Yom
Kippur - Hebrew: יוֹם כִּפּוּר. Also known as Day of Atonement, is the holiest
day of the year in Judaism.
Kol Nidre - NOUN: an Aramaic prayer annulling vows made before God, sung by Jews at the opening of the Day of Atonement service on the eve of Yom Kippur.
Kol Nidre - NOUN: an Aramaic prayer annulling vows made before God, sung by Jews at the opening of the Day of Atonement service on the eve of Yom Kippur.
Yom
Kippur and the Kol Nidrei Liar’s Liturgy
Yom
Kippur begins Tuesday evening, September 22, wherein the western world will
watch in awe as "pious Jews” allegedly "beg God for forgiveness"
while supposedly "striving for righteousness.” No doubt that the pope of Rome and the heads of the
Protestant fundamentalist churches will convey their esteem for the Yom Kippur
ceremony as performed by “God’s people.”
On
Yom Kippur the infamous Kol Nidrei takes place, almost always explained away to
the public as a blessed ceremony of begging God for forgiveness for oaths that
were violated, contracts that were broken and promises that were not kept in
the past year. The trouble is, that pious picture is a phony.
In truth, Kol Nidrei is a ceremony whereby: 1. All the perjury you will commit in the coming year and, 2. All contracts you will sign and violate in the coming year, and 3. All the promises you will break in the coming year...
are absolved, with no heavenly punishment accruing as a result.
In truth, Kol Nidrei is a ceremony whereby: 1. All the perjury you will commit in the coming year and, 2. All contracts you will sign and violate in the coming year, and 3. All the promises you will break in the coming year...
are absolved, with no heavenly punishment accruing as a result.
That's
the reality of Yom Kippur's Kol Nidrei rite, and it's one reason why Yom Kippur
is the best-attended of all of Judaism's synagogue ceremonies. Talmudists like
to have an edge and during Yom Kippur that entails making God a senior partner
in the sting.
The
truth about the Kol Nidrei liturgy is usually dismissed by the rabbis and their
mouthpiece media as a "loathsome antisemitic canard.”
They
hurl this mendacious accusation in the expectation that the public will be so
intimidated by fear of being labeled "antisemitic" that they will not
consult the documentation, and will instead accept at face value the word of
the noble rabbis and the always truthful media.
The
American media reverentially showcase the pious Yom Kippur extravaganza of
Pharisaic displays of penitence and purification, fasting and prayer, that
allegedly give evidence of the supposed special relationship which Talmudists
enjoy with God. Quite a gaudy show is made of the confessional Viduy comprising
the Ashamnu and the Al het, the catalogue of sins which is
meaningless as a form of self-accusation, since the Judaic recites the whole
litany, whether he is actually guilty of each transgression or not.
After
the recitation of each transgression, one is to strike the left side of one’s
chest with one’s right fist. This is followed by the prayer of
supplication, Avinu malkenu and the Alenu, the so-called
“mourner’s kaddish.”
All
of this makes an impressive Yom Kippur Eve accompaniment to the
promise-breaking Kol Nidrei and demonstrates that rather than moving them
closer to God, these ceremonies move Judaic persons who are adherents of
Judaism farther away, by making God into an accomplice to deceit and
oath-breaking, surrounded by a hypocritical show of piety and penance.
The
Talmud in Mishnah Hagigah 1:8(a) admits that there is no Biblical
basis for the Kol Nidrei rite. Rabbi
Moses Maimonides confirms that the Kol Nidrei rite is not in any way Biblical:
"The absolution from oaths has no basis whatever in the Written
Torah" (Mishneh Torah, Sefer Haflaah, Hilkhot Shevuot 6:2).
The
Talmudic law concerning the Kol Nidrei rite is as follows
“And
he who desires that none of his vows made during the year shall be valid, let
him stand at the beginning of the year and declare, ‘Every vow which I make in
the future shall be null.” (Babylonian Talmud: Nedarim 23a and 23b).
Note
that the Talmud declares that the action nullifying vows is to be taken
at the beginning of the year and with regard to promises made in the
future. This distinction is critical since it contradicts what the
deceivers claim is a penitential service for begging forgiveness for promises
broken in the past, rather than what it is: a nullification made in advance for
vows and oaths yet to be made (and deliberately broken with impunity).
This
“advance stipulation” is called bitul tenai and it is the basis for a
Judaic being absolved in advance of breaking promises that he will make in the
future, or to use the rabbinic lawyer’s jargon: “declaration of intent for the
anticipatory invalidation of future vows.”
This
corresponds to the Talmudic lesson that God rewards clever liars (Kallah 51a).
You
have to pity people ensnared in this sordid charade of cajoling God into
helping them cheat.
Little
of this harsh reality will surface in the next few days, however. Instead, the
corporate media will spout warm and fuzzy shibboleths about Yom Kippur as part
of the sly masquerade by which Judaism ascends ever higher over the West, while
its adherents sink ever lower in moral turpitude.
To
all those “Christians” who, rather than seeking to rescue the pitiable Judaics
who are captive to this system of institutionalized religious dishonesty,
instead abandon them to it, we can only say, may God have mercy on you for the
hateful part you are playing in cooperating with the Orthodox rabbis in
permitting more Judaic souls to be lost to the Father of Lies.
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