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Jewish religious movements

Jewish religious movements, sometimes called "denominations", include diverse groups within Judaism which have developed among Jews from ancient times. Today in the west, the most prominent divisions are between traditionalist Orthodox movements (including Haredi ultratraditionalist and Modern Orthodox branches) and modernist movements such as Reform Judaism originating in late 18th century Europe, Conservative (Masorti) originating in 19th century Europe, and other smaller ones,[1] including the Reconstructionst and Renewal movements which emerged later in the 20th century in the United States.

In Israel, variation is moderately similar,[2][3][4][5] differing from the west in having roots in the Old Yishuv and pre-to-early-state Yemenite infusion, among other influences. For statistical and practical purposes, the distinctions there are based upon a person's attitude to religion. Most Jewish Israelis classify themselves as "secular" (hiloni), "traditional" (masortim), "religious" (dati) or ultra-religious (haredi).[6][5]

The western and Israeli movements differ in their views on various issues (as do those of other Jewish communities). These issues include the level of observance, the methodology for interpreting and understanding Jewish law, biblical authorship, textual criticism, and the nature or role of the messiah (or messianic age). Across these movements, there are marked differences in liturgy, especially in the language in which services are conducted, with the more traditional movements emphasizing Hebrew. The sharpest theological division occurs between traditional Orthodox and the greater number of non-Orthodox Jews adhering to other movements (or to none), such that the non-Orthodox are sometimes referred to collectively as the "liberal" or "progressive streams".

Other divisions of Judaism in the world reflect being more ethnically and geographically rooted, e.g., Beta Israel (Ethiopian Jews), and Bene Israel (among the ancient Jewish communities of India). Normatively, Judaism excludes from its composition certain groups that may name or consider themselves ethnic Jews but hold key beliefs in sharp contradiction, for example, modern or ancient Messianic Jews.

Terminology edit

Some Jews reject the term denomination as a label for different groups and ideologies within Judaism, arguing that the notion of denomination has a specifically Christian resonance that does not translate easily into the Jewish context. However, in recent years the American Jewish Year Book has adopted "denomination", as have many scholars and theologians.[7]

Commonly used terms are movements,[8][9][10][11][12][13][14][3][15][16][17][18] as well as denominations,[19][20][21][22][7][15][23][24] varieties,[1] traditions,[25] groupings,[17][26] streams,[27] branches,[28] sectors and sects (for some groups),[29][30] trends,[31] and such. Sometimes, as an option, only three main currents of Judaism (Orthodox, Conservative and Reform) are named traditions, and divisions within them are called movements.

The Jewish groups themselves reject characterization as sects. Sects are traditionally defined as religious subgroups that have broken off from the main body, and this separation usually becomes irreparable over time. Within Judaism, individuals and families often switch affiliation, and individuals are free to marry one another, although the major denominations disagree on who is a Jew. It is not unusual for clergy and Jewish educators trained in one of the liberal denominations to serve in another, and left with no choice, many small Jewish communities combine elements of several movements to achieve a viable level of membership.

Relationships between Jewish religious movements are varied; they are sometimes marked by interdenominational cooperation outside of the realm of halakha (Jewish law), such as the New York Board of Rabbis, and sometimes not. Some of the movements sometimes cooperate by uniting with one another in community federations and in campus organizations such as the Hillel Foundation. Jewish religious denominations are distinct from, but often linked to, Jewish ethnic divisions and Jewish political movements.

Sects in the Second Temple period edit

Prior to the destruction of the Second Temple in 70 CE, Jews of the Roman province of Judaea were divided into several movements, sometimes warring among themselves: Pharisees, Sadducees, Essenes, Zealots, and ultimately early Christians. Many historic sources such as Flavius Josephus, the New Testament and the recovered fragments of the Dead Sea Scrolls, attest to the divisions among Jews at this time. Rabbinical writings from later periods, including the Talmud, further attest these ancient schisms.[32][33]

The main internal struggles during this era were between the Pharisees and the Sadducees, as well as the early Christians, and also the Essenes and Zealots. The Pharisees wanted to maintain the authority and traditions of classical Torah teachings and began the early teachings of the Mishna, maintaining the authority of the Sanhedrin, the supreme Jewish court. According to Josephus, the Sadducees differed from the Pharisees on a number of doctrinal grounds, notably rejecting ideas of life after death. They appear to have dominated the aristocracy and the temple, but their influence over the wider Jewish population was limited. The Essenes preached an ascetic way of life. The Zealots advocated armed rebellion against any foreign power such as Rome. All were at violent logger-heads with each other, leading to the confusion and disunity that ended with the destruction of the Second Temple and the sacking of Jerusalem by Rome. The Jewish Christians were the original Jewish followers of Jesus. The radical interpretation of Moses' Law by Jesus' disciples and their belief he is the Son of God, along with the development of the New Testament, ensured that Christianity and Judaism would become distinctively different religions.[32][33]

Rabbinic Judaism edit

Most streams of modern Judaism developed from the Pharisaic movement, which became known as Rabbinic Judaism (in Hebrew Yahadut Rabanit — יהדות רבנית) with the compilation of the Oral Torah into the Mishna. After the Bar Kokhba revolt and the destruction of the Second Temple the other movements disappeared from the historical record, yet the Sadducees probably kept on existing in a non-organized form for at least several more decades.[34][32][35]

Non-Rabbinic Judaism edit

 
In central Karaite synagogue, Ramla

Non-Rabbinic Judaism—Sadducees, Nazarenes, Karaite Judaism, and Haymanot—contrasts with Rabbinic Judaism and does not recognize the Oral Torah as a divine authority nor the rabbinic procedures used to interpret Jewish scripture.[36]

Karaite Judaism edit

The tradition of the Qara'im survives in Karaite Judaism, started in the early 9th century when non-rabbinic sages like Benjamin Nahawandi and their followers took the rejection of the Oral Torah by Anan ben David to the new level of seeking the plain meaning of the Tanakh's text. Karaite Jews accept only the Tanakh as divinely inspired, not recognizing the authority that Rabbinites ascribe to basic rabbinic works like the Talmud and the Midrashim.[37][38]

Ethno-cultural divisions' movements edit

Although there are numerous Jewish ethnic communities, there are several that are large enough to be considered predominant. Generally, they do not constitute separate religious branches within Judaism, but rather separate cultural traditions (nuschaot) and rites of prayer (minhagim). Ashkenazi Jews compose about 75% of the world's Jewish population. Sephardi Jews and Mizrahi Jews compose the greatest part of the rest, with about 20% of the world's Jewish population. Israel has two Chief Rabbi—one for the Ashkenazic, another for the Sephardic with Mizrahi Jews.[39] The remaining 5% of Jews are divided among a wide array of small groups (such as various groups of African Jews, most prominently the Beta Israel from Ethiopia who follow the Haymanot branch of Judaism), some of which are nearing extinction as a result of assimilation and intermarriage into surrounding non-Jewish cultures or surrounding Jewish cultures. Additionally, special ethnoreligious divisions are also the Italian rite Jews and the Greek Romaniote Jews. Both groups are considered distinct from Ashkenazim and Sephardim.

The Enlightenment had a tremendous effect on Jewish identity and on ideas about the importance and role of Jewish observance.[40] Due to the geographical distribution and the geopolitical entities affected by the Enlightenment, this philosophical revolution essentially affected only the Ashkenazi community; however, because of the predominance of the Ashkenazi community in Israeli politics and in Jewish leadership worldwide, the effects have been significant for all Jews.[40]

Sephardic and Mizrahi Judaism edit

 
Torah reading Sephardic custom

Sephardic Judaism is the practice of Judaism as observed by the Sephardim (Iberian, Spanish-Portuguese Jews). The Mizrahi Jews (including Maghrebi) are all Oriental Jewry. Some definitions of "Sephardic" also include Mizrahi, many of whom follow the same traditions of worship but have different ethno-cultural traditions. So far as it is peculiar to themselves and not shared with other Jewish groups such as the Ashkenazim (German rite).[41][42][43]

Sephardim are primarily the descendants of Jews from the Iberian Peninsula, such as most Jews from France and the Netherlands. They may be divided into the families that left in the Expulsion of 1492 and those that remained as crypto-Jews, Marranos and those who left in the following few centuries. In religious parlance, and by many in modern Israel, the term is used in a broader sense to include all Jews of Ottoman or other Asian or African backgrounds (Mizrahi Jews), whether or not they have any historic link to Spain, although some prefer to distinguish between Sephardim proper and Mizraḥi Jews.

