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Glossary of Judaism
  Encyclopedia of Keywords > Glossaries > Glossary of Judaism   Michael Charnine

Keywords (Sections) X
JUDAISM
JEWISH_ETHICS
JEWISH_POPULATION
ANUSIM
APOCRYPHA
ARAMAIC
CHABAD_LUBAVITCH
CIRCUMCISION
EBIONITES
ESSENES
GEMATRIA
GENTILE
HALAKHA
HASIDIC_JUDAISM
HEBREW_BIBLE
HEBREW_CALENDAR
HEBRON
HOLINESS_CODE
HOLY_LAND
HOSANNA
HUMANISTIC_JUDAISM
JEHOVAH
JERUSALEM
KABBALAH
KARAITES
LEVITES
MAIMONIDES
MODERN_HEBREW
MOSES
MUSSAR_MOVEMENT
ORTHODOX
ORTHODOX_JEWS
ORTHODOX_JUDAISM
PANENTHEISM
PHARISEES
PRAYER
PROSELYTE
RABBI
RABBINIC_JUDAISM
RECONSTRUCTIONIST_JUDAISM
RABBIS
REFORM_JUDAISM
RITUAL_DECALOGUE
SERVICES
SYNAGOGUE
SYNAGOGUES
TALMUD
TEMPLE_MOUNT
TEN_COMMANDMENTS
WESTERN_WALL
Review of Short Phrases and Links

    This Review contains major "JUDAISM"- related terms, short phrases and links grouped together in the form of Encyclopedia article.

JUDAISM

  1. However, the word "Judaism" primarily refers to the religion in any dictionary. (Web site)
  2. It is difficult to separate what is now termed "Orthodox" judaism from the collective term "Judaism". (Web site)
  3. Judaism is a Jewish religion. (Web site)
  4. Judaism is a belief in G-d, monotheism, and derived ethics. (Web site)
  5. Judaism is a calling to marry the two, and make this world holy. (Web site)

JEWISH ETHICS

  1. Jewish ethics are based on a universal sense of justice. (Web site)
  2. Jewish ethics is an ever-expanding arena, as Jews explore their relationship to an ever-changing world. (Web site)
  3. Jewish ethics is based on the fundamental concepts of Judaism, which holds that ethical duties of all mankind can be derived from the Hebrew Bible. (Web site)
  4. Jewish ethics is based on the fundamental concepts of Judaism, which holds that ethical duties of mankind are derived from the Hebrew Bible. (Web site)

JEWISH POPULATION

  1. Jewish population is the number of Jews in the world, something that is difficult to calculate, given the constant debates over the definition of Jew. (Web site)
  2. The Jewish population was concentrated in settlement areas in 1947. (Web site)
  3. The Jewish population was decimated throughout Europe, ostensibly because they were the infidels who had crucified Jesus. (Web site)
  4. The Jewish population was increased in the last half of the 19th century by immigration from Iran, Morocco, and Algeria. (Web site)
  5. The Jewish population was increased in the last half of the 19th century by immigration from Persia, Morocco, and Algeria. (Web site)

ANUSIM

  1. Anusim is a rabbinic legal term applied to a Jew who has been forced to abandon Judaism against his or her will. (Web site)
  2. Anusim are also known as Conversos or Marranos. (Web site)
  3. Anusim are required to pay high taxes while un-baptized Jews are prohibited from commerce all-together.
  4. Anusim is the preferred term.

APOCRYPHA

  1. Also, your use of the term "Apocrypha" puts you in a Protestant camp and your neutral point of view is therefore compromised. (Web site)
  2. Also, your use of the term "Apocrypha"?title=puts you in a Protestant camp and your neutral point of view is therefore compromised. (Web site)
  3. Apocrypha is a Greek word (----------------, neuter plural of ------------------), from ----------------------, to hide away.
  4. Denotation and connotation The term "apocrypha" has evolved in meaning somewhat, and its associated implications have ranged from positive to pejorative. (Web site)
  5. It seems to me that the question of true authorship is all that the word "apocrypha" is conveying. (Web site)

