Administror Notice

We pray that all is well for you in your local communities. The USA's economy is currently receading at 6-8%, in excess of that of the depression in 1931, but we are still not calling it a depression. I wanted to post a note on this not relating to prophecy, but to our own situation. The costs of operating this and other sites over the years have been born primarily out of my personal income with little to no support from the community. Due to my own finances, I am in a situation where I may have to take the sites off line for an extended period. My income provides support for over 20 people, several who are disabled. My ministry to them is in danger of failing as we are 60 days behind in our mortgage. My personal take-home income has been cut this year by nearly $800 per month. My wife lost $400 in hers. While we struggled through last year, barely keeping afloat, this year we are running with $1200 less personal income than last year. Although we have embedded advertising into the sites to produce a revenue stream, the income is amounts to pennies a day. We do not intend to bring the site down permenantly, but may need to shut our servers down for a period of time to save on electricity and cut our commercial internet connection. Please pray that Elohim provides the resources necessary to sustain our home as there are a dozen children and others that will have no home if we lose ours.
Shalom,
Rabbi Netzar ben Yaacov
UNJS, INBD
| Yom Kippur and Fasting |
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| Written by Eric Sandquit |
| Sunday, 27 September 2009 15:52 |
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During discussions of Yom Kippur, an argument was presented that nowhere does the Scripture indicate that fasting is a requirement of Yom Kippur. This struck me as an odd thing, even dangerous. I had not even heard such a thing before. I didn’t know that there was any debate over this issue among observant Jews. I knew that some Reformed Jews would casually work and not fast on Yom Kippur, but was not aware that there were other groups in the Jewish community that did not believe that fasting was a requirement of Yom Kippur. Certainly the idea of fasting on Yom Kippur is an age old “tradition” among the more observant of both Jews and some Gentiles. There are even some “Christian” groups that fast on this day. Some groups fast on a regular basis, either for health or spiritual benefit, multiple times a year – even weekly. The instructions in question for Yom Kippur are in the following texts: Leviticus Chapter 16: 29And it shall be a statute for ever unto you: in the seventh month, on the tenth day of the month, ye shall afflict your souls, and shall do no manner of work, the home-born, or the stranger that sojourneth among you. Leviticus Chapter 23: 27Howbeit on the tenth day of this seventh month is the day of atonement; there shall be a holy convocation unto you, and ye shall afflict your souls; and ye shall bring an offering made by fire unto the LORD.
7And on the tenth day of this seventh month ye shall have a holy convocation; and ye shall afflict your souls; ye shall do no manner of work; So we see that five times in these verses we are told to “Afflict your souls”. Also, we see that to not “afflict our souls” bears the punishment of being “Cut off from His people.” This is a pretty serious thing. We often find the term being “cut off from a people” as a euphemism for dieing or being executed. It would then seem to be very important to know what afflicting one’s soul is. What does it mean to afflict our soul? Is that fasting? Does scripture support this idea? Is it just tradition? 1Cry aloud, spare not, lift up thy voice like a horn, and declare unto My people their transgression, and to the house of Jacob their sins. 2Yet they seek Me daily, and delight to know My ways; as a nation that did righteousness, and forsook not the ordinance of their God, they ask of Me righteous ordinances, they delight to draw near unto God.
Jeremiah Chapter 36: 5And Jeremiah commanded Baruch, saying: 'I am detained, I cannot go into the house of the LORD; In Jeremiah, we see that at least once a year there is a commanded “fast-day”. This day was a day of repentance and the people of Israel were gathered together at the house of Elohim.
4Then came the word of the LORD of hosts unto me, saying: Here, we find in Zechariah, that there is a fast in the fifth and seventh month of the year. The tenth day of the seventh month is Yom Kippur. The other Holydays during that month are all days of feasting with food and drink. The day of Yom Kippur is the ONLY day during that time requiring both prayers of repentance and “Afflicting one’s soul”. In fact, there are four times a year we are instructed to fast, according to Zechariah: Zechariah Chapter 8: 18And the word of the LORD of hosts came unto me, saying: We know that one of these, the fast of the seventh month is Yom Kippur. So are we to fast on Yom Kippur? Traditional Halachah says, yes, we are required to except in matters pertaining to life. If our life would come into serious jeopardy by fasting, such as severe diabetes, Epilepsy, blood loss and other ailments which threaten immediate life, then we are excused from the fast. www.ohr.edu has this to say regarding eating on Yom Kippur:
Yom Kippur is one of the most solemn of all Scriptural Holydays. It is a time of repentance ending the 10 days of Aw, and also ending the 40days of mourning since the 9th of Av. The punishment for not keeping this day is severe. It is in our best interest and the best interest of our people to keep this day in the most pious of fashions. Should we fast on Yom Kippur? By all means, except where life may be lost by doing so. Shalom, Netzar ben Yaacov |
| Last Updated ( Wednesday, 10 November 2010 09:41 ) |















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