Here's something fun. Well, something I find fun.
Professor of Rabbinics Dr. Candice Levy gives a description of Zoroastrian beliefs about the afterlife that, by
changing a few words, could be a description of current Jewish beliefs. To make
the point about how closely Jewish beliefs about the afterlife align with Zoroastrian
beliefs of antiquity, let's do exactly that.
First, Dr. Levy’s description of Zoroastrian
beliefs.
"Zoroastrianism includes a belief in the afterlife, where the person survives death and transforms into the urvan (soul or self) to be judged and recompensed for their actions in this life. Upon death, the soul remains around the body for three days and then travels to the heavens for judgment and reward. All persons have the potential to enter heaven, where access is granted based upon the moral and ethical conduct of the individual. Passage into heaven requires crossing the Chinvat bridge where the deeds of a person are weighed and the good person is rewarded with entry into the “House of Good Thought” with Ahura Mazda while the wicked go to the “House of the Lie” or “House of the Worst Thought.” Eventually, the souls will be reunited with a more perfected body at the time of the resurrection. In Zoroastrianism, the resurrection was a collective one, where the Saoshyant will reunite the dead bodies with souls. The Bundahishn details the unification of the body and soul as well as the process of refinement that follows it, which is a painful process for the wicked while the righteous pass through easily. Nonetheless, all persons emerge purified and free from sin to enter into the “newly reconstituted earth.” The Bundahishn imagines a completely transformed existence and world following the resurrection. Ahura Mazda will come into the world to offer a final sacrifice, of which the righteous will partake and as a result, their bodies will become eternally young and immortal. Angra Mainyu will be forced to retreat and the world will be devoid of evil. The earth will be flattened by a fiery flood that will leave the earth as a perfect environment where people will be reunited with their families and live in harmony as a unified community." [1]
Now, let's swap out a few words
and see how well this describes frum beliefs.
Zoroastrianism Frumkeit includes a belief in the afterlife, where the person survives death and transforms into the urvan neshama (soul or self) [is] to be judged and recompensed for their actions in this life. Upon death, the soul remains around the body for three days* and then travels to the heavens for judgment and reward. All persons have the potential to enter heaven, where access is granted based upon the moral and ethical conduct of the individual. Passage into heaven requires crossing the Chinvat bridge coming before the Beis Din Shel Ma’aleh where the deeds of a person are weighed and the good person is rewarded with entry into the “House of Good Thought” Gan Eden with Ahura Mazda Hashem while the wicked go to the “House of the Lie” or “House of the Worst Thought.” Gehenom. Eventually, the souls will be reunited with a more perfected body at the time of the resurrection techiyas hameisim. In Zoroastrianism Frumkeit, the resurrection was a collective one, where the Saoshyant Hashem will reunite the dead bodies with souls. The Bundahishn gemara details the unification of the body and soul as well as the process of refinement that follows it, which is a painful process for the wicked while the righteous pass through easily.** Nonetheless, all persons emerge purified and free from sin to enter into the “newly reconstituted earth.” The Bundahishn Midrashim imagines a completely transformed existence and world following the resurrection. Ahura Mazda Hashem will come into the world to [be] offer[ed] a final sacrifice [of the Levyasan], of which the righteous will partake*** and as a result, their bodies will become eternally young and immortal. Angra Mainyu The Satan will be forced to retreat and the world will be devoid of evil. The earth will be flattened by a fiery flood that will leave the earth as a perfect environment where people will be reunited with their families and live in harmony as a unified community.
*Also a Jewish belief, see Bereishis Rabbah 100:7 and Vayikra Rabbah 18:1
** One example of a gemara that says something similar is BT
Sanhedrin 91b, which says that the soul will be reunited with the body for
judgment.
***Several midrashic sources say that the Levyasan will be a korban and the tzadikim will eat it.[2]
[2] Y.D. Eisenstein, Otzar Midrashim, Vol. 1 (New York: Nobel Offset Printers, 1915), pp. 217-222, in Noegel, S.B. (2015). JONAH AND LEVIATHAN Inner-Biblical Allusions and the Problem with Dragons.
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