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Q: What is the title of the girl song in early 90s that has an intro that begin with dot-dot dorot dot dororotdorot dorot dotdororot?
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How do Jews explain why God allowed the temple of Jerusalem to be destroyed in 70 AD?

Answer 1To deserve God's Temple among us, we have to be on a high spiritual level.Answer 2This is merely a longer explanation of Answer 1.The Jews have two concepts about how the spiritual level of any Jew works. The first is that a Jew's "baseline" spirituality is generally contingent on how close he is to the Revelation at Sinai and can truly experience the holiness of that singular event. This leads to what is called Yeridat Ha-Dorot (ירידת הדורות) or the Decline of the Generations. Each new generation cannot reach the level of holiness and spirituality that the most spiritual members of the previous generations were able to attain. Therefore, as time passes, Jews naturally become less and less holy in the Spiritual Plane and need to work harder to retain the same level of spirituality as their ancestors.Once the baseline is established, the second aspect of a particular Jew's spiritual level is defined and created by the Jew himself. A Jew who performs the commandments elevates his spiritual plane. Some Jewish Sages like the Vilna Gaon are said to have elevated themselves so highly in this way that it is as if he were a person from the "baseline" of 300 years before he lived. Of course, the reverse is true as well; namely that doing sins and abandoning the commandments lowers a Jew from the present baseline. Many of the Jews during the Roman period were of this second group. They were corrupt, overly Hellenized, and abandoned many of the core commandments in order to assimilate. Therefore they were no longer at the minimal spiritual level to merit having a connection to God like the Temple. Therefore, God allowed the Romans to destroy the Temple.Our current physical inability to rebuild the Temple is a consequence of our spiritual level as Jews still not meeting this minimal standard of merit. While Religious Jews today are certainly more pious than the assimilated Jew from 2000 years ago who was corrupt and Hellenized, the Religious Jews are still too few and too weak from the Decline of the Generations to exert a strong enough pull, unless all Jews join together. Judaism holds that when all Jews take on the commandments as they are supposed to do, the situation will change and we will merit the Temple again. At that time, the Messiah will reign and the Temple will be rebuilt.


Who do jews and christians insist that muhammad is a false prophet?

First of all, the burden of proof in this question. Muslims have to prove that Mohammed is a true prophet and everyone else should be skeptical until that claim is proven true. However, there are issues with Mohammed's prophecy, from both Jewish and Christian perspectives. These come from four major objections to what he claimed and preached:Prophecy Post-Malachi: Judaism believes that each generation has a weaker connection to God than the previous generation, a concept called Yeridat ha-Dorot. Judaism also holds that a person has to have a naturally strong connection to God to prophesy. Therefore, around the time of the Prophet Malachi, humanity was losing the strength to maintain prophesy. Jews therefore claim that since Malachi, no person is capable of prophesying successfully. As Mohammed lived over 900 years after Malachi died, Mohammed, therefore, could not be a Prophet.In Christianity, the issue is Prophecy Post-Jesus. Jesus, as the living Christ, was supposed to be the final message of salvation for humanity. Since no prophet after Jesus could clarify his message, none can come.Disagreements with the Torah: Mohammed claimed that he received Divine Revelations that explicitly contradicted the Torah such as the claim the Ishmael was taken to be sacrificed instead of Isaac. Mohammed claimed that any differences between what his revelations and the Torah was due to corruption from bad Jews. This infuriated Jews who maintained that their scripture was the same one that they had been using for centuries. He was disagreeing with the words of the Torah and according to Deuteronomy 13:1-4, anyone who openly disagrees with the words of the Torah is a false prophet at best.These same contradictions cause issues for Christians.Inclusion of Christian Tradition: Mohammed said that Jesus and John the Baptist were prophets when the Jews did not believe so. Jesus was seen in the Jewish community as not only a heretic, but the cause of much Jewish suffering in the Byzantine Empire because of its Christian orientation. They would not accept the religious leadership of someone that supported Jesus as a legitimate prophet. Of course, Jews also rejected Jesus for substantial religious reasons which Mohammed did not take the time to hear out. Muslims today often do not know what the Jewish perspective was on Jesus either that led to their rejection of him.In Christianity, the corollary to this is that Islam picked up the vein of Christian heresies, such as those emphasizing Jesus' humanity and excising his divinity. The inclusion of this incorrect tradition belies Mohammed's claim to prophecy.Different Rules: Islamic Law was not the same as Jewish Law. While there were certainly similarities, it was a different law and Jews were not going to give up their traditions and history to join a new religious group. To many Jews, it was a reflection of all of the previous religions that had tried to convert them away from their proper mission.Islamic Law is also quite different, and much more restrictive, than Christian legal codices.