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n—fi- W 210 ‘ A VERY BRIEF INTRODUCTION TO JUDAISM _ _ w is the oldest surviving religion of the about 4,000 years ago when the Western World. people, led by Mam, It began migrated from They worshipped a God called El Shaddai Mesopotamia and settled in Palestine. whom they regarded as the Creator of heaven and earth and the source of all moral law. Abraham's grandson, {£13, was also called became knpwn as the Children of Israel. fig}, and therefore his descendants During his bifetime, owing to a famine, they left Palestine for Egypt, where they lived for some 400 years. end of that time they were enslaved, until liberated by a new leader, led them into the wilderness of Sinai. now called Towards the Ms, who There, in the name of the God of Abraham, M1, he proclaimed to them the Ten Commemdments and many other laws, knmvn collectively as the Tigrih, that is, the Teaching, which they pledged them— selves a.11d all their future generations to obey. Moses died, and his guccessor, .. back into Paiestine. W; ’— githe so Israelites across the Jordan, MiezffitissLIEl/gazflfztablished a monarchy Solomon's death, it split up. Piggy, then Solomon, [After Eventually, the northern kingdom, Israel, was conquered by Assyria, leaving only under king §§L_1_1, then m- M w From this time, therefgore, the people became known Hiu‘r R» (M Judah was also conquered, by the Babylonians, and its people the southern kingdom, Judah. as Judeans, or J_e_w_s, exiléd to Babylonia. 131-11; they survived, and when Babylonia KKK fail to Persia, they were pemittedjfto return to Palestine and. rebuild their Temple‘én— During all these centuries there appeared a succession of prophets, such as liaiall and Jeremiah, who further refined the Jewish ieligion. were cgmmitted to writing. So were their lawsand legends, and eventually all these writings were put together to become the ID o 16. Testament Their prephecie; ewfiBile, known to Christians as the r‘" E" nLEO BAEAVK C IN UR . I ~ \ 5 LES—2&1 ‘ .., About ~ — 2 — . E500 13.0. . the Middle East was conquered from the Persians by the Greeks. Then, in the 2nd century B.C., the Jews rebelled against the Greeks and once again established an independent Jewish State. as the Pharisees. About the same time there arose among them a new séct, known They tried to democrat ise Judaism by taking it out of the Temple into the Synagogue, a new institution where communal prayer and the study W W M 61‘ Scripture took the place of sacrifice, and Where the lay people enjoyed the same privileges as the LLULLQMI, Mum Lia» Wakexlu‘i TL PhD/(w; Lew ei/zl-[t‘ {dun-Ci priests. ' (,2. acmflzm wart QM“ M In the first century B.C. Jndea. once again lost its independence and became a. oppressed by the Romans, the Jews began to dream about a saviour, Roman province. known as the Messiah, which means the Anointed One, who, they hoped, would liberate themmxfifim become their king, and usher in a Golden Age for all mankind. From time-to time an indivisual claimed to be this Messiah, or was so acclaimed by his followers. One of them was Jesus of Nazareth. and practice, and he taught Judaism. is not certain. He was a Jew by birth and upbringing, belief Whether he believed himself to be the Messiah But he became the leader of what seemed to many to be a messianic But many of his followers movement, and as such, he was exgecuted by the Romans. continued to believe in him. shortly return. Tgey believed that he 112341 ascehded to heaven and would But they remained Jews and continued to practise Judaism. It was only when, through Paul's missionary activities, their ideas cauglt on among non—Jews that these constructed out of them a new religion, Christianity, which was in some ways very'likn Judaism and in some>ways very unlike it. About a generation after the death of Jesus the Jews of Palestine rebelled against the Romans, who [crushed the rebellion and destroyed the Temple. Pharisees and their synagogues, Judaism surfiived, the Middle East. The Jews also not. But thanks to the only in Palestine but all over maimed creative. For instance, they wrote a huge literature, consisting of laws and legends ectpounding and supplementing the 1316. ' Testament, known as the ’Fl‘gllnid. I; the course of the centuries more and more Jews moved westwards from the Middle East and established communities all over Europe. ’l‘herej‘fiiiéx however, perseéuted by the they were almost constantly Christian Church, often massacred, and finally deprived of all citizenship riglts I; was only when the power of the Church declined, and. and herded into {mitt—05. especially in consequence of the French Revolmtion with its motto of liberty, But their new freedom was equality and fraternity, that their lot improved. Soon they were persecuted again, no longer from religious but from short-lived. political motives, especially in Germany and Russia, and in our own century, under the Nazis, six million Jews, about one—third of their total number in the world, were murdered, LL MAJ KL. low J' 19‘ lc°l°°””'/ [< ' By that time many Jews had become convinced that they would never attain any 2:13.41». [4, [K fife“ 4 ’4 Zw‘I A and Lawrurfuk—J If A lasting seéuxity as long as they lived as minorities among non—Jews, Illfiez‘ailepe "44¢:q ° 31:11 " A éovanM/[owcvd 112;. ~ w ~ ~ o the' cient homeland Palestine . v MIG. A frfwffiwnl‘, hard/- [fizW-lu‘ flag/V voted. in favour o ~ a Jewish State and an Arab State side by side. ~ Soon after that the British,_a:—-$he withdrew, and the Jews of Palestine proclaimed the $tate of Israel. But the Arab States'rmvw nnnny+nfl Han vnr+i+irm D1 L7 up an Arab‘State in the area Israel in a series-of wars. akitotted fior it, ’“1. :‘r‘4‘rwa7 instead of Setting thertried to destréy the State of 1 T; this day, as we all know, real peace has not yet been achieved, and therefore the security which the State of Israel was supposed to provide for the Jewish people still remains elusive. Today there are about 15 million Jew in the world. 