Thursday, August 14, 2014

In the Episcopal Church (United States), it is normal to refer to Sundays after Epiphany and Sundays after Pentecost. The use of Ordinary Time is not common. In the Orthodox Church and in the Eastern Catholic Churches, Sundays are all numbered after Pentecost which runs through the following year. Orthodox do not distinguish Ordinary Time.

Solemnities and feasts within Ordinary Time[edit]

Weeks of Ordinary Time
-movable by Lent
-movable by Easter
WeekBeginning on or after
1Jan 7
2Jan 14
3Jan 21
4Jan 28
5Feb 4
6Feb 11
7Feb 18
8Feb 25
9Mar 4 (3 in leap years)
6May 8
7May 15
8May 22
9May 29
10Jun 5
11Jun 12
12Jun 19
13Jun 26
14Jul 3
15Jul 10
16Jul 17
17Jul 24
18Jul 31
19Aug 7
20Aug 14
21Aug 21
22Aug 28
23Sep 4
24Sep 11
25Sep 18
26Sep 25
27Oct 2
28Oct 9
29Oct 16
30Oct 23
31Oct 30
32Nov 6
33Nov 13
34Nov 20
In addition, certain solemnities and feasts that fall on Sundays during Ordinary Time preempt the observance of an ordinarily numbered Sunday. On preempted Sundays, the liturgical color of the feast or solemnity replaces the liturgical color green. These feast days include, in the Roman Catholic calendar, any holy day of obligation, any other solemnity, any feast of the Lord, and the Commemoration of All Faithful Departed Souls.
On the universal calendar, these include:
The following observances always preempt a Sunday in Ordinary Time:
Other solemnities which outrank Sundays of Ordinary Time vary from parish to parish and diocese to diocese; they may include the feast of the patron saint of a parish and the feast of the dedication of the parish church.
In addition, if a solemnity or feast that outranks a Sunday of Ordinary Time, such as those mentioned above, should occur during the week, a priest celebrating Mass with a congregation may observe the solemnity on a nearby Sunday. Such a celebration is traditionally called an "external solemnity," even if the feast in question is not ranked as a solemnity. If an external solemnity is celebrated on a Sunday, the color of that celebration is used rather than green.

Use of the term[edit]

Before the liturgical reforms of 1970, there were two distinct seasons in the Roman Breviary and Roman Missal, known as the season after Epiphany and the season after Pentecost, respectively. Liturgical days in these times were referred to as the -nth Sunday after Epiphany or Pentecost, or Feria II,III,IV,V or VI after the -nth Sunday.
With the reforms came the introduction of four liturgical weeks, the 6th through 9th weeks of Ordinary Time, which could fall either after Epiphany or after Pentecost, making the old numbering scheme unusable, and the term tempus per annum was used to describe both of these seasons. Before the reforms until the present, the term tempus per annum has been used to describe the season of the Little Office of the Blessed Virgin Mary that is not part of Advent or Christmastide, and so tempus per annum extends from Matins on 3 February through None on the last Saturday before Advent.
Following the lead of the liturgical reforms of the Roman rite, many Protestant churches also adopted the concept of Ordinary Time alongside the Revised Common Lectionary.

Kingdomtide exception[edit]

Some Protestant denominations (most notably the United Methodist Church) set off the last 13 or 14 weeks of Ordinary Time into a separate season, known as Kingdomtide.

See also[edit]

Notes[edit]

  1. Jump up^ http://www.catholicculture.org/culture/liturgicalyear/overviews/seasons/ordinary_time/ordinary1.cfm
  2. Jump up^ Lectionary Calendar and Movable Feasts
  3. Jump up^ There are 34 weeks of Ordinary Time in years with dominical letters A or g or some combination containing A or g, i.e., AgbA, or gf. All other years have 33 weeks of Ordinary Time, with the fifth, sixth, seventh, eighth, or ninth or 10th week dropped from the calendar that year.
  4. Jump up^ In the United States, white may be used in place of violet on All Souls Day.

External links[edit]

In the Church of England, "the period between All Saints' Day and the First Sunday of Advent is observed as a time of celebration and reflection on the reign of Christ in earth and heaven".[1]Kingdomtide?

Kingdomtide

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Kingdomtide was a liturgical season formerly observed in the autumn by the United Methodist Church'Kingdomtide'; observed in the church of England called "All Saints to Advent", in the United States, and some other Protestantdenominations.

