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"You shall not add to the word that I am commanding you, nor take away from it, that you may keep the commandments of YHWH, your God, which I command you." (Deut 4:2)
How do Rabbinic Judaism and Christianity reconcile with this passage?
What needs reconciliation? He's commanding men, not himself. God can reveal as much scripture as he pleases, don't you think? Otherwise, from whence came the rest of the OT?
I am pretty sure G-d is saying not to add anything after Tanakh, but that is just opinion. How would interpret the passage?
Oh I see. Just the first 5 books. Well that's fine. To me it seems strange. Even if it were in Genesis... I mean, is it all in there? The first 5 books?
Why couldn't God continue teaching his children?
Well the Tanakh is more than the 5 Books of Moses; but AFAIK Nevi'im and Ketuvim are not used Christians.
Scripture is not needed for G-d to teach people IMO.
Then what do you use the Tanakh for?
I personally see the Tanakh as a moral compass, a way to understand G-d, and insights into the human psyche.
Right...so what else does God teach you, and how does he do it?
We have to figure out what G-d is teaching us. I think he teaches us in subtle ways.
"You shall not add to the word that I am commanding you, nor take away from it, that you may keep the commandments of YHWH, your God, which I command you." (Deut 4:2)
How do Rabbinic Judaism and Christianity reconcile with this passage?
We have to figure out what G-d is teaching us. I think he teaches us in subtle ways.
Christians do have both Nevi'im and Ketuvim, but they aren't split in the same way. I think there may be some difference in book choices, definitely changes in order of where they are placed, but for the most part they are there.but AFAIK Nevi'im and Ketuvim are not used Christians.
Tanakh is "Torah, Nevi'im, Ketuvim", which make up what are called 'The Old Testament' by Christians. This goes from Genesis to Malachi.Oh I see. Just the first 5 books. Well that's fine. To me it seems strange. Even if it were in Genesis. Why couldn't God continue teaching his children? I mean, is it all in there? The first 5 books?
"You shall not add to the word that I am commanding you, nor take away from it, that you may keep the commandments of YHWH, your God, which I command you." (Deut 4:2)
How do Rabbinic Judaism and Christianity reconcile with this passage?
Rabbinic Judaism reconciles this with the concept of Torah she'b'al peh (Oral Torah). The Rabbis of the Talmud tell us that along with the written Torah given at Sinai, there was also an Oral Torah given, and that this Oral Torah was something that would be fully revealed only over the ages. The Rabbis also teach that the Torah is not to be read only at the level of pshat (the most basic, literal meaning), but rather that there are many multiple interpretations of Torah that are viable and can stand side by side. In the Midrash, we are told, shiv'im panim le-Torah ("The Torah has seventy faces") wherein "seventy" is not a literal number, but a typical metonymy of the time for "a whole lot." In Pirkei Avot (the wisdom tractate of the Mishnah), we are taught, hafokh v'hafokh ba ki d'kula ba "Turn it [that is, interpret it, meaning the Torah] and turn it again, for everything is contained within it." In other words, one should ever seek for new meanings, new nuances, new levels of understanding of the Torah. The Oral Torah is the tradition of halakhic discourse, using many many models and methodologies of interpretation, reinterpretation, and understanding: when rabbis issue halakhic rulings, publish rabbinic responsa, when codes are made, when customs are set, when different interpretations survive and are taught, when Torah adapts in meaning to evolve alongside the Jewish People, this is Oral Torah. It was all envisioned at Sinai (maybe not in the exact details, but the tradition, fluid, evolving, always intertwined with Written Torah, making it always relevant and never obsolete...that was envisioned at Sinai. It is the human part of Torah as a cooperative process: it is how Torah can be both God's work and humanity's work, and, as the Talmud teaches us, Yisrael v'oraita v'Kudsha Brich Hu chad hu "The People Israel, the Torah, and the Holy One Blessed Be He, are all one thing." Obviously, we don't literally mean that Torah and Israel are God! But rather, that in Torah, Israel and God have a point of meeting, a space of coming together in our Covenant.