... was seen as the sin of usury)
· Many European nations attempted to forcibly
convert or expel Jews from their kingdoms.
After the Crusades, Anti-Semitism increases
...
... The first five books of the Hebrew bible
(known in Christianity as the Old
Testament)
Began with a covenant: a sacred
agreement. God would protect the
Jewish people if they followed his
teachings.
...
... There are more than 10 different concepts of God in
Judaism?
The concepts of resurrection and messiah come from
Judaism?
After the destruction of the Second Temple, the Rabbis
instituted prayer to take the place of Temple Sacrifices?
Judaism adapted to current circumstances again in th ...
... Judaism is the original of the three Abrahamic faiths, which also includes Christianity
and Islam. There are 12 million Jewish people in the world, and most of them are in
the USA and Israel. According to the 2001 census 267,000 people in the UK said that
their religious identity was Jewish, about 0 ...
... The Phoenicians produced a number of goods for foreign markets.
They also built ships and became great sea traders.
3. Create a chart showing the significance of three major events in the
history of the Israelites
...
... Hebrews under his strong rule, and conquered Jerusalem, which became an important city forever after.
Modern Palestinians, who live inside Israel and surrounding countries, believe they are descendants of
these people.
OOLSNOM
16. The great Hebrew King __________________ built the First Temple of
Je ...
... Abraham, Isaac, Jacob - patriarchs of the Jewish people and bearers of a belief in
one God - settle in the Land of Israel.
Famine forces Israelites to migrate to Egypt.
...
... 2. What is the holy book of Judaism?
a. The Torah
b. The Bible
c. The Qu’ran
d. The Vedas
3. What is Shabbat?
a. The leader of a Jewish house of worship.
b. The Sabbath Day
c. The Jewish New Year
d. A Jewish house of Worship.
4. What is the Jewish holy building called?
a. Mosque
b. Church
c. Covenan ...
... Yom Kippur is the Day of Atonement and comes at the end of the 32._____________day of Rosh
Hashanah.
Hanukkah celebrates the 33. ______________________ in ancient Israel over the tyrants who tried to
destroy the Jewish religion.
Passover commemorates the time in history when Jews were 34. __________ ...
... Judaism is one of the world’s oldest monotheistic religion, starting some 6,000 years ago in the Fertile Crescent. With its
rejection of polytheism and insistence on social justice and law, Judaism marked a significant change from the religions
of other Middle Eastern cultures. The religious literat ...
... The wisest of all men, built the Temple in
Jerusalem and Israel’s golden age.
He built the first Holy Temple. It takes 7 ½ years
to built the Temple to complete.
1250 BCE – Exodus from Egypt
...
... Les juifs
Jew’s religion or Judaism incorporates religious rituals and a moral code of
conduct. It also lies on the Hebrew people’s history on which celebrations
and rituals are inspired. Today, Judaism brings together people of all races
and nations.
The Torah is the basis of judaism . It includes ...
... 6.3.2 Identify the sources of the ethical teachings and central beliefs of Judaism (the Hebrew Bible, the Commentaries):
belief in God, observance of law, practice of the concepts of righteousness and justice, and importance of study; and
describe how the ideas of the Hebrew traditions are reflected ...
... Christianity. Jesus was Jewish and many of his teachings reflect Jewish ideas which
was the basis of Christianity.
18. The diaspora led to the Jewish communities developing all around the world. This
led to the creation of two main cultural traditions. Name and describe both traditions.
Ashkenazim, ...
... • Temple destroyed
• New focus: sacred writings
• Synagogues, study houses
• Torah, “the teaching” (instruction)
• The Law
• The Five Books of Moses (Genesis, Exodus, Leviticus,
Numbers, Deuteronomy)
...
... was different about this occurrence, which essentially guided how
Hebrew faith came to be?
2. What two ideas emerged from God’s instructions to Abraham, and
why are they significant to Judaism.
3. What was the reason the descendants of Abraham left Canaan?
Where did they go?
4. Eventually the Egypti ...