Sephardic and Mizrachi Jewish synagogues are generally considered Orthodox or Sephardic Haredim by non-Sephardic Jews, and are primarily run according to the Orthodox tradition, even though many of the congregants may not keep a level of observance on par with traditional Orthodox belief. For example, many congregants will drive to the synagogue on the Shabbat, in violation of halakha, while discreetly entering the synagogue so as not to offend more observant congregants. However, not all Sephardim are Orthodox; among the pioneers of the Reform Judaism movement in the 1820s there was the Sephardic congregation Beth Elohim in Charleston, South Carolina.[44][45] A part of the European Sephardim were also linked with the Judaic modernization.[46]

Unlike the predominantly Ashkenazic Reform, and Reconstructionist denominations, Sephardic and Mizrahi Jews who are not observant generally believe that Orthodox Judaism's interpretation and legislation of halakha is appropriate, and true to the original philosophy of Judaism. That being said, Sephardic and Mizrachi rabbis tend to hold different, and generally more lenient, positions on halakha than their Ashkenazi counterparts, but since these positions are based on rulings of Talmudic scholars as well as well-documented traditions that can be linked back to well-known codifiers of Jewish law, Ashkenazic and Hasidic Rabbis do not believe that these positions are incorrect, but rather that they are the appropriate interpretation of halakha for Jews of Sephardic and Mizrachi descent.[41][43][47]

 
A Yemenite Jew in traditional vestments under the tallit gadol, reading from a Torah scroll

The Yemenite Jews—the Dor Daim and other movements—use a separate Baladi-rite. The Yemenite and the Aramaic speaking Kurdish Jews are the only communities who maintain the tradition of reading the Torah in the synagogue in both Hebrew and the Aramaic Targum ("translation"). Most non-Yemenite synagogues have a specified person called a Baal Koreh, who reads from the Torah scroll when congregants are called to the Torah scroll for an aliyah. In the Yemenite tradition, each person called to the Torah scroll for an aliyah reads for himself.[48]

The Shas, a religious political party in Israel, represents the interests of the Orthodox/Haredi Sephardim and Mizrahim.[49]

Italian and Romaniote Judaism edit

 
Italian siddur (סידור איטליני)

A relatively small but influential ethnoreligious group in the intellectual circles of Israel are Italian rite Jews (Italkim) who are neither Ashkenazi nor Sephardi. These are exclusively descendants of the ancient Roman Jewish community, not including later Ashkenazic and Sephardic migrants to Italy. They practice traditional Orthodox Judaism. The liturgy is served according to a special Italian Nusach (Nusach ʾItalqi, a.k.a. Minhag B'nei Romì) and it has similarities with the nusach of the Greek Romaniote Jews.

The Romaniote Jews or the Romaniotes (Romanyotim) native to the Eastern Mediterranean is the oldest Jewish community in Europe, whom name is refers to the Eastern Roman Empire. They are also distinct from the Ashkenazim and Sephardim. But, nowadays, few synagogues still use the Romaniote nusach and minhag.

Ashkenazic movements edit

Hasidic Judaism edit

 
Hasidim

Hasidic Judaism—a revivalist movement—was founded by Israel ben Eliezer (1700–1760), also known as the Baal Shem Tov, whose followers had previously called themselves Freylechn ("happy ones") and now they call themselves Hasidim ("pious, holy ones"). His charismatic disciples attracted many followers among Ashkenazi Jews, and they also established numerous Hasidic groups across Europe. The Baal Shem Tov came at a time when the Jewish masses of Eastern Europe were reeling from the bewilderment and disappointment which were engendered in them by the two notorious Jewish false messiahs, Sabbatai Zevi (1626–1676) and Jacob Frank (1726–1791), and their respective followers. Hasidic Judaism eventually became the way of life for many Jews in Eastern Europe. The Hasidim are organized into independent "courts" or dynasties, each dynasty is headed by its own hereditary spiritual leader-rebbe. Unlike other Ashkenazim, most Hasidim use some variation of Nusach Sefard, a blend of Ashkenazi and Sephardi liturgies, based on the innovations of the Kabbalist Isaac Luria. Neo-Hasidism is a term which refers to trends of interest in the teachings of Kabbalah and Hasidism which are expressed by members of other existing Jewish movements.[50][51][52][53][54]

Lithuanian (Lita'im) edit

In the late 18th century, there was a serious schism between Hasidic and non-Hasidic Jews. European traditionalist Jews who rejected the Hasidic movement were dubbed Mitnagdim ("opponents") by the followers of the Baal Shem Tov. Lithuania became the centre of this opposition under the leadership of Vilna Gaon (Elijah ben Solomon Zalman), which adopted the epithets Litvishe (Yiddish word), Litvaks (in Slavic) or Lita'im (in Hebrew) those epithets refer to Haredi Jews who are not Hasidim (and not Hardalim or Sephardic Haredim). Since then, all of the Hasidic Jewish groups have been theologically subsumed into mainstream Orthodox Judaism, particularly, Haredi Judaism, but cultural differences persist.[55][51][56][57][54][17][58] In the 19th century, the Lithuanian spirituality was mainly incorporated into the Musar movement.[59][60][61][62]

Post-Enlightenment movements edit

Late-18th-century Europe, and then the rest of the world, was swept by a group of intellectual, social and political movements that taken together were referred to as the Enlightenment. These movements promoted scientific thinking, free thought, and allowed people to question previously unshaken religious dogmas. The emancipation of the Jews in many European communities, and the Haskalah movement started by Moses Mendelssohn, brought the Enlightenment to the Jewish community.[40]

In response to the challenges of integrating Jewish life with Enlightenment values, German Jews in the early 19th century began to develop the concept of Reform Judaism, adapting Jewish practice to the new conditions of an increasingly urbanized and secular community. Staunch opponents of the Reform movement became known as Orthodox Jews. Later, members of the Reform movement who felt that it was moving away from tradition too quickly formed the Conservative movement.[63]

At the same time, the notion "traditional Judaism" includes the Orthodox with Conservative[17] or solely the Orthodox Jews[16] or exclusively pre-Hasidic pre-modern forms of Orthodoxy.[64]

Over time, three main movements emerged (Orthodox, Reform and Conservative Judaism).[17][16]

Orthodoxy edit
 
Orthodox men during morning Torah reading at the Western Wall

Orthodox Jews generally see themselves as practicing normative Judaism, rather than belonging to a particular movement. Within Orthodox Judaism, there is a spectrum of communities and practices, ranging from ultra-Orthodox Haredi Judaism and Jewish fundamentalism to Modern Orthodox Judaism (with Neo-Orthodoxy, Open Orthodoxy, and Religious Zionism). Orthodox Jews who opposed the Haskalah became known as Haredi Jews (Haredim), including Hardalim, Hasidim, Misnagdim (Lita'im), and Sephardim Haredim. Orthodox Jews who were sympathetic to the Haskalah formed what became known as modern/neo-Orthodox Jews.[65][11][66][67][31][68][30][69] The German rabbi Azriel Hildesheimer is regarded as a Modern Orthodoxy founder,[70][71] while the father of neo-Orthodoxy was German rabbi Samson Raphael Hirsch, who proclaimed principle Torah im Derech Eretz—the strict observance of the Jewish Law in an active social life—in 1851, he become the rabbi of first Orthodox separatist group from Reform community of Frankfurt am Main.[72][73] In addition, the "Centrist" Orthodoxy was represented by American rabbi Joseph B. Soloveitchik affiliated with the Orthodox Union.[74][71]

In Israel, Orthodox Judaism occupies a privileged position: solely an Orthodox rabbi may become the Chief rabbi and Chief military rabbi; and only Orthodox synagogues have the right to conduct Jewish marriages.[5][68]

Reform edit
 
Reform Jewish service with mixed sitting

Reform Judaism, also known as Liberal (the "Liberal" label can refer only to the British branch)[28] or Progressive Judaism, originally began in Germany, the Netherlands and the United States c. 1820 as a reaction to modernity, stresses assimilation and integration with society and a personal interpretation of the Torah. The German rabbi and scholar Abraham Geiger with principles of Judaism as religion and not ethnicity, progressive revelation, historical-critical approach, the centrality of the Prophetic books, and superiority of ethical aspects to the ceremonial ones has become the main ideologist of the "Classical" Reform. Unlike traditional Judaism, the Reform rejects the concept of the Jews as the chosen people.[8][75][11][76][13][77][78][79][80][45] There are transformations from the purism of "Classical" European to the "New Reform" in America with reincorporation some traditional Jewish elements.[81][82]

In the United States, at the turn of the 20th and 21st centuries, the Reform movement became the first in terms of numbers, ahead of Conservative Judaism.[83][84] In contrast, Israeli Reform is smaller one.[2][3]

Conservative (Masorti) edit
 
Birkat Hachama of Conservative Jews, Encino, Los Angeles
 
Conservative women rabbis, Israel

Conservative or Masorti Judaism, originated in Germany in the 19th century on the ideological foundation of the Historical School studies,[85] but became institutionalized in the United States, where it was to become the largest Jewish movement[16][18][86] (however, in 1990 Reform Judaism already outpaced Conservatism by 3 percent).[83] After the division between Reform and Orthodox Judaism, the Conservative movement tried to provide Jews seeking liberalization of Orthodox theology and practice, such as female rabbi ordination, with a more traditional and halakhically-based alternative to Reform Judaism. It has spread to Ashkenazi communities in Anglophone countries and Israel.[9][87][11][88][2][3][89][90][18]

Neolog Judaism, a movement in the Kingdom of Hungary and in its territories ceded in 1920, is similar to the more traditional branch of American Conservative Judaism.[91]

Communal Judaism (Ḥevrati) edit
 
Members of the DC Minyan light candles in celebration of the Festival of Hanukkah.

