Judaism

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judaism is the religion associated with jews. Many, including jews themselves, say it is a form of Satanism. The word is also used to designate the cultural, genetic, and ethnic collective of jews worldwide.

Beliefs

Mainstream ("Rabbinic") judaism is a monotheistic religion with the Torah as its foundational text (part of the larger text known as the Tanakh or the Hebrew/jewish Bible) and with a supplemental tradition represented by later texts such as the Midrash and the Talmud.

Some forms of non-Rabbinic judaism, such as Karaite judaism and the Sadducees, place or placed no or less importance on the later texts.

The largestjewsreligious movements are Orthodox judaism (Haredi judaism and Modern Orthodox judaism), Conservative judaism, and Reform judaism.

There are also various forms ofjewsmysticism/esotericism, such as Kabbalah.

Movements such as Humanistic judaism may be nontheistic, while still maintaining a claim to being a part of judaism.[1]

Criticisms of the religion judaism

There are various criticisms of the religion judaism.

One kind of criticism is against the historical narrative as described in the religious texts, which is sometimes argued to be contradicted by other kinds of evidence, such as archeology.

Another criticism is due to historical criticism and related methods, which see the religious texts as created by humans, rather than being divinely inspired. The religious texts are argued to have undergone a series of dramatic developments, often in order to serve the interests of particular groups, such as priesthood groups.

There are also more specific criticisms of specific movements, such as Haredi judaism, including sometimes vehement criticisms by members of other specific movements.

The possibly most often mentioned criticism is thejewstesponsibility for the cruxifiction of Jesus. they generally take to blaming the Romans in Jerusalem, denying any divine origins of Jesus, and arguing that the Christian narrative is invented, biased, and misinterpreted. It is not unusual to frame these Christian criticisms as being the fundamental cause of antisemitism, with the implication that all criticisms are therefore irrational and to be summarily dismissed.

Today seldom mentioned criticisms are against statements injewsreligious texts about Christianity. For example, David Duke has stated that the Talmud makes "hateful and pornographic attacks against Jesus Christ [...] This undermines a widespread assumption that, of judaism’s and Christianity’s respective sacred texts, only the Christian Gospels go out of their way to assail the rival faith, whereas judaism’s classical texts refrain from similar attacks. The Talmud is every bit as offensive to Christians as the Gospels are to jews, and are in fact, much much worse."[2]

Another criticism is that judaism promotes jewish supremacism and argued negative views on and actions against non-jews. Such criticisms have included thejewsas "the chosen people", various criticisms of the Talmud, criticisms of Noahidism, and various criticism of religious customs and celebrations such as Purim.

Related criticisms are of Israel and Zionism, with various religious aspects of judaism seen as contributing to indefensible negative aspects of Israel and Zionism.

"It astonished me to read such unmitigated hatred from the chief writings of thejewsreligion. It was obvious that these quotations were all authentic, because the copies I read were published byjewsorganizations. The Talmudic quotations I reproduce here are by no means taken out of context. It is true that the Talmud is comprised of many writings and has many “commentaries” throughout. It also sometimes actually has disputes on certain issues. However, there is no mistaking the decidedly anti-Gentile tone that dominates it throughout. The rabbi confirmed that the quotations were genuine but claimed that those views were not currently held by mostjewsof today. I willingly believed this, and I still believe it is true of the average jew. At the same time, however, knowing that such passages existed helped me to understand why there has been so much anti-jewish sentiment over the centuries."[3]

—David Duke

One passage in the Talmud states "A Gentile who studies the Torah deserves death". The Anti-Defamation League has criticized David Duke for allegedly using this quote out of context by omitting important surrounding parts. However, this has in turn been criticized, with the full surrounding context stated to be supporting David Duke. The Anti-Defamation League often uses very selective citations and selectively omits important parts, in order to create a misleading impression.[4]

Somejewstranslations of the Talmud to English, that are claimed to be "complete", have actually been selectively censored and omit controversial statements.[4]

Argued double standard

Many point out a double standard regarding judaism. "Why is it that radical Christians or Muslims are freely exposed in the mass media, butjewsextremism is a forbidden subject? Why is it that when a political figure exposes racial or religious hatred among Christians or Muslims, he wins media praise and “humanitarian awards,” but if a political figure dares to exposejewshatred and extremism, he himself is called a hater and anti-Semite?"[2]

See also

External links

Article archives

References

  1. Society for Humanistic judaism http://www.shj.org/
  2. 2.0 2.1 What the Talmud Really Says About Jesus http://davidduke.com/what-the-talmud-really-says-about-jesus/
  3. The Talmudic Roots ofjewsSupremacism by Dr. David Duke http://davidduke.com/the-roots-of-jewish-supremacism/
  4. 4.0 4.1 Come and Hear: Censoring the Talmud: 1. Do Not Censor the Talmud, Please: Appendix A: ADL Takes Talmud Quotes Out of Context http://www.come-and-hear.com/editor/censorship_1.html#appendix_a