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  1. Dictionary
    Or·tho·dox Ju·da·ism
    /ˈôrTHəˌdäks ˈjo͞odəˌizəm/

    noun

    • 1. a major branch within Judaism that teaches strict adherence to rabbinical interpretation of Jewish law and its traditional observances.

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  2. Orthodox Judaism is the most religiously stringent of the three main streams of American Judaism. Its adherents believe the Torah was given to the Jewish people in a mass revelation at Mount Sinai and that the rabbinical tradition (known as the Oral Law) is a faithful elucidation of divine rules for Jewish living that are obligatory upon all ...

  3. Orthodox Judaism Today. With rising numbers and increasingly stringent observance, Orthodoxy thrives even as it faces challenges. By Michael Kress

    • Michael Kress
  4. Modern Orthodox Judaism (also Modern Orthodox or Modern Orthodoxy) is a movement within Orthodox Judaism that attempts to synthesize Jewish values and the observance of Jewish law with the modern world. Modern Orthodoxy draws on several teachings and philosophies, and thus assumes various forms.

  5. Orthodox Judaism is the Jewish tradition that adheres to a relatively strict interpretation and application of the laws and ethics promulgated in the Talmud and later rabbinical tradition. It is distinguished from other contemporary types of Judaism , such as Reform , Conservative , and secular Judaism, in its insistence that traditional Jewish ...

    • define orthodox judaism1
    • define orthodox judaism2
    • define orthodox judaism3
    • define orthodox judaism4
    • define orthodox judaism5
  6. A popular definition of the Orthodox Jew is a Jew who obeys the rules laid down in the standard Code of Jewish law, the Shulhan Arukh. The Orthodox Jew is a Shulhan Arukh Jew, which is not to say that all innovations introduced after the Shulhan Arukh are never countenanced.

  7. www.wikiwand.com › simple › Orthodox_JudaismOrthodox Judaism - Wikiwand

    Orthodox Judaism - Wikiwand. one of the three major Judaism movement, and the formal one in Israel / From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia. Orthodox Judaism is the more traditional form of Judaism in the modern world.

  8. Orthodox Judaism seeks to preserve Jewish practice as inherited from the pre-modern period. In the passage before the one reprinted below, the author–a leading advocate of "centrist" or "modern" Orthodoxy–notes three of the intellectual and moral challenges posed by modernity: (1) Adherence to Jewish law is voluntary since Jewish ...

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