Communal Judaism, also referred to as יהדות חברתי (Yahadut Ḥevrati) in Hebrew, is a denomination that intertwines the ethnoreligious identity and indigenous tradition within the broader Jewish community. Unlike other movements which may emphasize theological nuances, Communal Judaism places a substantial focus on the social and communal aspects of Jewish life, alongside personal spiritual practices.

Practitioners are diverse, found globally with significant numbers in Israel and the United States, extending to European and Middle Eastern countries. This spread is reflective of the movement's inclusive approach to Jewish identity, welcoming those who align with its core values of maintaining communal traditions and customs without the stringent adherence to rabbinical interpretations that some other denominations might require.[92][93]

In terms of religious observance, adherents commonly engage in the lighting of Shabbat candles, recitation of Kiddush, and the enjoyment of communal meals replete with traditional zemirot. This practice is designed to foster a sense of community and spiritual reflection, particularly on Shabbat where the use of technology is often set aside to maintain a contemplative state.[94][95]

Dietary laws within Communal Judaism adhere to kashrut, the set of Jewish dietary laws, with a focus on traditional observance. This includes abstaining from pork and shellfish and not mixing meat with dairy products, as outlined in the Torah.[96]

The connection to the Land of Israel stands as a central tenet of Communal Judaism, emphasizing a deep ethnic heritage and historical relationship with the land. This connection is celebrated and remembered through the observance of holidays and commemorations that reflect on the Jewish people's historical experiences of dispersal and return.[97][98]

Spiritually, Communal Judaism advocates for the integration of tradition into daily life, upholding a heart-centered approach to religious practice. While individual prayer is encouraged, the emphasis is placed on communal worship and support, reflecting the movement's overarching commitment to a life lived in close connection with one's community and heritage.[92][93]

Migration edit

The particular forms of Judaism which are practiced by the different Jewish denominations have been shaped by the immigration of the Ashkenazi Jewish communities, once concentrated in eastern and central Europe, to western and mostly Anglophone countries (in particular, in North America). In the middle of the 20th century, the institutional division of North American Jewry between Reform, Conservative, and Orthodox movements still reflected immigrant origins. Reform Jews at that time were predominantly of German or western European origin, while both Conservative and Orthodox Judaism came primarily from eastern European countries.[99]

Zionists (Datim-leumi) and anti-Zionists edit

 
IDF soldier, Asael Lubotzky prays with tefillin

The issue of Zionism was once very divisive in the Jewish community. Religious Zionism, a.k.a. "Nationalist Orthodoxy" (Dati-leumi) combines Zionism and Orthodox Judaism, based on the teachings of rabbis Zvi Hirsch Kalischer and Abraham Isaac Kook. The name Hardalim or Haredi-leumi ("Nationalist Haredim") refers to the Haredi-oriented variety of Religious Zionism.[100][101][102][103][104][105] Another mode is Reform Zionism as Zionist arm of Reform Judaism.[103]

Non-Orthodox Conservative leaders joined Zionist mission.[15] Reconstructionist Judaism also supports Zionism and "the modern state of Israel plays a central role in its ideology."[106]

Religious Zionists (datim) have embraced the Zionist movement, including Religious Kibbutz Movement, as part of the divine plan to bring or speed up the messianic era.[17][101][107]

Zionism was rejected by most ultra-Orthodox and Reform Jews.[101][15] Ultra-Orthodox Jewish non-Zionists believed that the return to Israel could only happen with the coming of the Messiah, and that a political attempt to re-establish a Jewish state through human means alone was contrary to God's plan. Non-Zionists believed that Jews should integrate into the countries in which they lived, rather than moving to the Land of Israel. The original founders of Reform Judaism in Germany rejected traditional prayers for the restoration of Jerusalem. The view among Reform Jews that Judaism was strictly a religion rather than a nation with cultural identity, and that Jews should be assimilated, loyal citizens of their host nations, led to a non-Zionist, and sometimes anti-Zionist, stance. After events of the 20th century, most importantly the Holocaust and the establishment of the modern State of Israel, opposition to Zionism largely disappeared within Reform Judaism.[101][108]

Among most religious non-Zionists, such as Chabad, there is a de facto recognition of Israel, but only as a secular non-religious state.

 
Naturei Karta protest, USA

A few of the fringe groups of the anti-Zionists, with marginal ideology, does not recognize the legitimacy of the Israeli state. Among them are both the Orthodox (the Satmar Hasidism, Edah HaChareidis, Neturei Karta) and Reform (American Council for Judaism).[17][108]

In addition, according to some contemporary scholars, Religious Zionism stands at least outside of Rabbinic Judaism or ever shoots off Judaism as such.[109][102]

Pressures of assimilation edit

Among the most striking differences between the Jewish movements in the 21st century is their response to pressures of assimilation, such as intermarriage between Jews and non-Jews.[110] Reform and Reconstructionist rabbis have been most accepting of intermarried couples, with some rabbis willing to officiate in mixed religious ceremonies, although most insist that children in such families be raised strictly Jewish. Conservative rabbis are not permitted to officiate in such marriages, but are supportive of couples when the non-Jewish partner wishes to convert to Judaism and raise children as Jewish.[111]

Crypto-Judaism edit

Crypto-Judaism is the secret adherence to Judaism by people who publicly profess another faith; practitioners of Crypto-Judaism are referred to as "crypto-Jews" (origin from Greek kryptos – κρυπτός, 'hidden').[112] Nowadays, in whole, Crypto-Judausm movements are a historical phenomenon.

In the United States, Reform rabbi Jacques Cukierkorn is one of the leaders of the outreach to the descendants of those Crypto-Jews who wish to renew their ties with the Jewish people.[113][better source needed]

The subgroups of Crypto-Jews are as follows:

Other ethnic movements edit

Beta Israel (Haymanot) edit

 
Beta Israel celebrating Sigd, Jerusalem

The Beta Israel (House of Israel), also known as Ethiopian Jews, are a Jewish community that developed in Ethiopia and lived there for centuries. Most of the Beta Israel emigrated to Israel in the late 20th century. They practiced Haymanot, a religion which is generally recognized as a non-Rabbinic form of Judaism (in Israel, they practice a mixture of Haymanot and Rabbinic Judaism). To the Beta Israel, the holiest book is the Orit (a word which means the "law"), and it consists of the Torah and the Books of Joshua, Judges and Ruth. Until the middle of the 20th century, the Beta Israel of Ethiopia were the only modern Jewish group which practiced a monastic tradition which the monks adhered to by living in monasteries which were separated from the Jewish villages.[114]

Crimean Karaites edit

The Crimean Karaites (a.k.a. Karaims) are an ethnicity which is derived from Turkic Karaim-speaking adherents of Karaite Judaism in Eastern Europe, especially in Crimea. They were probably Jewish by origin, but due to political pressure and other reasons, many of them began to claim that they were Turks, descendants of the Khazars. During the era when Crimea was a part of the Russian Empire, the Crimean Karaite leaders persuaded the Russian rulers to exempt Karaites from the anti-Semitic regulations which were imposed upon Jews. These Karaites were recognized as non-Jews during the Nazi occupation. Some of them even served in the SS. The ideology of de-Judaization and the revival of Tengrism were imbued with the works of the contemporary leaders of the Karaites in Crimea. While the members of several Karaite congregations were registered as Turks, some of them retained Jewish customs. In the 1990s, many Karaites emigrated to Israel, under the Law of Return.[115][116] The largest Karaite community has since then resided in Israel.

