Wednesday, April 8, 2020
Judiasm Essays - Book Of Exodus, Bo, Torah, Israelites, Moses
  Judiasm    Judaism was a parent of Christianity, and we probably know more  about it than any other religion, excluding our own, right off the top of our  heads. The ancestors of the Jews, called the Israelites, established a  kingdom in Canaan-the land of Milk and Honey. The Israelites first began  to see themselves in a special relationship with their God at about 1000  B.C.E. God had selected them to be a Chosen People. God had offered the  Chosen People a covenant, or special agreement. In this covenant, the  Israelites promised to worship only God, and in return God promised them  preservation throughout history and the land of Canaan. Canaan was later  called Judah, Israel, and Palestine.  Central to the understanding of the Jewish convenant is the  prosperous herdsman who heard and followed God's call, Abraham.   Abraham answered God's call and led his family from Ur of the Chaldees to  Canaan. Abraham mad a son, Isaac, and a grandson Jacob who also  inherited the convenant. Abraham, Isaac, and Jacob were called the  patriarchs, or the founders of Judiasm.  Moses, being one of the great religious leaders in history, God  revealed his name Yahweh to him. Yahweh means ?to be? in Hebrew. The  events recorded in Exodus indicate that through Moses a new and deeper  understanding of God was revealed. The worship of Yahweh was unknown  before Moses. The Israelites as a whole began to realize that the God of  Moses was a very ?jealous God,? who would not tolerate worship of any  other god.  As the book of Exodus opens, we find that the Israelites are slaves in  the land of Egypt. Exodus became the heart and soul of Judaism. Moses  is the key character in Exodus and one of great religious leaders in history.   The Exodus story is one that is very touching.  The persecution of the Jews in the 1930's was horrible and will be  remembered forever. After being crushed in the economic disaster in the  Great Depression and being totally defeated in WWI, the time was perfect  for Hitler to take anti-Semitism, or hatred for Jews-to a whole different  level. Jews all over became victims of Hitler's awful laws such as those in  Poland, Europe, Hungary, Czechoslovakia, and Germany. It was an awful  time for the Jewish people and in camps all over Germany and Poland Jews  were being murdered by starvation, disease, beating, mutilation, infection,  gassing, and burning. Six million Jews, or about one-third of the entire  Jewish population of the world was completely wiped out. Only fifty  thousand Jews remained after the war. The faith of the Jewish people was  tested greatly during the Holocaust.  The vivid living faith of the Jewish people is shown through their  mant festivals and celebrations throughout the year. Besides the Sabbath  observance, the Jewish year is filled with yearly festivals. They are all  based on the Jewish lunal calendar. Rosh Hashanah, or the Jewish new  year, which is celebrated in October, opens ten ?Days of Awe?. There is a  celebration at the beginning and end of the two days. Yom Kippur is the  ?Day of Atonement?. It is considered the most holy day of the year and is  the closest to repentance. Five days after Yom Kippur, the Feast of  Tabernacles, or Sukkoth, is celebrated. This is a week long feast in the fall  celebrating God's presence when the Israelites were in the desert. The  Rejoicing of the Torah closes the Sukkoth. Hanukkah is the Festival of  Lights and is celebrated in December. It commemorates the restoration of  the Temple after it was destroyed by the Syrians. Purin celebrates Esther's  success to find a plot to massacre all Jews in the Persian Empire. One of  the most important spring holy days is Pesach, or the Passover. There are  many special foods associated with this holiday, especially those served at  the seder (ceremonial meal). Fifty days after the Seder, the feast of the  Pentecost which remembers the giving of the Law of Moses fifty days after  the Passover. The Jewish calendar year is filled with many feasts and  special ceremonies.  There are three branches of Judaism. Orthodox Judaism is the  oldest and largest of the three branches. It has the full tradition of  Judaism. It calls itself the ?Torah-True Judaism? because of its strict  adherence to the law of Moses. This stance seems to influence and shape  tis approach to theology. The second branch of Judaism is Reform. The  Reform branch is extremely liberal and call their houses of worship  ?temples? and have begun to ordain female rabbis. They believe that the  Mosaic law should not be    
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