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GOSPEL DOCTRINE
New Testament Supplements
by Daniel
Rona
Lesson Number 9 - "Seek Ye First the Kingdom of God."
A look at Judaism reflects a great history of instructions and traditions in giving charity and making offerings to assist the less fortunate. Philanthropy is a basic part of Biblical life, and hence, Jewish life.
"The obligation to help the poor and the needy and to give them gifts is stated many times in the Bible and was considered by the rabbis of all ages to be one of the cardinal mitzvot of Judaism."
"In the Bible there are several laws which are in effect a sort of tax for the benefit of the poor. Among these are leket, shikhhah and pe'ah, according to which the farmer could not pick up the ears of corn that had fallen during the harvest, or go back for forgotten sheaves or reap into the corners of the field. All these he was required to leave for the poor. Every third year the farmer was also required to put aside a special tithe for the needy. The institution of the Sabbatical Year and Jubilee was in order "that the poor of your people may eat" as well as to cancel debts. The Torah also insists that the needy be remembered when the Festivals are celebrated, e.g., "You shall rejoice before the Lord your God, with your son and daughter, your male and female slave, the Levite in your communities, and the stranger, the fatherless and the widow in your midst." The Bible expects Israel to be aware of the needs of the poor and the stranger because Israel itself had experienced this situation in Egypt."
"Although the idea of charity and almsgiving is spread throughout the whole of the Bible, there is no special term for it. The rabbis of the Talmud, however, adopted the word (zedakah) for charity and it is used (but not exclusively so) throughout rabbinic literature in the sense of helping the needy by gifts. The word has since passed into popular usage and is almost exclusively used for charity. The term hesed ("loving-kindness"), which is used widely in the Bible, has taken on the meaning of physical aid, or lending money without interest."
"Everybody is obliged to give charity; even one who himself is dependent on charity should give to those less fortunate than himself. The court can compel one who refuses to give charity --- or donates less than his means allow -- to give according to the court's assessment."
"To give a tenth of one's wealth to charity is considered to be a "middling" virtue, to give a 20th or less is to be "mean"; but the rabbis decided that one should not give more than a fifth lest he become impoverished himself and dependent on charity."
"The rabbis were especially concerned about the manner in which alms are to be dispensed. The prime consideration is that nothing be done that might shame the recipient. About one pious man it was related that if he met a man of good family who had become impoverished he would say, "I have heard that a legacy has been left to you in such a place; take this money in advance and pay me back later." When the man accepted it he then said to him, "It is a gift."
"Maimonides lists eight ways of giving zedakah which are progressively more virtuous: to give
(1) but sadly;
(2) less than is fitting, but in good humor;
(3) only after having been asked to;
(4) before being asked;
(5) in such a manner that the donor does not know who the recipient is,
(6) in such a manner that the recipient does not know who the donor is; and
(7) in such a way that neither the donor nor the recipient knows the identity of the other.
"The highest form of charity is not to give alms but to help the poor to rehabilitate themselves by lending them money, taking them into partnership, employing them, or giving them work, for in this way the purpose is achieved without any loss of self-respect at all."
"This last way of helping the poor is known as gemilut hasadim, "dispensing kindness." This term also includes aiding people who need help and encouragement and includes such matters as visiting the sick and looking after them and inviting needy guests to eat at your home. One of the greatest acts of charity is to provide for orphans." (Encyclopedia Judaica Jr.)
Collecting offerings in a Jewish community is similar to a Latter-day Saint custom of "Fast Offerings."
"In every town where there are Jews they must appoint 'charity wardens,' men who are well-known and honest that they should collect money from the people every Sabbath eve and distribute it to the poor . . . We have never seen or heard of a Jewish community which does not have a charity fund" (Maimonides). Because the charity warden was involved in the collection and distribution of public funds, special care was taken to ensure that there should not be even the slightest suspicion of dishonesty. The actual collection had to be made by at least two wardens who were not permitted to leave each other during the course of it. The distribution of the money was to be made by at least three wardens in whose hands lay the decision as to whom to give and how much. Besides money, food and clothing were also distributed. Apart from maintaining the poor, the fund was also used for redeeming captives and dowering poor brides, both of which were considered to be among the most virtuous of acts. In addition to the fund there were also communal soup kitchens at which any person with less than enough for two meals was entitled to eat."