Methodist and Presbyterian Usage[edit]

Kingdomtide was a liturgical season or sub-season observed only by Protestant churches, especially Methodists and Presbyterians. Green was traditionally the color of the day throughout this season as it is a part of the season of Ordinary Time. In 1937, the Federal Council of Churches (now known as the National Council of Churches) recommended that the entire part of the Christian calendar between Pentecost and Advent be named Kingdomtide; however, two years later theMethodist Episcopal Church adopted the term only for the second half of this time period.
Precise criteria for determining when Kingdomtide began varied in different localities. The most common practice was to start the season on the Sunday on or nearest August 31, which gave Kingdomtide 13 Sundays every year; in some places, Kingdomtide began on the last Sunday in August, giving the season 13 Sundays in some years and 14 in others. The last Sunday before Advent begins is observed as the Feast of Christ the King.
The liturgy for Kingdomtide stressed charity and assistance to the poor, in contrast to the preceding Sundays after Pentecost, when a more spiritual mission was emphasized. Green vestments and paraments were used at church services during Kingdomtide, replacing the red used on the Sundays after Pentecost (in churches that did not recognize Kingdomtide as a separate season, green was generally deployed throughout the entire period between Pentecost and Advent).
By 1992, the United Methodist Church was the only denomination still using the term Kingdomtide, and even within the United Methodist Church the observance has almost completely ceased, with most congregations adopting the more common ecumenical pattern of a season of Ordinary Time between Pentecost and Advent.

Anglican Usage[edit]

In the Church of England, "the period between All Saints' Day and the First Sunday of Advent is observed as a time of celebration and reflection on the reign of Christ in earth and heaven".[1] In the Church of England liturgical colours are recommended but not mandatory, so while red is encouraged during this period, individual churches may continue to use green until Advent. This period, called All Saints to Advent in the Church of England's liturgical material, is often nicknamedKingdomtide or the Kingdom season.

References[edit]

  1. Jump up^ Common Worship: Daily Prayer, p. xx

#6166 ×¢ַרָד `Arad {ar-awd'} from an unused root meaning to sequester itself; TWOT - n/a; —Hebrew Word Study (Transliteration-Pronunciation Etymology & Grammar)

http://lexiconcordance.com/hebrew/615.html#66
 Arad = "a wild ass"
 n pr m
 1) a Benjamite, son of Beriah, who drove out the inhabitants of Gath
 n pr loc
 2) a royal city of the Canaanites north of the wilderness of Judah

—Brown-Driver-Briggs (Old Testament Hebrew-English Lexicon)

From an unused root meaning to sequester itself; fugitiveArad, the name of a place near Palestine, also of a Canaanite and an Israelite:—Arad.

—Strong's (Hebrew & Chaldee Dictionary of the Old Testament)

 AV - Arad 5; 5
Arad
Numbers 21:133:40. Joshua 12:14. Judges 1:16. 1 Chronicles 8:15.

Eran = "watcher" 1) the eldest son of Ephraim, Hebrew Dictionary (Lexicon-Concordance) Key Word Studies (Translations-Definitions-Meanings) » H6197 «

Hebrew Dictionary (Lexicon-Concordance)

Key Word Studies (Translations-Definitions-Meanings)

» H6197 «

  #6197 ×¢ֵרָן `Eran {ay-rawn'}

 probably from H5782; TWOT - n/a; n pr m

—Hebrew Word Study (Transliteration-Pronunciation Etymology & Grammar)

 Eran = "watcher"
 1) the eldest son of Ephraim

—Brown-Driver-Briggs (Old Testament Hebrew-English Lexicon)

Probably from H5782watchfulEran, an Israelite:—Eran.

—Strong's (Hebrew & Chaldee Dictionary of the Old Testament)

  • #6197.
  • ×¢ֵרָן
  • Eran (735d); from 5782; an Ephraimite:—
  • NASB - Eran(1).

—NAS Exhaustive Concordance of the Bible with Hebrew-Aramaic and Greek Dictionaries

Copyright © 1981, 1998 by The Lockman Foundation — All rights reserved — http://www.lockman.org
 AV - Eran 1; 1
Eran
Numbers 26:36.

