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Quiz: How many years of historical development does the Jewish religion have?
4,000 years
Judaism is based upon the existence of how many gods?
One god (monotheism) who is all knowing, all powerful.
What are the attributes of God in Judaism?
All knowing, all powerful, the creator, has no children, rivals, or equals
What does “Son of God” mean in Christianity?
Title affirming equality with God; not a biological father-son relationship. Three people in one God, yet one nature, one being
When did the Maccabean (Matthean) Revolution end, making major changes in Judaism?
Around 150 BC
What is the earliest explanation of Judaism’s covenantal foundation?
The covenant on Mount Sinai, explained in Deuteronomy and Prophets
What happened in 70 AD that changed Jewish worship?
Romans destroyed the Temple in Jerusalem, ending the priesthood who were the center of faith.
What were the two central pieces of Jewish faith before 70 AD?
The Temple and the Priesthood
What challenges did medieval Judaism face?
Persecution by Christian nations; reformulated theology in dialogue with Christian and Islamic philosophy.
When did the new Jewish movements emerge?
In the 18th century with the forecoming of the enlightenment .
What characterizes Reform Judaism?
The integration of science into faith. A belief that there is a constant revelation of God’s will in the world.
What is another name for Reform Judaism?
Deriveral or Progressive Judaism
What does Reform Judaism believe about revelation?
There is a constant revelation of God’s will in the World.
What are Reform Judaism’s social and political values?
Progressive agendas such as repairing the world (Tikkun Olam)
What is the size ranking of Reform Judaism among the Jewish sects?
Second-largest
Quiz: Which Jewish Group is regarded as liberal or progressive?
Reform Judaism
What is the major current of Judaism called?
Orthodox Judaism which advocate for the traditional believe that the oral and written Torah were given to Moses at MT. SINAI
What do Orthodox Jews believe about the Torah and the Talmud?
Both were given to Moses on Mt Sinai.
What does the term Hanukkah mean?
“The path one walks”
What is the Torah?
First five books of the Old Testament
What is the Talmud?
Central text of Rabbinic Judaism (completed around the 4th century AD)
What does the Talmud teach?
God gave Moses both the written and oral Torah
The teaching of the prophets come from both
When and where did Orthodox Judaism arise?
19th Century with a different position, showing more affirmity for the following of the commandments and the laws of the Torah and Talmud
Quiz: Which Jewish group arose as a reaction against Jewish reformist tendencies?
Orthodox Judaism
What do Orthodox Judaism emphasize?
Observance of the commandments (Mitzvot) , which is central to Jewish Law.
How many people follow Orthodox Judaism today?
About 2 million
What is the foundation of authority in Conservative Judaism?
Authority of tradition comes from its acceptance by the people
What does Conservative Judaism emphasize?
Belief in a personal God and the survival of the Soul
How many adults follow Conservative Judaism?
Over 1 million people (600,000 in Israel)
What future belief do Conservative Jews maintain?
Survival di espiritus
Resurrection and the coming of the Messianic Age
What is another name for Conservative Judaism?
Traditional or Positive-Historical Judaism
What does Messiah mean?
Anointed One
What does “Hasidic” mean?
“The Pure Ones”
What is Hasidic Judaism a part of?
It is a group within Orthodox Judaism.
When did Hasidic Judaism emerge?
18th century (Maccabees, the beginning of the movement)
Quiz: What is the basic through about God underpinning Hasidic thought and life? (What does Hasidic Judaism emphasize about God?)
God’s immanence - his divine presence throughout the universe
The need to give him respect
How are Hasidic Jews recognized?
Heavy hates, black clothes, and side curls as stated in the Torah and the story of Sampson.
What is the central belief of Judaism?
Monotheism- one God revealed to Abraham
What does God’s liberation of Israel from Egypt show?
God’s love for freedom.
Belief that God took care of ancestors for 300 years of slavery
Belief that through his actions, God established them as his chosen people by various covenants, most important one being the presentation of the decalogue
How did God establish Israelites as the chosen people?
Through covenants, especially the one on Mount Sinai.
