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Row over messianic red heifer divides Jewish activists
Mail & Guardian ^ | Peter Beaumont

Posted on 08/24/2015 1:10:24 PM PDT by Sir Gawain

Row over messianic red heifer divides Jewish activists

14 Aug 2015 00:00 Peter Beaumont

Agriculture researchers, US exporters and Jewish activists clash over plans to breed a holy cow.

Sacred, profane: Hopes to build the Third Temple at the Temple Mount, or Noble Sanctuary, are controversial. (Spencer Platt/Getty)

A Jewish activist group dedicated to controversially building a Third Temple in Jerusalem has launched a crowdfunding appeal to scientifically breed the perfect “red heifer”.

The creation of a Third Temple as a permanent house in which God will reside was prophesied by Ezekiel, and most orthodox Jewish authorities regard it as something miraculous. A minority, however, believe humans can build the temple.

An obstacle for the latter group is the belief that, because the world is impure, individuals wishing to ascend to the Temple must be cleansed with water mixed with the ashes of a pure red heifer that has been ritually sacrificed.

  For decades, Jews subscribing to this belief have engaged in a painstaking, unsuccessful search for the miraculous red cow, in Hebrew, the para aduma. The most recent candidate was discounted last year. Now, however, the Jerusalem-based Temple Institute announced it plans to breed its own red heifer using surrogacy techniques.

The plans have sparked friction with local Israeli agricultural authorities and United States-based investors in a business importing Red Angus embryos (a breed of Aberdeen cattle) to raise for meat, after the activists appeared to have attached themselves to the import business.

The institute hopes to raise $125 000 for the red heifer project to pay for embryo implantation, care and identification of candidates to breed the perfect red heifer in Israel. The Temple Institute was founded in 1987 by Rabbi Yisrael Ariel. It has recreated artefacts for rituals required in a new temple; the red heifer would be the most ambitious.

Visits discouraged
Controversially, it has been active in encouraging its supporters to visit the Temple Mount, known to Muslims as the Noble Sanctuary, causing friction at the site. The more conventional view of orthodox rabbis is that Jews should not visit the site.

The cow is mentioned in the book of Numbers and other religious texts and has significance to strands of messianic Christianity and Judaism.

Jewish religious teaching holds that, between the time of Moses and the destruction of the Second Temple, only nine perfect red heifers were discovered. The 10th – according to the Jewish philosopher Maimonides, whose writings in this case the group adheres to – will herald the coming of the messiah.

  The cow’s ashes, burned with fragrant wood and scarlet wool, are used to produce mei niddah – purifying water that allows people access to the temple’s most sacred places.

For messianic Christians, the red cow is also seen as a precursor to the building of the Third Temple, an act that would herald the “end times”.

In recent years, the Temple Institute has twice announced the discovery of the perfect red cow as part of a more conventional search, only to reverse its view.

In a video to launch the initiative – which has raised $22 000 in 12 days – Rabbi Chaim Richman, head of the Temple Institute’s international division, said: “... this project is nothing less than the first stage of the reintroduction of biblical purity into the world, the prerequisite of the building of the holy temple.

“For 2 000 years we’ve been mourning for the destruction of the holy temple; the future is in our hands.”

To that end, the institute announced in its publicity material, it had launched a scheme to import frozen Red Angus embryos to a cattle ranch in Israel’s Negev. All of which, it appears, is news to some in the company investing in a scheme to import the embryos from Texas and which, thus far, has produced only male offspring.

For while Negev cattle rancher Moshe Tenne has reportedly done a deal with the institute to allow access to the Red Angus project, others involved seem to have been caught angrily unawares, with some US donors to the meat-raising project threatening to withdraw.

  “[The Temple Institute] didn’t bring over embryos, we did everything without thought of the Temple,” Yaakov Moskowitz, head of research and development at Ramat Negev regional council, told Israeli paper Haaretz.

  Religious experts have pointed out a more esoteric and perhaps insoluble problem with the institute’s plans to make red heifers. Ritual requires the priest who sacrifices the heifer to be ritually pure as well. Lacking the mei niddah from a previous holy cow, that seems like a catch-22. – © Guardian News & Media 2015



TOPICS: Current Events; Judaism; Religion & Culture; Theology
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To: Sir Gawain; NYer; Morgana; Salvation; HiTech RedNeck; agamemmnon; onyx; betty boop; Alamo-Girl
Please *PING* other believers.

Hint: 2 Thessalonians 2:3-4 ...Anti-Christ sets himself up in the temple
See also Daniel 9:27, Matthew 24:15-16...

Note that a red heifer is necessary to consecrate the Temple, Numbers 19; note also the writings of Maimonides...

Curiouser and curiouser.

