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Modern Judaism

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Early prophets Joshua, Judges, 1-2 Samuel, 1-2 Kings ... Moses de Leon most famous book called Zohar (Book of Splendor or Book of Lights) ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Modern Judaism


1
Modern Judaism
  • Religion of Obedience to the Righteous God

2
Historical Development
  • Gods Election of Israel Revealed
  • God in the world, Gen. 1-11
  • God to all people
  • All people answerable to God
  • Gods election of Abraham for a chosen people
  • A people through whom all peoples would be
    blessed
  • Abraham (2100 B. C.)
  • Joseph in Egypt (1900 B. C.)
  • Two Commonwealths
  • Law given to fall of southern kingdom (1446 B. C.
    587 B. C.)
  • Fall of southern kingdom to destruction of
    Jerusalem (586 B. C. A. D. 70)

3
Historical Development
  • First Commonwealth (1446 587 B. C.)
  • Exodus and the Law (1446 1406 B. C.)
  • Period of Judges (1406 1050 B. C.)
  • United Kingdom (1050 931 B. C.)
  • Fall of Northern Kingdom, Israel (722 B. C.)
  • Features of First Commonwealth
  • Identity as a nation
  • Legal code
  • Worship sacrificial system

4
Historical Development
  • Second Commonwealth (586 B. C. A. D. 73)
  • Fall of Southern Kingdom, Judah (586 B. C.)
  • End of Exile (537 B. C.)
  • Last Biblical Prophet, Malachi (440 B. C.)
  • Conquest of Alexander the Great (332 B. C.)
  • Maccabean revolt (166 B. C.)
  • Herod the Great, Hasmonean Kingdom (37 B. C. to
    A. D. 4)
  • Destruction of Jerusalem (A. D. 70) Masada (A.
    D. 73)
  • Features of Second Commonwealth
  • Ethnic Identity
  • Legal Code Keeping the Law
  • Devotion to God
  • Party Division Pharisees, Sadducees, Herodians,
    etc.
  • Messianic expectation

5
Historical Development
  • Rabbinic Judaism
  • Developed after fall of Masada from Pharisees as
    the source of Rabbis
  • Emphasized obedience to the law
  • Today Judaism emphasizes obedience to the law,
    not a personal belief
  • Collected the Mishnah
  • A. D. 136 Bar Kochba rebellion put down and
    Jerusalem razed
  • Jews dispersed to various parts of the world
  • Jews prospered in Persia
  • When Shiite Islam came to Persia in 7th cent.
    Judaism moved to Iberian Peninsula
  • Further movement to Europe

6
Historical Development
  • Talmudic Tradition to Middle Ages
  • Rashi (Rabbi Solomon ben Isaac)
  • Literal interpretation
  • Rambam (Rabbi Moses Maimonides)
  • Know for his intellectual defense of Judaism
  • Quoted by Thomas Aquinas
  • Time of the Crusades
  • Began in the 11th century

7
Historical Development
  • 1492 - Messianic Hope but Persecution
  • Kabalic scholars had predicted 1492 as a
    redemptive year
  • Ferdinand and Isabella unified Spain under
    Catholic rule and expelled Jews
  • Many Jews settled in Southeastern Europe under
    Turkish rule and lived fairly peaceful lives
  • Two main Jewish groups by language
  • Sephardic Jews Spanish roots, Turkish Arab
    influence, Ladino language, Spanish dialect,
    Hebrew script
  • Ashkenazic Jews north northeastern European
    roots. Separate from Gentile Europeans. Yiddish
    German with Hebrew script.

