆä òåÉã îÇáÌåÌì ìÀùÑÇçÅú äÈàÈøÆõ‫:

Notice that the only promise is that there will be no recurrence of the îÇáÌåÌì. Clerics who represent that the Bᵊrit akh provides ki•pur (atonement) distort and misrepresent the teachings of Tor•âh. Those who follow such clerics place their trust in the clerics instead of in é--ä and in Tor•âh.

Further details may be found in the chapter "The Bᵊn•ei-akh" in Who Are The Nᵊtzarim? Live-Link (WAN) and Atonement In the Biblical 'New Covenant' Live-Link (ABNC) in our Distance Learning Syllabus (see the appropriate Ministry).

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Rainbow Rule

5755 (1994.10)

Largest ship 2012 Knock Nevis 460m-1504ft (oddstuffmagazine.com)
Click to enlargeLargest ship 2012 – Oil tanker "Knock Nevis," 460 m (1504 ft) (oddstuffmagazine.com) – would hold almost 4 of akh's "arks," end-to-end (not to mention side-by-side and stacking). Click to enlarge.

According to bᵊ-Reish•it (6.15), the úÌÅáÈä was about 150 meters long by 75 meters wide by 45 meters high. akh's úÌÅáÈä would be dwarfed by many of today's cruise liners and aircraft carriers. Yet, it would be impossible to load a pair of every unkosher animal on earth plus seven pairs of all kâ•sheir animals on earth into the largest aircraft carrier. Indeed, many of the species of the world weren't even found in the same hemisphere as akh!

This seems to suggest that "all of the beasts" in chapters 6-7 refers only to animals that were useful, domesticated or harmless, and local. Dangerous wild predators apparently are never intended; neither as being named by man (a task still not completed today), nor being brought aboard akh's úÌÅáÈä (a physical impossibility), nor as being destroyed. What was preserved in akh's úÌÅáÈä or destroyed in the îÇáÌåÌì was more likely all of the homo sapiens genetically most closely related to •dâm and Khaw•âh—all of the "tribe" that •dâm and Khaw•âh knew—along with their domesticated animals.

Some may argue that this stretches the pᵊshut meaning of these pᵊsuq•im. Yet, the Bible is the history of a family, since homo sapiens began to record history; and none have forwarded a more plausible explanation that doesn't require breaking the unchanging laws of the Perfect Creator.

This explanation would also resolve the enigma of 6:4—if •dâm and Khaw•âh were the first two people, then how were there äÇðÌÀôÄìÄéí who were in the land/earth in those days, and also after that, when áÌÀðÅé äÈàÁìÉäÄéí came to the áÌÀðåÉú äÈàÈãÈí and had children by them.

According to the Chronology of the Tanakh, from the "Big ðÈèÈä" Live-Link suggested by Tor•âh, the îÇáÌåÌì occurred circa B.C.E. 2468. Thus, the îÇáÌåÌì doesn't explain such things as the disappearance of the dinosaurs, which scientists think occurred millions of years earlier and, they theorize, was caused by a collision with a meteor.

In this pâ•râsh•âh, the Bᵊrit akh is defined: In return for keeping the akhide laws (derived from 9:3-7), "My bᵊrit, which is between Me and you and every living nëphësh of all flesh, including the livestock and birds": the waters shall never again become a îÇáÌåÌì to destroy all flesh (8-15). The Bᵊrit akh (pop. akhide Covenant) has nothing to do with a "share in äÈòåÉìÈí äÇáÌÈà". Moreover, the "Bᵊn•ei-akh" defines "all goy•im". Clearly it is not "all goy•im", i.e., it is not "Bᵊn•ei-akh", who have a share in äÈòåÉìÈí äÇáÌÈà.

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Rainbow Rule

5753 (1992.10)

Ancient cosmology, celestial sphere
Click to enlargeAncient cosmology, celestial sphere

7:11 — On the 17th day of Secondmonth all of the great underground springs were broken open, likely by an earthquake and àøáú (arubot, lattices) opened in the heavens.

Here, apparently, is the first indication of the breaking up of the cloud cover, forming latticework in the heavens. Blue sky showed through.

Movies have depicted scorners mocking akh as raindrops began to fall out of the blue skies. However, it would seem that when the rain started, no one in that area had seen rain of such magnitude, perhaps during that season; and perhaps not the blue sky – and rainbow – that displayed after.

