Faith vs Truth (2)

The following questions need to be answered with regard to faith:

  • What is faith?
  • Is faith a rational quantifiable phenomenon, or is faith an abstract human experience?
  • Is faith a) a wish/ hope for something to be true b) an affirmation of something we know to be true or c) something that is completely unrelated to truth, and in fact, I can have faith in something that I know to be false

Based on the above:

  • Is faith a “place holder” for truth, ie we will have faith until I no longer need it, because I know now that that statement x is true?
  • Is there an “expiry date” on faith? Ie I will only have faith for y amount of time, where after if the statement is not known to be true I will declare that statement to be false?

These questions will serve as a background for the real purpose of these posts, examining the Jewish tradition and its relationship to faith.

To be continued…

Layout of Blog II

Two people have complained previously about lines being squashed on the website. Since I am concerned about all my readers being able to read my blog I want to try and find out why this problem is occuring for these people.

First of all, is this problem occuring to any other people who have just not left a comment?
Second, is the problem occuring on every single post, or just some posts?
Third, if you are having this problem, please let me know what resolution you are viewing the website in, what browser you are using and what post you were reading

I want to determine whether this problem is on my side (ie the way my html is set up) or on the readers side (browser, resolution settings, etc). If there are any wiz kid HTML experts out there who have any suggestions, please let me know.

Also when leaving a comment please provide some contact details so I can email you back to see if we can fix this problem

Quotes 3

Here are some beautiful quotes from Rav Kook. I cannot recall where I got them from, however I think they are probably from Rav Moshe Lichtman’s translation of R’ Simcha Raz’s book "An Angel among men".

"I write not because I have the strength to write, but because I do not have the strength to remain silent"

"Whoever said that my soul is torn, spoke well. It is certainly torn. We cannot imagine a person whose soul is not torn. Only an inanimate object can be whole. A human being however is filled with conflicting aspirations, and an inner war rages within him continuously. Man’s true mission to fuse the torn fragments of his soul by means of an all inclusive concepts, an idea whose magnitude and eminence encompasses everything else, bringing it to complete harmony"

"Just as poetry contains rules, so too, rules contain poetry"

If anyone knows the source for these quotes, or has any quotes from Rav Kook that they would like to share, please leave a message in the comments.

Faith vs Truth (1)

The following questions are the ones that really need to be examined in the course of any discussion on faith. These questions have bothered, perplexed, amazed and enthralled greater thinkers than I since the dawn of time. In essence these questions (in my understanding) form the foundational underpinnings for the entire philosophical / scientific en devour.

1. What is truth? Does truth in fact exist?
2. How do we know / recognize that a particular statement is true?
3. What mechanisms can be used to test to see if a particular statement is true?
4. If the truth is found, can it be documented / quantified?

The above questions can all be asked by replacing the word “truth” with “false”. For by definition if the concept of truth is said to exist then so too the concept of falsehood.

Definitions of Faith

Definitions of Faith

Some brief generic definitions of faith are required before examining the relationship between Judaism and Faith. The following are various statements taking from numerous on line resources that will provide such a generic definition:1

1. confident belief in the truth, value, or trustworthiness of a person, an idea, or a thing.
2. belief that does not rest on logical proof or material evidence.
3. loyalty or allegiance to a person or thing; esp. fidelity to a promise.
4. the theological virtue defined as secure belief in God and a trusting acceptance of God’s will.


Some synonyms / concepts that can be applied to faith are the following:2

acceptance, allegiance, assent, assurance, belief, certainty, certitude, confidence, constancy, conviction, credence, credit, credulity, dependence, faithfulness, fealty, fidelity, hope, loyalty, reliance, stock, store, sureness, surety, troth, truth, truthfulness


The previous statements while not being the definitive definitions of faith will serve as a backdrop for further discussion.

1. [http://www.spirithome.com/definif.html]
2. [http://thesaurus.reference.com/search?q=faith] Roget’s New Millennium™ Thesaurus, First Edition (v 1.1.1)
Copyright © 2005 by Lexico Publishing Group, LLC. All rights reserved.

Definitions of Truth

Definitions of Truth:

1. Conformity to fact or actuality.
2. A statement proven to be or accepted as true.
3. Sincerity; integrity.
4. Fidelity to an original or standard.
a. Reality; actuality.
b. often Truth That which is considered to be the supreme reality and to have the ultimate meaning and value of existence. 1


1. a fact that has been verified; "at last he knew the truth"; "the truth is that he didn’t want to do it"
2. conformity to reality or actuality; "they debated the truth of the proposition"; "the situation brought home to us the blunt truth of the military threat"; "he was famous for the truth of his portraits"; "he turned to religion in his search for eternal verities"
3. a true statement; "he told the truth"; "he thought of answering with the truth but he knew they wouldn’t believe it"
4. accuracy: the quality of being near to the true value; "he was beginning to doubt the accuracy of his compass"; "the lawyer questioned the truth of my account" 2


