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  • Judaism & Mediumship: A Complimentary Relationship

    Monday, October 5, 2015
    Judaism & Mediumship: A Complimentary Relationship


    "Without a doubt, visiting spirit mediums is becoming amazingly popular,” author Cathy Cash Spellman told the New York Times last October (La Ferla 2000).

    The subject of mediumship has long been popular in many segments of society. There are presently televised shows featuring famous mediums and their work with individuals and groups, there have been reality based shows which featured mediums in competition and there has been a famous long running sitcom portraying a fictional story line based upon an actual medium. With all of this mediumship going on it is not unusual for Jews to ask themselves what Judaism has to say about this subject. Typically the response of most Rabbi’s is to enforce the idea that Judaism is about this life and not the next life and spiritual contemplation regarding an afterlife and whether we can engage that other life are intrinsically opposed to the values and ethics of Judaism. In a debate on Larry King Live, Rabbi Shmuely Boteach summarized the mainstream Jewish position concerning psychic ability and mediumship:

    I believe that religion is supposed to get us to be focused on this world, mastering relationships, being better parents, better husbands, more ethical in business, not telling us what happens in the afterlife. In fact, I even think that's quite dangerous. I don't want to be pulled to the heavens. You know, we're supposed to be focused here on Earth. But I just issue this simple challenge to the psychics, just tell us anything that can help preserve life on this planet sometime in this program” (Are Psychics for Real? Aired March 6, 2001).


    Rabbi Boteach is correct in one sense of his assertion, namely that Judaism teaches us how to live this life first and foremost by emphasizing proper thoughts, speech and actions. However, Rabbi Boteach is incorrect in asserting that Judaism should not tell us what happens after physical death and that it is dangerous to do so. Judaism has discussions concerning the afterlife in every genre of its literature from the Talmud to the Kabbalah and within the myriad writings of various Rabbinic literature the afterlife appears as a common theme of discussion. In this matter Rabbi Boteach sympathizes with many other modern Rabbis in the effort to sterilize Judaism into a strictly naturalistic endeavor being devoid of spiritual imperative, inspiration and comfort. Rabbi Boteach’s Judaism is one that is devoid of life and inspiration and the type of Judaism that Jews the world over are abandoning for more spiritual oriented faiths of the East.

    Does Judaism have a particular perspective when it comes to mediumship and/or psychic ability? The answer is a definite yes. Before we examine the Jewish position concerning mediumship we need to define what mediumship precisely is as a phenomenon. A retired spiritualist and certified medium, Rita Straus Berkowitz, defines mediumship as follows:

    A medium is a person whose senses are so acute that they register the presence of beings belonging to the non-physical world; and interpret the wishes and information which such beings desire to impart to people still in the body in this physical world.”

    I would add my own definition as the innate ability to perceive non-physical signals via the stimulation of the internal sensory receptors of sight, sound and feeling. The 5 sensory gateways of perception are not externally stimulated rather they are internally stimulated by an imposing force thus creating a mental effect that may or may not be experienced physically.

    Mediumship is experienced and expressed differently by the medium. Some mediums have an acute sense of perception and can readily interpret the information from this outside acting force while other mediums are not as attuned and their perceptions can be quite muddied and lacking clarity. Mediums receive information which may or may not be factual as the incoming information must be interpreted by the medium and/or the acting external force may not be clear in its presentation or may not be truthful and this depends on the quality of its ego.

    Mediums do not predict the future (nor do psychics) as the future is open to a random series of possible quantum-wave fluctuations and any shift in either perception or action by a single individual can change the future of a billion other people. Therefore any psychic or medium who claims to be able to do predictive work is not to be trusted and should be viewed as being unethical.

