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Judaism. The first monotheistic religion. The first to believe in one G_d. Sinai Peninsula. Where are Jews Located Today?. Founding Fathers. Abraham ~ 2000 BCE Considered the first Hebrew. First person to believe in one G_d. Moses ~1300 BCE Ten Commandments were revealed to him on
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Judaism The first monotheistic religion. The first to believe in one G_d.
Founding Fathers • Abraham ~ 2000 BCE • Considered the first Hebrew. • First person to believe in one G_d. • Moses ~1300 BCE • Ten Commandments were revealed to him on • Mt Sinai. • Moses was the man who led his people out of Egypt. This movement is known as the Exodus.
Dead Sea Scrolls • The oldest surviving texts of the Hebrew Bible were found in a set of caves in 1947. • The 2000 year-old Dead Sea Scrolls were printed on papyrus and had been stored in clay jars. The caves of Qumran, where the scrolls were found.
Who is the Jewish G_d? • Jews believe in a single, omniscient (all knowing), omnipotent (all powerful), omnipresent (in all places at all times), who created the universe and continues to be involved in its governance. • This G_d is just and merciful and has no form or representation.
Creation Story • Jews believe it took G_d six days to create the world and everything in it. • On the seventh day G_d rested. The Creation of the Heavens Michelangelo
Sacred Text ~ Torah • The first five books of the Hebrew Bible which presents the Mosaic law and moral codes. • Torah comes from the Hebrew word for “instruction.” • Always written in Hebrew • 613 Commandments • Rules for moral conduct: Ten Commandments
Ten Commandments • The Ten Commandments given to Moses are these: • 1. You shall have no other G_ds before me. • 2. You shall not make idols. • 3. You shall not take the Lord’s name in vain. • 4. You shall honor the Sabbath. • 5. You shall honor your parents. • 6. You shall not murder. • 7. You shall not commit adultery • 8. You shall not steal. • 9. You shall not commit perjury. • 10. You shall not covet.
How do you become a Jew? • Traditional Jewish Law: a Jew is anyone • born of a Jewish mother or converted in • accordance with Jewish Law. • Judaism maintains that a Jew, whether by birth or conversion, is a Jew forever. • All Jews consider themselves to be descendants • of the patriarchs Abraham, Isaac and Jacob.
Holy Days • Passover-commemorates the story of the Exodus, in which the ancient Israelites were freed from slavery in Egypt. • Rosh Hashanah-Creation of the World • Yom Kippur-Day of Atonement-most important holy day. Painting by Maurycy Gottlieb, 1878, depicting Ashkenazi Jews praying in the synagogue on Yom Kippur, the Jewish Day of Atonement.
Rituals • Sabbath~ • The weekly holy day-sundown Friday to sundown Saturday-reserved for worship and attention to family and community.
Rituals • Bar Mitzvah & Bat Mitzvah • Respectively mean “son” and “daughter” of the Commandment. • Religious rites of passage for thirteen-year-old boys and twelve-year-old girls. • After the ceremony, they are fully responsible in the eyes of G_d and are seen as adult members of the congregation.
Kosher • Kashruth (kashroot) • Very specific dietary laws regarding food restrictions as well as proper animal slaughter.
Where Do Jews Pray? • Synagogue • Central place for worship and the place where • customs, religious practice and faith are maintained • Synagogue in Florence, Italy
Dress • Yarmulke • Covering the head is regarded more as a custom rather than a commandment. It is a common pious practice to cover the head at all times, it is not religiously mandatory.
Other beliefs of the Jewish People • Jews believe the Messiah will be a person • (not a god), from the family of King David, • who will lead the world to unity and peace. • Jews do not believe that Jesus was the Messiah. • Jews do recognize that in his time, Jesus was an influential Jewish teacher who lived and died as a Jew, with no thought of creating a separate religion.
Symbols • Star of David
Major Branches of Judaism • Orthodox: • Original and only form of Judaism until the 1800’s. • Named Orthodox in reaction to the advent of • Reform Judaism. • Most observant.
Major Branches of Judaism • Reform • Founded by Rabbi Isaac Mayer Wise in 1873 in • rebellion against the binding traditions of • orthodoxy. • Most flexible about observance of Jewish laws. • Largest Jewish movement in North America.
Major Branches of Judaism • Conservative • Organized by Dr. Solomon Schechter in 1913 as a reaction to Reform Judaism's liberalism. • Philosophically stands between Orthodox and • Reform.