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äôèøä

(Haphtâr•âh; resolution, wrap-up, dismissal) Tei•mân•it Bal•ad•it:

'éùòéä ð"ã à'—ð"ä ä

The Haph•târ•at Tei•mân•it and Ashkᵊnazit is Yᵊsha•yâhu 54.1 – 55.5,
not the Sᵊphâ•râd•it Yᵊsha•yâhu 54.1-10.

5760 (1999.10)

The Bᵊrit Dawid
(Davidic / Messianic Covenant)

54.9: "For this is the 'Waters of akh' to Me, which I swore, [to refrain] from passing the 'Waters of akh' another [time] upon the land'"

55.3-5: "Then I will cut for you a bᵊrit o•lam [pact of the world-age], of the trustworthy kindnesses of Dâ•wid. Look, the testifier [i.e., the Mâ•shiakh, pop. "witness"] to the le•um•im [nations] I have given him [viz., Dâ•wid], a nobleman and orderer of mi•tzᵊw•ot for the le•um•im. Look, you shall call a goy you don't know, and a goy who doesn't know you shall run to you; for the sake of é--ä your Ël•oh•im, and for the Holy [One] of Israel for He has glorified you."

Here it is made clear that the bᵊrit that is for the world-age—i.e., "all the days of hâ-ârëtz," as long as there is "planting time and harvest time, cold and hot, summer and winter, day and night" (bᵊ-Reish•it 8.22)—is the Davidic bᵊrit that Yᵊshayahu ha-Nâ•vi considered still in the future, to supplement (for those party to the new bᵊrit) the preceding, and limited, Noakhide bᵊrit.

Analysis of the sequence of bᵊrit•ot demonstrates that they are not supersessive—which would imply contradiction, an impossibility. Two realizations are crucial to understanding the bᵊrit•ot. Successive bᵊrit•ot are both:

  1. cumulative in both conditions and promises and

  2. increasingly exclusive concerning parties that satisfy the cumulative conditions and, thus, are acceptable to be party to the bᵊrit and its promises.

Each successive bᵊrit selected an elite family from within the previous group, and imposed both higher standards and greater rewards until, with the Davidic-Messianic bᵊrit, ki•pur is provided for all sho•meir-Torah Jews and geir•im who are recognized by Pᵊrush•im-heritage Israel, i.e., the Pᵊrush•im-heritage Bat•ei-Din stipulated in Tor•âh. The relationship of these bᵊrit•ot is examined in depth in ABNC Live-Link Technology.

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Rainbow Rule

5755 (1994.10)

This week's Haphtâr•âh recalls the Bᵊrit akh. é--ä says to Yi•sᵊr•â•eil (54:5, 9). "For this is îé-ðç (mei akh; water(s) of akh) to Me, as I've sworn about îé-ðç passing over the earth/land again, so I've sworn about being furious with you and rebuking you. For the mountains shall be removed and the hills shall totter, but My kindness shall not be removed from you, nor shall My bᵊrit shalom totter, says é--ä Who has compassion on you."

Compare this with the instruction of Ribi Yᵊho•shua in the 'Amar Ribi Yᵊho•shua' section.

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'àîø øéáé éäåùò

(•mar Ribi Yᵊho•shua)

îúúéäå áòáøéú

Ma•tit•yâhu bᵊ-Ivᵊr•it; Hebrew Ma•tit•yâhu
The Nᵊtzârim Reconstruction of Hebrew Matitᵊyâhu (NHM, in English)

(Redacted, Christianized & corrupted to 4th-century "Matthew")

5755 (1994.10)

Main St., viewed from the Beit K'nesset, K'phar Nakhum (Capernaum)
Main St., Kᵊphar Na•khum, viewed from the veranda of the village Beit-ha-Kᵊnësët. Photograph 1983, Yirmeyahu Bën-David.

One of Ribi Yᵊho•shua's greatest teachings was almost certainly based on this week's Haphtâr•âh. •mar Ribi Yᵊho•shua: "The heavens and the earth/land shall be [ex]changed, but not even one é or one Yemenite Otei title of the words of the Tor•âh of Mosh•ëh shall be [confused and ex]changed until they are all completed" (i.e., observed completely) (NHM 5:18, where see note 5.18.2).

