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Judaism Overview Judaism. Class Objective:  Students will understand the essential questions of Judaism, Christianity, and Islam.  Essential Questions.

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Presentation on theme: "Judaism Overview Judaism. Class Objective:  Students will understand the essential questions of Judaism, Christianity, and Islam.  Essential Questions."— Presentation transcript:

1 Judaism Overview Judaism

2 Class Objective:  Students will understand the essential questions of Judaism, Christianity, and Islam.  Essential Questions -  Who was the founder?  Where did it originate?  What are the key texts?  What are the core beliefs?  What happens when a believer dies?  What are their practices and rituals?  How has the religion spread geographically ?

3 Zoroaster  Taught that on Earth people receive training for a future life. On Earth the forces of good and evil battle one another and people must choose between them.  Those who chose good would be rewarded with eternal blessings and those who chose evil would face punishments.  These beliefs impacted Judaism and Christianity.

4 Judaism  Jewish people are also called Hebrew.

5  The Christians also use the first five books as the Old Testament.  These books contain historical accounts of important events. They also contain stories told to teach important lessons.

6 Founder  The “ father ” or founder of the Hebrew people was Abraham.  He lived in Sumer.  He left Sumer and led his people through the desert to Canaan.  Abraham ’ s story is told that God said to take his family and God would show them where to settle. As long as the Jewish people are there they will be blessed.

7 Abraham

8  The land that they moved to was called Canaan.  Canaan is where modern day Israel is located.  Eventually the descendants of Abraham left Canaan and traveled West into Egypt.

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10 The Exodus  The Hebrews lived peacefully in Egypt for some time. Then the Egyptians no longer favored them.  The Hebrews were held as slaves for 400 years and suffered greatly.  The Hebrews were then led out of slavery by a great leader named Moses.

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12 Moses  Led by Moses, the Hebrews fled into the deserts of the Sinai Peninsula, where they wandered in the wilderness.  Moses climbed to the top of Mount Sinai. When he returned he carried tablets bearing the Ten Commandments.  The Ten Commandments are moral laws revealed to Moses by the Hebrew god, Yahweh.

13 10 Commandments  The first four commandments concerned the Hebrews ’ relationship with God.  The last six commandments concerned the Hebrew ’ s relationship with one another.

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15  The Hebrew people agreed to follow these commandments.  This was an example of entering into a covenant with Yahweh.  Moses announced that Canaan was a promised land to his ancestors and Yahweh had sent him to found the holy nation.

16  The Hebrew people were inspired by Moses’ words and set out for Canaan.  They wandered in the desert for many years before entering the “promised land.”  They were expecting to find a land “flowing with milk and honey.”

17  The Hebrews from Egypt joined those who lived on the border of northern Canaan.  Together, they became a loose confederation of tribes bound together in order to maintain the Ark of the Covenant.  Prophets would appear from time to time to warn people that God was angry because they were straying from the terms of the covenant.

18  The Hebrews became tough desert tribes from living in the wilderness.  The groups called the Canaanites and Philistines were a struggle for the Hebrews.  They tried to conquer both groups, but the Canaanites and Philistines resisted.  Eventually the Hebrews conquered the Canaanites.  They drove the Philistines closer to the sea coast, but never conquered them completely.

19  Since the Hebrews lived in the wilderness, they were living a nomadic lifestyle.  They were split up into twelve tribes.  During times of fighting, the tribes would unite under one king.

20 Kings of Israel  From about 1020 to 922 B.C.., the Hebrews united under three able kings: Saul, David, and Solomon. The new kingdom was called Israel.  Under David, the village of Jerusalem was conquered and made the capital and religious center.  Under Solomon, Israel reached the height of its wealth and power.  For 100 years Israel enjoyed its greatest period of power and independence.

21  After Solomon’s death, unity was disrupted by struggles for political power.  In the late 900s BC the 10 northern tribes revolted and the kingdom split in two.  The northern part remained the kingdom of Israel and the capital was Samaria.  The Southern part, located around the Dead Sea, became the kingdom of Judah. The capital was Jerusalem.

22  Since the Hebrews were no longer united, they lacked the strength to withstand invasions.  In 722 BC the Assyrians conquered Israel. They captured and enslaved many Hebrews.  In 587 BC the Chaldeans destroyed Jerusalem and took the Hebrews captive.  When Cyrus, the Persian king conquered the Chaldeans, he allowed the Hebrews to return to their homeland.

23  The Hebrew scriptures tell of the creation of the world and the special missions of Hebrews.  About one third of these scriptures, also known as the Old Testament, is Hebrew history.  The remaining scriptures include laws, property, prophecy, and religious instruction.

24 The Torah  The first five books of the Old Testament are known as the Torah.  It includes the Hebrew Code of Laws, called the Mosaic law.  Law reflected the belief that all people deserved kindness and respect.

25  The early Hebrews worshipped Yahweh as their only god.  Yahweh protected them from enemies and provided food and water.  Those who sinned against Yahweh would suffer and their children and succeeding generations would also suffer.

26  As time went on, the Hebrews came to believe that people had a choice between good and evil and would be held responsible for their choices.  Yahweh was now a god who lived in the hearts of worshippers. They would serve him out of love.  Yahweh was viewed as a spiritual force, not as a glorified human or a part of nature.  Earthly political leaders had no claims to divinity. Only Yahweh was divine.

27  Today, many people refer to the values first established by the Hebrews as Judeo-Christian ethics.  The Jewish system of ethics carried over into the founding of Christianity.

28 Modern Day Judaism  Judaism does not focus much on abstract cosmological concepts. (the nature of God, man, the universe, life, afterlife) They focus on this life, here and now.  They have substantial room for personal opinion on all these matters.  They are much more concerned about actions than beliefs.

29 Modern Day Judaism  Judaism focuses on relationships:  The relationship between God and mankind  The relationship between God and Jewish people  The relationship between Jewish people and the Land of Israel  The relationship between human beings

30 Worship and Practices  Jewish pray in a congregation three times a day.  They study the Torah.  The Torah is read each Sabbath. The Sabbath is spent in prayer, study, rest, and family feasting.  The Jewish year includes five major festivals- Passover, Shabuoth, Sukkot, Rosh Hashanah, and Yom Kippur.  The two minor holidays are Hanukkah and Purim.

31  Judaism originated in the Middle East and has spread throughout all parts of the world because of both voluntary migrations and forced exile or expulsions.  The Jewish population is about 15 million.  Most live in the United States, Israel, and Russia.

32  http://www.pbs.org/jewishamericans/watch/index.ht ml#10 http://www.pbs.org/jewishamericans/watch/index.ht ml#10

33  Open to page 452 in the World Geography Today textbook.  Read pages 452-453 and answer the questions.

34 Chicago Police Dept  http://www.archive.org/details/gov.doj.ncj.212664.v1.6 http://www.archive.org/details/gov.doj.ncj.212664.v1.6


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