"When necessary, accepting charity is perfectly legitimate and no shame attaches itself to the poor who are otherwise unable to support themselves. However, one is advised to do everything in one's power to avoid having to take alms: "Make your Sabbath a weekday (by not eating special food or wearing good clothes) rather than be dependent on other people." Great Sages did physical labor in order to support themselves and remain independent. A person who is really entitled to take charity but delays doing so and consequently suffers rather than be a burden to the community will surely be rewarded and not die before he reaches a position in which he will be able to support others. About such a person it was written: "Blessed is the man that trusts in the Lord" (Jeremiah 17:7)."
"Throughout History the Jewish community has always been sensitive to the needs of the poor and established institutions to provide them with relief. This was a form of taxation which nobody could refuse if he wanted to be considered a member of the community. During the Middle Ages in some towns "meal tickets" were distributed to the needy entitling them to eat at various homes, and there is hardly a synagogue even today without a charity box. Before festivals, charity is distributed so that the poor will also be able to enjoy the Holy Day; this is especially true of Passover when the charity is given a special name, ma'ot hittim, "money for wheat" to make mazzot."
"Many associations were formed for charitable purposes, particularly to look after the sick and provide proper burial. Some communities set up hospitals; this has its result in modern times in institutions like the Mt. Sinai Hospital in New York which was established by Jews. Often the charitable society would own and maintain a hostel where needy wayfarers could spend the night."
"Nowadays many communities integrate all their charitable endeavors into one central agency. In the State of Israel the needs of the poor are looked after by the Ministry of Welfare, which is a government agency. However, a great deal of private, non-governmental charity work still goes on." (Encyclopedia Judaica Jr.)
In modern times the principle of tithing has been modified to reflect the charity and "alms" given. It is a general understanding that 3 percent of one’s income should be used for charitable purposes. In the religion of the Moslems, Islam, also has charity as one of its basic five pillars or tenants of faith. The charitable contribution is generally considered to be 2 percent. The five pillars are underlined below.
Islam, the name given by Muslims to their religion, means "submission" (to the will of God). Muhammad, a seventh century C.E. merchant of Mecca, and founder of Islam, is considered by believers to have been the last of a line of prophets starting with Adam, and the one who revealed to the world the divine doctrine of the Koran, said to have been given him from God by the angel Gabriel. Acceptance of Muhammad's teaching implies belief in Allah as the only god; in the angels; in the divine inspiration of the holy books (including the Bible); in the prophets (including such Jewish and Christian figures as Abraham, "the merciful friend" and the first to profess monotheism, Moses, and Jesus); in the day of judgment; and in Allah's predetermination of good and evil. Muslims are obliged to recite their creed and to pray five times daily; to fast from dawn to sunset in the month of Ramadan; to pay legal alms (charity); and to go on at least one pilgrimage to Mecca, site of the holy Black Stone, the Ka'aba." (Encyclopedia Judaica Jr.)
Both to Moslems and Jews as well as to many Christians, the acts of prayer are accompanied by mannerisms that "show" the person is in the act of prayer. Various forms of singing (chanting), bobbing (moving), washing, covering heads and women wearing aprons have come down through the ages.
Prayer(s) (Hebrew: Tefillah), (are) expressions of praise, thanksgiving, petition and confession made by individuals or groups and directed toward God."
