  |                  Talmud Bavli Tractate                    Shabbat 31a
  |                    |                                  |                                          A would-be Jewish convert asked Hillel the Elder to teach                    him the entire Torah "on one foot."
  Hillel replied,                    "What is hateful to you, do not do to your fellow. This is the                    entire Torah. The rest is commentary. Go and study."                    
   |                                                                              |                  Talmud Bavli Tractate                     Yoma 9b
  |                    |                                  |                                          Why was the First Temple destroyed? 
  Because there                    was idolatry, promiscuity and murder. 
  But the Second                    Temple...at which time they were occupied in Torah, mitzvoth                     and charity... why was it destroyed? 
  Because                    there was baseless hatred between them.                
   |                                                                              |                  Talmud Bavli                    Tractate  Arachin 15a
  |                    |                                  |                                          Malicious talk kills three people: the speaker, the                    listener, and the one who is spoken of.                
   |                                                                              |                  Talmud Bavli                    Tractate Berachot 40a
  |                    |                                  |                                          Said Rabbi Judah in the name of Rav: 
  A person is                    forbidden to eat before he feeds his animals, for it is                    written (in Deuteronomy 11:15), "I will send grass in your                    fields for your cattle" and only after that, that you may eat                    and be sated" 
   |                                                                              |                  Talmud Bavli                    Tractate Sanhedrin 37a
  |                    |                                  |                                          Whoever saves a single life, is as though he saved an                    entire world. 
   |                                                                              |                  Talmud Tractate                    Sotah 10b
  |                    |                                  |                                          One should cast himself into a fiery furnace rather than                    shame his fellow in public.              
   |                                                                                                      Click Here                    to Order Rabbi Arthur Segal's Books:
  The                    Handbook to Jewish Spiritual Renewal:  A                    Path of Transformation for the Modern                    Jew
  A                    Spiritual and Ethical Compendium to the  Torah                    and Talmud
 
  
  |    |                        |                                                                                                                                                 |                           Let's Talk Torah and                          Talmud
  A Holiday Message                          From Rabbi Arthur Segal's Jewish Spiritual Renewal                          October                     2010
   |                       |                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                           Shalom My Dear                                Chaverim, Talmudim v'                                Rabbanim:
                                 In last month's message I                                wrote of the myriad September Jewish Holidays; the                                last being Simchat Torah, or, Celebration of                                Torah. 
  So chag Samaiech Simchat Torah, and                                of course, a L'shana Tova.
  It began on the                                eve of September 30 and continues through the                                first day of October. 
  As it is October's                                only Jewish Holiday, this month I have an                                opportunity to answer questions about Torah and                                other Holy Scriptures.                                
   |    |                                                                                                                                                                                                                   Years                                ago I set out on a journey to reclaim my                                Judaism.
  Along that path, I discovered that                                the reason I'd "lost" it was that I hadn't been                                understanding much Judaism at all...and I didn't                                even know it!
  To not leave you utterly                                confused, I need to explain the difference between                                Hebraism, also known as the religion of the                                Sadducees, and Rabbinic Judaism, known as the                                religion of the Pharisees.                             |                                                                                                               |                               |   |                                                              |                                                                                                                                                                             Judaism                                or Hebraism? That is the                                Question.
  The word Sadducee comes                                from the name of Solomon's Temple's High                                Priest Zadok. They believed in the Torah, priestly                                intercessors, animal and grain sacrifices, and a                                G!d Who punishes in this lifetime.
  The                                word Pharisee, comes from the word "perushim"                                which means to separate. Pharisees believed in                                prayer with no intercessors, afterlife in corporal                                resurrection, a messiah, and the entire Jewish                                Bible including the TaNaK, the Talmud, Midrash,                                and other Jewish texts. 
  Their leaders                                today are called Rabbi (my master), a word derived                                from the Aramaic, "Rav," which means                                "master."
