cnorman18
Critical Thinker
- Joined
- Oct 22, 2007
- Messages
- 304
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It does, and I see your point; and what it tells me is that I'm not making myself clear.
Let me throw out a few statements and see if it helps:
My beef with today's Christians is not that these events took place; no one living today can be held responsible for them.
My complaint is that the attitudes and doctrines that enabled and legitimized those events are still being taught, and that the role of those teachings in the tragedies of the past has never been acknowledged.
That is not true of all Christian denominations; it is, however, unquestionably true of the Christians on the other forum to whom my remarks were addressed.
I know of nothing analogous in any branch of Judaism, including the Orthodox.
I do not wish to separate myself, or liberal Judaism, from the Orthodox in any way, except in the matter of Biblical interpretation; and that only because I am unfamiliar with their teachings. I have no particular reason to believe that they are objectionable; I do not know.
I do not believe that the Orthodox are responsible for the actions of Israel any more than are liberal Jews.
I do not regard Israeli actions to be a religious issue.
I do not regard the actions of Israel, by and large, to be objectionable anyway. Israel is certainly not perfect, and has been responsible for misdeeds, crimes, and occasionally even atrocities; but no more so than any other nation, and less than most. Its human rights record is not perfect, but is light-years ahead of its neighbors'.
In any case, none of this is relevant to a discussion of Judaism any more than American misdeeds and atrocities are relevant to a discussion of Christianity (I believe that there is a higher percentage of Christians in America than of Jews in israel; I shall look it up, and if I'm wrong I shall report it).
No doubt there are other objections to my remarks that I have not dealt with here; please point them out, and I shall try to do so.
As some have perhaps noticed, I am perfectly willing to concede a point or even admit when I discover that I am entirely wrong (e.g., in my thread on "Slavery in the Bible"). I am no less willing to do so here.
All that said, I stand by my primary point; that Judaism ought not be judged by the actions or teachings of other religions, but only by its own; and that it is illegitimate to attribute beliefs to Jews that they do not hold.
I am glad, at least, that we seem to have left the matter of making assumptions about Jewish beliefs from a superficial reading of the OT behind. That, by my assessment, is progress.
My thanks to everyone for their responses, and my apologies for my own failure to communicate my thoughts effectively.
I have no opinion on Israel.
What you're saying is you don't speak for any Jewish views but your own, right?
So how is it fair that I'm supposed to accept that there's a distinction between the Jewish views but in your OP you're lumping all the entire Christian church into one group knowing full well there's at least as many if not many more sects of Christians but you make no such distinction there? At least make a distinction between both.
It's like your saying that all Jews ain't this way, but all Christians are that way, i.e. "us liberal Jews don't have anything to do with Israel (your example, not mine), it's those Orthodox Jews" but say Christians can't be saying that in regards to the events you listed in your OP, even though the two situations are remarkably similar.
I hope that makes more sense to you.
It does, and I see your point; and what it tells me is that I'm not making myself clear.
Let me throw out a few statements and see if it helps:
My beef with today's Christians is not that these events took place; no one living today can be held responsible for them.
My complaint is that the attitudes and doctrines that enabled and legitimized those events are still being taught, and that the role of those teachings in the tragedies of the past has never been acknowledged.
That is not true of all Christian denominations; it is, however, unquestionably true of the Christians on the other forum to whom my remarks were addressed.
I know of nothing analogous in any branch of Judaism, including the Orthodox.
I do not wish to separate myself, or liberal Judaism, from the Orthodox in any way, except in the matter of Biblical interpretation; and that only because I am unfamiliar with their teachings. I have no particular reason to believe that they are objectionable; I do not know.
I do not believe that the Orthodox are responsible for the actions of Israel any more than are liberal Jews.
I do not regard Israeli actions to be a religious issue.
I do not regard the actions of Israel, by and large, to be objectionable anyway. Israel is certainly not perfect, and has been responsible for misdeeds, crimes, and occasionally even atrocities; but no more so than any other nation, and less than most. Its human rights record is not perfect, but is light-years ahead of its neighbors'.
In any case, none of this is relevant to a discussion of Judaism any more than American misdeeds and atrocities are relevant to a discussion of Christianity (I believe that there is a higher percentage of Christians in America than of Jews in israel; I shall look it up, and if I'm wrong I shall report it).
No doubt there are other objections to my remarks that I have not dealt with here; please point them out, and I shall try to do so.
As some have perhaps noticed, I am perfectly willing to concede a point or even admit when I discover that I am entirely wrong (e.g., in my thread on "Slavery in the Bible"). I am no less willing to do so here.
All that said, I stand by my primary point; that Judaism ought not be judged by the actions or teachings of other religions, but only by its own; and that it is illegitimate to attribute beliefs to Jews that they do not hold.
I am glad, at least, that we seem to have left the matter of making assumptions about Jewish beliefs from a superficial reading of the OT behind. That, by my assessment, is progress.
My thanks to everyone for their responses, and my apologies for my own failure to communicate my thoughts effectively.