Synonyms for truth:

reality, accuracy, actuality, authenticity, axiom, case, certainty, correctness, dope, exactitude, exactness, fact, facts, factualism, factuality, factualness, genuineness, gospel, gospel truth, honest truth, infallibility, inside track, law, legitimacy, maxim, naked truth, nitty-gritty, perfection, picture, plain talk, precision, principle, rectitude, rightness, scoop, score, straight dope, trueness, truism, truthfulness, validity, veracity, verisimilitude, verity, whole story 3


1. http://dictionary.reference.com/search?q=truth

2. [http://www.google.com.au/search?hl=en&q=define%3A+truth&btnG=Google+Search&meta=] Under entry [http://wordnet.princeton.edu/perl/webwn?s=truth]

3. http://thesaurus.reference.com/search?q=truth Under entry Roget’s New Millennium™ Thesaurus, First Edition (v 1.1.1) Copyright © 2005 by Lexico Publishing Group, LLC. All rights reserved.

Prelude to Faith, Doubt and Heresy

I just finished writing exams, (hence there being no post for the last 2 days, due to studying). As a prelude to my upcoming posts on Faith, Doubt and Heresy, I would just like to paste a pertinent quote that will serve as a backdrop for further discussion for these as well as other related topics. The quote is from "The Hopelessness of a Ban (TTP-173) by : Rabbi Nathan Lopes Cardozo" and can be found here.

It is well known that the heretic Uriel Da Costa (1585-1640) from Amsterdam was several times put under a ban by the leaders of the Portuguese Spanish Synagogue in Amsterdam and consequently committed suicide. Concerning this most unfortunate and tragic case the famous sage Rabbi Baruch Halevi Epstein, author of the Torah commentary Torah Temima made the following comment:

‘This phenomenon, to our sadness, seems to repeat itself in every generation. Whenever people quarrel over matters related to ideology and faith, and a person discovers his more lenient opinion is in the minority, all too often although his original view differed only slightly from the majority the total rejection he experiences pushes him over the brink. Gradually, his views become more and more irrational and he becomes disgusted with his opponents, their Torah and their practices, forsaking them completely. Instead of instructing him (Da Costa) with love and patience and extricating him from his maze of doubts by showing him his mistake, they disparaged him. They pursued him with sanctions and excommunication, cursing him until he was eventually driven away completely from his people and his faith and ended his life in a most degrading way (Makor Baruch, chapter 13;5.)’

This upcoming series of posts is something that I have being wanting to do for a long time, so G-d willing there will be some posts for you the readers, over the next few days and weeks. Stay tuned and please keep commenting. I have read all the comments and have appreciated all the praise, insight and references. Keep it up


Quotes 2

Here are two more quotes that I feel offer a keen insight into human nature:

"The smart way to keep people passive and obedient is to strictly limit the spectrum of acceptable opinion, but allow very lively debate within that spectrum – even encourage the more critical and dissident views. That gives people the sense that there’s free thinking going on, while all the time the presuppositions of the system are being reinforced by the limits put on the range of the debate."Noam Chomsky1

"A stupid man’s report of what a clever man says can never be accurate, because he unconciously translates what he hears into something he can understand"Bertrand Russell2 [http://www.quotationspage.com/quote/27667.html]


1 Avram Noam Chomsky (born December 7, 1928) is the Institute Professor Emeritus of linguistics at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology. Chomsky is credited with the creation of the theory of generative grammar, often considered the most significant contribution to the field of theoretical linguistics of the 20th century. See further [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Noam_Chomsky]

2 Bertrand Arthur William Russell (b.1872 – d.1970) was a British philosopher, logician, essayist, and social critic, best known for his work in mathematical logic and analytic philosophy. See further [http://plato.stanford.edu/entries/russell/]

Transgression for its own sake / Aveiro Lishmo

There is a concept in Judaism of “transgression for its own sake” / “aveiro lishmo”. This topic although not spoken of frequently, definitely has sources in traditional & modern Jewish thought. I would like to outline a few sources that I have found recently found that discuss this concept. (for further discussion see Major Trends in Jewish Mysticism, Gershom Scholem pg, “Holiness of Sin” page 315 – 319)

“Love and Sacrifice” Source: R. Zadok ha-Kohen of Lublin, Takkant ha-Shavin, no. 5 s.v umitzad ha-ahavah
[The Religious Thought of Hasidism by R’ Norman Lamm pg 593]


"Through love [of God] one may enter into matters such as this (ie./ to fulfill God’s will even to the detriment of one’s own spiritual well-being) by means of a “transgression for its own sake” as did Yael [who according to the Talmud, had a physical relationship with Sisera]. Though we dot not find any explicit dispensation in the Torah for this action. Rather, it is from this incident that we derive this [teaching that a “transgression for its own sake is greater than a mitzvah done not for its own sake”] 20 That is, because of her own great desire and love for the salvation of Israel. And in order to destroy such a great enemy of God as Sisera, she did not take into consideration the [gravity of the] transgression, and the foulness that he cast into here although, as the Sages say, she regarded the act as wrong. 21

Nevertheless, she sacrificed her own spiritual wellbeing 22 for this, for she though that although there was no way in which such action could be permitted, and should be punished for it, nevertheless, better that she should go down to perdition so long as an enemy of God be removed from the world thereby.

