Thursday, November 28, 2024

Sanhedrin Announces Ruling: All Jews Worldwide Must Come Home to Israel Immediately


Sanhedrin Announces Ruling: All Jews Worldwide Must Come Home to Israel Immediately


“For days are coming,” declares Hashem, “when I will return the fortunes of  My people Yisrael and Yehuda from exile,” said Hashem. “And I will bring them back to the land that I gave to their fathers, and they shall possess it.”

The nascent Sanhedrin in Jerusalem has made an official ruling, calling on Jews outside of Israel to come home.

“We are the beis din (rabbinic court) of Yerushalayim (Jerusalem), and we have poskened(officially ruled) that all Jews around the world have an obligation and chiyuv (religious requirement) right now to do whatever is in your power, to come to Eretz Yisrael (the land of Israel), and that is the mitzvah of Torah (Biblical requirement). And that is the mitzvah of today, especially because of what’s happening around the world and the dangers that all the Jews are in around the world. It’s necessary now more than ever to come to Eretz Yisrael, and we as a beis dinhave poskened that all the Jews have to come as soon as they can back to eretz Yisrael.”

The Sanhedrin’s ruling was intended for Jews worldwide, so it was recorded in EnglishHebrewYiddish, French, and Spanish.

The Sanhedrin’s pronouncement was succinct, so Israel365 News interviewed Josh Wander, who has received smicha (ordination) from the Sanhedrin, to hear the details and implications of the rabbinic ruling. 

As a precursor, Wander explained that since the Torah was given at Mount Sinai, the Sanhedrin, composed of 71 elders, has been the ultimate judicial authority of the Jewish people. Comparable to the Supreme Court in secular matters, the Sanhedrin also had the ultimate authority on religious issues and met in the Temple while it stood in Jerusalem. 

While many Jews do not recognize the authority of this current Sanhedrin, it is, in fact, expressly forbidden by Torah law for Jews to accept the authority of a system of law or a legal body that is not based in the Torah.

There have been previous attempts to reestablish the Sanhedrin. The current nasi, or head of the Sanhedrin, is Rabbi Eliyahu Abergel, who served as the head of the Rabbinical Court in Beersheba and later as the head of the Rabbinical Court in Jerusalem. 


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