Igbo Jews edit

 
Igbo Jews, Nigeria, presented with a plaque

Igbo people of Nigeria who practice a form of Judaism are referred to as Igbo Jews. Judaism has been documented in parts of Nigeria since the precolonial period, from as early as the 1500s, but is not known to have been practiced in the Igbo region in precolonial times. Nowadays, up to 30,000 Igbos are practicing some form of Judaism.[117]

Subbotniks edit

The Subbotniks are a movement of Jews of Russian ethnic origin which split off from other Sabbatarians in the late 18th century. The majority of the Subbotniks practiced Rabbinic and Karaite Judaism, a minority of them practiced Spiritual Christianity.[118][119] Subbotnik families settled in the Holy Land which was then a part of the Ottoman Empire, in the 1880s, as part of the Zionist First Aliyah in order to escape oppression in the Russian Empire and later, most of them married other Jews. Their descendants included Israeli Jews such as Alexander Zaïd, Major-General Alik Ron,[120] and the mother of Ariel Sharon.[121]

20th/21st-century movements edit

20th-century movements edit

Additionally, a number of smaller groups have emerged:

Black Judaism

A type of Judaism that is predominantly practiced in African communities, both inside and outside Africa (such as North America). It is theologically characterized by the selective acceptance of the Judaic faith (in some cases, such selective acceptance has historical circumstances), and the belief system of Black Judaism is significantly different from the belief system of the mainstream movements of Judaism. In addition, although Black Judaic communities adopt Judaic practices such as the celebration of Jewish holidays and the recital of Jewish prayers, some of them are generally not considered legitimate Jews by mainstream Jewish societies.[122][123]

Rather than a type, Judaism as practiced by the Abayudaya, in eastern Uganda and in Israel, is devout in keeping western halakha, especially as led by the Reform and Conservative movements, with whom most Abayudaya community members in Uganda affiliate.[124] Gershom Sizomu, the spiritual leader of the Abayudaya and Rosh Yeshiva, first native-born black rabbi in sub-Saharan Africa,[125] also the first chief rabbi of Uganda,[126] and since 2016 a Member of Uganda Parliament,[127] is a graduate of the American Jewish University in Los Angeles, California receiving ordination under the auspices of the Conservative movement in 2008. In June 2016, Rabbi Shlomo Riskin led a Beit Din that performed an Orthodox conversion for the Putti community in Uganda.[128][129]

Jewish Science

Formed in the early 20th century by Alfred G. Moses and Morris Lichtenstein, Jewish Science was founded as a counterweight Jewish movement to Christian Science. Jewish Science sees God as a force or energy penetrating the reality of the Universe and emphasis is placed upon the role of affirmative prayer in personal healing and spiritual growth. The Society of Jewish Science in New York is the institutional arm of the movement regularly publishing The Interpreter, the movement's primary literary publication.[130]

Reconstructionist Judaism
 
Torah reading at the Reconstructionist synagogue, Montreal

Founded by rabbi Mordecai Kaplan, the 1922 American split from Conservative Judaism that views Judaism as a progressively evolving civilization with focus on Jewish community.[11][131][132][133][106][134] The central organization is "Reconstructing Judaism". Assessments of its impact range from being recognized as the 4th major stream of Judaism[11][131][132][135][16] to described as a smaller movement.[136] As noted, Reconstructionism is a smaller movement, but its ideas significantly impacted Jewish life in the America.[15][137]

Humanistic Judaism

A nontheistic worldwide movement that emphasizes Jewish culture and history as the sources of Jewish identity. Originated in Detroit in 1963 with the founding figure, Reform rabbi Sherwin Wine, in 1969 was established the Society for Humanistic Judaism.[138][139]

Carlebach movement

The neo-Hasidic movement inspired by the counterculture of the 1960s and founded in the late 1960s in San Francisco (where opened the House of Love and Prayer), then in Israel, by a musician, Lubavich's Hasidic rabbi Shlomo Carlebach for the return of secular youth to the bosom of Orthodox Judaism. The movement has no organisational agenda and promotes Carlebach minyan, a song-filled form of Jewish worship.[140][141]

Jewish Renewal

Partly syncretistic movement founded in the mid-1970s by ex-Lubavich's Hasidic rabbi Zalman Schachter-Shalomi and rooted in the counterculture of the 1960s and the Havurat Shalom group. The "Bnei ʻOr" (Songs of Light) in Philadelphia—the first Renewal community—later was established the ambrella organisation "ALEPH: the Alliance for Jewish Renewal". Its syncretism includes Kabbalah, neo-Hasidism, Reconstructionist Judaism, Western Buddhist meditation, Sufism, New Age, feminism, liberalism, and so on, tends to embrace the ecstatic worship style. Renewal congregations tend to be inclusive on the subject of who is a Jew and had avoided affiliation with any Jewish communities.[140][142]

Conservadox

The term is occasionally applied to describe either individuals or new congregations, especially congregations which were established in the US in 1984 by rabbi David Weiss Halivni, such as the Union for Traditional Judaism, located between the Conservative and Modern Orthodox.[143][144] While most scholars consider "Union for Traditional Judaism" (formerly Union for Traditional Conservative Judaism) as a new movement, some attribute it to the right wing of Conservative Judaism.[145]

Kabbalah Centre

A "New Age Judaism"[146] worldwide organisation established in 1984 by American rabbi Philip Berg, that popularizes Jewish mysticism among a universal audience.[147][148]

Lev Tahor

A Haredi sect formed in the 1980s by Israeli-Canadian rabbi Shlomo Helbrans, follows a strict version of halakha, including its own unique practices such as lengthy prayer sessions, arranged marriages between teenagers, and head-to-toe coverings for females.[149]

Open Orthodoxy

A movement founded by Avi Weiss in the late 1990s in US, with its own schools for religious ordination, both for men (Yeshivat Chovevei Torah) and women (Yeshivat Maharat). The movement declarates liberal, or inclusive Orthodoxy with women's ordination, full accepting LGBT members, and reducing stringent rules for conversion.[150]

Haredi burqa sect

A controversial ultra-Orthodox group with a Jewish burqa-style covering of a woman's entire body, including a veil covering the face.[151] Also known as the "Taliban Women" and the "Taliban Mothers" (נשות הטאליבן).[152]

Messianic Judaism
 
Purim of Messianic Jews, Saint Petersburg

Made up of followers who seek to combine parts of Rabbinic Judaism with a belief in Jesus as the Messiah and other Jewish Christian and western Christian beliefs.[153][154] It is not regarded as Judaism by the major movements of Judaism, and it is considered a form of Protestant Christianity.[note 1] People who had become Messianic Jews as, in fact, Christians were not therefore eligible for Aliyah under the Law of Return.[156] "Scholars are divided as to whether to call Messianic Judaism a Christian or Jewish Sect."[157]

Remark: Baal teshuva movement—a description of the return of secular Jews to religious Judaism and involved with all the Jewish movements.

Trans- and post-denominational Judaism edit

Already in the 1980s, 20–30 percent of members of the largest American Jewish communities, such as of New York City or Miami, rejected a denominational label.[158] And "Israeli Democracy Index" commissioned in 2013 by the Israel Democracy Institute found that the two thirds of respondents said they felt no connection to any denomination, or declined to respond.[159]

The very idea of Jewish denominationalism is contested by some Jews and Jewish non-denominational organisations, which consider themselves to be "trans-denominational" or "post-denominational".[160][142][161][162][163] The term "trans-denominational" also applied to describe new movements located on the religious continuum between some major streams, as an instance, Conservadox (Union for Traditional Judaism).[143][144]

A variety of new Jewish organisations are emerging that lack such affiliations:

Organizations such as these believe that the formal divisions that have arisen among the "denominations" in contemporary Jewish history are unnecessarily divisive, as well as religiously and intellectually simplistic. According to Rachel Rosenthal, "the post-denominational Jew refuses to be labeled or categorized in a religion that thrives on stereotypes. He has seen what the institutional branches of Judaism have to offer and believes that a better Judaism can be created."[167] Such Jews might, out of necessity, affiliate with a synagogue associated with a particular movement, but their own personal Jewish ideology is often shaped by a variety of influences from more than one denomination.