    Mediums have the responsibility to connect two worlds together in order to bring comfort for the bereaved, hope for the despaired, inspiration to the uninspired, a sense of meaning and purpose for those who have lost direction and a sense of LIFE when the mundane feels so lifeless. There are those who have protested that this is the responsibility of religion but the difference between religion and mediumship is that religion is a static faith-based orientation and mediumship is experiential. Further, religion and mediumship are not mutually exclusive and should not work at odds with one another Religion should be enlivened by the practical tools of mediumship to insure vitality and responsibility for both.

    Mediumship & the Torah

    The Torah appears to condemn mediumship and most references to such phenomenon are portrayed in a negative manner within Torah’s narrative. However, we know that Moses divined the will of YHVH be secluding himself and finding a place of solitude; Joseph was an interpreter of dreams and even possessed and used a cup for divination; the Urim and Thummim of the High Priest was utilized to divine messages from the other world and there are more examples in the Torah that indicate a methodology of divination utilized by the Hebrews. However we have explicit verses in the Torah which seems to warn against such practices such as Leviticus 19:26 which reads:  “You shall not eat anything with the blood, nor shall you practice divination or soothsaying.” A few verses later verse 31 states: “Regard not those who are mediums nor seek after sorcerers, to be defiled by them…” Though it does appear that the Torah is forbidding practices of divination and mediumship at first glance there is more to this narrative. Verse 26 correlates soothsaying or mediumship with the consumption of blood and this is not an arbitrary correlation. Divination and soothsaying, insofar as it was practiced in the ancient world, consisted of using the blood and organs of animals in an attempt to divine the future.  The practice was common around the world from China to Rome.  Attempts to propitiate false gods in the ancient Mesopotamian world included human sacrifices with the hearts ripped out, another element of this practice included blood which was spilled profligately. It should be noted that as the life of an animal was in the blood, it was improper to either eat it or to use it in pagan worship.  This required that even clean meats be slaughtered and bled properly, and cooked properly, to avoid sinning by eating the blood and causing suffering to an animal. Thus verse 26 and the following verse 31 which appears in the same context are discussing in particular the practices of the idolatrous nations and that the Hebrew is to avoid defiling themselves with said practices. All of these practices being prohibited follow on the heels of Leviticus 17:10-12 which states: “I will set my face against any Israelite or any foreigner residing among them who eats blood, and I will cut them off from the people. For the life of a creature is in the blood, and I have given it to you to make atonement for yourselves on the altar; it is the blood that makes atonement for one’s life. Therefore I say to the Israelites, “None of you may eat blood, nor may any foreigner residing among you eat blood.” The indication is quite clear that the subsequent verses 26 & 31 are specifically talking about engaging in the idolatrous blood sacrifices of the other nations.

    There are a few other verses in the Torah which cast mediumship in a seeming negative light but when each of these verses is read in their entire context it is easily discerned that these injunctions are not against mediumship rather they are opposed to the practices of the other nation in the ancient Mesopotamian world. Let’s briefly summarize the other verses:

    ·        *  Leviticus 20:5,6 – this verse is specifically talking about those who “commit whoredom with Molech.” Molech was the deity worshipped by the Ammonites and later the Moabites worshiped this same deity under the name Chemosh. Devotees of Molech routinely offered up their children as human sacrifices to this deity.

    ·       *  Deuteronomy 18:9-15 – verse 9 specifically states “you shall not mimic the abomination of those nations” which is the qualifying phrase of this statement. The Hebrew was not to follow any other deity or engage in other religious practices outside of the scope of their own cultural and religious context.

    It must be pointed out that what a medium was in the context of the ancient world and what a medium is in the modern world are radically different from one another. Human sacrifices, the disemboweling of animals and drinking blood is not on the agenda for mediums of our modern era and this is because these rituals were distinctly a part of ancient religions which no longer exist. A medium today may be religious or non-religious and mediumship is rarely tied to a religious or sectarian practice.

