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thegraMember
WIY: “If there was a likely chance that the company was putting poison in their food would you believe them if they told you that they don’t? Kashrus is not a joke and not a game. It doesnt look like you take it too seriously.”
We are commanded to judge others favorably.
thegraMemberHa thats so funny thats the exact kind of thing mishpachashu is talking about.
thegraMemberI love those 10 min. shiurim but yes I hear what you are saying. I am going to go right now and delete them from my ipod!
thegraMemberSo I called the OU and they said the company has dropped out of the certification process for unknown reasons. You think I can trust them and eat it or just go somewhere else? What if I see a family member eating it? Should I rebuke them or not tell them?
thegraMembertrue there are differences in halachic thought but there are certain things that everyone agrees on- such as that it is assur to drive on shabbos. Can we make it a illegal to drive on shabbos in Israel? Two eidim will testify against someone who drives on shabbos if it is not an emergency. That person will then be executed or at least thrown in jail.
thegraMemberHealth: Why are you being hika galim for no reason?
thegraMemberrabdoniel: Can you please post a link to that shiur!?
thegraMemberNope
thegraMemberIf all the gedolim who’s seforim are on hebrewbooks.org knew their sefarim would be available to ANYONE with a click of a button and presented as public lectures on yutorah.org- would they have ever published them in the first place?
thegraMemberwell i want to know if I can buy a new one from the grocery store.
February 12, 2013 2:07 am at 2:07 am in reply to: Calling people with questionable smicha Rabbi #995578thegraMemberWow, what a great topic that is finally being discussed. Yasher Koach to chafetzchaim613 (I cannot agree with you more regarding everything you said).
I agree that it is a week proof to bring Chukas Hagoyim as your raya (a couple people said since doctorate holders in America are called doctors regardless of what they do or how old they are so should people with any sort of “smicha”- no matter how cheep the smicha is). However EVEN THIS is not true.
The book Honor & Respect: The Official Guide to Titles
says someone who has a Ph.D and does not work in academia (the example they gave is someone with a doctorate who works at a Bank) should not be addressed as doctor. So by that logic someone with a smicha degree who works in business, medicine, law etc. should not be called Rabbi.
Regardless, to even compare the two in the first place is rather silly in my opinion. The problem is that historically over time honorifics with real meaning get more and more watered down. This happens whenever money is given directly or indirectly in return for an honorific to institutions.
The lesson is that unless it is coming from a very well known and respected rov: focus on what people say and not the person saying it.
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