Bnei Noah edit

Noahidism, Noahides, or Bnei Noah (Hebrew: בני נח, "Sons of Noah") is a new religious movement which is based upon the Seven Laws of Noah. Historically, the Hebrew term Bnei Noah has been applied to all non-Jews because Jews believe that they are the descendants of Noah.[168] Nowadays, however, it is specifically used to refer to those "Righteous Gentiles" who observe the Seven Laws of Noah. According to Jewish law, non-Jews (Gentiles) are not obligated to convert to Judaism, but they are required to observe the Seven Laws of Noah in order to be assured that they will have a place in the World to Come (Olam Ha-Ba), the final reward of the righteous. The modern Noahide movement was founded in the 1990s by Orthodox rabbis from Israel (mainly tied Hasidic and Zionist).[169][170]

List of contemporary movements edit

Rabbinic Judaism
Other Rabbinic
Non-Rabbinic

See also edit

Notes edit

  1. ^ "Messianic Judaism is a Protestant movement that emerged in the last half of the 20th century among believers who were ethnically Jewish but had adopted an Evangelical Christian faith… By the 1960s, a new effort to create a culturally Jewish Protestant Christianity emerged among individuals who began to call themselves Messianic Jews."[155]

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Further reading edit

External links edit

  • Neusner, Jacob; et al. (eds.). Encyclopedia of Judaism Online.
  • (MyJewishLearning.com)
  • (MyJewishLearning.com)
  • Jewing Movements - How Jewish movements will and have evolved
Orthodox/Haredi
  • Orthodox Judaism – The Orthodox Union
  • Chabad-Lubavitch
  • Rohr Jewish Learning Institute
  • The Various Types of Orthodox Judaism 2005-11-03 at the Wayback Machine
  • Aish HaTorah
  • Ohr Somayach
Traditional/Conservadox
  • Union for Traditional Judaism
Conservative
  • Masorti (Conservative) Movement in Israel
  • United Synagogue Youth
Reform/Progressive
  • The Union for Reform Judaism (USA)
  • Reform Judaism (UK)
  • Liberal Judaism (UK)
  • World Union for Progressive Judaism (Israel)
Reconstructionist
    Renewal
    • ALEPH: Alliance for Jewish Renewal
    • OHALAH Association of Rabbis for Jewish Renewal
    Humanistic
    • Society for Humanistic Judaism
    Karaite
    • World Movement for Karaite Judaism

