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  1. Official homepage for worldwide Chabad-Lubavitch movement that promotes Judaism and provides daily Torah lectures and Jewish insights. Chabad-Lubavitch is a philosophy, a movement, and an organization. Chabad is considered to be the most dynamic force in Jewish life today.

    • Basic Beliefs
    • Writings
    • Daily Way of Life
    • Holidays
    • Important Points in A Jewish Life
    • Kinds of Judaism
    • Names of God
    • Other Websites

    The three main beliefs at the center of Judaism are Monotheism, Identity, and covenant(an agreement between God and God's people). The most important teaching of Judaism is that there is one God, who wants people to do what is just and compassionate. Judaism teaches that a person serves God by learning the holy books and doing what they teach. Thes...

    Jews believe that to know what God wants them to do, they must studythe books of Torah and its laws and do what they teach. These include both laws about how to behave to other people and how to serve God. The two most important groups of books in Judaism are the Bible and the Talmud. The beliefs and actions of Judaism come from these books. Jewish...

    Kashrut: Jewish food laws

    Jews who follow the religious rules called "kashrut" only eat some types of food that are prepared by special rules. Food that a Jew can eat is called kosherfood. Traditional Jews are very careful about kashrut. They usually cannot eat many foods in non-kosher restaurants or in the home of someone who does not keep kosher. Sometimes, this makes it hard to visit people or to do business. People help avoid this problem by choosing to dine with Traditional Jews in a kosher restaurant or serve th...

    Shabbat

    One of the commandments is to keep the Jewish Sabbath, or Shabbat. Shabbat starts every Friday at sunset and ends on Saturday at nightfall. Shabbat is a day of rest to thank God for making the universe. The tradition of resting on Shabbat comes from the Torah. According to the Torah, God created the world in six days and on the seventh day, Shabbat, He rested. Many Jews go to their temple or synagogueto pray on Shabbat. Religious Jews follow special rules on Shabbat. These rules require Jews...

    For a very long time, most Jews in Europe believed the same basic things about Judaism. Jews in other lands had different beliefs and customs than European Jews. About 200 years ago, a small group of Jews in Germany decided to stop believing in many parts of Judaism and try to become more "modern" and more similar to Germans. Those Jews were called...

    Names are very important in Judaism. Many Jews believe that a name not only tells you who someone is, but also tells you something about them. Names of God are very special in Judaism, so Jews do not write them or speak them fully but use other words instead. That is why some Jews write G-d, with a "-" instead of an "o." HaShemMeans "The Name". It ...

  2. Judaism is the world’s oldest monotheistic religion. According to the Bible, Abraham and Sarah were the first to recognize God, and they are considered the ancestors of all Jews today. Some people think that Judaism is a culture, like being Irish or Indian. Others view it as a religion.

  3. Judaism - Religion, Monotheism, Culture: Judaism has played a significant role in the development of Western culture because of its unique relationship with Christianity, the dominant religious force in the West.

  4. Judaism: Basic Beliefs. Jewish people believe in the Torah, which was the whole of the laws given to the Israelities at Sinai. They believe they must follow God's laws which govern daily life.

  5. What do Jews believe in? The Rambam —a great Jewish rabbi and philosopher—summarized the Jewish faith in 13 principles. He starts each of those principles of faith with the words “ Ani Maamin - I believe”. The following is a summary of those principles. a) I believe in G‑d. G‑d is one. He was, is and will be. b) I believe that G‑d is everywhere.

  6. Judaism - Monotheism, Torah, Covenant: Judaism is more than an abstract intellectual system, though there have been many efforts to view it systematically. It affirms divine sovereignty disclosed in creation (nature) and in history, without necessarily insisting upon—but at the same time not rejecting—metaphysical speculation about the divine.

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