ARAMAIC

  1. Aramaic is a Semitic language related to Hebrew. (Web site)
  2. Aramaic is a Semitic language with a 3,000-year history. (Web site)
  3. Aramaic is a Semitic language with a four-thousand year history. (Web site)
  4. Aramaic is a close sister of Hebrew. (Web site)
  5. Aramaic is also a North-West Semitic language, quite similar to Hebrew. (Web site)

CHABAD LUBAVITCH

  1. Chabad Lubavitch is a branch of Hasidic Judaism widely known for its emphasis on outreach and education. (Web site)
  2. Chabad Lubavitch is a sect of Hassidism, an Orthodox mystical form of Judaism. (Web site)
  3. Chabad Lubavitch is a vast international educational, outreach, community-building movement of Hasidic Judaism. (Web site)
  4. Chabad Lubavitch is a well-known branch of Hasidic Judaism which is well known because of its emphasis on outreach and education. (Web site)
  5. Chabad Lubavitch is an international educational and outreach movement of Hasidic Judaism.

CIRCUMCISION

  1. Circumcision is a ritual used in many ethnic groups; the widely use of a stone knife rather than a metal one suggest a great antiquity of the operation. (Web site)
  2. Circumcision is one of the most violent of these rituals (Odent, 199 1). (Web site)
  3. Circumcision is the antidote which both assuages and perpetuates these ancient terrors. (Web site)
  4. Circumcision is the operation of cutting away all or part of the foreskin (prepuce) of the penis. (Web site)
  5. Circumcision is the physical symbol of their covenant relationship with God. (Web site)

EBIONITES

  1. EBIONITES is the name given to a Jewish Christian sect that flourished during the early history of the Christian church. (Web site)
  2. The Ebionites are mentioned or referred to by various Fathers of the Church. (Web site)
  3. The Ebionites are thus by no means a negligible or derisory group. (Web site)
  4. The Ebionites were Jews who accepted Jesus of Nazareth as the Messiah (Christ) while continuing to maintain their identity as Jews. (Web site)
  5. The Ebionites were Jews who insisted there was only one God. (Web site)

ESSENES

  1. The Essenes are not mentioned in the Bible or in rabbinical literature. (Web site)
  2. Essenes were known for wearing white garments and practicing the art of body healing. (Web site)
  3. The Essenes were a fringe group, and those who lived at Qumran had dropped out of mainstream Judaism. (Web site)
  4. The Essenes were a more radical sect, with extremely strict rules. (Web site)
  5. The Essenes were an ascetic and mystical group devoted to strict discipline. (Web site)

GEMATRIA

  1. GEMATRIA: A system of discovering truths and hidden meanings behind words, using numerical values for letters of the alphabet. (Web site)
  2. Gematria is a Rabbinical Hebrew term derived from Greek roots. (Web site)
  3. Gematria is a hotly discussed and debated topic. (Web site)
  4. Gematria is a system of discovering truths and hidden meanings behind words, using numerical values for letters of the alphabet. (Web site)
  5. Gematria is a system of numerical values and mystical significance for each letter, word, phrase, chapter, and parsha of the Torah, Prophets and Writings. (Web site)

GENTILE

  1. A Gentile is a Jew hating anti-Communist; obviously since such people are evangelical and miltant they must be militantly opposed. (Web site)
  2. Gentile was applied to the other nations of the earth as distinguished from the Jews. (Web site)
  3. Gentile: The minimal things that Jews expect gentiles to know. (Web site)
  4. In Acts 10:1-2 we find mention of the word "Gentile" as the author introduces us to a man named Cornelius. (Web site)
  5. In modern language, the term "Gentile" refers to someone who was born of non-Jewish parents and has not identified himself with Israel through conversion. (Web site)

HALAKHA

  1. Halakha is a guide for everything the traditional Jew does from the moment he wakes up to the moment he goes to sleep. (Web site)
  2. The Halakha is a comprehensive guide to all aspects of human life, both corporeal and spiritual. (Web site)
  3. The Halakha is a comprehensive guide to each and every aspect of human life, corporeal and spiritual. (Web site)
  4. The Halakha is a comprehensive guide to numerous aspects of human life, both corporeal and spiritual. (Web site)