Yemenite Otei is one-half of a mated pair of cantillation points. Yemenite Otei is preceded by (reading right to left) Yemenite Ozeil (Ashkenazi Qadma), in the No•sakh Teimân•i, which is closest to No•sakh Har Sin•ai. Together, this pair delineates, or book-ends, a phrase. Such phraseology is frequently critical in establishing the interpretation intended by the ancient Hebrew authors. If an Yemenite Otei were lost, cantillation mark by itself (without the closing bracket cantillation mate) is read, instead, as cantillation mark—changing a conjunctive into a disjunctive, thereby altering the meaning of the clause and the pâ•suq. An example of Yemenite Otei Yemenite Ozeil (Ashkenazi Qadma) brackets the first two words of bᵊ-Reish•it 6.13. An example of cantillation mark is found only four words later, marking the accented syllable of áÌÈùÒÈø. Notice that the subsequent cantillation mark is a æÈ÷Åó ÷ÈèÈï (two words later, over the accented syllable of ìÀôÈðÇé), not an Yemenite Otei.

Deprived of its Displacement Theology (i.e. that Christ replaced Tor•âh) and the Beit-Din system of mi•shᵊpât (Ha•lâkh•âh in post-Biblical Hebrew) handed down by Mosh•ëh that Tor•âh records, Christianity is revealed to be self-contradictory, and self-destructs. But Ribi Yᵊho•shua's teaching, identical to Pᵊrush•im-heritage Judaism, reveals that the Mâ•shiakh must be the perfect complement to, not a displacing of, the Tor•âh.

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Rainbow Rule

5771 (2010.10)

àÈîÇø øÄáÌÄé éÀäåÉùÑËòÇ


Tor•âh Translation Mid•râsh Ribi Yᵊho•shua: NHM NHM
bᵊ-Reish•it 6.11-13

Now hâ-•ârëtz åÇúÌÄùÑÌÈçÅú before -Ël•oh•im; and hâ-•ârëtz had become filled with çÈîÈñ. ‭ ‬ 12 and Ël•oh•im saw hâ-•ârëtz and look, ðÄùÑÀçÈúÈä; because all bâ•sâr äÄùÑÀçÄéú its way on hâ-•ârëtz.

Learn the mâ•shâl 13.34.1 from the fig tree. Already, when its tender branch has become and it puts forth leaves, you know that ÷ÇéÄõ  24.32.1 is near. 33 Thus, when you see all of these things, you know that the ÷Åõ 24.33.1 is nearing the shᵊâr•im.7.13.1 34 Â•mein! I tell you, in no way shall this generation 24.34.1 have passed by until all of these things shall have become.24.35.1

36 No one knows this day; 24.36.1 none of the malâkh•im,1.20.1 [nor I who am a son of His].24.36.2 No one shall know this day except Eil alone.24.36.3 37 Yet, as it was in the days of ðÉçÇ,24.37.1 so shall it be in the Shᵊkhin•âh 24.27.2 of the bën-â•dâm.24.27.3 38 For so they were in the days that were before the Ma•bul—eating and drinking, being fruitful and multiplying24.38.1

24.32-38a
bᵊ-Reish•it 7.7

ðÉçÇ, with his sons, his woman, and his sons' women with him, went into the teiv•âh because of the waters of the Ma•bul.

until the day ðÉçÇ went into the box. 39 They did not know until the Ma•bul came and picked them all up. Thus shall the Shᵊkhin•âh 24.27.2 of the bën-â•dâm 8.20.2 also be.24.27.3 40 Then if there shall be two 24.40.1 in the field, one is taken and one is left.24.40.2 41 If there shall be two women grinding flour at the mill; one will be caught up and one will be left.24.40.2 42 Therefore keep watchguard 28.20.1 because you don’t see what hour 24.42.1 your •don 22.43.2 is coming. 43 Know this—that if the baal 12.24.0 of the house could see what hour 24.43.1 the thief would be coming he would watchguard, and not tolerate his house to be broken into.24.43.2 44 Therefore you become ready too, because, in an hour you don’t suppose, the bën-â•dâm 8.20.2 is to come.

24.38b-44
bᵊ-Reish•it 9.6

Whoever spills
ãÌÇí äÈàÈãÈí, áÈÌàÈãÈí ãÌÇíåÉ
shall be spilled; because [he is]
áÌÀöÆìÆí àÂìÉäÄéí, òÈùÒÈä àÆú-äÈàÈãÈí.

Then look! … One of those with Ribi Yᵊho•shua, having stretched out a hand, drew out his sword 26.51.1 and, striking the slave 20.27.1 of the Chief Ko•hein 2.4.1 of the Beit ha-Miq•dâsh, severed his ear. 52 Then Ribi Yᵊho•shua said to him, "Return your sword to its sheath, for those who take 21.22.3 the sword fall by the sword."