"The Bible assumes that God exists, that He cares about individual human beings, and that He hears and is moved by their prayers. It also assumes that man has an inborn, spontaneous yearning to communicate with God and that he turns to Him "instinctively," without being commanded to do so. Sometimes man's turning to God comes from his feeling of helplessness, his fear of the future, and his need to petition God for help. Sometimes he wishes to communicate his thankfulness to God because he feels that God does care about him, or because he feels that God has saved him from danger. Often in the Bible, someone expresses his own sense of failure and his desire to be forgiven. Several times a biblical personality finds it necessary to communicate his disapproval of God's planned action, and to urge Him to "change His mind."
"In general, biblical prayer was spontaneous and personal; the more formal aspect of worship probably consisted of bringing sacrifices at set times and with a fixed ritual. It seems, however, that even during the period of the First Temple there were already some prayers whose wording was set and which were always recited on certain specific occasions. Some scholars, basing themselves on Psalms 55:18 and Daniel 6:11, believe that the practice of worshiping at least three times a day may be traced back to the biblical period."
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Even though there is no specific biblical verse which commands daily prayer services . . . the rabbis of the Mishnah (c. 200 C.E.) and the Talmud assumed that Jews pray at least three times a day, once in the morning (Shaharit), once in the afternoon (Minhah) and once in the evening (Ma'ariv, sometimes called Arvit). They also speak about an additional (Musaf) service which is to be recited on Sabbaths and holidays after Shaharit, and about a fifth service (Ne'ilah) which is recited on the Day of Atonement shortly before darkness falls." (Encyclopedia Judaica Jr.)The Hebrew word, Kavvanah is the direction, intention or concentration of prayer. So that we can better understand the customs of others in their form of prayer and worship, the following quotation has been included.
"Because the times of the services and even the words which were to be recited, were fixed, there was a danger that prayer would lose its vitality and become mere routine. In order to overcome this danger, the rabbis urged the worshiper to meditate before he began to worship, to think of "before Whom he was standing" in prayer, and to create a new prayer every time he worshiped. They placed great emphasis on the emotional aspect of prayer, calling it "service of the heart" and stressing that God appreciates most the pure intentions of the worshiper. Later authorities sought to embellish the fixed prayers with original poems . . . or with short introductions (kavvanot) whose purpose was to direct the heart and mind of the worshiper. Melodic chanting was used as a means of increasing kavvanah and worshipers were taught to sway as they prayed, thus throwing their entire body into the worship." (Encyclopedia Judaica Jr.)
To the Jews, a prayer circle (Minyan) is arranged. It usually consists of at least ten participants. There is a tradition that if there are only nine persons, the prayer circle can be completed with a combined agreeable feeling that the "Presence of the Lord" or "the Spirit of the Lord" is with them. In any case, there is still a place for individual prayer.
Most prayers in Judaism are pre written. Many are created from the Psalms. It is common that the prayers were and still are said in the Hebrew language. In fact, the Hebrew language was largely preserved because of prayers and of course, the scriptures. There is also a recent trend of thought questioning the pre written structure of prayers. "The rabbis placed great emphasis on the relationship of the individual to the community during prayer. Almost all prayer, for example, was written in the first person plural --- "Forgive us," "Teach us," "Bring us to our Land." Although private prayer was certainly permitted, the individual was urged to join a congregation (minyan) when he prays and to incorporate the needs of the minyan in his prayers."
"A minyan was said to consist of at least ten adult Jewish males. Without the presence of a minyan many important prayers --- Kedushah , Kaddish, the Priestly Benediction, the reading of the Torah and the Haftarah and the hazzan 's repetition of the Amidah -- cannot be recited. Recently, the Conservative movement in Judaism has granted its congregations permission to include women in the minyan. Reform congregations generally have not insisted on the presence of a minyan. When they have, women have usually been counted." (Encyclopedia Judaica Jr.)
