"And you who cling to Havayah your G-d are all living          today." (From this week's Torah portion,          Va'etchanan, Deuteronomy 4:4)
The Jewish Nation is alive today in the merit of          its attachment to G-d. Our wondrous history and          the very fact that the Nation of Israel is          eternal testify to His existence. The Jewish          Nation has a pact - a covenant - with the Master          of the Universe. G-d frees us from the laws of          nature and makes us an eternal nation and we          cling to Him and testify to His existence. There          is no other nation that has consistently starred          on the stage of human history, been intricately          involved with all the empires throughout the          ages - and survived. It is a wonder outside the          bounds of the laws of history. 
There is a caveat, though. G-d's promise of          national eternity is reserved for those who          cling to Him. All those sects of Judaism that          considered themselves "liberated" from the basic          pact with our Father in heaven have eventually          dropped out of Judaism altogether. All the sects          that revised the Torah as per the dictates or          constraints of the times - from the Second          Temple era desert sects to "Progressive" Judaism          - eventually lost their charm and were erased          from the pages of Jewish history, or are on          their way to dropping out. 
In our day, the Reform movement has become the          dominant movement for Jewish assimilation. This          movement is now demanding that the Jewish State          relax the requirements for conversion to          Judaism. 
The rationale that preserves the authority for          conversion in the hands of the stream of Judaism          that perpetuates the tradition of the covenant          with G-d, the stream that is loyal to the Oral          Law - is stronger by far than any flaw that may          be found in Orthodox Judaism. A person who would          like to be a Jew according to Jewish law must          convert according to the requirements of that          very same law. It is as simple as that. 

 
 
No comments:
Post a Comment