A Guide For Jews To Roman Catholicism

A Jewish friend asked me for a book recommendation for learning about Roman Catholicism (not to convert herself but to understand some of those around her).

I replied:

I was raised a Seventh-Day Adventist and heard 10x as many bad things about Catholics as I did about Jews.

However, I recommend these three novels:

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Brideshead_Revisited

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Brideshead_Revisited_(TV_serial)

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Power_and_the_Glory

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Exorcist_(film)

I also recommend this music:

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=cmuPJvr89Jw&feature=list_other&playnext=1&list=AL94UKMTqg-9BZzI2jZ5DDP-IbR46elJhV

And just go sit in a Catholic church for an hour and meditate…

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Drudge Report Gets It Wrong

I was checking my Blackberry about 7 a.m. this morning and the Drudge Report headline was, “Mandate gone.”

I told people around me. We exchanged high-fives.

A few minutes later, the Drudge Report corrected and said the Supreme Court had affirmed Obamacare.

CNN got it wrong too.

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Torah Justice

Check out this new site about the Jewish legal system — TorahJustice.com.

The operator of the site, Chaim, responds to my questions:

I am doing this because as part of the frum community I have seen the need for a resource for people going through a din torah to help them avoid giving undue power to Dayanim and Batei Din and to help them avoid getting stuck in a bad din torah experience. I believe that the Chilul Hashem caused when a B”D acts (or is perceived to act) in an inappropriate manner is among the biggest Chilul Hashems there are.

I hope with this website to:

1.) Educate people as to what their rights in a Beis Din are

2.) Provide a resource were people can research a beis din before they sign a submission agreement to them

3.) Help people understand what they are signing away when they sign a Shtar Berurin and point out what they are not obligated according to Torah law to sign away.

4.) Provide a confidentiality/quality practice agreement that does not ask for anything beyond what the Torah and secualr la require that both parties in a Din Torah should request Beis Din to execute.

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Australian Suspicion Of Adventists

Australia is a secular country and it has a great deal of suspicion of religious people. I grew up a Seventh-Day Adventist in Australia. I had no Seventh-Day Adventist friends. I knew that the wider culture viewed us with great suspicion. I had almost no relationship with any of my relatives because none of them were Adventists.

Michael and Lindy Chamberlain were students of my father at Avondale College, where I grew up.

Ex-Adventist friends of mine who hated the church were convinced that Lindy Chamberlain murdered her baby.

An Australian writes in the New York Times:

Why did it take three decades, tens of millions of dollars, a criminal case appealed in Australia’s highest court, a royal commission and four inquests to establish Lindy Chamberlain’s innocence? In that time, Australia’s population grew from 14.5 million to almost 23 million. The case has been a spectacular example of poor forensic science, anxiety about “evil mothers” and suspicion of religiosity — the Chamberlains are members of the Seventh-day Adventist Church, which was wrongly portrayed as an infant-slaying cult. Rumors circulated that Azaria meant “sacrifice in the wilderness” in Hebrew, not “blessed of God.”

Most Australians thought the dingo was a flimsy excuse. Few people, except park rangers, believed a dingo would attack a baby, and the evidence indigenous trackers gave about drag marks near the tent was brushed aside. In a 1984 poll, 76.8 percent of Australians said Lindy Chamberlain was guilty, and the investigation did little to change their minds.

Then there was Lindy Chamberlain herself. She was thought too “sexy” and “cold”; she walked into court with a face set like concrete under large black sunglasses and severely cut black hair. Much was made of her bare, tanned shoulders, her expansive wardrobe and her stoicism. When she did not weep on cue, no one suggested she might have been suffering from shock or trauma. Even worse, she was accused of playing to the cameras that were constantly thrust in her face. She was, we were told, more interested in looking pretty than in the death of her child.

This was a woman, as the prosecution put it, who could murder a baby with nail scissors in the front seat of her car before stuffing the body into a camera case. When a forensic expert claimed there were bloodstains in the front of the Chamberlain’s car, those harboring suspicions were triumphant. Guilty! People spat on her as she walked into the courtroom. It took years before it emerged that the marks were from a chemical spray and old milk.

When “A Cry in the Dark” was released in 1988, it presented a significant challenge to public opinion, coming as it did on the heels of a commission that established serious bungling of evidence by the police and judiciary and overturned the conviction for which Lindy Chamberlain served three years. The movie offered a sympathetic portrayal of a woman struck by an inexplicable tragedy and then accused of an inexplicable crime. By then, she had already given birth in prison to her fourth child, who lived with foster parents until her mother was released. Many people wrote her apologetic letters after seeing the film.

When the coroner tearfully declared the Chamberlains innocent this week and gave them Azaria’s correct death certificate, there was a surprising display of grief and shame in Australia. Comedians issued public apologies for using Lindy Chamberlain as a punch line; TV hosts were grave and emotional. Azaria would have turned 32 on June 11; her parents’ faces crumpled when reminded of it.