HASIDIC JUDAISM

  1. Hasidic Judaism is a form of Orthodox Judaism based on the teachings of Rabbi Israel ben Eliezer (the 'Baal Shem Tov'). (Web site)
  2. Hasidic Judaism is a stream of Haredi Judaism based on the teachings of Rabbi Israel ben Eliezer (the 'Baal Shem Tov'). (Web site)
  3. Hasidic Judaism is a sub-set of Haredi Judaism. (Web site)
  4. Hasidic Judaism was founded by Israel ben Eliezer ( 1700 - 1760), also known as the Ba'al Shem Tov (or Besht). (Web site)
  5. Hasidic Judaism was founded by Israel ben Eliezer (1700-1760), also known as the Ba'al Shem Tov, or the Besht. (Web site)

HEBREW BIBLE

  1. Hebrew Bible is a term describing the common portions of the Jewish and Christian biblical canons. (Web site)
  2. Hebrew Bible is a term that refers to the common portions of the Jewish canon and the Christian canons. (Web site)
  3. The Hebrew Bible was originally written without full indication of the vowelling of the consonantal text, this being preserved by oral tradition. (Web site)
  4. The term "Hebrew Bible" is a theologically neutral term as compared with "the Old Testament", which is distinctively Christian. (Web site)
  5. This article is about the term "Hebrew Bible". (Web site)

HEBREW CALENDAR

  1. The Hebrew Calendar is an amazing mathematical achievement – to learn more about how it works, an in-depth scholarly analysis may be viewed here. (Web site)
  2. The Hebrew calendar is a lunar calendar based on 19-year cycles - each day is divided into 24 hours, which are then divided into 1080 parts (or "halakhim"). (Web site)
  3. The Hebrew calendar is a lunar calendar based on 19-year cycles. (Web site)
  4. The Hebrew calendar is a lunar calendar synchronised with the seasons by intercalation, ie. (Web site)
  5. The Hebrew calendar is a mix of solar and lunar calendars. (Web site)

HEBRON

  1. Hebron is a city in the southern Judea region of the West Bank, 30 km south of Jerusalem. (Web site)
  2. Hebron is one of the most ancient cities in the Middle East, and one of the oldest continuously inhabited cities in the world. (Web site)
  3. Hebron is one of the oldest continually occupied cities in the world, and has been a major focus of religious worship for over two millenia. (Web site)
  4. Hebron is the site of the oldest Jewish community in the world, which dates back to Biblical times. (Web site)
  5. Hebron was an old Canaanite royal city before it became one of the most ancient cities of the Kingdom of Judah. (Web site)

HOLINESS CODE

  1. The Holiness Code is a religious code found in the book of Leviticus. (Web site)
  2. The Holiness Code is a term that some have given to describe the 17th through the 26th chapters of the Book of Leviticus in the Hebrew Bible. (Web site)
  3. The Holiness Code is a term used in Biblical Criticism to refer to Leviticus 17-26 and is consistent with and supplements the Priestly Code. (Web site)
  4. The Holiness code is a collection of many laws concerning several subjects. (Web site)

HOLY LAND

  1. Holy Land is a new amusement park. (Web site)
  2. Holy Land is a themed, progressive party. (Web site)
  3. The Holy Land is a place that is very important for the three major monotheistic religions: Islam, Judaism, and Christianity. (Web site)
  4. The Holy Land was Jerusalem and the Christians believed that gaining control of it was their fate. (Web site)
  5. The Holy Land was important to the Turks only as a source of revenue; consequently, like many of their predecessors, they allowed Palestine to languish. (Web site)

HOSANNA

  1. Hosanna is a liturgical word in Judaism and Christianity . (Web site)
  2. Hosanna is a track off the latest hillsong united album, lead by brooke fraser. (Web site)
  3. Hosanna is a word of Syriac origin that means save now or save, I beseech thee;[19] how appropriate its potential use by the remnant. (Web site)
  4. Hosanna is also the name of one of the songs 1913 Catholic Encyclopedia article on Hosanna. (Web site)
  5. Hosanna is also the name of one of the songs featured in the rock opera Jesus Christ Superstar by Andrew Lloyd Webber. (Web site)