8
Historical Development
  • 17th Century Renewal of Messianic Expectation
  • Sabbatai Zevi
  • Jews from Europe, Middle East, and North Africa
    thought him to be the Messiah
  • Publicly proclaim by Nathan of Gaza as the
    Messiah
  • Sabbatai went to convert the Turkish Sultan but
    was converted to Islam and became a Muslim
  • General despair among Jew over messianic hope

9
Historical Development
  • New Movements and Reinterpretation of Judaism
  • Hasidism
  • Eastern Europeans
  • Central figure Israel ben Eliezer
  • Know as Baal Shem (master of the good name or
    good master of the name)
  • Also know as Besht
  • Born 1700
  • Miracle worker in Eastern Europe

10
Historical Development
  • New Movements and Reinterpretation of Judaism
  • Hasidism
  • God is found not in study or obeying the law but
    found inside the person and manifested in singing
    and dancing.
  • Joyful expression of God in their midst.
  • New cultural forms from the 18th century culture
    (like Amish)
  • No antinomianists
  • Followed Talmudic tradition
  • After Beshts death, villages setup centered
    around rebbe or Zeddik who was believed to have
    healing powers
  • Rebbe was given absolute obedience
  • Persecution drove them to the U. S.
  • European Jews were most exterminated by Nazis
  • Some objected to new state of Israel with no
    Messiah but changed

11
Historical Development
  • New Movements and Reinterpretation of Judaism
  • Reformed Judaism
  • Arose in 18th century
  • Accepted European culture and intellectual
    climate
  • Central figure Moses Mendelssohn
  • Studied in University of Berlin
  • Abandoned outward Jewish forms
  • Jews were free to adopt the culture in which they
    lived
  • Main Characteristics
  • Traditional forms not authoritative
  • Talmud not considered authoritative
  • Following orthodox practices not wrong but not
    binding
  • Religious practice is in a state of continues
    development
  • Not seek a Messiah if a Messiah exists, it is
    people working

12
Historical Development
  • New Movements and Reinterpretation of Judaism
  • Reformed Judaism
  • Main Characteristics
  • Traditional forms not authoritative
  • Talmud not considered authoritative
  • Following orthodox practices not wrong but not
    binding
  • Religious practice is in a state of continues
    development
  • Not seek a Messiah if a Messiah exists, it is
    people working to make a better world.
  • Initially opposed a separate homeland for Jews
    but in the wake of the Holocaust they supported
    the state of Israel
  • Meeting place called a temple
  • Similar concerns as mainline Protestants

13
Historical Development
  • New Movements and Reinterpretation of Judaism
  • Conservative Judaism
  • Arose in 19th century
  • Central figure Zecharias Frankel in Germany
  • Characterized by adhering to the law and adapting
    to the contemporary culture
  • Reconstructionist Judaism
  • 1934
  • Central figure Mordecai Kaplan
  • Small movement attempting to integrate religious
    Judaism into all aspects of Jewish religion

14
Historical Development
  • Third Commonwealth (Proposed by Some)
  • Migration to Palestine in the 19th century
  • English took over Palestine from Turkey in 1917
  • Both Arabs and Jews migrated
  • Holocaust moved international opinion in favor of
    Jews
  • Creation of state of Israel 1948
  • Recapture of Jerusalem in 1967

15
Founder of Judaism
  • Often associated with Moses and receiving the law
  • Biblically starts with Abraham

16
Sacred Writings of Judaism
  • Biblical canon agreed on in A. D. 90 at Jamnia,
    lead by Rabbi Yochanan ben Zakkai
  • Torah (Genesis Deuteronomy)
  • Prophets
  • Early prophets Joshua, Judges, 1-2 Samuel, 1-2
    Kings
  • Later prophets Isaiah, Jeremiah, Ezekiel, and
    twelve minor prophets (Hosea to Malachi)
  • Writings (Psalms, Job, Proverbs, Ruth, Song of
    Songs, Ecclesiastes, Lamentations, Esther,
    Daniel, Ezra, Nehemiah, 1-2 Chronicles

17
Sacred Writings of Judaism
  • The Mishnah collection of interpretations of
    the law by Rabbis
  • Collected over decades by Rabbis who met at
    Tiberius
  • Rabbi Meier and Rabbi Akiba lead the process
  • Came to a halt temporarily in A. D. 136 with the
    second conflict with Rome under Bar Kochba
  • Rabbi akiba and bar Kochba executed
  • Jerusalem razed and Hadrian rebuilt Jerusalem
  • Jerusalem dedicated to Jupiter, Aeolia Capitolina