—Exhaustive Concordance (KJV Translation Frequency & Location)


Monday, August 11, 2014

Christian Web site, Prophecy, Babylon, The Rapture, Apostasy, 11th Hour

Christian Web site, Prophecy, Babylon, The Rapture, Apostasy, 11th Hour

return to home page Collections from the Library of Congress Collections from the National Library of Russia: Prints and Photographs | Collections of the National Library of Russia: Prints and Photographs Album of the Amur and Ussuri Regions | Views of Sakhalin Island | Tsine-Louine "Siberia" Postcard Series | Atlas of Kruzenshtern's Circumnavigation | Album of Seniavin Lithographs | Tsarist and Soviet Posters | Cheliuskin | Album "Launch of the Icebreaking Ferry Baikal " | Album "Views of Hard Labor in Nerchinsk" | Siberian Postcards | The Birobidzhan Album | Albums of Siberian Cities | Albums of Expeditions to Siberia and the Russian Far East Album of the Amur and Ussuri region | Types of Sakhalin Island | Series Postcards Chin-Lung "Siberia" | Atlas travel around the world Krusenstern | album of lithographs "Senyavin" | tsarist and Soviet Posters | "Cheliuskin" | Album "Launching icebreaking ferry Baikal " | Album "to hard labor in Nercinsk" | Siberian Postcards | Birobidzhan album | Albums with pictures of Siberian cities | Albums expeditions to Siberia and the Russian Far East Album of the Amur and Ussuri Regions Prints Division This album contains 154 photographs taken in the second half of the 1860s and 1870s by a local photographer from the Far East, VV Lanin. The merchant VP Myl'nikov presented it as a gift to the Imperial Public Library of St. Petersburg upon his return from the Amur region. The photographs represent a variety of subjects, including municipal scenes of Blagoveshchensk, Nikolaevsk-na-Amure, and Vladivostok; images of native life and culture, views of nature, and commerce along the Amur, Ussuri, and Suifun Rivers.

http://frontiers.loc.gov/intldl/mtfhtml/mfdigcol/nlrph.html#d_rus
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ALERT! PROOF The Biggest EVENT in History is About to Happen!!!

Author Unknown; "The Awakening"

"THE AWAKENING" Author Unknown

"THE AWAKENING"
Author Unknown
A time comes in your life when you finally get
it...when, in the midst of all your fears and
insanity, you stop dead in your tracks and somewhere
the voice inside your head cries out - ENOUGH!
Enough fighting and crying or struggling to hold
on. And, like a child quieting down after a blind
tantrum, your sobs begin to subside, you shudder
once or twice, you blink back your tears and begin
to look at the world through new eyes.
"This is your Awakening"
You realize it's time to stop hoping and waiting
for something to change ... or for happiness, safety
and security to come galloping over the next horizon.
You come to terms with the fact that neither of
you is Prince Charming or Cinderella and that in the
real world there isn't always fairy tale endings (or
beginnings for that matter). You learn that any
guarantee of "happily ever after" must begin with
you...and in the process a sense of serenity is born
of acceptance.
You learn that people don't always say what they
mean or mean what they say and that not everyone
will always be there for you and that it's not always
about you.
So, you learn to stand on your own and to take
care of yourself...and in the process a sense of
safety and security is born of self-reliance.
You realize that much of the way you view
yourself, and the world around you, is as a result of
all the messages and opinions that have been
ingrained into your psyche. And you begin to sift
through all the junk you've been fed about how you
should behave, how you should look, how much you
should weigh, what you should wear, what you
should do for a living, how much money you should
make, what you should drive, how and where you
should live, who you should marry, the importance
of having and raising children, and what you owe
your parents, family, and friends.
You begin reassessing and redefining who you are
and what you really stand for.
You learn the difference between wanting and
needing and you begin to discard the doctrines and
values you've outgrown, or should never have bought
into to begin with ... and in the process you learn to
go with your instincts.
And that there is power and glory in creating
and contributing and you stop maneuvering through
life merely as a "consumer" looking for your next fix.
You learn that principles such as honesty and
integrity are not the outdated ideals of a bygone era
but the mortar that holds together the foundation
upon which you must build a life.
You learn that you don't know everything, it's
not your job to save the world and that you can't
teach a pig to sing.
You learn that the only cross to bear is the one
you choose to carry and that martyrs get burned at
the stake.
You stop trying to control people, situations
and outcomes.
You learn that feelings of entitlement are
perfectly OK....and that it is your right to want
things and to ask for the things you want ... and that
sometimes it is necessary to make demands.
You come to the realization that you deserve to
be treated with love, kindness, sensitivity and
respect and you won't settle for less.
You learn that your body really is your temple;
you begin to care for it and treat it with respect.
You begin to eat a balanced diet, drink more water,
and take more time to exercise.
You learn that being tired fuels doubt, fear,
and uncertainty and so you take more time to rest.
You learn that, for the most part, you get in
life what you believe you deserve...and that much of
life truly is a self-fulfilling prophecy.
You learn that anything worth achieving is worth
working for and that wishing for something to happen
is different than working toward making it happen.
More importantly, you learn that in order to
achieve success you need direction, discipline and
perseverance.
You also learn that no one can do it all
alone...and that it's OK to risk asking for help.
You learn the only thing you must truly fear is
the greatest robber baron of all: FEAR itself.
because to give in to fear is to give away the right
to live life on your own terms.
You learn that life isn't always fair, you don't
always get what you think you deserve and that
sometimes bad things happen to unsuspecting, good
people. On these occasions you learn not to
personalize things.
And you learn to deal with evil in its most
primal state - the ego.
You learn that negative feelings such as anger,
envy and resentment must be understood and
redirected or they will suffocate the life out of you
and poison the universe that surrounds you.
You learn to admit when you are wrong and to
build bridges instead of walls.
Slowly, you begin to take responsibility for
yourself by yourself and you make yourself a
promise to never betray yourself and to never,
ever settle for less than your heart's desire.
Then, with courage in your heart and God by
your side you take a stand, you take a deep breath,
and you begin to design the life you want to live as 