HUMANISTIC JUDAISM

  1. Humanistic Judaism is a human-centered philosophy. (Web site)
  2. Humanistic Judaism is a non-theistic alternative in contemporary Jewish life. (Web site)
  3. Humanistic Judaism is a nontheistic alternative in contemporary Jewish life. (Web site)
  4. Humanistic Judaism is a secular alternative in contemporary Jewish life. (Web site)
  5. Humanistic Judaism is a very good option for me if I want to be an atheistic Jew. (Web site)

JEHOVAH

  1. Jehovah is a combination of the consonants of Yahweh and the vowels of Adonai. (Web site)
  2. Jehovah is a name for God which developed in English and was made popular by the King James Version of the Bible in 1611. (Web site)
  3. Jehovah is the special and significant name (not merely an appellative title such as Lord) by which God revealed himself to the ancient Hebrews (Ex. (Web site)
  4. Jehovah was a mistranslation in the king james bible but it stuck. (Web site)
  5. Jehovah was never used in the LXX., the Samaritan Pentateuch, the Apocrypha, or in the New Testament. (Web site)

JERUSALEM

  1. Jerusalem IS the capital of Israel from Israel's point of view, but since Israel controls Jerusalem it is UNDER Israeli law a capital. (Web site)
  2. According to the Book of Samuel it was given the name "Jerusalem" ( Hebrew Yerushal-yim) by King David but the precise meaning of this name is unclear.
  3. Jerusalem is a center of important activity. (Web site)
  4. Jerusalem is a holy city for Jews, Christians, and Muslims. (Web site)
  5. Jerusalem is an Israeli city Capitial not american so hands off world. (Web site)

KABBALAH

  1. Incidentally, the word "kabbalah" in Hebrew means "acceptance". (Web site)
  2. Kabbalah : the way of the Jewish mystic. (Web site)
  3. Kabbalah is a branch of Jewish mysticism, which is thought to have originated in the 13th century. (Web site)
  4. Kabbalah is a complex system of mystical practice aimed at union with God, which is personal enlightenment. (Web site)
  5. Kabbalah is a doctrine of esoteric knowledge concerning God and the universe. (Web site)

KARAITES

  1. Karaites are often confused with Ananites, the sect formed by Anan ben David. (Web site)
  2. The Karaites are a parelle universe, with their own interpretive tradition. (Web site)
  3. The Karaites are not behind the Rabbinites in the elaboration of Articles of Faith. (Web site)
  4. The Karaites are now a very small sect, though they claim that at one time they attracted 40 percent of the Jewish population. (Web site)
  5. Those who did not agree with the Rabbinic oral law were later called by the name "Karaites" (in Hebrew "Karaim" - ----------) - followers of the scriptures. (Web site)

LEVITES

  1. Levites are given the second aliyah on Shabbat (i.e., the second opportunity to recite a blessing over the Torah reading), which is consideed an honor. (Web site)
  2. Levites are given the second aliyah on Shabbat (i.e., the second opportunity to recite a blessing over the Torah reading), which is considered an honor. (Web site)
  3. Levites are the "first fruits" of Israel.
  4. Levites were also essential in King Hezekiah's reform of purging the Temple of Jerusalem of allegedly idolatrous furnishings (2 Chron. (Web site)
  5. Levites were appointed to minister before the Ark (1 Chron. (Web site)

MAIMONIDES

  1. Maimonides : a spiritual biography. (Web site)
  2. Maimonides was a famous Jewish teacher of the 12th century. (Web site)
  3. Maimonides was much influenced by Aristotelianism, and this gave him an impulse towards a logical statement of the tenets of Judaism. (Web site)
  4. Maimonides was of the "same color as the garment" camp. (Web site)
  5. Maimonides was reluctant to write in Talmudic Aramaic, since it was known only to those who were specially interested in it (Preface to the "Mishneh Torah"). (Web site)

