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Transcript
JUDAISM
-Ian Fichtner
-Pilar Martínez Osorio
-Belén Gonzalez
-Pilar Martínez
BELIEVES
Judaism consists mainly of 4 believes:
 One God: Judaism is strictly monotheistic. God is absolute,
indivisible and incomparabl, they call him Yehovah or
Elohim.
 Shekinah: It´s the presence of God. It is held by some to
represent the feminine attributes of the presence of God,
based especially on readings of the Talmud.
 Teshuva: the way of atoning for sin in Judaism. There are
several ways in which sins can be forgiven.
 Tikkun Olam: "repairing the world which suggests
humanity's shared responsibility to heal, repair and
transform the world.
INTERESTING FACTS




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Shema: an affirmation of Judaism and a declaration of faith in
one God. The obligation to recite the Shema is separate from
the obligation to pray and a Jew is obligated to say Shema in
the morning and at night.
Covenant: Sacred agreement between the Israelites and God.
The first covenant was made by God with Abraham, then
renewed by his son Isaac and Isaac's son Jacob. This covenant
was symbolized by circumcision. God was to make the Jewish
nation great and give them the Holy Land.
Kashrut: Kashrut is the body of Jewish law dealing with what
foods we can and cannot eat and how those foods must be
prepared and eaten.
Shabbat: It is a joyful day of rest, reminding of two
commandments: to remember and to observe.
Yom Kippur: It´s a day of reparation in which jews have to
fast and pray for 25 hours.
HOLY BOOKS
To judaism belong a whole series of holy books:
 Tanakh: The books of the Tanakh were relayed with an
accompanying oral tradition passed on by each generation,
called the Oral Torah.
 Torah: The main holy book. Jews hold strictly to its laws.
These laws include both the Biblical and rabbinic mitzvot
(commandments).
 Mishnah: The first major written redaction of the Jewish
oral traditions called the "Oral Torah“.
 Talmud: The first part is the Mishnah. The second part is
the Gemara (c. 500 CE), an elucidation of the Mishnah and
related Tannaitic writings that often deals onto other
subjects and clarifies broadly the Jewish Bible.
TEN SAYINGS
There are ten commandments each jew must obey and
believe:
1.
I am the Lord your God who brought you out of slavery in
Egypt.
2.
You shall have no other gods but me.
3.
You shall not misuse the name of the Lord your God.
4.
You shall remember and keep the Sabbath day holy.
5.
Honor your father and mother.
6.
You shall not murder.
7.
You shall not commit adultery.
8.
You shall not steal.
9.
You shall not bear false witness against thy neighbor.
10. You shall not envy.
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613 COMMANDMENTS

1.
2.
3.
4.
5.
6.
These principles of Biblical law are called
commandments (mitzvot) and are referred to as the
"Law of Moses“. These are contained in the Torah.
Examples:
To honor the old and the wise.
To learn Torah and to teach it. See Torah.
To cleave to those who know.
Not to add to the commandments of the Torah,
whether in the Written Law or in its interpretation
received by tradition. See Torah.
Not to take away from the commandments of the
Torah. See Torah.
That every person shall write a scroll of the Torah
for himself.