    Mediumship in Jewish Context

    Mediumship is appears in Jewish history and was quite prevalent amongst some of the Rabbi’s. Rabbi Baruch HaLevi points out: “Many of the great Rabbis, leaders and scholars throughout Jewish history, spanning from the rationalists to the mystics, from the Ashkenazim to the Sefardim, not only qualified the Torah’s views on necromancy, not only allowed for modern day consultation of a medium, but consulted a medium themselves, if indeed, they didn’t speak to the dead on their own” (Consulting the Dead).

    Rabbi Baruch HaLevi further asserts:

    Clearly what the Torah forbids is the cultic practices that surrounded the consultation with the dead among a whole host of other disturbing, idolatrous practices. It was not, however, dealing with what most of us are doing when consulting a medium” (Consulting the Dead).

    Following are Rabbinic sources for mediumship which have been collected by Rabbi Baruch HaLevi and also by Rabbi Elie Spitz. In order to avoid repeating their previous efforts I will post their findings herein:

    * Talmud, Sanhedrin 65B
    There is an ongoing conversation between the rabbis as to what specifically the Torah forbids in regards to speaking to the dead. Below is a fragment of the conversation. The point, however, is clear - the various rabbis involved assumed that such communication was possible and some forms of it were permissible. (It is also noteworthy that the esteemed Rabbi Akiva is among those who believe in communicating with the dead).

    As has been taught: Or that consulteth the dead: this means one who starves himself and spends the night in a cemetery, so that an unclean spirit [of a demon] may rest upon him [to enable him to foretell the future]. And when R. Akiba reached this verse, he wept: If one who starves himself that an unclean spirit may rest upon him has his wish granted, he who fasts that the pure spirit [the Divine Presence] may rest upon him — how much more should his desire be fulfilled! But alas! our sins have driven it away from us, as it is written, But your iniquities have separated between you and your God.”

    * Talmud, Moed Katan 28A
    Here the Talmud relates numerous deathbed encounters where the living and the dead converse before death. Then, upon dying, the dead visit the living and have various interchanges and conversations. Here is one of those encounters.

    Raba, while seated at the bedside of R. Nahman, saw him sinking into slumber [death]. Said he to Raba: ‘Tell him,Sir, not to torment me’. Said Raba: ‘Are you, Sir, not a man esteemed?’ Said [R. Nahman] to him, ‘Who is esteemed, who is regarded, who is distinguished [before the Angel of Death]?’ Said [Raba] to him: ‘Do, Sir, show yourself to me [in a dream]’. He did show himself. [Raba] asked him: ‘Did you suffer pain, Sir’? He replied: ‘As [little as] the taking of a hair from the milk; and were the Holy One, blessed be He, to say to me, Go back to that world as you were, I wish it not, for the dread thereof [of death] is great’”.

    Some of the Hasadei Ashkenaz, the leading German rabbis of Thirteenth century, gave permission to consult the dead. The made a distinction between consulting upon a dead body, which they forbid, however, allowing the consultation with a spirit. [most notably, the Maharan (Rabbi Mordechai Routenberg); see Beit Yosef in the Tur, Yoreh De’ah 179). (adapted Spitz, “Does the Soul Survive,” p.106).

    * Maimonidies (the Rambam)
    Even rationalists, like Moses Maimonidies (the Rambam), though qualifying necromancy, allowed for consultation with dead spirits. To read his prohibition as being against all forms of communication with the dead is clearly a misreading. (See Mishnah Torah, Avodah Kocavim, 11:13; Sanhedrin 19:4).

    * The Besht (1698-1760)
    The Besht (Ba’al Shem Tov) once tested Rabbi Gershon Kittover to see if he could help him in his work with deceased souls. After he had shown him what kavanah (incantation) to use, Rabbi Gershon followed his instructions and, suddenly faced with the uprush of countless souls, he fained... (retold in Spiritual Intimacy, Schachter Shalomi, p.99).

    * Joseph Karo (Israel, 1488-1575)
    To cause a sick person to swear that he will return after his death to tell him [his living friend] what he will ask him is permitted.”

