The Jewish community does not have consensus on the question
"Who is a Jew"
In "Jews for Jesus" from a messianic perspective, a Jewish
person is someone who is a physical descendant of Abraham, Isaac
and Jacob. We define being Jewish as an ethnicity
According to the Bible, if your father was Jewish you were
Jewish
Over times, the Rabbis changed that law so that your mother
being Jewish made you Jewish. This was in response to rape and
pillaging of the Jewish people and to preserve the ability to
identify their people
If someone is a Jew you're referring to ethnicity (the
bloodline, like hardware). If someone practices some of the
Jewish faith or culture, anyone can do that (like software).
The Jewish culture varies in different countries
Referring to the Jewish people as "Jews" may be fine or
derogatory depending on the context
The 3 main branches of Judaism are Orthodox (most
conservative), Conservative, and Reformed (most liberal).
Orthodox Jews believe in the inerrancy of scripture and the
oral law (the Talmad, the rabinical interpretation of the Hebrew
scriptures). They believe in the coming Messiah and the
resurrection of the dead. Within Orthodox there are sub-groups of
modern Orthodox, strict Orthodox, and the ultra-Orthodox (the
Hasidim).
A Reformed Jewish person would not believe in the Messiah as a
person. They would not believe in the miracles of the
Bible. There are even athiestic and humanistic synagogues
that do not believe in God. There are a large group of Jewish
people who follow Buddhaism (called JewBus) and New Age.
As the culture has shifted, there has been a deterioration
between these 3 branches and in the beliefs of each
Judaism didn't morphe significantly until after the Temple was
destroyed in 70AD.
A Yamaka (Yittish) and Kippah (Hebrew) are two names for
a skull cap or head covering for men
Jewish people tend to vote democrat due to justice
issues
The general sentiment in our culture and in Jewish culture is
whatever makes you happy and that impacts the Pro-life issue.
A bar mitzvah is when a boy reaches age 13 (bat mitzvah for a
girl). The ceremony is only about 400 years old. The
essential elements of the ceremony is they spend a year or longer
learning Hebrew. The Torah is broken into 54 portions, so you
find the portion associated with the week of your birthday and you
learn to chant that in Hebrew. You give a sermonette on the
Torah portion you're chanting on and what it means to be a man (or
woman). Then you have the party.
For most boys their life doesn't change that much as a result
of the bar mitzvah
Loving God, others and ourselves at work and at home. Interviews and ponderings, from a Messianic perspective, and with a focus on men. Formerly the Christian Men at Work Podcast.