26.51-52
Ha•phᵊtâr•âh Yᵊsha•yâhu 54.3,9

1QIsa

ëéà éîéï åùîåàì úôøåöé åæøòê âåàéí ééøùå åòøéí ðùîåú éåùéáå… 9  ëéà îé ðåç æàú ìé àùø ðùáòúé îòáåø îé ðåç òåã òì äàøõ ëï ðùáòúé î÷öåó òìéê òåã åîâòåø áê

MT, including Tei•mân•i and ëÆÌúÆø àÂøÈí öåÉáÈà (Aleppo Codex)

For right and left you will burst forth; and your offspring will inherit goy•im, and they shall settle devastated cities… 9 For this is waters of ðÉçÇ to Me: when I swore îÅòÂáÉø the waters of ðÉçÇ over hâ-•ârëtz, so I swore îÄ÷ÌÀöÉó over you and îÄâÌÀòÈø you. (Translation © 2010 by Yirmeyahu Ben-David)

Tar•gum Yo•nâ•tân (pâ•suq 9):

ëÀéåÉîÅé ðÉçÇ ãÈà ÷ÃãÈîÇé ãÀ÷ÇééÅîÄéú áÀîÅéîÀøÄé ãÀìÈà éÄòãåÉï îÅé èåÉôÈðÈà ãÇäÂåÉå áÀéåÉîÅé ðÉçÇ òåÉã òÇì àÇøòÈà ëÅéï ÷ÇééÅîÄéú áÀîÅéîÀøÄé ãÀìÈà éÀçåÌì øåÌâæÄé òÀìÇê åÀìÈà àÇæåÉó áÄéêÓ

Comprehensive Aramaic Lexicon, Hebrew Union College, Cincinnati, Ohio, USA

As in the days of this ðÉçÇ ãÀ÷ÇééÅîÄéú in My Saying before Me, there shall no more be waters of the Ma•bul that were in the days of ðÉçÇ while such [a bën-â•dâm] ÷ÇééÅîÄéú in My Saying on the earth nor shall I shall hover My agitation around you nor threaten you. (Translation © 2010 by Yirmeyahu Ben-David)

Yet, as it was in the days of ðÉçÇ,24.37.1 so shall it be in the Shᵊkhin•âh 24.27.2 of the bën-â•dâm.24.27.3

24.37

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îÀðåÉøÇú äÇîÌÈàåÉø é"ç

Mᵊnor•at ha-Mâ•or by Yi•tzᵊkhâq Abuhav

Translated by Yi•rᵊmᵊyâhu & Yâ•eil Bën-Dâvid.

("The [Seven-Branched] Candelabra of Light"), The Teimân•im Yᵊhud•im' Ancient Halakhic debate, Corrupted into the Zo•har & medieval Qa•bâl•âh

At Beit-ha-Kᵊnësët Morëshët Âvot—Yad Nâ•âmi here in Ra•a•nanâ(h), Yi•sᵊr•â•eil, liturgy for a regular Shab•ât concludes with one of the members reciting the following portion of Mᵊnor•at ha-Mâ•or by Yi•tzᵊkhâq Abuhav

© Yi•rᵊmᵊyâhu Bën-Dâ•wid. All rights reserved. Copies, reproductions and/or retransmissions strictly prohibited.

Part 1 (of 3)

Wine is one of those foods that are beneficial in small amounts but harmful in large amounts. Wine taken with meals helps to digest the food. Wine also uplifts the spirit. However, anyone who uses wine to intoxicate himself is making his body go to waste and destroying his mind; he is inviting catastrophe.

akh came to grief because of wine, bringing disgrace upon himself and curses upon his descendants. The Tal•mud tells us (Ma•sëkët Sunedrion 70a): Oveid of the Jalil expounded: "Speaking of wine, the Tor•âh uses the connective Ivᵊr•it letter vav followed by the letter yod thirteen times. Together these letters form the sound 'woy,' an expression of lament.

"It is written, And akh became a man of the earth, and he planted a vineyard. And he drank of the wine and became drunk, and he undressed within his tent. And Kham the father of Kena•an saw the nakedness of his father, and told of it to his two brothers outside. And Sheim and Yaphet took the coat and placed it upon both of their shoulders and went backwards and covered the nakedness of their father, and their faces were averted, and they did not see the nakedness of their father. And akh awoke from the stupor of the wine and realized what his youngest son had done to him (bᵊ-Reish•it 9.20-24)."

There is a difference of opinion between Rav and Shmueil as to what akh's youngest son Kham had done to him. One says that he had castrated him. The other says that he had sodomized him.

