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Different Forms of Judaism - All I Really Need to Know I Learned In
Different Forms of Judaism - All I Really Need to Know I Learned In

... Torah must be followed exactly as they were taught by Moses and developed in the Talmud (central text of Rabbinic Judaism; includes the Oral Torah and written teachings) ...
29 Judaism PowerPoint
29 Judaism PowerPoint

... Holy Books:  Written in Hebrew  Torah: (first five books of the Bible and ...
How is Judaism related to Christianity?
How is Judaism related to Christianity?

... -In _____________, creator of the universe, personal but non-corporeal -In ____________ of old – especially Moses, through whom Torah was revealed to the Hebrew people -In _________ (first five books of the Bible), containing religious, moral and social law which guides the life of a Jew the Hebrew ...
Now
Now

... covenant between God and his people. God revealed the laws, including the Ten Commandments and the Holy Scriptures to Moses on Mount Sinai, after he had led Abraham’s descendants out of Egypt. These teachings are contained in the Torah, the Jewish holy book & their place of worship is the Synagogue. ...
Judaism Today
Judaism Today

... Orthodox Judaism Orthodox Judaism holds on to all of the ancient Jewish traditions and does not believe that they can be changed in any way. Orthodox Jews strictly follow the Laws of the Hebrew Scriptures or the Old Testament. The Hebrew language is used in all religious services and men and women s ...
Types of Judaism (NOTE)
Types of Judaism (NOTE)

... binding Conservative Judaism believes that Jewish law should be continually examined to meet the needs of every new generation. ...
Judaism
Judaism

... New Amsterdam ( New York ). The new Jewish state Israel was created in 1948, three years after the end of the Holocaust where six million Jews were massacred. In Judaism before the Diaspora, religious authority was carried out by priests who were hereditarily assigned. They celebrated the Temple of ...
Jewish American Timeline
Jewish American Timeline

...  Proper social relations between male and female, in business, judicial rulings, etc. ...
Ordained As Rabbis, Women Tell Secret
Ordained As Rabbis, Women Tell Secret

... 1985. But in Orthodoxy, the prospect of female rabbis is so controversial that many of the most accomplished women scholars insist they have no interest in seeking the title. Now two Orthodox Jewish women have stepped forward in the pages of the newspaper The Jewish Week to say that they have alread ...
Judaism is…
Judaism is…

... As a way of life, Judaism is based on… • 613 commandments found in Torah (“Written Law”) • Talmud (“Oral Law”) – commentary of ancient rabbis that elaborates on how to apply God’s Law in everyday life through: • Dietary rules (Kashrut/Kosher) • Dress and other symbols • Prayer and devotion to the o ...
Orthodox - emmausSOR2009
Orthodox - emmausSOR2009

... seek ways to fulfil the Torah in modern circumstances. high moral and ethical concern for the world’s well-being. observe strictly the Jewish Sabbath. strict dietary rules. (note: there are many varieties of Orthodoxy) 2005 Preliminary Course: Judaism. This sheet may be photocopied for non-commercia ...
Varieties of Judaism - Catholic
Varieties of Judaism - Catholic

... The differences between Reform and traditional branches of American Judaism came to a head in 1883, at the "Trefa Banquet"- where shellfish and other non-kosher dishes were served at the celebration of the first graduating class of Hebrew Union College in Cincinnati. The adoption of the radical Pitt ...
Branches of Judaism
Branches of Judaism

... Only known as a distinct branch after Reform develops Adheres to Jewish law in all of life, not just ethics ...
File - Ms. Mosley
File - Ms. Mosley

... Judaism • Three major branches: • ORTHODOX: Traditionalists who observe most ceremonial laws and dietary restrictions. • CONSERVATIVE: Do not hold the importance of a Jewish political state, but emphasize the historical and religious aspects of Judaism. • REFORM: Liberal wing; culture and race orie ...
JST 3005: Tenets of Judaism
JST 3005: Tenets of Judaism

... Did you know that…  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 circum ...
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Conservative Judaism

Conservative Judaism is a modern stream of the Reform movement in Judaism, which views Religious Law (Halakha) as binding, yet also regards it as subject to historical development. The movement regards its approach to Jewish Law as the authentic and traditional one, disavowing both what it considers the excesses of Reform Judaism and the stringency of Orthodoxy. Reconstructionist Judaism is an offshoot of Conservative Judaism. Conservative Judaism views itself as a continuation of the Positive-Historical School led by Rabbi Zacharias Frankel in mid-19th Century Germany. While at first close to the pioneers of Reform Judaism, he broke with the movement which he perceived as too radical. In America, the term 'Conservative' came to denote the group centered around the JTS, which coalesced after the publication of the 1885 Pittsburgh Platform. While a common label from then onward, symbolizing relative traditionalism, JTS-affiliated communities and rabbinic organizations became a wholly independent denomination only in the postwar years, after a long process of separation from the moderate, Americanized wing of Orthodox Judaism.In many countries outside the United States and Canada, including Israel, Germany and the UK, it is today known as Masorti Movement (Hebrew for ""Traditional""). While it resembles the conservative branch of the Reform movement in Judaism, it should not be confused with the large part of Israeli Jews (25% to 50% depending on definitions) who define themselves as ""masorati"" (or Shomer Masoret)—meaning religiously ""traditional""—and support (Modern) Orthodoxy as the mainstream Judaism.In the United States and Canada, the term Conservative, as applied, does not always indicate that a congregation is affiliated with the United Synagogue of Conservative Judaism, the movement's central institution and the one to which the term, without qualifier, usually refers. Rather, it is sometimes employed by unaffiliated Ashkenazi groups to indicate a range of beliefs and practices more liberal than is affirmed by the Orthodox or Modern Orthodox, and more traditional than the more liberal Reform and Reconstructionist Judaism. In Canada, several congregations belong to the Canadian Council of Conservative Synagogues instead of the United Synagogue. The moniker Conservadox is sometimes employed to refer to the right wing of the Conservative spectrum, although ""Traditional"" is used as well (as in the Union for Traditional Judaism). Both Conservative/Masorti and Reform/Liberal rabbinical assemblies are installing women in highest leadership assignments and ordain female, as well as male, rabbis.
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