    * Moses Isserles (Poland, 1572) adds: “And there are those who even permit [asking a question of the dead] after his death, if he doesn’t address the body of the dead, but only his spirit.” Shulkhan Arukh, Yoreh Deah 179:14

    * Chaim Vital (1542 -1620) used mediums to continue to communicate to his teacher, the great Rabbi Joseph Karo, after his death. (Sefer Hahiyzonyot p.3-4).

    * Vilna Gaon (Elijah ben Solomon Zalman, 1720-1797) records that his teacher spoke to the dead;

    I heard from his holy mouth that many times maggidim (messengers) from Heaven appeard to him, requesting to deliver him the mysteries of the Torah without any effort, but he would not listen to them... When one of the maggidim insisted persistently.... he answered, “I do not want my understanding of the Torah to be mediated by [others]” (Werblowsky, Joseph Karo, Lawyer and Mystic (Philadelphia: JPS; 1977, as retold by Spitz, Does The Soul Survive, p. 107-108).

    * Rabbi Shneur Zalman of Lyady & Rabbi Joseph Isaac Schneerson (two key figures in the origins and flourishing of Chabad):

    During the festival of Sukkot the Magid (famous Rabbi), in training (his student) Rabbi Shneur Zalman (founder of Lubavitch Judaism), told him to remain in his sukkah (booth) for a visit by the Ba’al Shem Tov (famous, deceased rabbi and teacher of the Maggid’s). He ordered Rabbi Shneur Zalman to be calm and observe the event as if it were the most natural thing. Later, when Shneur Zalman was imprisoned, his ability to invoke the presence of exalted (deceased) souls helped greatly to sustain him in his suffering. Rabbi Yosef Yitzchak Schneersohn reports similar visions during his imprisonment in Moscow. (Spiritual Intimacy, Schachter-Shalomi, p.. 104).

    Summary

    Much more has been written about this subject in Rabbinic literature but it is my hope that this article provides a Jewish perspective on Mediumship and related phenomenon. This subject was elucidated by some of the Rabbinic greats such as Chaim Vital, the Vilna Gaon, Rav Akiva, Joseph Karo, etc. The voices of the sages is in direct contradistinction to the modern voices of those Rabbis who are either ignorant of what these sages have taught or they willfully turn a blind eye to these teachings and subsequently lie in this regard. Rather than debating about Judaism’s emphasis on “this” life to the exclusion of the spiritual worlds we need to be utilizing Judaism’s spiritual teachings to better enhance life in this world. Mediumship done with competence and responsibility is a great tool and being inclusive of this ability, rather than exclusive, will help insure that people can obtain the services of a quality medium with integrity and avoid the charlatans who prey on the suffering and the weak.  Judaism has a large tradition of spirituality and spiritism much of which is encapsulated in Shaare Gilgulim and Sefer ha Ot. There is no reason for seekers to pass by Judaism when looking for answers to the infamous inquiry: “What happens when we die?”

    4 comments:

    1. Unknown said...:

      Great article. I really enjoyed reading it and I am going to share it with others too. Many blessings to you!

    1. GCarter said...:

      Thanks for article. Question, I have is ...how or why does this may help me relate to dreams where people of our pas, lives. For example love one visit in dreams and things are true ?

    1. GCarter said...: This comment has been removed by a blog administrator.
    1. Unknown said...:

      GCarter, I have an article which explains the dream state at: http://jeffjudaism.blogspot.com/2013/09/the-reality-of-dreams.html

      As far as loved ones coming to us in the dream state, the Kabbalah teaches us that our souls are semi-detached from the physical constraints of the body and brain and it moves throughout supernal realms meeting with elders and loved ones on the "other side." This is all likely attributed to the shift in the brains state of consciousness and at this state of rest their are less hindrances or blocks against stimulation from the non-physical realms.

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