6 million of them live in the United States of America, 3 million in Israel, about the same number in the Soviet Union. 400,000 of them “S” 3d IL flwtt Wm The remaining 3 million are scatted all over the world. Britain. 'zV‘L LW/‘I EAInJA/wwu .live in WP” W“ [a A K 0"“ “I” About Au.“ A Mk" Auk“ M _ g; _‘ So much, than, for the history 9f Judaism. Now me say a little about its 191; JEdaism teaches that there is One God. teachings and practices. He is the Creator of the universe, and His greatness is such that no human being can fully, or anything like fully, understand Him. W He is not to be identified with the universe, still less any part of it, whether mineral, vegetable, animal or human. U MW . But J daism also teaches that He is a moral God, a u He is an invisible God. God. of justice and mercy, and that what He demands of human beings above all else is that — 9—1 i~ min—,L Lonncwi, "LWC‘yw m'piSm. In jaunt/Li." they should practise justice and mercy towards one anather, Judaism further teanhes that God has made Hfmself ‘mm‘m to mankknd and, in particular, that He has rgvealed .. His will to the Jewish people in the Torah. specaal responsibility: t'o proclaim the Unity of God, to set an example of loyalty to Him, and to work for the coming of the One God alt]. Therefore the Jewish people have a Lam'w: ’3“ /~ a when all men will worship the obey His commandments and therefore live together in brbtherhood and. peace. Finally, a few words about the practiées of Judaism. u First and foremost, of course, J daism requires its adherents to lead a good life. But in order that they may acguire the necessary spiritual and moral strength, it also requires them to practise a well-defined discipline of study, prayer and Observances. Tfierevis therefore a great emphasis on reli ious educ tion, not only for children but for 7;“ u adults as well. be“ (1M; Ideal 3;, Jews are suppos morning, afternoon and evening. so—called Ma, . to pray three times daily, in the Twice a day they are supposed to recite the which is a passage from the book of Deuteréjnomy beginning: "Hear, O Israel, the Lord is our God, the Lord is 0;;9. And you shall love the Lord your God with all your heart, with all your soul and with all your might," Public wprship takes place mainly on the Sabbath and Festivals. coutse, in the synagogue. That is, of There are nowadays two kinds of synagogue. I; the f5" so-called Orthodox synagogues the service is conducted entirely in Hebrew, it is without instrumental music, chanted rather than spoken, and the. women are segregated from the men. In the .. “ £21m ,N. so—called Ref%m ’or Liberal syn gogues, the service is conducted partly in Hebrew and partly in English, it is spoken rather than chanted, though there is also a lot of singing, usually led by a choir with organ accompaniment, and men and women Si t Sabbath or Festival morning, the most important part of the serv ce is the reading V A of Scripture. Tgere are two lessons, one from the Five Books of M ses, which is ' r‘ . read from a parchment scroll; the other,from the Prophets, is read from a book. But the Sabbath and Festivals are not only occasions for are also observed at home. - 2‘ Hum 13113110 vorship. MAL»? They For instance, the Sabbath, which lasts from Friday evening till Saturday evening, is ushered in by the lighting of candles, which is the privilege of the mother, followed by the drinking of some wine and the eating of some bread, with blessings generally recited by the father, and then a festive meal. K1011 Ml The Jewish year begins in the autumn with a New Year festival on which a ram's solemn T is is followed 10 days later by the most gm [4.4 festival of all, the Day of Atonement, when most Jew: observe a complete horn is blown as a call to repentance. fast and spend the whole day in the synagogue praying. Em. j fax yful festivals, in the spring summer and autumn. 5 The spring festival is called I A If commemorates the E odus from Egypt and is celebrated in the home with an elaborate meal and many colourful rituals. bread is eaten. . There are also three During this festival only unleavened Jinn/Moi w The summer festival is called Pentecost. 4. IL commemorates the Revelation of the Torah at Mount Sinai and involves the reading of the Ten Commandments. ' w’ - — The autxjnm festival is called Tabernacles. It is mainly a harvest festival and involves the building of a booth or tabernaclesi made but of foliage and decorated ~ with vegetables, fruit and flovmrs. There are also some minor festivals. The most important of these occurs in December gnd lasts for eight days. It is called I Chanukkah or the Feast of Dedication. It commemorates the successful 2&3 uprising of the Jews of Palestine in the 211d century 13.0. against the Greeks, who had tried to compel them to give up their religion, and involves the lighting of candles, one on the first. night, two on the second, and so on, until all are lit on the last night, and for which a BM spscial eight-branched eight cmdlestick is used. Needless to say, there are also special ceremonies to mark the various stages in the life of a Jew, such as birth, confirmation, marriage and death. But to describe these would. take too long, and I think it is betfier that I should now stop and invite you to ask any questions you wish.