Zone1 If a follower of Judaism simply cannot keep Shabbat, is there a way to make amends?

shockedcanadian

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Aug 6, 2012
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Surely not everyone has Saturdays off from work. Or, they absolutely must refrain from rest for any number of reasons. any practitioners (or simply those in the know) have a recourse plan if you fail to properly rest during Shabbat? Maybe fast, ask for forgiveness etc. Thank you for your time.
 
Surely not everyone has Saturdays off from work. Or, they absolutely must refrain from rest for any number of reasons. any practitioners (or simply those in the know) have a recourse plan if you fail to properly rest during Shabbat? Maybe fast, ask for forgiveness etc. Thank you for your time.
We arrange our schedule around it. There are a few things allowed to break Shabbat. Saving a life is top of the list.
 
- if you fail to properly rest during Shabbat?

so much better using their word for what they claim, refreshing ... their day off from work.


in american the word is - sabbath - which was what the heavens claimed their creation they had just completed, not the phony moses commandment but the true commandment to keep their sabbath - holy.

- and of course like all things desert ...

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they have abandoned the heavens, garden earth - for their own personal pleasures.
 
Surely not everyone has Saturdays off from work. Or, they absolutely must refrain from rest for any number of reasons. any practitioners (or simply those in the know) have a recourse plan if you fail to properly rest during Shabbat? Maybe fast, ask for forgiveness etc. Thank you for your time.
Are you speaking about here in the U.S.A. and have to work on a Friday sundown to Saturday sundown? Then, perhaps one solution is to call up The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints and ask for the Missionaries to come and prepare you for baptism so you can then worship the Sabbath on Sundays like everyone else that follows God's Commandments in the U.S.A. :hello77:
 
Are you speaking about here in the U.S.A. and have to work on a Friday sundown to Saturday sundown? Then, perhaps one solution is to call up The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints and ask for the Missionaries to come and prepare you for baptism so you can then worship the Sabbath on Sundays like everyone else that follows God's Commandments in the U.S.A. :hello77:
I believe the poster was asking Jews that question, and you seem to think people who observe Sabbath on Saturday should get with the program and just worship the day Christians do.

Maybe Christians should observe the Sabbath on the day Jesus did. Saturday.
 
I believe the poster was asking Jews that question, and you seem to think people who observe Sabbath on Saturday should get with the program and just worship the day Christians do.

Maybe Christians should observe the Sabbath on the day Jesus did. Saturday.
You do know that in Israel that the Sabbath is on Saturday and that Christians worship the Sabbat on Saturdays. The Lord just said worship one day a week. The day doesn't matter. During OT times, the Sabbath eventually fell on every day of the week many times. We simply make it easy by picking a day that works for the vast majority so as to have a civil society that respects one another. There are 210 million Christians and about 7.5 million Jews. Come on, just practice the Sabbath on Sundays.
 
Surely not everyone has Saturdays off from work. Or, they absolutely must refrain from rest for any number of reasons. any practitioners (or simply those in the know) have a recourse plan if you fail to properly rest during Shabbat? Maybe fast, ask for forgiveness etc. Thank you for your time.
This is a complicated question. Are you talking about an emergent situation or a set schedule that precludes observing the sabbath? Are you talking about a scenario which involves potential loss of life or just the decision to take a job which includes Saturday work?

If one accidentally does not observe the sabbath then there are means for atonement, but if one intentionally breaks the sabbath, the situation is more difficult.
 
This is a complicated question. Are you talking about an emergent situation or a set schedule that precludes observing the sabbath? Are you talking about a scenario which involves potential loss of life or just the decision to take a job which includes Saturday work?

If one accidentally does not observe the sabbath then there are means for atonement, but if one intentionally breaks the sabbath, the situation is more difficult.
So, nurses and first responders are unable to atone for their life saving work? The Sabbath was made to benefit mankind. Man was not made to benefit the Sabbath.
 
Surely not everyone has Saturdays off from work. Or, they absolutely must refrain from rest for any number of reasons. any practitioners (or simply those in the know) have a recourse plan if you fail to properly rest during Shabbat? Maybe fast, ask for forgiveness etc. Thank you for your time.
Jews that work on Saturdays go to hell.
 
You do know that in Israel that the Sabbath is on Saturday and that Christians worship the Sabbat on Saturdays. The Lord just said worship one day a week. The day doesn't matter. During OT times, the Sabbath eventually fell on every day of the week many times. We simply make it easy by picking a day that works for the vast majority so as to have a civil society that respects one another. There are 210 million Christians and about 7.5 million Jews. Come on, just practice the Sabbath on Sundays.
Come on, just stop being a shithead to Jews.
 
So, nurses and first responders are unable to atone for their life saving work?
No. Saving a life takes precedence over the sabbath, and the parameters for what is considered "saving a life" are often fairly liberal.
 
No. Saving a life takes precedence over the sabbath, and the parameters for what is considered "saving a life" are often fairly liberal.

a heavenly commandment - when correctly interpreted. think again rosey.

that's because taking a day off from work - is not what is holy ... as appealing as that was at that time their direction should have been an issue to resolve than placating what was for them a convenience over fortitude.

saving a life is their creation - to keep holy.
 
No. Saving a life takes precedence over the sabbath, and the parameters for what is considered "saving a life" are often fairly liberal.
But there is no atonement for breaking the Sabbath and not being in the Synagogue
 
We aren't to judge each other regarding Sabbath observance. Ancient Israel 'kept' the Sabbath through tiresome rituals. They got little rest, especially families with small children. Jesus fixed that. Now we can rest and be refreshed as God intended.

So, rest on the Sabbath, go to church on Sunday wide awake and ready to hear God's word without falling asleep.
 
Of course there is. You know nothing about our religion, but that doesn’t stop you from insulting it.
I didn’t say this. Rosend did, “If one accidentally does not observe the sabbath then there are means for atonement, but if one intentionally breaks the sabbath, the situation is more difficult.”
You know very little
 

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