  A Rav is one who has                                mastered the Jewish texts and has been granted                                semicha ordination by his Rabbi. A non-ordained                                teacher is called Moreh or Morah.                                
    |                                                                                                               |                               |   |                                                              |                                                                                                                                              The Talmud's explanation                                of Judaism begins with the destruction of                                Solomon's Temple in 586 B.C.E. and Ezra's Temple                                in 70 C.E.
  We are traditionally taught that                                the Talmud - called oral Torah - was given to                                Moses at the same time that he received the                                written Torah on Mt. Sinai 3,300 years                                ago.
  With the Temples destroyed the Hebrews                                had no way to continue their Hebraic worship. They                                needed a new way to worship and a new life                                philosophy. So the Rabbinate and Judaism evolved                                during their Babylonian captivity.
  They                                weren't about to negate the entire Torah, but they                                did reinterpret it into Talmudic Rabbinic Judaism.                                 For example, the Talmud teaches us the Jewish                                way to celebrate Passover, which is quite                                different from what is outlined for Hebrews in the                                Torah. 
  The Talmudic teaching of the                                rabbis is what we know as Judaism today, and it is                                a faith of a G!d of love, forgiveness, kindness,                                mercy and peace, and Who wishes for us to treat                                our fellows that way.
  All of Torah is                                about kindness, or "chesed." The Talmud                                teaches that Torah is about loving our                                fellow. The rest is commentary and we must "go and                                study." 
  |                                                                                                               |                               |   |                                                              |                                                                                                                                              The Jewish Bible                                is the TaNaK, an acronym standing for                                the first letters of Torah, Nevi'im and                                Ketuvim. It contains the Five Books of Moses, the                                Prophets and the Writings.
  The Oral Torah                                was originally the Mishna, which comes from the                                Hebrew word for "repeat," as in,the Oral Torah was                                repeated orally. 
  It is written in the                                Hebrew language, but the Rabbinic commentary on                                Mishna - Gemara - is written in Aramaic. Gemara                                comes from "mara," which means to learn or                                study.
  The Mishna is succinct. The                                Gemara is lengthy, often moving off                                topic. Together, they were put to writing as the                                Talmud circa 500 C.E.
  Midrash                                are parables that fill in gaps in the TaNaK,                                for example, what was life like on Noah's Ark.                                Like the TaNaK, the Talmud and Midrash teach                                ethical and spiritual lessons. 
  I give you                                a more fully exacting explanation in the                                introduction to my book, A Spiritual and Ethical Compendium                                to the Torah and Talmud.
  I invite you                                to go and study.                          
  |                                                                                                                                        Many                                Blessings,
  Rabbi Arthur                                Segal
  |                                                                                                               |                               |   |                                                              |                                                                                                               |                                 The                                Torah and Talmud
  A Modern                                Interpretation
   In                                my years of Rabbinic Counseling I've noticed that                                many modern Jews are not as familiar with the                                Torah and the Talmud as they might be.
  They                                find it difficult to understand and interpret in a                                way that makes sense and has relevance to their                                lives in the modern world. 
  The spiritual                                disconnection that this causes inspired me to                                write a second book, A Spiritual and Ethical Compendium                                to the Torah and Talmud.
 
  This                                book instills Jewish values and an understanding                                of the Torah and Talmud's teachings in plain                                English and from a modern point of view.                                
  The                                Talmud teaches that the Torah is about loving our                                fellow man and that we are to ''go and study.''                                The rest is commentary. 
  A                                Spiritual and Ethical Compendium to the Torah and                                Talmud clarifies the commentary                                and allows one to study the Torah and the Talmud                                to learn the Judaic ideals of love, forgiveness,                                kindness, mercy and peace.
  A Spiritual and Ethical Compendium                                to the Torah and Talmud is only $24.99 (plus                                S&H) when you purchase your copy from my online bookstore.                                
  That's a $5.00 savings from the Amazon                                price, and certainly                                a small amount to pay for the priceless wisdom                                contained within the Torah and the                                Talmud.
                                                                Click                                the link below to                                order.                                                                
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