    jewish, religious, movements, sometimes, called, denominations, include, diverse, groups, within, judaism, which, have, developed, among, jews, from, ancient, times, today, west, most, prominent, divisions, between, traditionalist, orthodox, movements, includi. Jewish religious movements sometimes called denominations include diverse groups within Judaism which have developed among Jews from ancient times Today in the west the most prominent divisions are between traditionalist Orthodox movements including Haredi ultratraditionalist and Modern Orthodox branches and modernist movements such as Reform Judaism originating in late 18th century Europe Conservative Masorti originating in 19th century Europe and other smaller ones 1 including the Reconstructionst and Renewal movements which emerged later in the 20th century in the United States In Israel variation is moderately similar 2 3 4 5 differing from the west in having roots in the Old Yishuv and pre to early state Yemenite infusion among other influences For statistical and practical purposes the distinctions there are based upon a person s attitude to religion Most Jewish Israelis classify themselves as secular hiloni traditional masortim religious dati or ultra religious haredi 6 5 The western and Israeli movements differ in their views on various issues as do those of other Jewish communities These issues include the level of observance the methodology for interpreting and understanding Jewish law biblical authorship textual criticism and the nature or role of the messiah or messianic age Across these movements there are marked differences in liturgy especially in the language in which services are conducted with the more traditional movements emphasizing Hebrew The sharpest theological division occurs between traditional Orthodox and the greater number of non Orthodox Jews adhering to other movements or to none such that the non Orthodox are sometimes referred to collectively as the liberal or progressive streams Other divisions of Judaism in the world reflect being more ethnically and geographically rooted e g Beta Israel Ethiopian Jews and Bene Israel among the ancient Jewish communities of India Normatively Judaism excludes from its composition certain groups that may name or consider themselves ethnic Jews but hold key beliefs in sharp contradiction for example modern or ancient Messianic Jews Contents 1 Terminology 2 Sects in the Second Temple period 3 Rabbinic Judaism 4 Non Rabbinic Judaism 4 1 Karaite Judaism 5 Ethno cultural divisions movements 5 1 Sephardic and Mizrahi Judaism 5 2 Italian and Romaniote Judaism 5 3 Ashkenazic movements 5 3 1 Hasidic Judaism 5 3 2 Lithuanian Lita im 5 3 3 Post Enlightenment movements 5 3 3 1 Orthodoxy 5 3 3 2 Reform 5 3 3 3 Conservative Masorti 5 3 3 4 Communal Judaism Ḥevrati 5 3 4 Migration 5 3 5 Zionists Datim leumi and anti Zionists 5 3 6 Pressures of assimilation 5 4 Crypto Judaism 5 5 Other ethnic movements 5 5 1 Beta Israel Haymanot 5 5 2 Crimean Karaites 5 5 3 Igbo Jews 5 5 4 Subbotniks 6 20th 21st century movements 6 1 20th century movements 6 2 Trans and post denominational Judaism 6 3 Bnei Noah 7 List of contemporary movements 8 See also 9 Notes 10 References 11 Further reading 12 External linksTerminology editSome Jews reject the term denomination as a label for different groups and ideologies within Judaism arguing that the notion of denomination has a specifically Christian resonance that does not translate easily into the Jewish context However in recent years the American Jewish Year Book has adopted denomination as have many scholars and theologians 7 Commonly used terms are movements 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 3 15 16 17 18 as well as denominations 19 20 21 22 7 15 23 24 varieties 1 traditions 25 groupings 17 26 streams 27 branches 28 sectors and sects for some groups 29 30 trends 31 and such Sometimes as an option only three main currents of Judaism Orthodox Conservative and Reform are named traditions and divisions within them are called movements The Jewish groups themselves reject characterization as sects Sects are traditionally defined as religious subgroups that have broken off from the main body and this separation usually becomes irreparable over time Within Judaism individuals and families often switch affiliation and individuals are free to marry one another although the major denominations disagree on who is a Jew It is not unusual for clergy and Jewish educators trained in one of the liberal denominations to serve in another and left with no choice many small Jewish communities combine elements of several movements to achieve a viable level of membership Relationships between Jewish religious movements are varied they are sometimes marked by interdenominational cooperation outside of the realm of halakha Jewish law such as the New York Board of Rabbis and sometimes not Some of the movements sometimes cooperate by uniting with one another in community federations and in campus organizations such as the Hillel Foundation Jewish religious denominations are distinct from but often linked to Jewish ethnic divisions and Jewish political movements Sects in the Second Temple period editFurther information Second Temple Judaism Prior to the destruction of the Second Temple in 70 CE Jews of the Roman province of Judaea were divided into several movements sometimes warring among themselves Pharisees Sadducees Essenes Zealots and ultimately early Christians Many historic sources such as Flavius Josephus the New Testament and the recovered fragments of the Dead Sea Scrolls attest to the divisions among Jews at this time Rabbinical writings from later periods including the Talmud further attest these ancient schisms 32 33 The main internal struggles during this era were between the Pharisees and the Sadducees as well as the early Christians and also the Essenes and Zealots The Pharisees wanted to maintain the authority and traditions of classical Torah teachings and began the early teachings of the Mishna maintaining the authority of the Sanhedrin the supreme Jewish court According to Josephus the Sadducees differed from the Pharisees on a number of doctrinal grounds notably rejecting ideas of life after death They appear to have dominated the aristocracy and the temple but their influence over the wider Jewish population was limited The Essenes preached an ascetic way of life The Zealots advocated armed rebellion against any foreign power such as Rome All were at violent logger heads with each other leading to the confusion and disunity that ended with the destruction of the Second Temple and the sacking of Jerusalem by Rome The Jewish Christians were the original Jewish followers of Jesus The radical interpretation of Moses Law by Jesus disciples and their belief he is the Son of God along with the development of the New Testament ensured that Christianity and Judaism would become distinctively different religions 32 33 Rabbinic Judaism editFurther information Rabbinic Judaism Most streams of modern Judaism developed from the Pharisaic movement which became known as Rabbinic Judaism in Hebrew Yahadut Rabanit יהדות רבנית with the compilation of the Oral Torah into the Mishna After the Bar Kokhba revolt and the destruction of the Second Temple the other movements disappeared from the historical record yet the Sadducees probably kept on existing in a non organized form for at least several more decades 34 32 35 Non Rabbinic Judaism edit nbsp In central Karaite synagogue Ramla Non Rabbinic Judaism Sadducees Nazarenes Karaite Judaism and Haymanot contrasts with Rabbinic Judaism and does not recognize the Oral Torah as a divine authority nor the rabbinic procedures used to interpret Jewish scripture 36 Karaite Judaism edit The tradition of the Qara im survives in Karaite Judaism started in the early 9th century when non rabbinic sages like Benjamin Nahawandi and their followers took the rejection of the Oral Torah by Anan ben David to the new level of seeking the plain meaning of the Tanakh s text Karaite Jews accept only the Tanakh as divinely inspired not recognizing the authority that Rabbinites ascribe to basic rabbinic works like the Talmud and the Midrashim 37 38 Ethno cultural divisions movements editThis article is about Jewish religious and ethno religious movements For ethnicity see Jewish ethnic divisions Although there are numerous Jewish ethnic communities there are several that are large enough to be considered predominant Generally they do not constitute separate religious branches within Judaism but rather separate cultural traditions nuschaot and rites of prayer minhagim Ashkenazi Jews compose about 75 of the world s Jewish population Sephardi Jews and Mizrahi Jews compose the greatest part of the rest with about 20 of the world s Jewish population Israel has two Chief Rabbi one for the Ashkenazic another for the Sephardic with Mizrahi Jews 39 The remaining 5 of Jews are divided among a wide array of small groups such as various groups of African Jews most prominently the Beta Israel from Ethiopia who follow the Haymanot branch of Judaism some of which are nearing extinction as a result of assimilation and intermarriage into surrounding non Jewish cultures or surrounding Jewish cultures Additionally special ethnoreligious divisions are also the Italian rite Jews and the Greek Romaniote Jews Both groups are considered distinct from Ashkenazim and Sephardim The Enlightenment had a tremendous effect on Jewish identity and on ideas about the importance and role of Jewish observance 40 Due to the geographical distribution and the geopolitical entities affected by the Enlightenment this philosophical revolution essentially affected only the Ashkenazi community however because of the predominance of the Ashkenazi community in Israeli politics and in Jewish leadership worldwide the effects have been significant for all Jews 40 Sephardic and Mizrahi Judaism edit Further information Sephardic law and customs Sephardic Haredim and Baladi rite prayer nbsp Torah reading Sephardic custom Sephardic Judaism is the practice of Judaism as observed by the Sephardim Iberian Spanish Portuguese Jews The Mizrahi Jews including Maghrebi are all Oriental Jewry Some definitions of Sephardic also include Mizrahi many of whom follow the same traditions of worship but have different ethno cultural traditions So far as it is peculiar to themselves and not shared with other Jewish groups such as the Ashkenazim German rite 41 42 43 Sephardim are primarily the descendants of Jews from the Iberian Peninsula such as most Jews from France and the Netherlands They may be divided into the families that left in the Expulsion of 1492 and those that remained as crypto Jews Marranos and those who left in the following few centuries In religious parlance and by many in modern Israel the term is used in a broader sense to include all Jews of Ottoman or other Asian or African backgrounds Mizrahi Jews whether or not they have any historic link to Spain although some prefer to distinguish between Sephardim proper and Mizraḥi Jews Sephardic and Mizrachi Jewish synagogues are generally considered Orthodox or Sephardic Haredim by non Sephardic Jews and are primarily run according to the Orthodox tradition even though many of the congregants may not keep a level of observance on par with traditional Orthodox belief For example many congregants will drive to the synagogue on the Shabbat in violation of halakha while discreetly entering the synagogue so as not to offend more observant congregants However not all Sephardim are Orthodox among the pioneers of the Reform Judaism movement in the 1820s there was the Sephardic congregation Beth Elohim in Charleston South Carolina 44 45 A part of the European Sephardim were also linked with the Judaic modernization 46 Unlike the predominantly Ashkenazic Reform and Reconstructionist denominations Sephardic and Mizrahi Jews who are not observant generally believe that Orthodox Judaism s interpretation and legislation of halakha is appropriate and true to the original philosophy of Judaism That being said Sephardic and Mizrachi rabbis tend to hold different and generally more lenient positions on halakha than their Ashkenazi counterparts but since these positions are based on rulings of Talmudic scholars as well as well documented traditions that can be linked back to well known codifiers of Jewish law Ashkenazic and Hasidic Rabbis do not believe that these positions are incorrect but rather that they are the appropriate interpretation of halakha for Jews of Sephardic and Mizrachi descent 41 43 47 nbsp A Yemenite Jew in traditional vestments under the tallit gadol reading from a Torah scroll The Yemenite Jews the Dor Daim and other movements use a separate Baladi rite The Yemenite and the Aramaic speaking Kurdish Jews are the only communities who maintain the tradition of reading the