Grace Seeker
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I appreciate the response. I agree that who started "it" is irrelevant. What is relevant is how one responds to whatever "it" is.
I even understand the sense of needing to protect one's self -- certainly that was the USA's response after 9/11 (which explains going after Al Qaida, not Iraq, but I'm getting off topic). Though, I'm not sure that I see said positions as biblically based as you do, but that may be the difference in a Jewish interpretation of the Bible and Christian. I cannot shake Jesus' commentary:
Now, honestly, I cannot find in scripture any place where it is written "hate your enemies", so perhaps Jesus is commenting on the popular understanding of the time, not on the Torah. Or perhaps, as I am learning here, he is commenting on the Oral Law. In any case, it sounds strikingly familiar to the point of the article you cited:
And so, we behave toward our brother, our neighbor in ways that build them up rather than tear them down. And we even rebuke our of love, not out of hate in one's heart.
But I gotta love Jesus' ethic who says this applies not only to one's brother or one's neighbor, but even one's enemies. And who also went so far as to say that even the despised Samaritan was to be considered a neighbor in the context of these verses. Yes, I see that it is a different ethic than what you feel is necessary to keep as Jews. Thank-you for the education.
I even understand the sense of needing to protect one's self -- certainly that was the USA's response after 9/11 (which explains going after Al Qaida, not Iraq, but I'm getting off topic). Though, I'm not sure that I see said positions as biblically based as you do, but that may be the difference in a Jewish interpretation of the Bible and Christian. I cannot shake Jesus' commentary:
"You have heard that it was said, 'Love your neighbor and hate your enemy.' But I tell you: Love your enemies and pray for those who persecute you,
Now, honestly, I cannot find in scripture any place where it is written "hate your enemies", so perhaps Jesus is commenting on the popular understanding of the time, not on the Torah. Or perhaps, as I am learning here, he is commenting on the Oral Law. In any case, it sounds strikingly familiar to the point of the article you cited:
Certainly the ethic of Jesus differs from many of the other ethics presented whether it be one of returning "eye for eye, tooth for tooth", the self defense model, or Rabbi Michael J. Gotlieb's rebuking is a form of love model. Of course, rebuking can be a form of love. And indeed I think when one reads all of Leviticus 19:17 that we can see the Rabbis point that love is not about an emotion, that it is an action:[Leviticus]19:18 instructs us, "Rebuke your neighbor." In other words, love, as expressed by the Bible, is not uncon-ditional.
Leviticus 19
15 " 'Do not pervert justice; do not show partiality to the poor or favoritism to the great, but judge your neighbor fairly.
16 " 'Do not go about spreading slander among your people.
" 'Do not do anything that endangers your neighbor's life. I am the LORD.
17 " 'Do not hate your brother in your heart. Rebuke your neighbor frankly so you will not share in his guilt.
18 " 'Do not seek revenge or bear a grudge against one of your people, but love your neighbor as yourself. I am the LORD.
And so, we behave toward our brother, our neighbor in ways that build them up rather than tear them down. And we even rebuke our of love, not out of hate in one's heart.
But I gotta love Jesus' ethic who says this applies not only to one's brother or one's neighbor, but even one's enemies. And who also went so far as to say that even the despised Samaritan was to be considered a neighbor in the context of these verses. Yes, I see that it is a different ethic than what you feel is necessary to keep as Jews. Thank-you for the education.