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Joshua Prager Still Claiming He Was Nominated For A Pulitzer Prize

A few years ago, I busted Joshua Prager — whose work I admire — for claiming he was a Pulitzer Prize nominee. It did no good. He still claims the honor on his site: “His work has appeared in publications including The New York Times, The Washington Post, The New Republic, Best American Sports Writing and the Wall Street Journal, where he was a senior special writer for eight years and was nominated for the Pulitzer Prize four times.”

MSNBC reports: NEW YORK — If you’re keeping a list of journalists who have claimed for years to be Pulitzer Prize nominees without the inconvenience of actually being nominated for a Pulitzer Prize, add one more name: Charles Gasparino, the pugnacious senior Wall Street correspondent for Fox Business Network.

…Though there are only three nominees, known as nominated finalists, in each Pulitzer category each year, there are more than 2,000 submissions. The winner in beat reporting in 1992 was Gretchen Morgenson, one of Gasparino’s competitors on the Wall Street beat for The New York Times. The two other nominees were Patrick Healy of The Boston Globe for education reporting, and Jack Kelley of USA Today for reporting on terrorism. (Kelley turned out to have made up information in his articles, but that’s a topic for another day.) No Gasparino.

…When asked on Tuesday in which year he was nominated, former boxer Gasparino jabbed back in a one-line email: “I was nominated by the wsj sir.”
But the news organizations don’t choose the Pulitzer nominees, any more than the record studios choose Grammy nominees. By Gasparino’s reckoning, thousands of journalists each year could sell books and earn speaking fees by calling themselves “Pulitzer nominees.”

…Neither Fox nor Gasparino would answer the question: Why include a “submission” in a bio at all if it didn’t make the finals?

…It’s not uncommon for Pulitzer entrants to make false claims to be nominees. If all Pulitzer entrants could be called nominees, any publisher could give all its authors and journalists that honorific by submitting an entry form and a check for $50. (And some publishers do seem to play that game.)
As the Pulitzer board’s online list of frequently asked questions explains politely, the finalists and the nominees are the same three people in each category: “Work that has been submitted for Prize consideration but not chosen as either a nominated finalist or a winner is termed an entry or submission. … We discourage someone saying he or she was ‘nominated’ for a Pulitzer simply because an entry was sent to us.”

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Writing Biographies Of Great Rabbis

Jonathan Rosenblum writes: More than twenty years ago, I wrote an op-ed entitled, “Are Gadol Biographies Good for Us?” Little did I dream at the time that I would soon be asked to write the first of many biographies of major Jewish leaders. From that experience, I learned to be careful with my words lest they come back to haunt me.

At least one person benefits greatly from the writing of a “gadol biography” – the author himself. The best such biographies require a total immersion in the subject’s life, until one is constantly asking oneself: How would he have approached this subject? Why did he make that choice? Living with a great person for years can only uplift a person, though, as with everything in life, no degree of inspiration lasts unless translated into concrete actions.

At their best, biographies of gadolim should provide the reader with the experience of living in the presence of the subject. I have witnessed how a maggid shiur with sterling middos can, over a period of years, transform every single person in a shiur. And the same thing should be true of a “gadol biography.”

At the same time, specific biographies will have a different impact on particular readers, depending on the nature and interests of the reader. Someone who aspires to be an askan (community activist) will get much more out of the biography of Rabbi Moshe Sherer than one who does not. Someone who knows Michtav M’Eliyahu will gain more from a biography of Rabbi Dessler than those not familiar with his works. Rabbi Noach Orlowek does a great deal of counseling, and tells me that he returns to Reb Yaakov for its reminder that gadlus and normalcy can go together whenever he needs cheering up.

IN ORDER FOR A BIOGRAPHY to have its intended impact, the subject must come through in all his multi-faceted individuality, not as if he is being crammed into some cardboard formula of a “gadol biography.” Providing that full portrait is easier said than done. Rabbi Nisson Wolpin, who was the dorm counselor at Torah Vodaas when Rabbi Yaakov Kamenetsky was Rosh Yeshiva, once told me that many of the incidents I described were accurate as far as they went. But had I known what Reb Yaakov said when the bochur in question left the room, it would have added yet another layer to Reb Yaakov’s pick’hus (sharp insight).

Biographers must avoid the trap of political correctness. If a certain gadol eschewed, for instance, “the Brisker derech” in learning, the biographer should not be afraid to say so, even if that is prevailing approach today. If a subject is worthy of a biography, his opinions are worthy of being quoted, even if they are not those held by other figures of comparable stature.