MODERN HEBREW

  1. Modern Hebrew is also the primary official language of the modern State of Israel, which further encourages many to learn it as a second language. (Web site)
  2. Modern Hebrew is the official language of the state of Israel. (Web site)
  3. Modern Hebrew is the only language based on an ancient written form (Aramaic), which developed as an actual language. (Web site)
  4. Modern Hebrew is the primary official language of the state of Israel, (Arabic also has official language status). (Web site)
  5. Modern Hebrew was incorporated into the curriculum of Jewish schools and Jewish newspapers were published. (Web site)

MOSES

  1. Moses is an important figure in Judaism and founder of Israel. (Web site)
  2. Moses is a man of character. (Web site)
  3. Moses is the hero of this story and the story of the enslavement and freedom is retold every year around the Passover seder table. (Web site)
  4. Moses is the leader who freed them from slavery in Egypt. (Web site)
  5. Moses was also a prophet and is considered to be the greatest of all the Hebrew Bible 's prophets. (Web site)

MUSSAR MOVEMENT

  1. The Mussar Movement is a Jewish ethical movement which developed in the 19th century, and which still exists today. (Web site)
  2. The Mussar Movement is a Jewish ethics movement which developed in the 19th century, and which still exists today. (Web site)
  3. The Mussar Movement is a Jewish movement to revive this scholarly tradition. (Web site)
  4. The Mussar movement was founded by Rabbi Yisrael Lipkin Salanter (1810-1883), who was inspired by his teacher, Reb Zundel Salant. (Web site)
  5. The Mussar movement was founded in the mid-19th century by a Lithuanian rabbi named Israel Salanter. (Web site)

ORTHODOX

  1. Movement The term "Orthodox" Judaism only emerged as a result of the growth of new branches of Judaism. (Web site)
  2. The term "Orthodox" ( Ortodoxi) is unpopular in Israeli discourse (among both "secular" and "religious" alike). (Web site)
  3. The term "Orthodox" ( dati) is unpopular in Israeli discourse (among both "secular" and "religious" alike). (Web site)
  4. The term "Orthodox" is unpopular in Israeli discourse (among both "secular" and "religious" alike). (Web site)
  5. The term "Orthodox" was first applied to them in connection with the Sanhedrin convened by Napolean. (Web site)

ORTHODOX JEWS

  1. Orthodox Jews are conscious of the fact that they are competing with the Messianic movement for the same audience. (Web site)
  2. Orthodox Jews are divided on the legitimacy of these seminaries; most consider their ordinations invalid because they do not consider halacha to be binding. (Web site)
  3. Orthodox Jews are divided on the legitimacy of these seminaries; most consider their ordinations invalid.
  4. Orthodox Jews are divided on the legitimacy of this seminary. (Web site)
  5. Orthodox Jews were the biggest reformers in their time: they have substituted rabbinical Judaism for the Temple-based, land-centered religion. (Web site)

ORTHODOX JUDAISM

  1. Orthodox Judaism is a branch of Judaism versus Christian. (Web site)
  2. Orthodox Judaism is a loosely linked set of traditionalist movements that have consciously resisted many philosophical influences of the Enlightenment.
  3. Orthodox Judaism is a loosely linked set of traditionalist movements that have consciously resisted the influences of modernization and the Enlightenment.
  4. Orthodox Judaism is one of the three major Jewish denominations. (Web site)
  5. Orthodox Judaism is the most traditional branch of Judaism. (Web site)

PANENTHEISM

  1. Panentheism is a form of theism that holds that God contains, but is not identical to, the Universe. (Web site)
  2. Panentheism is a theological component of Hasidic Judaism and Kabbalah. (Web site)
  3. Panentheism is the idea that deity is in everything. (Web site)
  4. Panentheism is the technical term for monistic theism. (Web site)
  5. Panentheism was a major force in the Unitarian church for a long time, based on Ralph Waldo Emerson 's concept of the Oversoul. (Web site)

