moral evil - the acts of humans which are
considered to be morally wrong
natural evil - natural disasters,
such as earthquakes or tsunamis
Suffering is the bearing or undergoing
of pain or distress. Suffering is often a
result of evil.
Causing Suffering is wrong
God and truth
Jews believe in the oneness of God. This is seen in one of the most important
prayers for Jews, the Shema which begins with: Hear, O Israel, the Lord is our
God, the Lord is one. Deuteronomy 6:4
Jews believe that all existence in heaven and on Earth
comes from God, and that God alone should be
worshipped.
They write
G-d
Revelation
Revelation is when something that was hidden becomes
known. For many religious people, revelation comes from
God and reveals something about God.
Sources of authority
scripture
Tanakh
Torah, Nevi'im and Ketuvim
Life after death
While Judaism has long taught that there is a life after death, the
details of this are unclear and long-debated.
humans have a soul which will one day return to God.
Jews are theists.
someone who believes that God exists.
Theists do not necessarily believe they
can prove God's existence.
Worships and practices
Worship
Worship is considered to be a response to
God's love for his people. It is not about
receiving things from God, but giving him
thanks and praise.
Jews do not make symbolic images of God as that
would be considered idolatry.
Jews do not usually write out the name of
God in case someone defaces it. This is why
Jews often use 'G-d' instead.
It is an important part of Jewish life
The most important prayer is the Shema. The opening line is
recited twice a day and reminds Jews of their monotheistic
belief: Hear, O Israel, the Lord our God, the Lord is One
(Deuteronomy 6:4).
Practices
Jewish men wear three diffrent aids to
prayer.
The tallit
It has 613 long fringes
that remind Jews of God's
laws.
Prayer Shawl
The tefillin
They are small capsules with
handwritten scripture passages.
kippah
The kippah is like a hat
It reminds them that God is always with them
and that they must keep God's laws.
Rituals and festivals
Festivals
Pesach
Also known as Passover
Jews remember how the Israelites left slavery
behind them when Moses led them out of
Egypt more than 3000 years ago.
The ten plagues were:
blood, frogs, gnats, flies, blight of the livestock,
boils, hail, locusts, darkness and the death of
each first-born child.
Seder plate - on the first night of Pesach, a special service
called a Seder takes place over a family meal in the home.
Yom
Kippur
They attend the synagogue on Yom Kippur, the
only day of the year with five services.
Rosh Hashanah
Rosh Hashanah is a day for judgement,
when Jews believe that God considers a
person's good and bad deeds over the
last year
Sukkot
Sukkot is the Jewish harvest festival.
Jews build sukkot in their garden with their families.
Rituals
Shabbat
Shabbat is the weekly period
of rest from Friday evening
until Saturday night.
Time is spent together praying,
socialising and reading from the Torah