Read more: http://www.cross-currents.com/archives/2012/06/25/on-writing-gadol-biographies/#ixzz1z0P9V0ZA
Under Creative Commons License: Attribution

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Where to Go for a New Nissan

Customizing a vehicle can be more fun that buying it or even driving it for the first time. Are you the type of person that enjoys pretty fabric covers in cars and awesome steering wheel covers? I went to a show recently at Inland Empire Nissan where the cars had awesome built in lights and really cool seat covers. If you’re confused about your next purchase, no worries. Tons of people are, and it can be a very nerve-wracking decision to make! When attempting to pick the right Nissan dealership, you should keep in mind what you can afford and consumer reviews. Fontana Nissan used cars is a section within Fontana and really gives you a great inventory and has potential for your next Nissan dealership. It offers outstanding service, a great inventory, fantastic specials and overall a friendly atmosphere. There are a lot of different considerations that should be thought about when deciding on a new car. It can either be a really great decision or a really bad one. Sometimes it will be somewhere in between, but it is usually more obvious than that. If you purchase a brand new car, it can either be a great or a horrible choice. It all depends on not only your personality (if you have road rage, opt for a used car), but your financial situation and plans as well. Don’t let the impulse of purchasing a brand new car offset your plans of paying off debt, or buying something that you really need. For example, a new car should not win over either having your bills paid, getting a new mattress because your back hurts and whatever else you may be giving up just to have a new car. It’s really not worth it, unless you actually intend to live in the car you should be very financially aware of your personal situation. Used cars are usually a much safer route to go, as long as they are fixed up right and don’t have too many miles on them. Personally I wouldn’t buy a used car that has over 100k miles on it unless I immediately planned on replacing the engine/transmission. Used cars will get you to the same places that a new car would, and they cost you less in the beginning. Although it is true they may require a bit of work down the line, it may still be better because at least you saved yourself money in the present. Either way, I’m sure your next car will be perfect for you and hopefully save you money in these economic times. Be sure to pick out an awesome fuzzy leopard print steering wheel! Nothing has more class than that, huh? Why not customize something that you will probably spend so much time in?

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Prager University: Earning Happiness — The Moral Promise of Free Enterprise

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Federation Scratches Pamela Geller Event, Sparking Protest

From the Forward: L.A. Federation president Jay Sanderson, out of town on a visit to Israel, claimed to be unaware that the ZOA, a tenant with offices in the Federation building, was sponsoring the event featuring Geller.
“We were unaware until Friday that this was happening.” He said his concern was that families visited the children’s museum, located in the building’s first floor, on Sunday mornings, “and we didn’t want the children and their families to be disrupted by politics.”
ZOA officials, which sponsored the event, noted that the event was posted on the federation’s web site.
“Sanderson should read his own web site,” said Steve Goldberg, ZOA’s national vice chairman, who said he’d spoken with Sanderson that morning and was unable to persuade Sanderson to allow ZOA to res-schedule the event. “The event has been posted there for the past two weeks.”
An interfaith coalition had earlier in the week issued a statement condemning the Federation for allowing Geller to speak, branding her an Islamophobe.
The coalition included American Muslims for Palestine (AMP), Council on American-Islamic Relations – Greater Los Angeles (CAIR-LA), Islamic Circle of North America – Southern California (ICNA), Islamic Shura Council of Southern California, Jewish Voice for Peace – Los Angeles (JVP-LA), LA Jews for Peace, Muslim American Society – Greater Los Angeles (MAS-LA), Muslim Public Affairs Council (MPAC), and Progressive Christians Uniting (PCU).

Read more: http://forward.com/articles/158381/anti-islamic-activist-blocked-from-la-speech/#ixzz1yp9zKBWd

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The Need For A Religious Jew To Talk To The World

An Orthodox rabbi writes an open letter to reggae singer Matisyahu:

When your beard came off and your large black yarmulke remained I took pause, but your reassuring Tweets kept my hopes high. The pictures you recently Tweeted of you and Wiz Khalifa – you with dyed blond hair sans yarmulke and Wiz smoking a joint – made me realized that you are no longer singing z’miros in Reggae. You are singing a different song.

I drive by the Windstar World Casino often. It is just across the Texas state line, in Oklahoma, built on an Indian reservation where the Judeo-Christian values of the Heartland don’t have jurisdiction, but close enough to tempt the millions in the Dallas Metroplex to turn gelt into glitter, savings into flashing lights. The dreamy theme of the building is a concrete version of the joint Wiz was smoking. It is not the place to offer even the most watered down Jewish values.

Your transition followed a path that has been traveled before. A creative Orthodox message becomes a broader universal message, and a broader universal message becomes a self-centered message. What was “Look at God” becomes “Look at me.”

“Me” is the currency of our pagan-light pop-culture.

I grew up in New York where God is glorified in the religious community but chided and derided in the surrounding culture. 12 years ago my wife and I left the Northeast to move to Dallas where we joined the Dallas kollel and subsequently started a meat business. It is a land like I have never seen growing up; God is revered and Jews are respected.

Over the years, I came to the conclusion that we need not be as insular as we were in New York and can speak values to the world around us, as our Patriarch Avraham did. The culture is utterly receptive; if it is listening, should we not speak? You, Matisyahu, were an example of what could be done if only we would speak.

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