חדש באתר: NotebookLM עם כל תכני הרב מיכאל אברהם

Q&A: His Students, Supposedly. But It Seems They Belong More to His Opponents?

Back to list  |  🌐 עברית  |  ℹ About
Originally published:
This is an English translation (via GPT-5.4). Read the original Hebrew version.

His Students, Supposedly. But It Seems They Belong More to His Opponents?

Question

The Rabbi can surely answer this question / puzzlement.
At the end of the day, you once used to be a “good Religious Zionist.”
(I ask many of those who are like that today, but their answers belong more to the realms of lies, craziness, and conspiracies, and less to truth, wisdom, and common sense.)
Rabbi Kook wrote about three forces in the leadership of the people: the religious, the universal (the good and beautiful in the values and morality of the world), and the national.
It is commonly understood as referring to the religious, the left, and the right.
And he writes that this without that, and that without this, will not succeed.
Rather, all of them together complete the “people.”
So how is it that people who see themselves as his students long for a government made up only of the national and the religious, giving up on the universal from the outset?
According to their rabbi, after all, that is a flawed, improper state and will not succeed.
Maybe they simply are not his students?
 
 
 

Answer

If you want to clarify someone’s doctrine, you should turn to him. I suggest that when you do, you formulate your questions better and more clearly.

Leave a Reply

Back to top button