"The rabbis assumed that God understands all languages; therefore they said that prayers may be recited in any language which the worshiper understands. Hebrew, however, was given a special status --- it may be used even though the worshiper does not understand it. Over the centuries some widely accepted prayers (Kaddish, Kol Nidrei for example) have been written in other languages. The Reform movement and, to a lesser extent, the Conservative movement, have encouraged prayer in the language understood by the worshiper. Recently, however, all movements have stressed the significance of Hebrew, not only as the language of prayer which ties the Jew to his past, but also as a means of uniting him with fellow Jews throughout the world."
"Modern Jewish thinkers, even those with a deep faith in God, have raised many questions about prayer, its effect upon God, and the person who is worshiping. Can the individual pray with real kavvanah when he is reciting words written by other people who lived in another era and when he is asked to recite these same words at set times every day? Do prayers, written so long ago, reflect the moral and religious ideas of modern Jews? Does God really "hear" prayer; does He, or can He, change the processes of nature (for example, heal a dying person) in response to prayer?"
"In light of these and other problems, many thinkers who have associated themselves with the Reform and Reconstructionist movements have suggested changes which should be made in the wording of traditional prayers. They have chosen to eliminate or to reinterpret prayers for the Resurrection of the Dead, the coming of a personal Messiah, the restoration of animal sacrifices and the benediction in which a man blesses God for not having made him a woman. Some thinkers, who do not believe that God changes the course of nature or favors the prayers of one person more than another have tried to reinterpret those prayers which call upon God to intervene in human affairs. These authors generally stress the belief that the Hebrew word for prayer, tefillah, is derived from a root pil which (in reflexive form) means to "judge oneself"; prayer, therefore, is mainly an act of self-judgment in which the individual examines his life in the light of what God expects of him and of what he, himself, is able to achieve."
The hasidic movement in Judaism places great emphasis on the necessity for kavvanah in prayer. According to hasidic teaching, man may easily be overcome by "evil thoughts" which deprive him of kavvanah and which, eventually, may destroy his moral and spiritual life. Prayer, in part, involves the "annihilation" of evil thoughts; it helps the good, already present in man's soul, to come forth; it enables man to achieve an intense closeness (devekut) to God. Many scholars believe that Hasidism stresses the devekut aspect of prayer even more than the literal meaning of the words recited."
"In prayer, mention of God's holiness should stimulate the worshiper to seek holiness in his own religious and moral life. Holiness is acquired by separation from evil, by the performance of mitzvot and by one's willingness to do even more than the law requires, "You shall be holy, for I the Lord your God, am holy" (Leviticus 19:2)." (Encyclopedia Judaica Jr.)
Kneeling, a common form of prayer among Christians, is shunned by Jews, although scriptural references to kneeling do exist.
"And it was so, that when Solomon had made an end of praying all this prayer and supplication unto the LORD, he arose from before the altar of the LORD, from kneeling on his knees with his hands spread up to heaven." (1 Kings 8:54)
"O come, let us worship and bow down: let us kneel before the LORD our maker." (Psalms 95:6)
"Related to the prohibitions regarding idolatry, is the Torah law of hukkat ha-goi (laws and customs of the gentiles). In this law the Torah explicitly states that it is forbidden to adopt any heathen superstitious or idolatrous practice of the gentiles. This encompasses any gentile dress associated with religious practice, on which the Talmud comments that one should accept martyrdom rather than "change even the style of a shoelace." Accordingly, in modern times, this law has raised a serious question about rabbis wearing the canonical garb which resembles the clothing of the priest in gentile religious ritual. In the same way, it has been questioned whether the organ which is used in Christian ceremonies should be permitted in Jewish prayer. The question has also been raised as to whether Christianity is considered an idolatrous religion, because of its belief in the Trinity and its use of images and icons. However, it is generally accepted that Islam is a monotheistic religion and is not idolatrous." (Encyclopedia Judaica Jr.)
As mentioned above, the practice of fasting is found is Islam. It is also a part of Jewish life, although fasting is never done on a Sabbath day because Sabbath is a day of joy and fasting (to many) is less than joyful! Yom Kippur (a High Day - hence, treated as a Sabbath) is the only exception. On that day fasting begins an hour before the "Sabbath" and continues until an hour afterwards.
