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Tag Archives: Jewish Religion
Consider the Cat
“Among my people it is believed – and rightly so – that it is only mindless superstitions and pointless rituals that separate us from the animals.” – Latka Gravas Rabbi Yochanan said: Had the Torah not been given, we would … Continue reading
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Tagged A fence around the Torah, Babylonian Talmud, Bavli, Bein Hametzorim, Bible, Conservative Juform, Cycleof the Jewish Year, daism, Ethics of the Fathers, Feminist learning, God, Haredi, Israel, Jerusalem, Jerusalem Talmud, Jewish, Jewish Calendar, Jewish Learning, Jewish Life, Jewish Living, Jewish Medical Ethics, Jewish Parenting, Jewish Religion, Jewish ritual, Jewish Wisdom, Judaism, Kabbalah, Kotel, Learning, Maimonides, Men of the Great Assembly, Moses, Oral Law, Orthodox, Orthodox Judaism, Orthodoxy, Parenting, Pharisees, Pirkei Avot, Pluralistic Learning, Prophecy, Prophets, Rabbis, Rambam, Reconstructionism, Reconstructionist Judaism, Reform Judaism, Religion, Religious coercion, religious freedom, Religious Judaism, ReShavuot, Sages, Samaritans, Sea of Halakhah, Shoah, Simon the Just, Sinai, Talmud, Tanach, Teaching Torah, Tel Aviv, Theology, Tikun Leil Shavuot, Torah shebe'al peh, tradition, Uncategorized, Western Wall, Women, Written Law, Yerushalmi | Tagged David Hartman, Yeshiva
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Halakhic Innovation
I know this is a bit off-topic, but this article from today’s Haaretz is relevant to the general theme of my series on the evolution of the oral law. It raises a question we raised since our first class in … Continue reading
Posted in A fence around the Torah, Alexander The Great, Babylonian Talmud, Bavli, Bein Hametzorim, Bible, Conservative Judaism, Cycleof the Jewish Year, Ethics of the Fathers, Ezra, Fast Days, God, Haredi, Holocaust, Israel, Jerusalem Talmud, Jewish, Jewish Calendar, Jewish Learning, Jewish Life, Jewish Living, Jewish Parenting, Jewish Religion, Jewish ritual, Jewish Wisdom, Judaism, Kabbalah, Learning, Luck, Madonna, Maimonides, Men of the Great Assembly, Moses, Oral Law, Orthodox, Orthodox Judaism, Orthodoxy, Parenting, Passover, Pharisees, Pirkei Avot, Prophecy, Prophets, Rabbis, Rambam, Reconstrcutionist Judaism, Reconstructionism, Reconstructionist Judaism, Reform, Reform Judaism, Religion, Religious coercion, Religious freedom, Religious Judaism, Saducees, Sages, Samaritans, Sea of Halakhah, Seder, Seventeenth of Tammuz, Shavuot, Shimon Hatzadik, Shoah, Shomronim, Simon the Just, Sinai, Talmud, Tanach, Teaching Torah, The Three Weeks, Theology, Torah Shebe'al Peh, Trah Shebe'al peh, Trochenbrod, Uncategorized, Women, Written Law, yahrzeit, Yerushalmi, Yom Hashoah
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Going…going…where? Goodbye to Prophecy
We know that between the last of the prophets and the beginning of the Mishnah, Judaism underwent a major change. Avot describes this period in just a sentence or two. The Rambam takes several paragraphs to explain it. But nobody … Continue reading
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Takkanot – The Torah adapts to new realities
The Mishnah marks the culmination of the transition from Prophetic Judaism to Rabbinic Judaism. The period before that – from the time of Ezra to the establishment of the Anshei Knesset Hagedolah (Men of the Great Assembly) – is the … Continue reading
Posted in Babylonian Talmud, Bavli, Bible, Conservative Judaism, Cycleof the Jewish Year, Ethics of the Fathers, Fast Days, God, Haredi, Holocaust, Israel, Jerusalem Talmud, Jewish, Jewish Calendar, Jewish Learning, Jewish Life, Jewish Living, Jewish Religion, Jewish ritual, Jewish Wisdom, Judaism, Kabbalah, Learning, Maimonides, Moses, Oral Law, Orthodox, Orthodox Judaism, Orthodoxy, Passover, Pirkei Avot, Rabbis, Rambam, Reconstrcutionist Judaism, Reconstructionism, Reconstructionist Judaism, Reform, Reform Judaism, Religion, Religious freedom, Religious Judaism, Sages, Sea of Halakhah, Seventeenth of Tammuz, Shavuot, Sinai, Talmud, Tanach, Teaching Torah, Theology, Trah Shebe'al peh, Uncategorized, Yerushalmi
Tagged Anshei Knesset Hagedolah, Avot d’Rabbi Nathan, babylonian exile, Babylonian Talmud, Bavli, Bible, build a fence around the torah, Conservative Judaism, Eliezer Berkovits, Ethics of the Fathers, evolution of Jewish law, evolution of Judaism, Ezra, Fast days, Gemara, gezerot, God, hakhamim, Halakhha le’Moshe Misinai, Hammurabi code, Haredi, History of halakhha, history of oral law, history of rabbinic law, Holocaust, Israel, Jerusalem Talmud, Jewish, Jewish Calendar, jewish civilization, Jewish evolution, Jewish Learning, Jewish Life, Jewish Living, Jewish people, Jewish Philosophy, Jewish Religion, Jewish ritual, Jewish tradition, Jewish Wisdom, Joshua, Judaism, Kabbalah, Learning, Maimonides, Men of the Great Assembly, Mishna Torah, Mitzvah, Mitzvot, Mordechai Kaplan, Moses, Nehemia, Oral Law, Orthodox, Orthodox Judaism, Orthodoxy, Passover, Pirkei Avot, rabbinic Judaism, Rabbis, Rambam, Reconstrcutionist Judaism, Reconstructionism, Reconstructionist Judaism, Reform, Reform Judaism, Religion, Religious coercion, religious freedom, Religious Judaism, Revelation at Sinai, Saadia, Sages, Sea of Halakhah, Shavuot, Sinai, Soloveitchik, takkanah, takkanot, Talmud, Tanakh, Teaching Torah, Theology, tikun, Tikun Leil Shavuot, toah sages, torah scholars, Torah shebe'al peh, tradition, Written Law, Yehoshua, Yerushalmi
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