Torah in the synagogue in both Hebrew and the Aramaic Targum translation Most non Yemenite synagogues have a specified person called a Baal Koreh who reads from the Torah scroll when congregants are called to the Torah scroll for an aliyah In the Yemenite tradition each person called to the Torah scroll for an aliyah reads for himself 48 The Shas a religious political party in Israel represents the interests of the Orthodox Haredi Sephardim and Mizrahim 49 Italian and Romaniote Judaism edit Further information Italian Nusach nbsp Italian siddur סידור איטליני A relatively small but influential ethnoreligious group in the intellectual circles of Israel are Italian rite Jews Italkim who are neither Ashkenazi nor Sephardi These are exclusively descendants of the ancient Roman Jewish community not including later Ashkenazic and Sephardic migrants to Italy They practice traditional Orthodox Judaism The liturgy is served according to a special Italian Nusach Nusach ʾItalqi a k a Minhag B nei Romi and it has similarities with the nusach of the Greek Romaniote Jews The Romaniote Jews or the Romaniotes Romanyotim native to the Eastern Mediterranean is the oldest Jewish community in Europe whom name is refers to the Eastern Roman Empire They are also distinct from the Ashkenazim and Sephardim But nowadays few synagogues still use the Romaniote nusach and minhag Ashkenazic movements edit Further information Nusach Ashkenaz Hasidic Judaism edit Further information Hasidic Judaism and List of Hasidic dynasties nbsp Hasidim Hasidic Judaism a revivalist movement was founded by Israel ben Eliezer 1700 1760 also known as the Baal Shem Tov whose followers had previously called themselves Freylechn happy ones and now they call themselves Hasidim pious holy ones His charismatic disciples attracted many followers among Ashkenazi Jews and they also established numerous Hasidic groups across Europe The Baal Shem Tov came at a time when the Jewish masses of Eastern Europe were reeling from the bewilderment and disappointment which were engendered in them by the two notorious Jewish false messiahs Sabbatai Zevi 1626 1676 and Jacob Frank 1726 1791 and their respective followers Hasidic Judaism eventually became the way of life for many Jews in Eastern Europe The Hasidim are organized into independent courts or dynasties each dynasty is headed by its own hereditary spiritual leader rebbe Unlike other Ashkenazim most Hasidim use some variation of Nusach Sefard a blend of Ashkenazi and Sephardi liturgies based on the innovations of the Kabbalist Isaac Luria Neo Hasidism is a term which refers to trends of interest in the teachings of Kabbalah and Hasidism which are expressed by members of other existing Jewish movements 50 51 52 53 54 Lithuanian Lita im edit Further information Lithuanian Jews and Misnagdim In the late 18th century there was a serious schism between Hasidic and non Hasidic Jews European traditionalist Jews who rejected the Hasidic movement were dubbed Mitnagdim opponents by the followers of the Baal Shem Tov Lithuania became the centre of this opposition under the leadership of Vilna Gaon Elijah ben Solomon Zalman which adopted the epithets Litvishe Yiddish word Litvaks in Slavic or Lita im in Hebrew those epithets refer to Haredi Jews who are not Hasidim and not Hardalim or Sephardic Haredim Since then all of the Hasidic Jewish groups have been theologically subsumed into mainstream Orthodox Judaism particularly Haredi Judaism but cultural differences persist 55 51 56 57 54 17 58 In the 19th century the Lithuanian spirituality was mainly incorporated into the Musar movement 59 60 61 62 Post Enlightenment movements edit Late 18th century Europe and then the rest of the world was swept by a group of intellectual social and political movements that taken together were referred to as the Enlightenment These movements promoted scientific thinking free thought and allowed people to question previously unshaken religious dogmas The emancipation of the Jews in many European communities and the Haskalah movement started by Moses Mendelssohn brought the Enlightenment to the Jewish community 40 In response to the challenges of integrating Jewish life with Enlightenment values German Jews in the early 19th century began to develop the concept of Reform Judaism adapting Jewish practice to the new conditions of an increasingly urbanized and secular community Staunch opponents of the Reform movement became known as Orthodox Jews Later members of the Reform movement who felt that it was moving away from tradition too quickly formed the Conservative movement 63 At the same time the notion traditional Judaism includes the Orthodox with Conservative 17 or solely the Orthodox Jews 16 or exclusively pre Hasidic pre modern forms of Orthodoxy 64 Over time three main movements emerged Orthodox Reform and Conservative Judaism 17 16 Orthodoxy edit Further information Orthodox Judaism nbsp Orthodox men during morning Torah reading at the Western Wall Orthodox Jews generally see themselves as practicing normative Judaism rather than belonging to a particular movement Within Orthodox Judaism there is a spectrum of communities and practices ranging from ultra Orthodox Haredi Judaism and Jewish fundamentalism to Modern Orthodox Judaism with Neo Orthodoxy Open Orthodoxy and Religious Zionism Orthodox Jews who opposed the Haskalah became known as Haredi Jews Haredim including Hardalim Hasidim Misnagdim Lita im and Sephardim Haredim Orthodox Jews who were sympathetic to the Haskalah formed what became known as modern neo Orthodox Jews 65 11 66 67 31 68 30 69 The German rabbi Azriel Hildesheimer is regarded as a Modern Orthodoxy founder 70 71 while the father of neo Orthodoxy was German rabbi Samson Raphael Hirsch who proclaimed principle Torah im Derech Eretz the strict observance of the Jewish Law in an active social life in 1851 he become the rabbi of first Orthodox separatist group from Reform community of Frankfurt am Main 72 73 In addition the Centrist Orthodoxy was represented by American rabbi Joseph B Soloveitchik affiliated with the Orthodox Union 74 71 In Israel Orthodox Judaism occupies a privileged position solely an Orthodox rabbi may become the Chief rabbi and Chief military rabbi and only Orthodox synagogues have the right to conduct Jewish marriages 5 68 Reform edit nbsp Reform Jewish service with mixed sitting Further information Reform Judaism Reform Judaism also known as Liberal the Liberal label can refer only to the British branch 28 or Progressive Judaism originally began in Germany the Netherlands and the United States c 1820 as a reaction to modernity stresses assimilation and integration with society and a personal interpretation of the Torah The German rabbi and scholar Abraham Geiger with principles of Judaism as religion and not ethnicity progressive revelation historical critical approach the centrality of the Prophetic books and superiority of ethical aspects to the ceremonial ones has become the main ideologist of the Classical Reform Unlike traditional Judaism the Reform rejects the concept of the Jews as the chosen people 8 75 11 76 13 77 78 79 80 45 There are transformations from the purism of Classical European to the New Reform in America with reincorporation some traditional Jewish elements 81 82 In the United States at the turn of the 20th and 21st centuries the Reform movement became the first in terms of numbers ahead of Conservative Judaism 83 84 In contrast Israeli Reform is smaller one 2 3 Conservative Masorti edit Further information Conservative Judaism nbsp Birkat Hachama of Conservative Jews Encino Los Angeles nbsp Conservative women rabbis Israel Conservative or Masorti Judaism originated in Germany in the 19th century on the ideological foundation of the Historical School studies 85 but became institutionalized in the United States where it was to become the largest Jewish movement 16 18 86 however in 1990 Reform Judaism already outpaced Conservatism by 3 percent 83 After the division between Reform and Orthodox Judaism the Conservative movement tried to provide Jews seeking liberalization of Orthodox theology and practice such as female rabbi ordination with a more traditional and halakhically based alternative to Reform Judaism It has spread to Ashkenazi communities in Anglophone countries and Israel 9 87 11 88 2 3 89 90 18 Neolog Judaism a movement in the Kingdom of Hungary and in its territories ceded in 1920 is similar to the more traditional branch of American Conservative Judaism 91 Communal Judaism Ḥevrati edit Main article Communal Judaism nbsp Members of the DC Minyan light candles in celebration of the Festival of Hanukkah Communal Judaism also referred to as יהדות חברתי Yahadut Ḥevrati in Hebrew is a denomination that intertwines the ethnoreligious identity and indigenous tradition within the broader Jewish community Unlike other movements which may emphasize theological nuances Communal Judaism places a substantial focus on the social and communal aspects of Jewish life alongside personal spiritual practices Practitioners are diverse found globally with significant numbers in Israel and the United States extending to European and Middle Eastern countries This spread is reflective of the movement s inclusive approach to Jewish identity welcoming those who align with its core values of maintaining communal traditions and customs without the stringent adherence to rabbinical interpretations that some other denominations might require 92 93 In terms of religious observance adherents commonly engage in the lighting of Shabbat candles recitation of Kiddush and the enjoyment of communal meals replete with traditional zemirot This practice is designed to foster a sense of community and spiritual reflection particularly on Shabbat where the use of technology is often set aside to maintain a contemplative state 94 95 Dietary laws within Communal Judaism adhere to kashrut the set of Jewish dietary laws with a focus on traditional observance This includes abstaining from pork and shellfish and not mixing meat with dairy products as outlined in the Torah 96 The connection to the Land of Israel stands as a central tenet of Communal Judaism emphasizing a deep ethnic heritage and historical relationship with the land This connection is celebrated and remembered through the observance of holidays and commemorations that reflect on the Jewish people s historical experiences of dispersal and return 97 98 Spiritually Communal Judaism advocates for the integration of tradition into daily life upholding a heart centered approach to religious practice While individual prayer is encouraged the emphasis is placed on communal worship and support reflecting the movement s overarching commitment to a life lived in close connection with one s community and heritage 92 93 Migration edit The particular forms of Judaism which are practiced by the different Jewish denominations have been shaped by the immigration of the Ashkenazi Jewish communities once concentrated in eastern and central Europe to western and mostly Anglophone countries in particular in North America In the middle of the 20th century the institutional division of North American Jewry between Reform Conservative and Orthodox movements still reflected immigrant origins Reform Jews at that time were predominantly of German or western European origin while both Conservative and Orthodox Judaism came primarily from eastern European countries 99 Zionists Datim leumi and anti Zionists edit See also Haredim and Zionism nbsp IDF soldier Asael Lubotzky prays with tefillin The issue of Zionism was once very divisive in the Jewish community Religious Zionism a k a Nationalist Orthodoxy Dati leumi combines Zionism and Orthodox Judaism based on the teachings of rabbis Zvi Hirsch Kalischer and Abraham Isaac Kook The name Hardalim or Haredi leumi Nationalist Haredim refers to the Haredi oriented variety of Religious Zionism 100 101 102 103 104 105 Another mode is Reform Zionism as Zionist arm of Reform Judaism 103 Non Orthodox Conservative leaders joined Zionist mission 15 Reconstructionist Judaism also supports Zionism and the modern state of Israel plays a central role in its ideology 106 Religious Zionists datim have embraced the Zionist movement including Religious Kibbutz Movement as part of the divine plan to bring or speed up the messianic era 17 101 107 Zionism was rejected by most ultra Orthodox and Reform Jews 101 15 Ultra Orthodox Jewish non Zionists believed that the return to Israel could only happen with the coming of the Messiah and that a political attempt to re establish a Jewish state through human means alone was contrary to God s plan Non Zionists believed that Jews should integrate into the countries in which they lived rather than moving to the Land of Israel The original founders of Reform Judaism in Germany rejected traditional prayers for the restoration of Jerusalem