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Mapping Monday Bellwork 2 6 3 1 4 5 Correct Answers • • • • • • 1 Gulf of Mexico 2 North Sea 3 Mediterranean Seas 4 Arabian Sea 5 Bay of Bengal 6 Sea of Japan Objective • WWBAT: Define and introduce key terms and texts of Judaism The First Major Monotheistic Religion • Today we are going to start on the first of two major monotheistic religions • Today we will begin studying Judaism Why Start With Judaism? • First off, Judaism developed before Christianity • Second two of the other major Monotheistic religions (Christianity and Islam) have their roots in Judaism • Specially in the founder of Judaism, Abraham Interactive Notebook Setup • 9/26/2016 • Judaism Terms and History • This will be on 2 pages Nevi’im Mishnah Ketuvim Gemara Tenach / Tanakh Talmud Yahweh Covenant Torah Ancient Jewish Peoples/History Today’s Goals • During class today we are going to address the following topics: • Geography • Origins of Judaism • Major terms • Tomorrow we will address the core beliefs and practices of Judaism Let’s Start Where We Usually do… • …with geography! • Judaism originated in the Middle East, in land referred to by ancient people as the Canaan • This is area is often referred to as the Promise Land in Judaism Jewish God(Yahweh) • Judaism is the first major monotheistic religion to develop in the world • This makes Judaism MUCH different than the religions we have already studied in this class • The Jewish god is called Yahweh Yahweh • Yahweh created the world and everything in it • Yahweh created natural phenomena, but is NOT the natural phenomena • Thus things like natural phenomena should be admired, but NOT worshiped Yahweh • Yahweh does not have a gender • Yahweh does not have any physical presence • Though Yahweh is not physically presence on Earth this does not mean Yahweh is removed from life Yahweh • Yahweh is good and just • Yahweh expects followers to be good or they will be punished • Both Christianity and Islam model the ultimate power on Yahweh Key Terms • Before we get into the history of Judaism, let’s look at two major terms • Covenant and Torah • Let’s start with covenant Covenant • Covenant –An agreement between God and people • The fact that Yahweh made a covenant with the Hebrews is SUPER important • This is where the concept of the Hebrews being the Chosen People comes from Torah • Torah- The first 5 books of the Hebrew Bible, believed to be the word of God, which contains history, a set of laws, and tales used as moral guidance • The Torah will be used and referenced in the holy text of Christianity and Islam • Now we are going to examine one the most important figures in Judaism and all of Western Religion • Abraham Abraham • Abraham is the father of the Hebrew people • This means he is the father of Judaism • Abraham was originally from Mesopotamia Abraham • According to Jewish tradition God told Abraham to abandon polytheism and Mesopotamia • In exchange God promised to take the people of Abraham to a “promise land” and make his people powerful Abraham • Abraham had two sons, Ishmael and Isaac • Ishmael was his son by Hagar • Isaac was his son by Sarah • Abraham had a son by Hagar because Sarah had not given him a son Isaac and Ishmael • Ishmael and his mother Hagar we sent away by Abraham at Sarah’s request • Islam traces it’s historical tradition through Ishmael and thus Abraham • Let’s look at a “Family Tree” The “Family” Tree Moses • Today we are going to talk about another major figure in Judaism • Moses • Let’s set the stage The Hebrews Move • Around the year 1600 BCE the Hebrew people(Jews) moved into Egypt because of a drought and famine in Land of Canaan • Initially they were treated well in Egypt • Probably because the Hyksos were in power – Does anyone remember who the Hyksos were? Things Take A Turn • Due to the success and how much the Hebrews prospered, the Pharaoh began to feel threatened • Worried about an uprising, the Pharaoh (known as the Pharaoh of oppression) enslaved the Hebrews Things Get Even Worse • The Pharaoh was also worried about the number of Hebrews and ordered that