"Fasting is an act of repentance or of supplication seeking divine forgiveness or the prevention of disaster. Public fasts also commemorate catastrophic events in Jewish history. On fast days one neither eats nor drinks. On major fasts, other prohibitions are washing, wearing leather shoes, using ointments or perfumes, and other physical pleasures. There are special prayers and the Torah is read in the synagogue. Yom Kippur and Tishah be-Av are observed from sunset to sunset. All other fasts are from sunrise to sunset."
"When a natural or human disaster threatens or strikes a whole community, a public fast is proclaimed. In biblical times, fasting served to beseech the Almighty to end a famine or to lighten the oppression of foreign rulers."
"Only one fast day is decreed in the Bible, that of the tenth of Tishrei, Yom Kippur. This holiest day is the climax of an annual period of soul-searching and resolution to improve one's life. So important is Yom Kippur that it is observed even if it occurs on the Sabbath." (Encyclopedia Judaica Jr.)
In spite of the statement that fasting is only required once in the Bible, Jews have many traditional fasting days and fasting reasons. It is the custom among the very religious to fast at the beginning of every month. The Talmudic teachings cautioned against excessive fasting. Young children are not required to fast nor are individuals whose health is precarious.
A few other comments may be of interest to Latter-day Saints who consider themselves chosen if the keep the commandments, both ritually and of morally.
"How odd of God, to choose the Jews." W.N. Ewer, who wrote this jingle, could not understand why Israel is God's Chosen People. Moses, in Deuteronomy 7:7--8, explains it thus: "The Lord did not set His love upon you because you were more in number than any people . . . but because the Lord loved you, and because He would keep the oath which He had sworn to your fathers." The rabbis insist that Israel was elected because it voluntarily accepted the Torah whereas other nations would not. Mercy and forgiveness, says the Talmud, are distinguishing characteristics of Abraham and his seed, and these characteristics motivated God to choose Israel as. His people."
" The exercise of mercy is an obligation for all Jews. By this it is meant that they must act with compassion and forgiveness towards all mankind, and perform deeds of charity and kindness. This quality is an essential characteristic of God who is known as Rahum ("Merciful") and, in accordance with the tradition which sets as man's goal the imitation of God: "As He is merciful, so be you merciful." Just as God is bound by His covenant of mercy with His people, so is the Jew bound by specific commandments to act mercifully to the oppressed, the alien, the orphan, the widow, and indeed, every living creature."
"The stress placed upon this quality is evident both in the many charitable institutions existing in Jewish communal life, and in the daily prayers which implore God to deal compassionately even with the undeserving man. Human beings are frail, imperfect creatures constantly open to error, and so they are totally dependent on God's mercy."
"But God, as depicted by the rabbis, embodies a combination of justice and mercy, of strict judgment and lenient compassion. This combination of justice and mercy in God is represented by the two names of God --- Elohim and YHWH. The former stands for justice and the latter for mercy. Though they may seem contradictory, one actually complements the other and, when there is a conflict between the two, God usually favors mercy."
"Judaism demands of its judges this same balance, and the principle of mercy thus assumes extreme importance in the administration of Jewish law. The prophet Zechariah (7:9) put it: "...execute the judgment and show mercy and compassion every man to his brother." (Encyclopedia Judaica jr.)
As a closing comment on this lesson, let me add a personal perspective. In the days of the Savior, all believing members committed their time, talent and even their lives to "the kingdom." In an archaeological survey I was participating in, we were discussing the odd nature of a beautiful synagogue floor of the first century close to Jericho. What was odd about it was the signature. Almost every ancient mosaic floor found in Israel has the signature of the donor with his family name and title. This one simply had an inscription that indicated that the "entire community" had done this work. I had the distinct feeling we were standing on the remains of a worship center used by early saints, "Former-day Saints." People who committed themselves to the building of the Kingdom of God, first.