best you can.

http://www.chabad.org/calendar/view/day.htm

Who Are the Hebrews?

Who Are the Hebrews?

1
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The first person to be called a Hebrew was Abraham,1 and the name commonly refers to his descendants, known as the Jewish people. The word for Hebrew used in the Bible is עברי (pronounced "Ivri"), meaning "of or pertaining to עבר-ever." So what does "ever" mean?
The Midrash2 quotes three opinions as to where this name comes from:
  1. Rabbi Yehuda taught that the word "ever" means "opposite side." Abraham believed in one G‑d, and the rest of the world worshipped man-made gods. Thus, "Abraham stood on one side, and the entire world stood on the other side."
  2. Rabbi Nechemiah opined that it is a reference to Ever, great-great-grandson of Noah (usually Anglicized as "Eber"), ancestor of Abraham. Eber was one of the bearers of the monotheistic tradition which he had learned from his ancestors Shem and Noah and passed on to his grandson Abraham. Since Abraham was a descendant and disciple of his, he is called an Ivri.
  3. The rabbis held that the word is a reference to the fact that Abraham came from the other side of the river and was not a native Canaanite. "Ivri" also refers to the fact that Abraham spoke the Hebrew language—thus named because of its ancient origins, preceding the development of the other languages current at that time.3
So Hebrew means the one who is opposed, on the other side, and different from all others. Abraham was a solitary believer in a sea of idolatry.
Perhaps this is why the second person to be called a Hebrew is Joseph.4 A nice Hebrew boy ends up in Egypt, the decadent land of the Pharaohs, where people and the celestial spheres are worshipped instead of G‑d; a lone teenager with outlandish Hebrew beliefs from the far side, in the strongest society of his day. Joseph did not cave in to the pressures. He stood firm in the faith of his ancestors and ultimately rose to the top of Egyptian society, until he was second to Pharaoh himself. In fact, it was after the wife of Potiphar had tried to tempt him into sinning, and he withstood the temptations, that he is first referred to as an Ivri—for then he showed that he was a faithful bearer of the contrary tradition of Adam, Noah, Shem, Eber, and Abraham.
So who are the Hebrews today?
The Jewish people, who after over 3,000 years still cling to their peculiar beliefs and are not swayed by the passing fancies of pop culture, are the same contrary people as their ancestors—the Hebrews of old.
FOOTNOTES
1.Genesis 14:13.
2.Bereishit Rabbah 42:8,
3.While the other languages developed after the dispersion which followed the building of the Tower of Babel, Hebrew preceded them all. Perhaps it is etymologically related to the word עבר-past, since it is a language from the past.
4.Genesis 39:14.
Rabbi Menachem Posner serves as staff editor for Chabad.org. He lives with his family in Montreal, QC.
© Copyright, all rights reserved. If you enjoyed this article, we encourage you to distribute it further, provided that you comply with Chabad.org's copyright policy.