21 posted on 08/24/2015 10:52:46 PM PDT by grey_whiskers (The opinions are solely those of the author and are subject to change without notice.)
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To: Salvavida

A respected take on evangelical bible theology has it that the Jewish rites will reappear, though now serving as well understood memorials to the work Christ performed.


22 posted on 08/25/2015 7:05:42 AM PDT by HiTech RedNeck (Embrace the Lion of Judah and He will roar for you and teach you to roar too. See my page.)
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To: Phinneous

Obviously, contemporary observant Jews and Christians tend to disagree on many things theological today.

We still say “God bless you.”


23 posted on 08/25/2015 7:07:23 AM PDT by HiTech RedNeck (Embrace the Lion of Judah and He will roar for you and teach you to roar too. See my page.)
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To: HiTech RedNeck
I know Hi-Tech, just funnin' with the first (silly rabbits) guy. May the One True G-d be revealed כמים בים מכסים as water covers the earth.
24 posted on 08/25/2015 7:41:48 AM PDT by Phinneous (Who reads the religion thread at 7am?)
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To: Phinneous

Before I became a believer, I used to give Christians a hard time with the “Oh, you believe in three gods” line... but I realized in the end, that it wasn’t that over-simplifiable.

“One God comprising three persons” is the official Christian theology. And this even ends up being respected in a different context by observant Jews, namely that of what gentiles can be validly viewed as non-polytheists and thus eligible to perform certain services for observant Jews. This concept of God is likened to that of a wheel with three spokes, which remains one wheel.


25 posted on 08/25/2015 7:47:52 AM PDT by HiTech RedNeck (Embrace the Lion of Judah and He will roar for you and teach you to roar too. See my page.)
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To: Sir Gawain; Yomin Postelnik
They've done this before. Years ago a farmer and preacher in Mississippi tried to breed a whole herd of red heifers so one would always be available, but for whatever reason, it didn't work out.

Not to worry though. Mashiach will come and the Holy Temple will be rebuilt.

26 posted on 08/25/2015 8:22:41 AM PDT by Zionist Conspirator (The "end of history" will be Worldwide Judaic Theocracy.)
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To: HiTech RedNeck

Literally and actually, at best (just to give you our party line,) within Orthodox Judaism, a minority opinion, that is to say, leniently-leaning Orthodox rabbis**, rule that a trinity is considered a “Partnership” and not separate entities. The prevailing opinion is that Christian theology has 3 separate gods (G-d forbid.) Thus an Orthodox Jew will not even enter a church.

**For a brief expose on rabbinical opinion, for the many, oh so many FReepers interested, and as an example, take the beard. There are Orthodox opinions that one must not remove his beard at all (generally a minority of Chassidic rabbis with the authority to make rulings within Jewish law,) a prevailing majority who agree that a beard can be removed but without a razoring of the face (ie, straight edge, Gillette, etc) ONLY with an electric shearing-type cut or a scissors. Ergo, you see different Jews with different customs. Take a light switch on the Sabbath, all agree that it is akin to “lighting a fire in your tents,” etc. And no Orthodox Jew, world-wide, would operate a light switch on Shabbos. The take-away is that G-d devised it that way so that we would adapt to any community where we would eventually be found. Many Jews, many diverse lands, many customs, all Orthodox, that is, following the Torah in its entirety as able (I say that less someone says, “But you can’t sacrifice anymore... Nu? Nu? Can’t keep the Law... Yes we do keep the Law and there are those who are perfectly righteous.)

I wrote about it before in a comment thread, that the Trinity is, (l’havdil,) obvious to Jews with even a basic understanding of Kabbala and Chassidic philosophy, a gross misunderstanding of how G-d manifests for Himself, as it were, while crating/sustaining our world, as it were, and as He exists within the world (nature, etc,) as it were. Clear as a bell. You would jump to say “But these are Father/son/spirit!!” But don’t jump into Jewish mysticism without a primer. It’s so essential. Look above where I wrote just a few Hebrew words. Scripture in the Holy Tongue. G-d “spoke” and created the world (G-d has a mouth??!) There are such exact and unfathomably-deep meanings behind every word and letter in Hebrew, that jumping to a KJV in English is absolutely ludicrous.

I know the (joking) many, many FReepers who aren’t really reading these threads won’t care, but perhaps you’d be interested in a couple of primers. One on Hebrew letters and their Divine energy, and one a series, at your leisure, on history of the Oral Law as explained with an understanding of Kabbala and Chassidic philosophies. (slightly above beginner and by a South African, if you can stand the accent.)

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=fBy71RLx8xQ

and the history series:

(if you pastor, you will be able to derive oceans of sermons from this:)

http://www.chabad.org/multimedia/media_cdo/aid/680636/jewish/The-Kabbalah-of-Jewish-History.htm


27 posted on 08/25/2015 8:23:02 AM PDT by Phinneous (Who reads the religion thread at 7am?)
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