Charles : Bible : Religion

[ Charles : Bible : Religion ] [ Main Menu ]


  


25187


Date: April 10, 2024 at 11:03:48
From: chatillon, [DNS_Address]
Subject: Texan red heifers

URL: link


What do Texan red heifers have to do with Al-Aqsa and a
Jewish temple?
Temple Movement’s plan to sacrifice the cattle seen as
a step towards its goal of building the Third Temple
over Al-Aqsa Mosque.

This picture taken on April 27, 2023 shows red heifer
cows imported from the US by the Boneh Israel
("Building Israel") organisation, feeding at a farm in
Hamadya near the northern city of Beit Shean. With
imported red cows, ancient hymns and growing support,
some nationalist Jews hope to rebuild their temple in
Jerusalem's Old City, at a site at the heart of
Israeli-Palestinian tensions. (Photo by JACK GUEZ /
AFP)
Red heifers imported from the US feed at a farm in
Hamadia, Israel, near the northern city of Beit Shean
in April 2023 [File: Jack Guez/AFP]
By Mersiha Gadzo
Published On 9 Apr 2024
9 Apr 2024
They have come from halfway across the world and are
kept under tight security and raised according to the
strictest rules.

They are five pure red heifers without blemish who have
never worked, given birth, been milked or worn a yoke.

These red heifers and the archaic ritual they were
brought to Israel for stand at the heart of a
convoluted effort by a segment of ultranationalist Jews
to destroy the Al-Aqsa Mosque compound, the third
holiest site in Islam that has stood on a hill in the
Old City of Jerusalem for more than 1,000 years, and
replace it with a “Third Temple”.

This minority ultranationalist push flies in the face
of Jewish scholarship, which rules that a “Third
Temple” can only be constructed after the coming of the
awaited Messiah to usher in the “Kingdom of God” – not
to bring about the return of the Messiah to Earth.

Members of these “Temple Movement” groups are also
pushing to perform Jewish rites in the Al-Aqsa Mosque
compound, in violation of the chief rabbinate’s
longstanding prohibition of the presence of Jews at Al-
Aqsa due to the holiness of the site.

Heifer prophecy
According to the Old Testament, the two Jewish temples
that stood where the Al-Aqsa compound stands today were
ritually pure as were all instruments, garments and
people who served in them.

Red Heifer Jerusalem Al Aqsa Mosque interactive Al
Jazeera

The first temple stood from 1000 to 586 BCE and the
second from 515 BCE to 70 AD and the third temple is
what ultranationalist organisations have been working
towards for decades.

Palestinians have for decades feared Israeli attempts
to take over Al-Aqsa, which is the direction Muslims
used to pray towards before the Kaaba in Mecca.

These fears have been particularly acute since 1967
when Israel illegally occupied East Jerusalem along
with the West Bank and Gaza in the wake of the 1967
War.

Sign up for Al Jazeera
Weekly Newsletter
The latest news from around the world. Timely.
Accurate. Fair.
E-mail address
Subscribe
By signing up, you agree to our Privacy Policy
protected by reCAPTCHA
The growing Jewish presence in Al-Aqsa and frequent
attacks by Israeli security forces on Palestinian
worshippers in recent years have only increased those
fears.

Advertisement

According to the reasoning of ultranationalist Jewish
organisations like the Temple Institute, a “Third
Temple” cannot be built until Al-Aqsa is destroyed and
the compound is purified, along with garments, utensils
and hundreds of men of a particular lineage who have
been trained for the priesthood who all stand ready to
serve in this temple.

The purification is through a mixture of ashes – of a
sacrificed red heifer, red yarn, cedar wood and hyssop
– with fresh spring water collected by ritually pure
children who were born and raised under certain
conditions. This ash mixture is believed to remain
effective for up to 100 years and can be mixed with
spring water as needed.

Israeli police detain a Palestinian worshipper at the
Al-Aqsa Mosque compound in the Old City of Jerusalem
during the Muslim holy month of Ramadan, Wednesday,
April 5, 2023. Palestinian media reported police
attacked Palestinian worshippers, raising fears of
wider tension as Islamic and Jewish holidays overlap.
(AP Photo/Mahmoud Illean)
Israeli police raid the Al-Aqsa Mosque compound and
harass worshippers during Ramadan, on April 5, 2023
[Mahmoud Illean/AP Photo]
The search for these pure red heifers is not new and
has been a main aim of the Temple Institute since its
founding in 1987, with fundraising efforts to breed one
through IVF and to search all over the world for one.