PHARISEES

  1. Pharisees were a powerful force in 1st-century Judaism.
  2. The Pharisees are furthermore described by Josephus as extremely virtuous and sober. (Web site)
  3. The Pharisees were a priestly (but not High Priestly) group, largely followed by the lower and middle-classes. (Web site)
  4. The Pharisees were also familiar with these texts. (Web site)
  5. The Pharisees were also innovators in that they enacted specific laws as they saw necessary according to the needs of the time. (Web site)

PRAYER

  1. Prayer is like a sweet- smelling incense rising to the nostrils of God. (Web site)
  2. Prayer is the only method that Hasidim uses openly. (Web site)
  3. Prayer is to be directed to G-d alone and to no other. (Web site)
  4. Prayer is to be directed to God alone. (Web site)
  5. Prayer is what connects us to Hashem (G-d).

PROSELYTE

  1. A proselyte is a convert to a Jewish religion. (Web site)
  2. Proselyte is used in the LXX. for "stranger" (1 Chr. (Web site)
  3. The name "proselyte" occurs in the New Testament only in Matt. (Web site)
  4. The word "proselyte" originally meant a Greek who had converted to Judaism. (Web site)

RABBI

  1. A rabbi is a teacher who has been well educated in Jewish law and tradition. (Web site)
  2. A rabbi is simply a teacher, a person formally educated in halakhah (Jewish law). (Web site)
  3. A rabbi is the person to whom Jews turn for answers to questions about Jewish laws and related matters. (Web site)
  4. Rabbi are expert in the Jewish law and are authorized to decide on any issues pertaining to the Jewish law. (Web site)
  5. The rabbi was also revered as being a figure closer to God than anyone else in the community. (Web site)

RABBINIC JUDAISM

  1. Rabbinic Judaism is a Judaism centered around the teachings and writings of Rabbis. (Web site)
  2. Rabbinic Judaism is based on the tradition that the law (Torah) revealed at Sinai had both a written and oral form. (Web site)
  3. Rabbinic Judaism is the predominant religion that persevered after the destruction of the Temple in 70 C.E. (Web site)
  4. Rabbinic Judaism was forced to undergo a significant development in response to this change; no longer could Judaism revolve round the Temple services. (Web site)
  5. Rabbinic Judaism was forced to undergo a significant evolution in response to this change; no longer could Judaism revolve round the Temple services.

RECONSTRUCTIONIST JUDAISM

  1. RECONSTRUCTIONIST JUDAISM is the youngest and smallest of the four branches, founded in the 20th century. (Web site)
  2. Reconstructionist Judaism is a branch created with the intention of combining the deep, rich traditions of Judaism with a contemporary society. (Web site)
  3. Reconstructionist Judaism is a product of 4,000 years of human experience and spiritual development. (Web site)
  4. Reconstructionist Judaism is a very small American denomination that has a naturalist theology; this theology is a variant of the naturalism of John Dewey.
  5. Reconstructionist Judaism is an American denomination that has a naturalist theology; this theology is a variant of the naturalism of John Dewey. (Web site)

RABBIS

  1. Rabbis are divided between those who seek the purpose of the mitzvot and those who do not question them. (Web site)
  2. Rabbis are expected to be learned in both the Talmud and the Shulkhan Arukh (Code of Jewish Law) as well as many other classical texts of Jewish scholarship.
  3. Rabbis are given authority to make interpretations of Jewish law and custom. (Web site)
  4. Rabbis are human, and falable, and subject to pride–just as much as anyone else. (Web site)
  5. Rabbis are not (necessarily) Kohanim; rather they are Jews who are particularly learned in Jewish law and practice. (Web site)

REFORM JUDAISM

  1. Reform Judaism is the largest Jewish movement in North America today. (Web site)
  2. Reform Judaism is a religious movement, a community of faith dedicated to G-d. (Web site)
  3. Reform Judaism is one of the two North American denominations affiliated with the World Union for Progressive Judaism. (Web site)
  4. Reform Judaism is the liberal wing of Judaism. (Web site)
  5. Reform Judaism is the most liberal expression of modern Judaism. (Web site)

