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  1. Mar 27, 2018 · In the last case, the Bible story does not even hint at a reason. Because Jews were to look to Scripture as authoritative, and because the Jewish Scriptures do speak of resurrection, the Mishna gives a stern warning: “He who maintains that the resurrection is not a biblical doctrine has no share in the world to come.” (Sanhedrin 10.1.)

  2. Nov 25, 2007 · The Code of Jewish Law clearly states that a child of a Jewish mother is Jewish, regardless of the father’s lineage (or whatever else may show up in a DNA test), while the child of a non-Jewish mother is not Jewish. 1 Matrilineal descent has been a fundamental principle of Torah since the Jewish people came into existence.

  3. Torah in Five Books. The definition of the word Torah is literally “instruction,” and when Jews say “Torah,” they’re most likely speaking of the Five Books of Moses, the foundation of all Jewish instruction and guidance. We also call it the Chumash, from the Hebrew chamesh, which means five—just like the not-so-Jewish and somewhat ...

  4. The books of the Bible, or Tanakh, are the founding texts of the Jewish people. Scholars believe the books of the Bible were written over a long period of time, dating some as early as the period of King David and King Solomon (around 1000 BCE), and others as late as the second century BCE. After the destruction of the Second Temple in 70 CE ...

  5. Donate. Moses (Moshe in Hebrew) was the most important leader of the Jewish people, the greatest of the Jewish prophets and, according to the Torah, the only person who ever spoke to God face-to-face. He led the Israelites out of slavery and then to Mount Sinai to receive the Torah. From there, he led them on their journey of 40 years through ...

  6. May 23, 2018 · There were 85,000 Ethiopian Jews living in Israel in 2002, 23,000 of whom were Israeli born. Their mass emigration from Ethiopia began during the early 1970s, encouraged by a decree issued by Israel's chief rabbis that the Jews from Ethiopia were "full" Jews (although they still required symbolic conversion to Judaism ).

  7. HEBREWS, RELIGION OF THE. Hebrew religion was unquestionably unique in character in the ancient Near E. From geographical origins in Mesopotamia it was gradually fostered through the patriarchal period until it assumed its normative covenantal character at Sinai. The subsequent history of Heb. religion to the Exile was one of periodic relapse ...

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