Until 2022, when five red yearlings were donated by an
evangelical farmer from Texas, United States, and flown
to Israel as “pets” to get around restrictions on
importing live animals as livestock at the time.

There have also been efforts to secure and prepare a
plot of land on the Mount of Olives, which overlooks
the Al-Aqsa compound and would enable the priest
overseeing the killing of the heifer to sprinkle her
blood towards Al-Aqsa as detailed in the Bible.

Sacrifice imminent?
There are indications that the Temple Movement is
preparing to sacrifice a red heifer with the support of
the Israeli government, according to the Israeli NGO Ir
Amim.

The Israeli Ministry of Agriculture and Rural
Development circumvented protocols when initially
seeking permission to import red heifers, Ir Amim noted
in a report in August, an example of increasing
government involvement as the US was not a country
approved for the import of live animals from at the
time.

Advertisement

Netanel Isaac, the director general of the Ministry of
Jerusalem Affairs and Heritage, delivered a speech in
honour of the heifers’ arrival at Ben Gurion airport in
September 2022 and admitted that the ministry has been
funding the development of the Mount of Olives area
where the ceremony is planned.

This picture taken on April 27, 2023 shows members of
the Boneh Israel ("Building Israel") organisation
Moriel Bareli (L) and Haim Berkovits feeding red heifer
cows imported by the organisation from the US, at a
farm in Hamadya near the northern city of Beit Shean.
With imported red cows, ancient hymns and growing
support, some nationalist Jews hope to rebuild their
temple in Jerusalem's Old City, at a site at the heart
of Israeli-Palestinian tensions. (Photo by JACK GUEZ /
AFP)
Members of Boneh Israel (Building Israel) feed red
heifers [File: Jack Guez/AFP]
The Ministry of Agriculture, the Temple Institute and
evangelical Christian group Boneh Israel did not
respond to Al Jazeera’s requests for comment before
publication.

In a video from January posted on Boneh Israel’s
website, Michael Samuel Smith, a Christian preacher
working to bring forth the temple prophecy, said the
red heifers they have been raising in Shiloh have come
of sacrificial age.

“This is the first time in nearly 2,000 years a
successful red heifer has come about,” Smith said in
the video. “It is still our opinion the first
successful red heifer sacrifice will take place in the
spring of 2024 around the Passover to Pentecost
timeframe.

“We believe God is going to reveal himself through the
efforts of this future event. It is truly a sign of the
times, most especially for Jews in Israel.”

Passover will be towards the end of April while
Pentecost is in mid-May.

Aviv Tatarsky, a senior Ir Amim researcher, told Al
Jazeera that in Jewish religious texts, a lot of the
details around sacrificing and burning a red heifer are
ambiguous.

Advertisement


“What is this ceremonial burning? What exactly is a red
heifer? This is not at all clear or known because the
last time this was done, it was done when there was a
Jewish temple 2,000 years ago,” Tatarsky explained.

“[I]t’s not 100 percent clear. Until recently, there
were some extreme and fringe people who were working on
it, but very few people took it seriously,” he added.


‘Detestable religious myth’?
Defending Al-Aqsa is an important mission for
Palestinian Muslims, worshippers and armed fighters
alike.

In a speech marking 100 days of Israel’s war on Gaza
which started after the “Al-Aqsa Flood” attack by
Palestinian armed fighters from Gaza, Qassam Brigades
spokesperson Abu Obeida said the red heifers are a
concern, and the potential sacrifice is a “detestable
religious myth designed for aggression against the
feelings of an entire nation”.

Tatarsky sees that the real “danger”, of the Temple
Movement is that it has “worked against Muslim freedom
of worship” and has consistently been “trying to create
some kind of Jewish control” over Al-Aqsa, backed by
the Israeli government.

The Temple Movement says it plans to build the temple
“within years”, according to Ir Amim. Still, Tatarsky
said he does not believe the red heifer ceremony or the
construction of the temple will happen “any time soon”.

Advertisement


He added that, despite state support for a Jewish
presence in Al-Aqsa, he does not believe there is
strong enough backing from the government for a group
to try to destroy Al-Aqsa, which is subject to numerous
agreements and regulations.

As for the heifer sacrifice, “they need recognition of
a very wide public and of decision-makers and all kinds
of important rabbis. If they just do it [in April], it
won’t be recognised, and all their effort will be for
nothing.

“I don’t underestimate the danger of these groups. …
[but] building the temple means a completely different
Israel from today.”


