However, I would like to share some notes I wrote awhile back on why I am drawn to read and study the Talmud.
I find it:
- a work of unimaginable dedication and commitment to God.
- a work focused on the particular day-to-day, moment-to-moment elements that make up life (obviously also many moments that don't make up my life -- temple sacrifices, etc.). It truly seems to avoid abstraction and focus on the particular.
- a work that accepts discord and multi-valent views of the world.
- a work that is basically INFINITE in its scope and depth and diversity.
- a work that stimulates intense interest today and has for 1500 years.
- a work that connects to the past and holds within it the explanations and explorations of God's will that have continued for over 2000 years.
- a work that can help me focus on and recognize the ever-present nature of God.
- a work of great creativity and imagination that can help stretch my mind.
- a work of which the study is a holy possibility and opportunity.
- a work that screams, shouts, contemplates and argues this basic fact -- "We are commanded!" This is something I deeply believe.
- a work large enough (a true sea) to welcome even an outsider in, who simply wants to enter and learn out of love
Your points are awesome in their insights. They help me
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