RITUAL DECALOGUE

  1. The "ritual decalogue" is a fringe theory. (Web site)
  2. The "ritual decalogue" is called such to disambiguate from the "main decalogue". (Web site)
  3. The Ritual Decalogue is a shorter version of the immediately preceding section of the Book of Exodus, known as the Covenant Code. (Web site)
  4. The Ritual Decalogue is the list of commandments in Exodus 34. (Web site)
  5. The Ritual Decalogue was replaced with the Ethical Decalogue by a later author, known as the Priestly source. (Web site)

SERVICES

  1. Services are especially joyous, and all attendees, young and old, are involved. (Web site)
  2. Services are followed by a Dairy Kiddush Buffet Luncheon, complete with Shavuot delicacies.
  3. Services are followed by a Kiddush Luncheon, complete with Shabbos delicacies, gefilte fish, kugel & cholent.
  4. Services are held on Friday night and Saturday morning. (Web site)
  5. Services are held that say the same prayers, that observe the same holidays, and hold the same core moral beliefs as other branches. (Web site)

SYNAGOGUE

  1. A Synagogue is a meeting place for Jewish people, where they can read their Holy book, the Torah and pray. (Web site)
  2. A synagogue is a Jewish house of prayer and study. (Web site)
  3. A synagogue is used not only for prayer but also for communal activities, adult education and school education. (Web site)
  4. A synagogue is usually also a beit midrash, a house of study. (Web site)
  5. The Synagogue is the communal place of worship for Jews. (Web site)

SYNAGOGUES

  1. Synagogues are Jewish houses of prayer and study. (Web site)
  2. Synagogues are also small in size and many in number, so to destroy each and every one is impossible. (Web site)
  3. Synagogues are assembly houses for community prayer, study, and meeting. (Web site)
  4. Synagogues are generally run by a board of directors composed of lay people. (Web site)
  5. Synagogues are led by rabbis (spiritual leaders). (Web site)

TALMUD

  1. TALMUD is a collection of ancient rabbinic commentary that elaborates on how to follow the rules set out in the Torah. (Web site)
  2. Talmud is the garden from which all Jewish plants have grown.
  3. The Talmud - a compendium of law and commentary on the Torah applying it to life in later and changed circumstances. (Web site)
  4. The Talmud is a collection of rules and arguments leading up to the adoption of the rules. (Web site)
  5. The Talmud is a compendium of arguments and pleadings regarding religious rulings, comprising the Mishna and the Gemara. (Web site)

TEMPLE MOUNT

  1. The Temple Mount is the foundation of the Jewish Temple that was destroyed in 70 A.D. by the Romans. (Web site)
  2. The Temple Mount is the holiest site for Judaism. (Web site)
  3. The Temple Mount is the holiest site in Judaism. (Web site)
  4. The Temple Mount is the holiest site in Judaism.After Solomon’s death, his Kingdom was split into the two kingdoms of Israel and Judah. (Web site)
  5. The Temple Mount is the large area directly behind the Western Wall in Jerusalem. (Web site)

TEN COMMANDMENTS

  1. The Ten Commandments are considered the most important commandments of the Torah. (Web site)
  2. The Ten Commandments are a part of the old covenant, so again, for Christians these commandments should be without importance. (Web site)
  3. The Ten Commandments are displayed on the Supreme Court building, which was built in 1935. (Web site)
  4. The Ten Commandments are essentially a summary of the 600+ commandments contained in the Old Testament Law. (Web site)
  5. The Ten Commandments are given in two passages of the Bible, according to the New Revised Standard Version.

WESTERN WALL

  1. The western wall is the longest, about 1600 feet (485 meters), and includes the Jewish area of prayer known as the Kotel or Western Wall. (Web site)
  2. The Western Wall is the remnant of the retaining wall around the site. (Web site)
  3. The Western Wall is what remains of the retaining wall around the Temple complex. (Web site)
  4. The Western Wall was part of territory captured in Jerusalem. (Web site)
  5. Western Wall is the holiest site in Judaism. (Web site)
  6. Books about "JUDAISM" in Amazon.com


 
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  Short phrases about "JUDAISM"
  Last modified: June 09, 2008.
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