18
Sacred Writings of Judaism
  • The Mishnah
  • Mishnah completed by Rabbi Judah the Prince in A.
    D. 200.
  • Six categories
  • Seeds agriculture and prayer
  • Feasts holy days and writing of scrolls
  • Women marriage and other vows
  • Damages criminal and civil laws, idolatry
  • Holy Matters sacrifices and laws
  • Purities ritual cleanliness and purification
  • Halakah application of the law

19
Sacred Writings of Judaism
  • The Talmud the books containing both the
    Mishnah and Gemara
  • Mishnah (Halakah) Gemara (Haggadah) Talmud
  • Gamara less formal traditions, stories
    illustrating the application of the law
  • Two versions of the Talmud
  • Palestinian completed in the 4th century
  • Babylonian completed in the 5th century
  • Seventeen dense volumes
  • Conservatives inspired
  • Liberals historical value
  • Others - authoritative

20
Divisions of Judaism
  • Hasidism
  • Reformed
  • Conservative
  • Orthodox primary religious Judaism
  • Secular Judaism
  • No belief in God
  • Jewish by birth and culture
  • Not religious

21
Divisions of Judaism
  • Kabala Jewish mysticism
  • Mysticism attaining an unmediated link to the
    divine
  • Kabala means tradition
  • Jewish mysticism is called merkavah mysticism
    fro the word for chariot (Elijah)
  • Could have started as early as 2nd commonwealth
  • Schools of kabala developed in Middle Ages
  • Moses de Leon most famous book called Zohar
    (Book of Splendor or Book of Lights)
  • Isaac de Luria fled Christian persecution in
    Spain, setup school in Safed, Galilee

22
Divisions of Judaism
  • Other Isolated Groups
  • Yemenite Jews transported from Arabian
    peninsula to Israel in 1940
  • Karaite Jews Accept Torah only and live in
    Jewish quarter of Old Jerusalem
  • Falasha Jews from Ethiopia from 2nd
    commonwealth but moved to Israel to avoid fanines
    in the 1980s

23
Orthodox Judaism Worldview
God Spiritual Realm
Law/Repentance
Material Realm
24
Orthodox Judaism Worldview
  • Spiritual Realm
  • Ultimate Reality
  • One supreme holy God
  • Covenant maker with His people
  • Spiritual Beings
  • Angels
  • Satan
  • Type of Spiritual Existence
  • Resurrection
  • Heaven Gehenna (temporary for most)
  • Relationship to Humanity
  • Covenant relationship

25
Orthodox Judaism Worldview
  • Physical Realm
  • Belief system
  • Worship of one God
  • Obedience to God
  • Prayer
  • Community
  • Keeping Kosher
  • Keeping the Sabbath
  • Source of revelation or enlightenment
  • Torah and Talmud

26
Orthodox Judaism Worldview
  • Physical Realm
  • Relation to spiritual realm
  • Belief in God
  • Keeping the law
  • Ultimate goal of religion
  • Live as Gods chosen people according to law
  • Resurrection
  • Hope of Messiah
  • Welfare of other people

27
Orthodox Judaism Worldview
  • Physical Realm
  • Rituals
  • Orthodox dress
  • Mezuzah in home on doorposts containing Shema
  • Dietary laws
  • Prayer
  • Life cycle
  • Birth circumcision for boys, naming for boys
    girls
  • Boys bar mizvah at thirteen now accountable
    for keeping the law (conservative and reformed
    have for girls)
  • Marriage
  • Death short wait between death and funeral

28
Orthodox Judaism Worldview
  • Physical Realm - Significant days
  • Sabbath
  • Rosh Hashanah Jewish New Year
  • Yom Kippur Day of Atonement
  • Sukkoth Feast of Booths
  • Simchat Torah final day of reading entire Torah
  • Hanukkah commemorating purification of Temple
  • Purim rescue of Jews by Esther
  • Passover Deliverance of Jews from Egypt
  • Shivuot - Pentecost or Feast of Weeks

29
Orthodox Judaism Worldview
  • Physical Realm Worship
  • Synagogues
  • Orthodox have separate place for women
  • Ark, Bema, Menorah
  • Ark
  • Bema
  • Menorah
  • Leaders
  • Cantor song leader
  • Rabbis preachers
  • Conservative and Reformed have women cantors and
    Rabbis
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