One thing is for sure, this Rabbi of his in Motown should steer clear of terming others as Apikorsim, lest his own lack of faith, albeit due to lack of study, be exposed.
The bottom line is - and its not a bad question - what makes Christianity wrong?
Is it because they believe that G-d can take a physical form?
Is it because they reject Chazal?
Is it because they reject halacha, etc.?
Is it because they persecuted us for thousands of years?
Is it beacuse their books are full of contradictions?
I mean, if someone takes a literal view of Kol Yachol, that would leave a possibility for G-d to take human form... but is that necessarily keneged haTorah?
6 comments:
So, HT, What are your thoughts on Bozo's post?
One thing is for sure, this Rabbi of his in Motown should steer clear of terming others as Apikorsim, lest his own lack of faith, albeit due to lack of study, be exposed.
How do you define Kol Yachol?
The bottom line is - and its not a bad question - what makes Christianity wrong?
Is it because they believe that G-d can take a physical form?
Is it because they reject Chazal?
Is it because they reject halacha, etc.?
Is it because they persecuted us for thousands of years?
Is it beacuse their books are full of contradictions?
I mean, if someone takes a literal view of Kol Yachol, that would leave a possibility for G-d to take human form... but is that necessarily keneged haTorah?
Theoretically:
So the question is: Is G-d limited by what Torah says he can (and "is allowed" to) do?
Anon,
What does Torah say he is limited to? Where does Torah limit Him?
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