What Makes a Jew "Jewish"? Based on the teachings of the Lubavitcher Rebbe Courtesy of MeaningfulLife.com

What Makes a Jew "Jewish"?

What Makes a Jew "Jewish"?

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Question:
Is Judaism a "religion"? Is the term "non-religious Jew" an oxymoron? Can one still be Jewish without observing the edicts and ethos ofTorah in one's daily life?
Answer:
Jews defy all conventional definitions of a "people" or "nation." We lack a common race, culture or historical experience. While we all share our eternal rights to the Land of Israel, for all but a few centuries of the last 4,000 years the overwhelming majority of Jews have not lived or even set foot in the Jewish homeland.
Throughout our 3300-year history, what has defined us as Jews is a relationship and commitment. We are Jews because G-d chose us to be His "cherished treasure from all the nations... a kingdom of priests and a holy people" (Exodus 19:5-6). We are Jews because G-d chose us to play the central role in the implementation of His purpose in creation: to orientate our lives in accordance with His will, and to develop a society and world community that reflects His goodness and perfection.
The substance of this relationship, the charter of this commitment, is the Torah. The Torah is G-d's concept of reality as communicated to man, the blueprint that describes the perfected world envisioned by its Creator and details the manner in which the Inventor of Life wishes it to be lived.
This would seem to define our Jewishness as a "religion": we are Jews because we adhere to the beliefs and practices mandated by the Torah. But the Torah itself says that this is not so.
The Torah itself proclaims (Leviticus 16:16) that G-d "dwells amongst them in the midst of their impurities" -- that His relationship with His people remains unaffected regardless of their behavior. In the words of the Talmud (Sanhedrin44a), "A Jew, although he has transgressed, is a Jew."
According to Torah law, a person's Jewishness is not a matter of life-style or self-perception: one may be totally unaware of one's Jewishness and still be a Jew, or one may consider himself Jewish and observe all the precepts of the Torah and still not be a Jew.
In other words, it is the relationship between the Jew and his Creator that defines his Jewishness -- not his acknowledgment of this relationship or his actualization of it in his daily life. It is not the observance of Torah's mitzvot(Divine "commandments") that makes him a Jew, but the commitment that the mitzvot represent.
The Essence of a Transgression
This is the deeper significance of the axiom, "A Jew, although he has transgressed, is a Jew."
The simple meaning of these words is that a Jew is still a Jew despite his transgressions. But on a deeper level, it is because he has transgressed that he is a Jew. A non-Jew who eats chametz (leavened bread) on Passover has done nothing wrong; likewise, his eating matzah on the Seder night has no moral or spiritual significance. But for a Jew, the mitzvot of Passover are a component of his relationship with G-d: by observing them he is realizing this relationship and extending it to his daily life; if he violates them, G-d forbid, he is transgressing -- he is acting contrary to the commitment which defines his identity. Thus, in a certain sense, the fact of a Jew's transgression is no less an expression (albeit a negative one) of his relationship with G-d than his observance of a mitzvah.
Indeed, the Hebrew word mitzvah means both "commandment" and "connection." The relationship between the word's two meanings can also be understood on two levels. On the behavioral level, we connect to G-d through our fulfillment of His commandments. On a deeper level, we are inexorably connected to Him by virtue of the fact that He chose us as the object of His commandments. Obviously, these two levels of connection are two sides of the same coin, being the inner and outer faces of the same truth: our observance of the mitzvot is the manifestation, in our daily lives, of the intrinsic bond between G-d and Israel.
The Six-Dimensional Link
The Zohar, the basic work of the Kabbalah, expresses this concept in the following manner:
There are three connections ('kishrin") that are bound to each other: G-d, the Torah, and Israel --each consisting of a level upon a level, hidden and revealed. There is the hidden aspect of G-d, and the revealed aspect; Torah, too, has both a hidden and a revealed aspect; and so it is with Israel, who also has both a hidden and a revealed aspect.
The Zohar goes on to describe the manner in which the Torah serves as the connecting link between G-d and Israel: how the Torah is one with its Divine Author, and how the Jewish people connect to the Torah through their study and observance of its teachings.