What did God give the Israelites on Mount Sinai?
The Ten Commandments (Decalogue)
What is the Sabbath in Judaism?
Day of rest and worship from sundown to sundown.
What is a Bar Mitzvah and Bat Mitzvah?
Bar Mitzvah (13-year-old boy): “Son of the commandment.”
Bat Mitzvah (12-year-old girl): “Daughter of the commandment.”
What does Leviticus 11 teach?
Jewish dietary laws
What moral values are central in Judaism?
Justice, morality, acknowledgment of God, and refraining from murder, adultery, theft, and blasphemy.
What does the word Kritos mean?
Christ
What do some Jews see Christ as?
Some see him as a political king like King David.
Some see him as a divine being.
What did the Jews believe about the Messiah?
The Messiah would come and restore God’s sovereignty over all creation. The just or righteous would rise to eternal life, and the wicked to contempt and doom.
The Messiah would restore creation.
Quiz: How many mandated Jewish Feasts are listed in the Book of Leviticus, chapter 23?
7 feasts
What does the Passover mean?
“To cross over” - when God passed over Israelite homes during Exodus
What does Passover commemorate?
Freedom from Egyptian slavery
What is the Christian parallel to Passover?
Easter, celebrates freedom from sin
What months is the Passover in?
March- April
When does the Feast of Unleavened Bread occur?
The night after Passover
Why is unleavened bread eaten?
The Israelites left Egypt in haste- no time for the dough to rise (Deut 16:3)
Quiz: In Judaism, what is the symbolic meaning of the spread of leaven in bread?
Sin- a little leaven spread through the whole dough.
What is the Christian meaning of unleavened bread?
The Eucharist Bread is unleavened.
Represent Jesus without sin, the lamb without blemish
How did Jesus use leaven symbolically?
In Matthew 13:33, the kingdom of God grows from small beginnings.
What months does the Feast of Unleavened Bread occur?
March-April
What does the Feast of First Fruits celebrate?
Reaping of the first harvest
What ritual was performed by the priests?
Waving a sheaf of first fruits before God after the Sabbath.
What is the Christian connection?
Christ as the first fruit to rise from the dead (promise of eternal life)
What months does the Feast of First Fruits occur?
May-June
Quiz: In the celebration of the Feast of Weeks, how many days are counted after the special Sabbath that follows the Feast of Unleavened Bread?
50 days
What does it commemorate for Jews?
The giving of the Torah (Law) to Israel 50 days after crossing Red Sea
What is the Christian name for this feast?
Pentecost ( 50th), celebrating the gift of the Holy Spirit (Acts 2)
What months does the Feast of Weeks fall in?
May-June
What makes the Feast of Trumpets?
Blowing of trumpets or rams’ horns
Quiz: According to the Book of the Prophet Isaiah, chapter 60-61, whose coming does the action of blowing the trumpets announce to Israel?
Reminds Israel of the coming of their KING
What is the Christian link?
1 Thessalonians 4:16- trumpets announce resurrection at Christ’s return
What months did the Feast of Trumpets occur?
Sept-Oct
What does Yom Kippur mean?
Day of Attonement
What are the main practices of Yom Kippur?
Rest, prayer, fasting, and repentance
What does it represent for Christians?
Christ’s atoning sacrifice and reconciliation with God
What months did Yom Kippur occur in?
Sept-Oct
Quiz: How many days is the Jewish Feast of Tabernacles to be celebrated by Israel?
7 days
What does it commemorate?
Israel’s 40 years in tents in the wilderness before reaching Canaan.
What does it symbolize for Christians?
Gathering of all believers into the Kingdom of Heaven.
What months does the Feast of Tabernacles occur?
Sept-Oct
What is a covenant?
A sacred promise or agreement between God and His people
Quiz: Which covenant is emphasized in the Book of Deuteronomy?
Sinaitic Covenant
What does Immanence mean?
God’s presence in all creation
What does Transcendence mean?
God’s existence beyond the physical world
What does “Iglesia” (Greek) mean in relation to festivals?
“Church” or “holy gathering”- from the term “holy convocation”