Transcript The Gemara

Emergence of
Monotheistic Religions
judaism
• According to the Hebrew conception, there is but one
God, whom they call YHWH.
• God is the creator of the world and everything in it. All the
gods of all other peoples were simply idols.
• The Hebrew God was totally sovereign and ruled the
world; he was subject to nothing. All peoples were his
servants, whether they knew it or not.
• This God was also transcendent. He had created nature
but was not in nature. The stars, moon, rivers, wind, and
other natural phenomena were not divinities or suffused
with divinity, but God’s handiwork.
judaism
• Secondly, this omnipotent creator of the universe was not
removed from the life he had created, however, but was a
just and good God who expected goodness from his own
people.
• Judaism also emphasized individual worth.
• Each person, possessed of moral freedom had the
ability to choose between good and evil.
• Through Moses and other holy men, God had made
know his commandments, his ideals of behaviour.
• True freedom consisted of accepting God’s ethical
norms voluntarily.
judaism
• Lastly, the Hebrew conception of God was closely related
to three aspects of the Hebrew religious tradition that have
special significance: the covenant, law, and the prophets.
• Covenant: Moses and the 12 commandments=
entering contract or covenant with God.
• Hebrews promised to obey YHWH and follow his law.
In return, YHWH promised take special care of his
chose people or “a peculiar treasure unto me above all
people.”
judaism
• Law: A crucial element of the Hebrew world. In some
cases it set for specific requirements, such as payments
for offenses.
• Most important were the ethical concerns that stood at
the center of the law.
• The prophets: they supposedly had special communion
with God and felt called upon to serve as his voice to his
people.
judaic terms
• Torah: (in Judaism) the law of God as revealed to Moses
and recorded in the first five books of the Hebrew
scriptures (the Pentateuch).
• Talmud: the body of Jewish civil and ceremonial law and
legend comprising the Mishnah and the Gemara.
• The Mishnah: an authoritative collection of exegetical
material embodying the oral tradition of Jewish law and
forming the first part of the Talmud.
• The Gemara: a rabbinical commentary on the
Mishnah, forming the second part of the Talmud.
tefillin
Studying the Torah
the jesus cult
the cult of jesus:
the jewish background
• Sadducee: rejected the possibility of personal immortality
and favored cooperation with the Romans.
• Pharisees: liberal approach to Jewish law, believed in the
afterlife, and wanted to liberate Judea from Roman
control.
• Essenes: lived in a religious community near the Dead
Sea who awaited the coming messiah.
• Zealots: militant extremists who advocated the violent
overthrow of Roman rule.
the cult of jesus:
the jewish background
• Yeshua ben Yusef (c. 6 BCE - 29 CE)
• The transformation of the inner person
• To love God and one another
• Sermon on the Mount: presentation of ethical
concepts:
✴
humility, charity and brotherly love.