"The Zohar, thought to have been written either by Simon bar Yochai in the second century or by a Spanish rabbi in the thirteenth century, makes certain statements which have obvious references to the Isaiah passage: There is in the garden of Eden a palace called the Palace of the sons of sickness: this palace the Messiah then enters, and summons every sickness, every pain, and every chastisement of Israel; they all come and rest upon himself, there had been no man able to bear Israel's chastisements for transgressions of the law: and this is that which is written, 'Surely our sicknesses he hath carried.'"
Ref-0011, p. 124.
"(Independence Day), the annual commemoration of the founding of the State of Israel in 1948 [May 15]"
Ref-0010, p. 18.
"[The Jews] are commanded to offer up a day of atonement sacrifice. But they are not obeying that commandment today. The Rabbis teach that fasting is equal to offering up a scarficie. The logic is: the fat and blood of the animal belong to God alone and by fasting you reduce the fat in your blood. Therefore, you are fulfilling the command. . . they interpret [the commandments] in such a way so they can claim to have kept a commandment when in reality they were breaking it."
Ref-0067, Fall 2001.
"The Day of Atonement was especially significant in the Jubilee Year, for the trumpet sounding the jubilee was blown on that day, the tenth day of the month Tishri, in contrast to other years when it was blown on the first of Tishri (Rosh Hashanah - the New Year). Therefore, the same day that physical land and liberty was restored, the high priest also offered a sacrifice to free the nation from its spiritual debt."
Ref-0010, p. 115.
Bold entries represent verses where 'you' cannot refer to the contemporaries of the speaker. Other verses represent passages where this also appears to be the case.