Table of Contents
Can people convert to Judaism?
Converting to Judaism is not easy. It involves many lifestyle changes and about a year of studying. Becoming a Jew is not just a religious change: the convert not only accepts the Jewish faith, but becomes a member of the Jewish People and embraces Jewish culture and history.
How can I be Israeli?
Even if you were not born in Israel, it is possible to become an Israeli citizen by birth if one or both of your parents is also an Israeli citizen. Your parents’ Israeli nationality can have been acquired by birth, by naturalization, by residence, or by the Law of Return.
How old do you have to be to become a rabbi?
“There is no legal regulation that says he must be 22 to become a rabbi, and he has already been tested after being recommended by many rabbis as the genius of his time. His test should be marked officially, and since I have no doubt he has passed, he should become a rabbi now.”
What are the origins of Rabbinic Judaism?
The origins of rabbinic Judaism are found in the many Judaisms that coexisted during the Second Temple period in the land of Israel, when biblical and co-biblical texts were edited and interpreted. Classical rabbinic Judaism flourished from the 1st century CE to the closure of the Babylonian Talmud, c. 600 CE, in Babylonia.
What is the development of Rabbinic Jewish literature?
Development. Rabbinic Jewish literature is predicated on the belief that the Torah cannot be properly understood without recourse to the Oral Law. It states that many commandments and stipulations contained in the Torah would be difficult, if not impossible, to keep without the Oral Law to define them—for example,…
Why did Rabbi Yehuda take five students of Rabbi Akiva?
Hearing the decree, Rabbi Yehuda took five students of Rabbi Akiva, the great sage who had just been martyred by the Romans, and sat between two mountains that served as the ” Shabbat boundary” 30 between two large cities, Usha and Shifarum. When the Romans discovered them, Rabbi Yehuda cried out to the students, “My children, flee!”