The one who says that Kham castrated akh bases his interpretation on the fact that akh cursed Kena•an, the fourth son of Kham. Since Kham had prevented akh from having a fourth son, it was only fitting that his own fourth son should be the bearer of his accursedness.

The one who says that Kham sodomized akh bases his interpretation on parallel expression. It is written here, And Kham the father of Kena•an saw (Ibid.). It is also written, And Shekhem the son of Khamor saw her. (bᵊ-Reish•it 34.2) in reference to the rape of Dinah.

According to the one who says that Kham castrated akh, the reason for akh's directing his curse at Kena•an, the fourth son of Kham, has already been explained. However, according to the one who says that Kham sodomized akh, why did he single out Kham's fourth son in his curse? Indeed, this one also agrees that Kham castrated akh; he only adds that Kham first sodomized him.

It is written, And akh became a man of the earth, and he planted a vineyard (bᵊ-Reish•it 9.20). •mar Rav Khisda •mar Mar Ukva, Amar Rabi Zakai: "•mar The Holy Blessed One to akh: 'akh, you should have learned from the lesson of •dâm, the original man of the earth, who was banished from Gan Eiden because of wine. ' " This statement coincides with the view that the forbidden Tree of Knowledge was a grapevine, since nothing else brings people as much grief as does wine.

There are, however, other views. Rabi Yᵊhudah contends that the forbidden fruit was wheat grain, grain being called the Tree of Knowledge because an infant speaks his first words only after he has begun to eat grains. Rav Nekhemyah contends fhat it was a fig tree, the source of their downfall participating in their rehabilitation, as it is written, And they sewed together fig leaves, and they made themselves robes (bᵊ-Reish•it 3.7 ).

Part 2 (of 3)

The Tal•mud outlines the proper use of wine (Ma•sëkët Sunedrion. Eiruvin 65a):
•mar Rav Khanan: "Wine was created for no other reason than to console the bereaved and to repay the sinful in this world for any merit they may possibly have, as it is written, Give spirits to the doomed and wine to the embittered souls (Mishlei 31.6)." •mar R' Yitzkhaq: "What is the meaning of that which is written, Do not look at wine in its redness (Mishlei 23.31)? "Do not be drawn to wine that flushes the faces of the sinful in this world but makes them become pale in the world to come. " Amar Rava: "Do not be drawn to wine for there is bloodshed in its aftermath. "

Rav Kᵊhana asked: "Why is it written, New wine (Ho•sheia 4.11) in the abbreviated version of the Ivᵊr•it word but read in the variant full form?" There is an intimation here that if wine is used wisely it helps one attain greatness, but if it is abused it brings destitution."

Rava asked: "Why is the Ivᵊr•it word in that which is written, And wine will devastate the heart of people (Tehil•im 104.15) read in the variant form meaning 'will gladden'?" There is an intimation here that if wine is used properly it brings gladness, but if it is abused it brings devastation. " This coincides with what Amar Rava: "Wine and fine scents have sharpened my wits."

Amar Rabi Amram in the name of Rabi Shim•on the son of Avin, Amar Rabi Khiya the son of Aba, Amar Rabi Khaniya: "What is the meaning of that which is written, Who cries out, who howls, who has quarrels, who has complaints, who has undeserved wounds, the ones who have bloodshot eyes, those that linger over wine, that search out blended wines (Mishlei 23.29-30)?" When Rav Dimi came, he said: "It was said in the Land of Eretz Yisraeil that these verses can validly be read both as a question and answer and as a declaratory statement. In the first meaning, they are asking who are the ones that have all of these and answering that it is the ones who linger over wine. In the alternate meaning, they are saying that those who are bereaved and cry out in pain and those who are quarrelsome and sinful are the ones for whom wine is fitting."

Part 3 (of 3)

The Tal•mud also tells us (Avot 3.10): Rav Dossa the son of Harkinos says: "Oversleeping in the morning, drinking wine at noon, idle chatter, and participating in assemblies of the ignorant cause a person to be banished from the world."

The Tal•mud further tells us (Berakhot 63a): It was taught: Rav Meiir says: "Why are the laws of the Nâ•zir, written next to the laws of the suspected adulteress?" To tell you that whoever sees a suspected adulteress in her disgrace should take on the Nâ•zir vow to refrain from the drinking of wine. " This, of course, is because it was drunkenness that clouded her judgment in the first place and led her to commit adultery. A person who sees the consequences of debauchery would, therefore, be well advised to take the Nâ•zir vow, thereby placing a strong barrier between himself and the potential dangers of wine. The wise person will always take care not to overindulge his thirst for wine. It will save him from disgrace and misfortune.

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