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PART 3 Groups & Denominations. Fundamentalist. Conservative. Moderate. Liberal. Cultural. Denominations. Orthodox - strict. The Torah is from Heaven – without question Word of God – unaltered over time Strictly observe traditional Jewish beliefs and way of life Pray three times a day,
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Fundamentalist Conservative Moderate Liberal Cultural Denominations
Orthodox - strict • The Torah is from Heaven – without question • Word of God – unaltered over time • Strictly observe traditional Jewish beliefs and way of life • Pray three times a day, • Wear yarmulkes - a sign of respect for God • Observe Sabbath strictly • Eat Kosher food only • Kashrut - ritual dietary laws that are of divine origin
Conservative - middle • Sits between Reform and Orthodox • Recognizes human element in faith • Centred in U.S. • Modernized to meet modern life • Follow moral guidelines, not strict observances • Hold traditional services in Hebrew • Flexible with interpretation of Jewish law • ie men and women sit together in Synagogue
Reconstructionist - middle • Modern American-based Jewish movement • Blend tradition with change • Youngest and fastest growing segment of Jewish population • Views Judaism as a progressively evolving civilization • an evolving faith changing over time • Holds that contemporary Western secular morality has precedence over Jewish law and theology • Torah is God’s law is a work in progress • Try to make Judaism more meaningful today
Reform - liberal • Developed during the mid 1800s in Germany • Helped to support assimilation while retaining Jewish heritage • Promoted integration into European Society • Interpret scriptures in light of modern knowledge • God allows humans to interpret and work with scripture • Introduced practice of using local language for worship
Hasidism - ? • Israel ben Eliezer - 1700’s • Hasidim ‘Pious ones’ • Less attention to formal details • Focus on communicating with God through action • good deeds • Seek God’s presence in everyday events
My Year of Living Biblically • http://www.ted.com/index.php/talks/a_j_jacobs_year_of_living_biblically.html
Sacred Scripture • Scripture is the revelation of God’s will • Describes development of god’s relationship with ‘chosen people’ • Mitzvah • Act of performing a good deed or commandment • Direction on how to live ethically and keep covenant with God • Bible contains total of 613 mitzvoth • (248 do, 365 do not) • (ie. 10 Commandments) GOD
The Hebrew Bible • The central religious text of Judaism • Belief system of Jewish Faith • Primarily written in Hebrew some small portions in Aramaic • Judaism recognizes a single set of books known as the Tanakh - Hebrew Bible (Law of Moses)
Written Torah GOD The Hebrew Bible or Tanakh • TaNaKh • Torah- aka the “Pentateuch” (Greek for ‘5 books’ of Moses) • Genesis, Exodus, Leviticus, Numbers, Deuteronomy • Nevi’im - Prophets – Historical accounts of ancient Israel & prophets • Khetuvim - Writings – Psalms, Proverbs, Stories, poetry & historical accounts • Adds richness to the Torah
TORAH • Written on parchment scroll in ancient form by hand and kept in Ark • Means “law” but more accurate • “revelation” • “teaching” or “instruction” • Divided into 54 sections and read from beginning to end in a year
Oral Torah - Talmud Passed down orally from successive Rabbis Talmud - two parts • Second most important source of rabbinic Jewish law • based on Mishnah • Large collection of biblical analysis • complements and interprets the Torah • applies scripture to everyday life Mishnah • Taught and transmitted by Rabbi’s over time • Early rabbinic teachings on how to live according to Torah • Starting point for rabbinic study and analysis Gemera • Comments on the Mishnah
Oral Torah Talmud Gemera Mishnah Written Torah TaNaKh GOD
Sacred Writings - The Bible Christian Bible includes: Old Testament • the same books as the Tanakh PLUS New Testament • collection of 27 books • Gospels, Acts of the Apostles, Epistles • Jesus is it’s central figure
The Ten Commandments - Moses • Born Hebrew then adopted by Pharaohs’ daughter • Realizes his true identity and begins to fulfill prophecy Burning Bush - Met God • God heard the cries of the Israelites • Would lead them from bondage • Moses chosen by God as the person to lead Israelites out of Egypt Exodus • Exodus means ‘departure’ or ‘going out’ • Story of departure from Egypt into Sinai and then to Canaan • Return to “the land of milk and honey” • Celebrated by Pesach (Passover)
The Ten Commandments - Moses • How? • 10 Plagues inflicted upon Egyptians • 10th plague - Angel of death took all 1st born in the region • Israelites mark doors of their homes with lamb’s blood • Spirit of the Lord passed over these homes • Forces Pharaoh to comply and release Hebrews from bondage • Celebrated by Pesach (Passover) • Mount Sinai - Met God again • God shared 10 Commandments with Moses • Showed God’s true nature • Gave laws that people needed to follow • Renewal of the Covenant
Judaism In ModernWorld Anti-Semitism Holocaust • (Hebrew., sho'ah) • the annihilation of the Jews (6 million) and other groups of people of Europe (5 million) under the Nazi regime during World War II Middle East Conflict
Zionist Movement Zionism • movement originally for re-establishment of Jewish nation in Israel • derived from the word Zion (Hebrew: ציון, Tzi-yon), • referring to a hill in Jerusalem and symbolizing the land of Israel • After WW2 - Zionist movement gained strength • Hundreds of thousands of Jews fled Europe for Palestine • leading to fighting over territory with Arabs • 1947 - UN partitioned Palestine into Arab and Jewish zones • May 14, 1948 - Jewish territory declared itself the independent State of Israel • Conflict ever since
Interesting Facts • The Israeli flag is rooted in Jewish tradition • The white background symbolizes purity • The two stripes and the Star of David emblem inspired by the techeileth dye of the tallit (Jewish prayer shawl) • Jews have regarded the Land of Israel as their homeland, • Holy Land and as a Promised Land • The Land of Israel holds a special place in Jewish religion • encompassing Judaism's most important sites • including the remains of the First and Second Temples
The Holocaust • Signifies the mass slaughter of European Jews by the Nazis during WW2 • terrible chapter in human history and religious intolerance • Means “destruction by fire” • Hitler planned to wipe out the entire Jewish population as part of his to conquer the world • Blamed the Jews for many of the economic hardships suffered by Germans • Killed over 6 million Jews, over two thirds of the entire Jewish European population • Also executed up to 10 million Poles, Gypsies, Russians, communists, homosexuals and disabled persons
Sources of Anti-Semitism • Lacked a homeland forced to live in scattered communities • Cast as outsiders • Different customs, clothes • Perceived as strange, untrustworthy • Interpretation of bible • Some Christians blamed all Jews for murder of Jesus • Frequently forbidden to own land or hold citizenship • Easy scapegoats for any perceived problems • Middle Ages • Christians couldn’t lend money • Jews could and needed to • Perceived as thieves and cheats • dishonest living
Anti-Semitism in Canada • Existed in both Canada and the US during the 30's and 40's • Desperate Jews were attempting to escape persecution in Germany • Politicians realized the strong anti-Semitic feelings in the country + their own feelings • Canada’s Immigration policy during WW2 • stated that “none was too many” • 1939 - St. Louis - Ship carrying 907 German Jews was refused permission to enter the USA • Polls showed that 83% opposed allowing Jewish refugees into the country
“The Eternal Jew”Depiction of a Jew holding gold coins in one hand and a whip in the other. Under his arm is a map of the world, with the imprint of the hammer and sickle. Posters like this promoted a sharp rise in anti-Semitic feelings, and in some cases violenceagainst the Jewish community. This Nazi propaganda poster reads, ‘Behind the enemy powers: the Jew.