Rabbinic Law
peace,
I'm trying to understand why the Rabbinic law on the matter is bad in your opinion?
I know good, dedicated, and wise rabbis who do a lot for the community and work at the same time or earn pennies.
Isn't it appropriate to pay rabbis of this type so that they can continue to work for the public without any hassle?
לגלות עוד מהאתר הרב מיכאל אברהם
Subscribe to get the latest posts sent to your email.
0 Answers
There are several problems. The first is that the rabbis are not chosen based on their quality, but for political reasons and by politicians (usually the Rabbinate). They have no interest in religious services. They are a boon to society and their crime families (Lao, Deri, Yosef).
If there is a good rabbi among them, this can of course happen, but it does not justify adding hundreds and thousands of positions in which the Minister of the Massas determines salaries and transfers them to the rabbis.
Beyond that, a community that wants a rabbi will honor and retain him and choose whomever it wants. The state should not choose rabbis or retain them.
There are already city rabbis (a role that is also unnecessary) and there are community rabbis for communities that desire it. There is no need for neighborhood rabbis.
It seems to me that anyone who does not understand the essence of this corrupt law is blind or blinds himself for its reasons.
לגלות עוד מהאתר הרב מיכאל אברהם
Subscribe to get the latest posts sent to your email.
השאר תגובה
Please login or Register to submit your answer