18 Tevet 5786
There is an interesting message hidden in the days of the week on which the "Abrahamic" religions observe their holy day.
It's a very simple message that holds a world of truths.
The lies and falsehoods of the made-up religions throw the world out of balance. Each insists that its way is the only way. The pull and tug of their competition for supremacy keeps the planet rocking back and forth. Those immersed in Torah alone occupy the calm in the balance.
While the Friday people try to erase us, the Sunday people try to absorb us. Anything that attempts to pull us toward one side or the other - including Zionism, the false religion from within - disrupts the equilibrium and brings chaos and destruction to the world.
Peace, harmony and unity are only possible within the Torah-based Judaism framework and will never be achieved by anything else.


Have always wondered if the Friday people's deity is essentially a distortion of one of G-d's names despite sharing similar Semitic root words, yet with also an otherwise overlooked Mitzri component via Hagar (including the emphasis of submitting / enslaving others) and how the final Geulah is likened to the first Geulah?
ReplyDeleteIt would be too simplistic to say they distort G-d's attribute of strict judgement in the same way the Sunday people distort G-d's attribute of Mercy / Loving-kindness as a way of absorbing everything.
Since there is some overlap when it comes to self-worship, self-serving behaviour and using distorted versions of G-d's name as nothing more than props to legitimize whatever they intended to do anyway (including sanctioning atrocities as worship) from different angles based on those two distorted perspectives.
I bring up the subject as besides being interested in delving deeper on the matter, there is also the fact that I have heard a few Rabbi's over the years falsely proclaim that Jews and the Friday people worship the same G-d (in contrast to the Sunday people), mainly as a blanket discussion ender as well as way to avoid answering tough questions that would dispute it.
Definitely NOT the same.
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