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explain God's way of deliverence of his people from exile.

best answer 10 points

2006-11-04 08:41:52 · 5 answers · asked by Betsy B 3 in Society & Culture Religion & Spirituality

i mean israelites

2006-11-04 08:44:32 · update #1

5 answers

The Israelites were first delivered from the Egyptian Pharaoh through the plagues, etc., cast down on the Egytians. Moses then led them away and they camped at the Red Sea. The Egyptian Pharaoh had a change of heart and chased after them, hoping to trap them between the Red Sea and his armies. The Lord parted the Red Sea, allowed His people to walk through safe and sound to the other side, but closed down the walls of water onto Pharaoh's army, killing all.

God then was leading them through the desert, providing water (when Moses struck his staff on the rock) and food (Manna from heaven), but the people complained. Moses went up onto the Mount of Olives to converse with God. God gave Moses the 10 Commandments. When Moses returned from the mountain, he found the people in the midst of idol worshiping. Moses got angry and threw the stone tablets engraved with the 10 Commandments to the ground breaking them.

They placed the stone fragments into a golden ark (The Ark of the Covenant) and wandered through the desert - following the beam of light - until all of the generation that participated in the idol worshiping were dead (including Moses). God then led them into the land of milk and honey.

2006-11-04 08:51:34 · answer #1 · answered by padwinlearner 5 · 0 0

If you mean Israel, then he brought them back to their land in 1948 after having been gone for almost two thousand years. I think he used World War Two as a way to make a path for the creation of Israel.
Deut 28, Lev. 26, Hosea 3 and other scriptures talk about this too.

2006-11-04 16:44:41 · answer #2 · answered by . 7 · 0 0

In the beginning was Ayin, that nothingness that is so nothing that to say, "It is nothing," is to define it and make it no longer Ayin. From this, the Worshipped G-d comes. It is profound to understand that "G-d came from nothing" is a statement of the beginning of G-d.

G-d wished to create, but G-d filled all that was. So G-d withdrew from itself, creating a void, which was not Ayin for the void existed. Into the void, G-d emminated the Adam Kadmon, the first light. As this energy trickled down lower and lower, it reached a point where its containers could no longer hold the perfection of the light, and the containers shattered, creating the Tzit-Tzum (the shattering).

The goal of existence is to repair the Tzit-Tzum so that the emminated Adam Kadmon can return to the source, the Worshipped G-d, so that the Worshipped G-d can return to the Ayin.

In short, all that is of G-d will return to G-d. Anything that contained even the slightest spark at all will return to G-d. There is no being so completely void of purpose that it contains no aspect of this Adam Kadmon -- even Hitler was capable of love (Eva Braun). So even the spark he carried will one day return to the source.

Hell is not a possibility under Jewish teaching. G-d cannot infinitely punish for finite sin, and to say that Hell separates from G-d eternally is to say that G-d is capable of failure, that G-d could lose a part of itself. In the end, ALL, every last thing that exists, returns to G-d, and then to Ayin.

2006-11-04 16:44:11 · answer #3 · answered by Anonymous · 1 2

If God used the Holocaust, which resulted in the murder of over six million innocent Jews by barbaric and systemic means, in order to fulfill the prophesy of Ezekiel 26, you'd have to admit that would make him a pretty shitty kind of god. There HAD to be ways of restoring them to Israel without almost making them extinct first.

2006-11-04 17:09:33 · answer #4 · answered by Bad Liberal 7 · 0 0

the Hebrews? Us?
Who are you referring to?

2006-11-04 16:43:43 · answer #5 · answered by IN Atlanta 4 · 0 0

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