But what are the "hidden" and "revealed" elements of G-d, Torah and Israel? And what is their relevance to our connection to G-d through His Torah?
The Zohar is intimating that these three "connections" are interlinked on two levels, both on a "hidden" and on a "revealed" plane. For each of the three interconnected links possesses both an explicit and an implicit dimension.
There is the so-called "revealed" aspect of G-d -- those expressions of His reality which He chooses to manifest within the created existence; and there is His "hidden" unknowable essence. The Jew, too, has his revealed and manifest self -- the manner in which he expresses himself through his behavior; and his hidden, quintessential self. And the Torah, as outlined above, has both a more pronounced as well as a more implicit significance as the connecting link between G-d and Israel.
On the "hidden" plane, the soul of the Jew is bound to the very essence of G-d through the underlying relationship and commitment which Torah represents. Even if the Jew's life, on the conscious-behavioral level, is inconsistent with the revealed will of the Almighty, s/he is no "less" a Jew, G-d forbid: no matter what, the "hidden" intrinsic bond that defines his Jewishness is unaffected. But in order to express this relationship on all levels of his being, in order to bring his life in line with her essence, the Jew must reiterate the connection on the "revealed" level. This s/he does by studying G-d's Torah and observing its mitzvot.
The Third Juncture
There is, however, another, yet deeper meaning to the Zohar's words.
The above-cited passage speaks of "three connections which are bound to each other." The Aramaic word translated here as "connections" is kishrin, which literally means "knots."
At first glance, this seems to be an inaccurate usage. If Torah is the link between G-d and Israel, then what we have are three entities (G-d, Torah and Israel) linked via two connections (Israel's connection to Torah and the Torah's connection with the Almighty). Where do we have three knots/connections?
This brings us to a second definition of the "hidden" and "revealed" dimensions of the relationship between G-d and Israel. The Midrash states:
Two things preceded G-d's creation of the world: Torah and Israel. Still, I do not know which preceded which. But when Torah states "Speak to the Children of Israel...", "Command the Children of Israel...", and so on, I know that Israel preceded all (Tana D'veiEliyahu Rabba, chapter 14)
In other words, G-d created the world in order that Israel might implement His Divine plan for existence, as outlined in the Torah. So the concepts of "Israel" and "Torah" both precede the concept of a "world" in the Creator's "mind." Yet which is the more deeply rooted "idea" within the Divine consciousness, Torah or Israel? Does Israel exist so that the Torah be implemented, or does the Torah exist to serve the Jew in the fulfillment of his mission and the expression of his relationship with G-d? If the Torah describes itself as a communication to Israel -- the Midrash is saying -- this presumes the concept of "Israel" as primary to that of "Torah."
This means that G-d's relationship with Israel "pre-dates" (in the conceptual sense) the Torah, for the Torah comes to serve that relationship. In this sense, Israel is the "link" between the Torah and G-d: the Torah's existence as the embodiment of the Divine wisdom and will is a result of Israel's existence and its connection with G-d.
Thus, we have three connections linking G-d, Israel and the Torah:
On the revealed level, the Torah serves as the link between G-d and Israel: the Torah is connected to G-d, and Israel is connected to the Torah. (This includes both levels of connection outlined above -- the connection achieved through the performance of a mitzvah and the connection defined by the commitment itself ).
But on a deeper, more quintessential level, there exists a third connection: the "direct" connection between G-d and His people which precedes the very concept of a Torah. On this level, Israel's involvement in Torah is what connects the Torah to G-d -- what causes Him to extend His infinite and wholly indefinable being into a medium of "Divine wisdom" and "Divine will." On this level, it is not the Jew who needs the Torah in order to be one with G-d, but the Torah who "needs" the Jew to evoke G-d's desire to project Himself via the Torah.
Nevertheless, the Torah is crucial to the Jew's relationship with G-d. The essence of the Jew, as it is rooted within the essence of G-d, is indeed one with its Source. But then it "descends" to become part of the created existence, assuming a distinct identity as a soul and then as a human being. So G-d provided the Jew with His Torah. Through Torah, the Jew touches base with his own quintessential self and makes his intrinsic bond with his Creator a reality in his daily life.