ALL male Hebrew newborns be executed • Moses was saved by his mother, who hid him the Nile in a basket • He was discovered and raised as Egyptian Prince Moses • Moses was aware of the fact that he was a Hebrew • He fled Egypt after killing a slave master who was beating a Hebrew • After fleeing Moses became a shepherd until God spoke to him Moses • Massive building projects were undertaken by the Pharaoh and the conditions of Hebrew salves were made much worse • God spoke to Moses in the form of a burning bush • God told Moses that he must lead the Hebrews out of Egypt Moses • Moses demanded that the Pharaoh let the Hebrews go, the Pharaoh refused • God brought plagues down on Egypt and this convinced the Pharaoh to let the Hebrews go • This is called the Exodus and celebrated with the Passover After The Exodus • After the Exodus of the Hebrews, they wandered the Sinai Desert for 40 years • While wandering the desert Moses climbed Mount Sinai • At Mount Sinai Moses received another covenant, the Ten Commandments Torah • Creation: God Created the Universe and everything in it, The covenant was created between God and Humanity (specifically between God and the Jewish people) • Redemption: Israelites were saved from bondage in Egypt (in order to experience revelation) • Revelation: God gave his 613 mitzvot as a standard for conduct and behavior ▫ Mixed with ritual practices this provides the framework of lifestyle for all humanity. Torah • Genesis (Bereshit): contains stories of creation, records the establishment of the covenant between God and the Jewish people, tells of the lives of the patriarchs and matriarchs • Exodus (Sh’mot): account of Israelites enslaved in Egypt, the exodus from Egypt, the receiving of the 10 Commandments at Mt. Sinai • Leviticus (Vayikra): gives God’s ethical and ritual laws and specific instructions to priests on how to perform their duties • Numbers (Bamidbar): recounts the history of the Israelites through the desert and gives more of God’s ethical and ritual laws • Deuteronony (Devarim): Moses reviews the laws and the people prepare to enter the promised land. Nevi’im • 2nd section of the Hebrew Bible, prophets • Not a fortuneteller but rather a messenger of God to the people • Prophets admonished the Jewish people for forgetting and forsaking God’s commands • They called on the people to examine their lives and their conduct • Nevi’im is divided in two sections: early and latter prophets Nevi’im • Early Prophets: Joshua, Judges, Samuel (2), Kings (2) • Latter Prophets: – Major Prophets: Isaiah, Jeremiah, Ezekiel – Minor Prophets: Hosea, Joel, Amos, Obadiah, Jonah, Micah, Nachum, Habakkuk, Zephaniah, Haggai, Zechariah, Malachi Ketuvim • 3rd section of Hebrew Bible, writings • Contains wisdom literature, poetry, songs, narrative, history, religious philosophy, and love hymns…12 books in total • Books include: Psalms, Proverbs, Job, Songs, Ruth, Lamentations, Ecclesiastes, Esther, Daniel, Ezra, Nechemiah, Chronicles Tenach / Tanakh • Tenach / Tanakh is Hebrew name for Hebrew Bible • Created by taking the first letter of each of the three sections of the Bible and making a word out of those three letters. – T: for Torah – N: for Nevi’im – CH: for Ketuvim Mishnah • The first compilation of the Oral Law between 200 BCE and 200 CE • Collects all of the Jewish legal material from the post-Torah era • Divided into 6 orders (or chapters) – Seeds, Festivals, Women, Damages, Holy Things, Purifications Gemara • A compilation of the discussions, interpretations, explanations, and theological arguments about the Mishnah • Also contains New interpretations and new laws that arose after Mishnah from about 200-600 CE • Contains both Jewish law and Jewish stories Talmud • Is the combined Mishnah and Gemara • Largest compilation of post-biblical law • Remains the basic and central document of postbiblical law • Talmud is studied for: ▫ ▫ ▫ ▫ ▫ the practical application of its laws its mind-expanding challenges in logic and reasoning its total immersion in Jewish concerns its wisdom and insights into the human experience And the simple love of learning and growing