1 / 27

COMPARATIVE JUDAISM

COMPARATIVE JUDAISM. Reform Judaism Conservative Judaism Neo-Orthodox Judaism. Reform Judaism. Reform Judaism A - History. Started between 1810 and 1820 Started by Israel Jacobson Popularized by Abraham Geiger who expanded Jacobson’s ideas Israel Jacobson.

fauna
Download Presentation

COMPARATIVE JUDAISM

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. COMPARATIVE JUDAISM Reform Judaism Conservative Judaism Neo-Orthodox Judaism

  2. Reform Judaism

  3. Reform JudaismA - History • Started between 1810 and 1820 • Started by Israel Jacobson • Popularized by Abraham Geiger who expanded Jacobson’s ideas Israel Jacobson

  4. Reform JudaismA - History – Why did it start • Many Jews were converting • 10% in Germany, 50% in Berlin • Only option was to be Orthodox or convert • Reform was a new option • Lets Jews participate in a secular culture and still be Jewish Abraham Geiger

  5. Reform JudaismB - Torah • God and Humanity interacting with each other • Ongoing process – doesn’t end • Individual must decide which commandments to follow, which are still meaningful

  6. Reform JudaismC - God • Concept of God up to the individual • God ranges from a “puppet master” to a “force”

  7. Reform JudaismD - Services • A lot of music (first time instrumental music since destruction of 2nd Temple.) • A lot of English • Shorter services than Conservative or Orthodox • Men and women participate

  8. Reform JudaismD – Services continued • Men and women sit together • Rabbi or Cantor – male female gay or heterosexual • Boys and girls can read Torah, have bar/bat mitzvah • Men and boys don’t always wear kippot or tallitot

  9. Reform JudaismE - Shabat • Not Shomer Shabbas • Celebrate Shabat Kabbalat Shabat “Revised version” Use electricity

  10. Reform JudaismF – Women’s role • Egalitarian – women are viewed exactly the same as men are

  11. Reform JudaismG – Intermarriage • The Rabbi’s may perform intermarriage • It’s going to happen – we can’t stop it • Need to make sure these couples feel welcome and can still be Jewish • Patrilinear and Matrilinear descent • Either parent can be Jewish and the children are Jewish.

  12. Conservative Judaism

  13. Conservative JudaismA - History • Founded by Zecharias Frankel Middle of 19th Century • Thought Jews needed a middle road between Orthodox and Reform Zecharias Frankel

  14. Conservative JudaismB - TorahB - Torah • God wrote the Torah • It was changed as it was copied and recopied by people • Only the community as a whole, (the rabbis) can make changes • Determine which laws people follow

  15. Conservative Judaism C - God • It is up to the individual but God is definitely and active presence

  16. Conservative Judaism D - Services • No instruments • Men and women sit together • Some English, mostly Hebrew • Male of female Rabbi • Girls and boys can read Torah • Both have Bar/bat Mitzvah

  17. Conservative JudaismE - Shabat • Shomer Shabas • Can drive for religious reasons

  18. Conservative JudaismF – Women’s Role • Women and men are equal • Can do all the same things

  19. Conservative JudaismG - Intermarriage • Rabbis will not perform an intermarriage • Matrilinear descent only

  20. Orthodox Judaism

  21. Orthodox JudaismA - History • Founded in the mid 1800’s • Samson Raphael Hirsh • Knew Judaism had to change • But only within strict guidelines set by Torah

  22. Orthodox JudaismB - Torah • Everything in the Torah is inspired by God • Nothing can be changed

  23. Orthodox JudaismC - God • God is a force who can influence or act upon humanity

  24. Orthodox JudaismD - Services • Men and women sit separately • No English • Services include every • prayer • Only boys can read Torah Only boys Bar mitzvah • With congregation • Girls Bat mitzvah with women only minyan • Rabbi must be a man • Does not face congregation

  25. Orthodox JudaismE - Shabat • Shomer Shabbos

  26. Orthodox JudaismF - Women’s Role • Focus on the home and family Cook shabat dinner Keep kashruth

  27. Orthodox JudaismG - Intermarriage • Will not perform intermarriage • Matrilinear descent only

More Related