segunda-feira, 23 de setembro de 2019

Trabalho de ingles - religion holds greatest role in society - Trabalho Feito



 
Table of contents

IntroductionGod, Torah, and IsraelGod: Biblical MonotheismIsrael: Jewish NationhoodRabbinic TextModern Jewish CultureConclusion


Avery religion holds greatest role in society, in so doing, all human being should choose the religion freely, no one is forced to worship someone’s God.
Thus, this work talks about Judaism, basically, looking in its culture.

Simply put, Judaism is the way of life of the Jewish people. In the English-speaking Western world, “Judaism” is often considered a “religion," but there are no equivalent words for “Judaism” or for “religion” in Hebrew; there are words for “faith,” “law,” or “custom” but not for “religion” if one thinks of the term as meaning solely the beliefs and practices associated with a relationship with God or a vision of transcendence. The Jewish tradition is much broader than this. As a way of life, it includes the social, cultural, and religious history of a widespread and diverse community, including people who do and do not think of themselves as “religious.”

Judaism embraces the intricate religious and cultural development of the Jewish people through more than thirty centuries of history, stretching from Biblical times to medieval Spain to the Enlightenment, and then to the Holocaust and the founding of the modern state of Israel. The result is an experience that reflects the elliptical relationship between religious practice and people hood. From a religious perspective Judaism is a theistic system, but from a people hood perspective, it is also the group memory of the manifold communities and cultures formed by Jews through the ages. It consists not only of Torah (divine revelation) and mitzvoth (divine commandments), but also the diverse cultures of the Hebrew, Yiddish, and Ladino languages.

Judaism is perhaps best conceptualized as a triad with three points of reference: God, Torah, and the people of Israel (that is, the Jewish people). None is central; all are interdependent, with varying degrees of emphasis at various times. God is the God of Israel, the God of all creation, the one God. Torah embodies Judaism’s intellectual culture, focusing on the study, understanding, and interpretation of sacred texts. Israel focuses on Judaism as a historical culture and the civilization of a particular people; the “people hood” of the Jews includes customs and foods, arts and music, dance and folkways that are part of a way of life. Judaism is critically concerned with the evolving relationship between God, Torah, and the Jewish people, a relationship described as a covenant. In the covenantal triad, God emphasizes the vertical relationship of the Jewish people to the Divine; Israel emphasizes the horizontal relationship Jews bear to one another, and Torah is both vertical and horizontal, for it defines the way of life of a whole people lived in relationship to God.
These three connotations of Judaism as a monotheistic system, as a literary tradition, and as a historical culture are sometimes viewed separately. For example, there are Jews who see themselves as culturally Jewish, but who are also non-religious or atheist, often identifying more strongly with Jewish “people hood” than with traditional understandings of God and Torah. Even so, all Jews would recognize that these three points of reference have shaped and guided Jewish experience through the ages.

The great symbols of God, Torah, and Israel have assumed varying positions of prominence throughout Jewish history, and our discussion of them necessarily unfolds within an ongoing historical framework. Such a historical approach is critical for an understanding of contemporary Judaism, for Judaism is a historical tradition—in which history is valued in and of itself. In many ways, Judaism has always been the sum total of all the history of its God, texts, and people.

The vision of a universal, singular God is arguably one of the greatest religious innovations of the Jewish tradition among the world’s historic religious systems. Between 1500 and 500 BCE, the Israelite people of the ancient Near East began to articulate a radical new understanding of divinity. The ancient Hebrews were most likely “polytheistic,” believing in numerous deities representing different forces of nature and serving various tribes and nations. Eventually, however, early Hebrew visionaries and prophets began to speak boldly of one God as the creator of all existence, a view we have come to call “monotheism.” Expressing the multivalent nature of divinity as well as an insistence upon the oneness of God, early Hebrew authors gave God names such as Elohim (“gods”), Adonai (“my lord”), and the unpronounceable YHWH, from the same root as the verb "to be," the etymological source of the name “Jehovah."

From the perspective of Jewish tradition, all Jews share a common ancestry descended from Abraham and his wife Sarah, and are therefore part of the same extended family. The Torah attributes this commonality to the patriarch Abraham: in his covenant with God, Abraham was promised that he would become the father of a great nation. Fulfilling the promise, they had a son, Isaac, whose own son Jacob was renamed Israel, literally “the one who struggles with God” (Genesis 32:29). Israel is the name of a person, a people, and a land.

The patriarch Jacob, renamed Israel, fathered twelve sons, the progenitors of the historic twelve tribes. First, they were known as bnei yisrael (“the children of Israel”). To this day, members of the Jewish community describe themselves metaphorically as a “tribe” and “family.” Second, the children of Israel (bnei yisrael) became the nation of Israel (am israel), following their liberation from slavery in Egypt and the uniting of the Israelite clans by the decree of God. Third and finally, the pivotal stage in the biblical account of nation-building was the inheritance of the promised land of Canaan, which thereafter became known as eretz yisrael, the land of Israel.

From a historical perspective, however, it may be more appropriate to highlight the transformation of the Jewish people from a loose confederation of tribes into a unified nation in the period of the Israelite monarchy, beginning in the late eleventh century BCE. After a period of political and social flux, King David (c. 1000-960 BCE) united the kingdom of Israel around his capital city of Jerusalem. David’s son Solomon (c. 961-922 BCE) built a Holy Temple in Jerusalem, thereby unifying the rituals and worship of the Israelite tribes as well. Following Solomon’s death, however, his warring sons divided the kingdom between the northern Kingdom of Israel and the southern Kingdom of Judah.

Traditionally, Judaism today is conceived as a timeless and ongoing conversation between the Jews and God, based on centuries of religious development and voluminous writings. These legal and interpretative texts, arguably the sum total of the discussion, argumentation, and writings of rabbis through the ages, is commonly called “rabbinic” literature. Rabbinic literature is a religious textual compendium developed over the history of the Jewish people, particularly in the Second Temple period and afterward.

The rabbis designated their literature the Oral Torah, as opposed to the finalized canon of the Written Torah. While the Torah refers mainly to the five books of Moses, it also refers more widely to all of Jewish sacred literature. To ensure the durability and relevance of the Biblical tradition, rabbis drew a distinction between the written Torah dictated by God to Moses on Mount Sinai and the unwritten Torah dictated by God to Moses verbally. According to rabbinic tradition, this second tradition was passed down orally, eventually developed in writing by the rabbis of the third century CE in Palestine and becoming known as the Mishnah.

The philosophical endeavor to reconcile traditional religion with modern culture has long had a place in Jewish history. Philo of first-century Alexandria, Rav Saadia Gaon of tenth-century Babylonia, Maimonides of twelfth-century Spain and Egypt: many great Jewish thinkers have taken pains to integrate the Judaism of the Torah and the Talmud with the best of contemporary thought. Maimonides not only codified Jewish Law in his monumental work the Mishneh Torah, he also wrote Guide for the Perplexed, which addresses an educated audience perplexed by the contradictions of the Torah and Aristotelian philosophy. The book had a great influence on the development of Jewish intellectual traditions.

Conclusion

The various teachings of Judaism have often been regarded as specifications of central idea monotheism, one God, the creator of the world has freely elected Jewish people for a unique covenantal relationship with him.

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