Esther acted in the same way, as we find when stated to Mordechai, and if I perish I perish (Esther 4.16) 23 That is, [she willing to risk] even the destruction of her soul, God forbid, in that she transgressed [in marrying Ahaseurus], with the intent of saving the Jewish people"


20 That is, this principle is derived not from the Torah itself, but from this incident in the Book of Judges, which describes the part Yael played in the ultimate salvation of the Israelites from Sisera. According to the Talmud in Nazir 23b, Jud 5:24, “Let Yael, the wife of Heber the Kenite, be blessed above all woman,” refers to the superiority of Yael’s action, in engaging in such relations, over the Matriarchs Sarah, Rachel, and Leah, who each urged their respective husbands to take a concubine out of jealousy (so Rashi there). Their actions thus constitute “mitzvot [done] not for their own sake,” and are inferior to Yael’s, which was a technical transgression done for the sake of bringing about the salvation of Israel.

21 That is the pleasure derived from physical relations with the wicked is unpleasant in an extreme degree for the righteous. The word zuhama, translated here as “foulness,” refers to the sin of Even and serpent in the Garden of Eden; the sepent case his foulness into Eve, and this foulness was not cleansed until the time of the Sinaitic Covenant

22 Literally, “her soul”
23This midrash seems to be amalgam of one of Esther verse in Megillah 15a, and one of the hikaret tikatet in Sanhedrin 64b

A practical illustration of this point in modern times by a figure revered by Orthodox adherents until today is the following case of the Rogatchover Gaon learning of Tishabav.

R’ Zevin’s Ishim v’Shittos pp. 91-92:

"All his days were an unbroken chain of Torah study. His mouth literally never ceased speaking Torah in the simplest sense, not as a metaphor. They say that it is for this reason that he nver had his hair cut and would grow them wildly, so he should not need to sit for that time with his head uncovered and cease Torah study. Even on 9 Av he would speak Torah withoutletup. He would usually be 9 Av in his birthplace, Rogatchov, because during those days fell his father’s yahrzeit, for which he would come from Dvinsk to Rogatchov. All the people of the city, great and small, would come to greet him and converse with him, and he would spend the fast talking divrei Torah with them. Furthermore, when his first wife died in Warsaw and the gedolim of the city came to be menachem avel, he would lecture before them for hours in Torah. None of the consolers dared to remind him of the aveilus. His uncle, however, once noted this to him and he responded:

"’Certainly, this is an avira, and when I get punished on my other sins they will punish me on this sin as well. But I will accept the punishment on this sin with love and will, and the Torah is worth being punished over it..’"


[http://www.aishdas.org/avodah/vol01/v01n019.shtml#17 by R’ YGB (http://rygb.blogspot.com)]

An interesting idea that I have not seen anyone make the connection to, is that of zealotry as an "aveira lishmo". The follwing source gives expression to this idea [http://www.halachabrura.org/parsha-e.htm]

“The Gemara says that if a zealot asks Bet Din if he should kill the sinners, they deter him. The Rosh infers from this that there is no mitzvah to kill them, only permission. But the Ran holds that it’s a mitzvah, only Bet Din does not tell anyone to carry it out, because the mitzvah is only for “zealots”, and the fact that someone asks shows that he isn’t a zealot. “ ("Pinchas One who lies with a non-Jewess – Zealots kill him" based on Birur Halacha, Sanhedrin 82a)


My thought process on the above source was as follows:

Surely a person is bound to following the ruling of the beis din in a situation where a psak has been giving[?]. How can it be that this man has fulfilled a mitzvah by killing the perpetrator, but yet if he had stopped to ask the beis din the question, his act would have been forbidden, possibly a sin[?]

I hope the readers can provide some insight into this enigmatic aspect of our tradition.

Frum Support

I came accross this website on the internet quite by accident. I am not sure of how many people are aware of it, but I feel it is a valuable resource for moral support and information regarding numerous health related issues. It is called Frum Support. The website can be found at [http://www.frumsupport.com/].

The following is a summary of what the website is about

"Frum support is a website where people from the Jewish frum (orthodox) community suffering from debilitating diseases and serious medical conditions and their families, can draw support from others in like situations. All information posted to the forum is anonymous except if you choose to have your profile visible to others. There is no cost to"


It is a noble project that covers topics ranging from "Endocrinology, Diabetes & Metabolism " to "Depression, Eating Disorder, Mood Disorder, OCD (Obsessive Compulsive Disorder)". If anyone has a need for the services or if people just want to join to give "chizuk" to those who are affected by these unfortunate situations, it would be a great chessed project to consider and a great mitzvah to publicize the website. There is unfortunately a large number of people who do not know who to turn to in such situations, and we in the Orthodox community should not feel we are immune to the issues either.