Responses:
[25188]


25188


Date: April 10, 2024 at 20:58:17
From: mitra, [DNS_Address]
Subject: Re: Texan red heifers

URL: https://jbqnew.jewishbible.org/assets/Uploads/432/jbq_432_newmanredheifer.pdf



"What is this ceremonial burning? What exactly is a red
heifer? This is not at all clear or known because the
last time this was done, it was done when there was a
Jewish temple 2,000 years ago,” Tatarsky explained.
"

UNDERSTANDING THE MYSTERY OF THE RED HEIFER RITUAL

STEPHEN NEWMAN The ritual of the Red Heifer described
in Numbers 19:1-22 is considered to be one of the most
mysterious and incomprehensible rituals in the entire
Bible and has troubled interpreters throughout the
ages.

1 The main difficulties are (1) the special power of a
red cow’s ashes to purify someone who came in contact
with a dead body; and (2) the seeming paradox that
while the ashes are able to purify, they defile anyone
involved in their preparation, albeit on a low level.

The Midrash reveals the wise King Solomon to have been
incapable of solving the mystery of the Red Heifer
(Kohelet Rabbah 8:5). In talmudic literature, the Red
Heifer is viewed as the quintessential example of a
hok, a rule that cannot be understood through logic and
reason (TB Yoma 67b). However, this never prevented
attempts to find some rationale for the ritual. Rashi,
at the end of his commentary to Numbers 19:22, cites a
midrashic reading from Rabbi Moshe ha-Darshan, which
states that the Red Heifer ritual is an atonement for
the worship of the Golden Calf. It is as if the mother
cow seeks to expiate the sin committed through her
offspring.

This also explains why the Bible states that Aaron's
son Eleazar was to perform this service, his father
being unworthy of the task due to his involvement with
the Golden Calf. The color red is associated in the
Bible with sin (Isa. 1:18), so a red cow symbolized the
ultimate sin of the Israelites, worshiping the Golden
Calf. In order to grasp the significance of the Red
Heifer, we must first understand the meaning behind the
Golden Calf.

Why did the Israelites choose that particular animal as
an object of worship?

According to Ezekiel 20:7, the enslaved Israelites
defiled themselves with the idols of Egypt, a land
where rites associated with bulls and cows were
widespread.

2 Some scholars identify the Golden Calf with worship
of the goddess Hathor, one of the leading Egyptian
deities.

3 Hathor was worshipped throughout Egypt, had many
functions,

4 and was depicted either as a beautiful woman with
bovine ears and
horns or as a red cow.

5 Hathor was sometimes referred to as "Nub the golden"
or as "heifer with the golden neck".

6 Rabbi Moshe ha-Darshan explains that the rite of
burning the Red Heifer was a reenactment of the
destruction of the Golden Calf at the foot of Mount
Sinai. Thus, it would also be a symbolic destruction of
the cow-goddess Hathor which the Golden Calf
represented.

This explains why a red cow was needed for the ritual.
The association with cleansing from impurity as a
result of contact with a dead body is understood, in
light of the midrash in TB Avodah Zarah 22b, to mean
that the Israelites attained a state of immortality at
Mount Sinai, but lost it due to the sin of the Golden
Calf. Purification from death thus involves rejection
of the Golden Calf, demonstrated by the ashes of the
Red Heifer. This is especially powerful considering
that Hathor was associated in Egypt with life and
reproduction.

7 Seen in this light, the Red Heifer ritual is a total
rejection of Egyptian idolatry and its symbols. The
ritual includes burning a crimson thread (Num. 19:6),
which may likewise be a negation of the magic scarlet
ribbon worn by the cow-goddess that was thought capable
of binding evil spirits.

8 This interpretation of the Red Heifer may enable us
to fathom a seeming paradox: that while purifying the
afflicted, contact with the ashes of the heifer defiled
those who were themselves ritually clean (Num. 19:21).
One explanation could be that since the Red Heifer
represented Egyptian idolatry, the state of impurity
resulted from contact with an idol. In the Bible we
find Jacob instructing his family to cleanse themselves
after discarding the idols they had with them (Gen.
35:2), and impurity due to contact with idols is
mentioned in the Mishnah (Shabbat 9:1).

The impurity contracted by dealing with the Red Heifer
is therefore associated with the idolatry that it
represented. By combining traditional rabbinic
interpretation (particularly that of Rabbi Moshe ha-
Darshan) with our knowledge of ancient Egypt, a new
understanding of the Red Heifer ritual and its
mysteries is possible.


Responses:
None


[ Charles : Bible : Religion ] [ Main Menu ]

Generated by: TalkRec 1.17
    Last Updated: 30-Aug-2013 14:32:46, 80837 Bytes
    Author: Brian Steele