The view among Reform Jews that Judaism was strictly a religion rather than a nation with cultural identity and that Jews should be assimilated loyal citizens of their host nations led to a non Zionist and sometimes anti Zionist stance After events of the 20th century most importantly the Holocaust and the establishment of the modern State of Israel opposition to Zionism largely disappeared within Reform Judaism 101 108 Among most religious non Zionists such as Chabad there is a de facto recognition of Israel but only as a secular non religious state nbsp Naturei Karta protest USA A few of the fringe groups of the anti Zionists with marginal ideology does not recognize the legitimacy of the Israeli state Among them are both the Orthodox the Satmar Hasidism Edah HaChareidis Neturei Karta and Reform American Council for Judaism 17 108 In addition according to some contemporary scholars Religious Zionism stands at least outside of Rabbinic Judaism or ever shoots off Judaism as such 109 102 Pressures of assimilation edit Main article Jewish intermarriage Among the most striking differences between the Jewish movements in the 21st century is their response to pressures of assimilation such as intermarriage between Jews and non Jews 110 Reform and Reconstructionist rabbis have been most accepting of intermarried couples with some rabbis willing to officiate in mixed religious ceremonies although most insist that children in such families be raised strictly Jewish Conservative rabbis are not permitted to officiate in such marriages but are supportive of couples when the non Jewish partner wishes to convert to Judaism and raise children as Jewish 111 Crypto Judaism edit Main article Crypto Judaism Crypto Judaism is the secret adherence to Judaism by people who publicly profess another faith practitioners of Crypto Judaism are referred to as crypto Jews origin from Greek kryptos kryptos hidden 112 Nowadays in whole Crypto Judausm movements are a historical phenomenon In the United States Reform rabbi Jacques Cukierkorn is one of the leaders of the outreach to the descendants of those Crypto Jews who wish to renew their ties with the Jewish people 113 better source needed The subgroups of Crypto Jews are as follows Anusim Sephardic Bnei Anusim Converso Marrano Xueta Beta Abraham Chala Jews Sabbateanism Frankism Donmeh Kaifeng Jews Mashhadi Jews Neofiti Other ethnic movements edit Main articles Jewish diaspora and Jewish ethnic divisions Beta Israel Haymanot edit Further information Beta Israel Haymanot and History of the Jews in Ethiopia nbsp Beta Israel celebrating Sigd Jerusalem The Beta Israel House of Israel also known as Ethiopian Jews are a Jewish community that developed in Ethiopia and lived there for centuries Most of the Beta Israel emigrated to Israel in the late 20th century They practiced Haymanot a religion which is generally recognized as a non Rabbinic form of Judaism in Israel they practice a mixture of Haymanot and Rabbinic Judaism To the Beta Israel the holiest book is the Orit a word which means the law and it consists of the Torah and the Books of Joshua Judges and Ruth Until the middle of the 20th century the Beta Israel of Ethiopia were the only modern Jewish group which practiced a monastic tradition which the monks adhered to by living in monasteries which were separated from the Jewish villages 114 Crimean Karaites edit Further information Crimean Karaites and History of the Jews in Ukraine The Crimean Karaites a k a Karaims are an ethnicity which is derived from Turkic Karaim speaking adherents of Karaite Judaism in Eastern Europe especially in Crimea They were probably Jewish by origin but due to political pressure and other reasons many of them began to claim that they were Turks descendants of the Khazars During the era when Crimea was a part of the Russian Empire the Crimean Karaite leaders persuaded the Russian rulers to exempt Karaites from the anti Semitic regulations which were imposed upon Jews These Karaites were recognized as non Jews during the Nazi occupation Some of them even served in the SS The ideology of de Judaization and the revival of Tengrism were imbued with the works of the contemporary leaders of the Karaites in Crimea While the members of several Karaite congregations were registered as Turks some of them retained Jewish customs In the 1990s many Karaites emigrated to Israel under the Law of Return 115 116 The largest Karaite community has since then resided in Israel Igbo Jews edit Further information History of the Jews in Nigeria and Igbo Jews nbsp Igbo Jews Nigeria presented with a plaque Igbo people of Nigeria who practice a form of Judaism are referred to as Igbo Jews Judaism has been documented in parts of Nigeria since the precolonial period from as early as the 1500s but is not known to have been practiced in the Igbo region in precolonial times Nowadays up to 30 000 Igbos are practicing some form of Judaism 117 Subbotniks edit Further information Subbotniks The Subbotniks are a movement of Jews of Russian ethnic origin which split off from other Sabbatarians in the late 18th century The majority of the Subbotniks practiced Rabbinic and Karaite Judaism a minority of them practiced Spiritual Christianity 118 119 Subbotnik families settled in the Holy Land which was then a part of the Ottoman Empire in the 1880s as part of the Zionist First Aliyah in order to escape oppression in the Russian Empire and later most of them married other Jews Their descendants included Israeli Jews such as Alexander Zaid Major General Alik Ron 120 and the mother of Ariel Sharon 121 20th 21st century movements edit20th century movements edit Additionally a number of smaller groups have emerged Black Judaism Not to be confused with Black Hebrew Israelites A type of Judaism that is predominantly practiced in African communities both inside and outside Africa such as North America It is theologically characterized by the selective acceptance of the Judaic faith in some cases such selective acceptance has historical circumstances and the belief system of Black Judaism is significantly different from the belief system of the mainstream movements of Judaism In addition although Black Judaic communities adopt Judaic practices such as the celebration of Jewish holidays and the recital of Jewish prayers some of them are generally not considered legitimate Jews by mainstream Jewish societies 122 123 Rather than a type Judaism as practiced by the Abayudaya in eastern Uganda and in Israel is devout in keeping western halakha especially as led by the Reform and Conservative movements with whom most Abayudaya community members in Uganda affiliate 124 Gershom Sizomu the spiritual leader of the Abayudaya and Rosh Yeshiva first native born black rabbi in sub Saharan Africa 125 also the first chief rabbi of Uganda 126 and since 2016 a Member of Uganda Parliament 127 is a graduate of the American Jewish University in Los Angeles California receiving ordination under the auspices of the Conservative movement in 2008 In June 2016 Rabbi Shlomo Riskin led a Beit Din that performed an Orthodox conversion for the Putti community in Uganda 128 129 Jewish Science Formed in the early 20th century by Alfred G Moses and Morris Lichtenstein Jewish Science was founded as a counterweight Jewish movement to Christian Science Jewish Science sees God as a force or energy penetrating the reality of the Universe and emphasis is placed upon the role of affirmative prayer in personal healing and spiritual growth The Society of Jewish Science in New York is the institutional arm of the movement regularly publishing The Interpreter the movement s primary literary publication 130 Reconstructionist Judaism nbsp Torah reading at the Reconstructionist synagogue Montreal Founded by rabbi Mordecai Kaplan the 1922 American split from Conservative Judaism that views Judaism as a progressively evolving civilization with focus on Jewish community 11 131 132 133 106 134 The central organization is Reconstructing Judaism Assessments of its impact range from being recognized as the 4th major stream of Judaism 11 131 132 135 16 to described as a smaller movement 136 As noted Reconstructionism is a smaller movement but its ideas significantly impacted Jewish life in the America 15 137 Humanistic Judaism A nontheistic worldwide movement that emphasizes Jewish culture and history as the sources of Jewish identity Originated in Detroit in 1963 with the founding figure Reform rabbi Sherwin Wine in 1969 was established the Society for Humanistic Judaism 138 139 Carlebach movement The neo Hasidic movement inspired by the counterculture of the 1960s and founded in the late 1960s in San Francisco where opened the House of Love and Prayer then in Israel by a musician Lubavich s Hasidic rabbi Shlomo Carlebach for the return of secular youth to the bosom of Orthodox Judaism The movement has no organisational agenda and promotes Carlebach minyan a song filled form of Jewish worship 140 141 Jewish Renewal Partly syncretistic movement founded in the mid 1970s by ex Lubavich s Hasidic rabbi Zalman Schachter Shalomi and rooted in the counterculture of the 1960s and the Havurat Shalom group The Bnei ʻOr Songs of Light in Philadelphia the first Renewal community later was established the ambrella organisation ALEPH the Alliance for Jewish Renewal Its syncretism includes Kabbalah neo Hasidism Reconstructionist Judaism Western Buddhist meditation Sufism New Age feminism liberalism and so on tends to embrace the ecstatic worship style Renewal congregations tend to be inclusive on the subject of who is a Jew and had avoided affiliation with any Jewish communities 140 142 Conservadox The term is occasionally applied to describe either individuals or new congregations especially congregations which were established in the US in 1984 by rabbi David Weiss Halivni such as the Union for Traditional Judaism located between the Conservative and Modern Orthodox 143 144 While most scholars consider Union for Traditional Judaism formerly Union for Traditional Conservative Judaism as a new movement some attribute it to the right wing of Conservative Judaism 145 Kabbalah Centre A New Age Judaism 146 worldwide organisation established in 1984 by American rabbi Philip Berg that popularizes Jewish mysticism among a universal audience 147 148 Lev Tahor A Haredi sect formed in the 1980s by Israeli Canadian rabbi Shlomo Helbrans follows a strict version of halakha including its own unique practices such as lengthy prayer sessions arranged marriages between teenagers and head to toe coverings for females 149 Open Orthodoxy A movement founded by Avi Weiss in the late 1990s in US with its own schools for religious ordination both for men Yeshivat Chovevei Torah and women Yeshivat Maharat The movement declarates liberal or inclusive Orthodoxy with women s ordination full accepting LGBT members and reducing stringent rules for conversion 150 Haredi burqa sect A controversial ultra Orthodox group with a Jewish burqa style covering of a woman s entire body including a veil covering the face 151 Also known as the Taliban Women and the Taliban Mothers נשות הטאליבן 152 Messianic Judaism nbsp Purim of Messianic Jews Saint Petersburg Made up of followers who seek to combine parts of Rabbinic Judaism with a belief in Jesus as the Messiah and other Jewish Christian and western Christian beliefs 153 154 It is not regarded as Judaism by the major movements of Judaism and it is considered a form of Protestant Christianity note 1 People who had become Messianic Jews as in fact Christians were not therefore eligible for Aliyah under the Law of Return 156 Scholars are divided as to whether to call Messianic Judaism a Christian or Jewish Sect 157 Remark Baal teshuva movement a description of the return of secular Jews to religious Judaism and involved with all the Jewish movements Trans and post denominational Judaism edit Already in the 1980s 20 30 percent of members of the largest American Jewish communities such as of New York City or Miami rejected a denominational label 158 And Israeli Democracy Index commissioned in 2013 by the Israel Democracy Institute found that the two thirds of respondents said they felt no connection to any denomination or declined to respond 159 The very idea of Jewish denominationalism is contested by some Jews and Jewish non denominational organisations which consider themselves to be trans denominational or post denominational 160 142 161 162 163 The term trans denominational also applied to describe new movements located on the religious continuum between some major streams as an instance Conservadox Union for Traditional Judaism 143 144 A variety of new Jewish organisations are emerging that lack such affiliations Havurah movement is the number of small egalitarian experimental spiritual groups first in 1960 in California for prayer as autonomous alternatives to Jewish movements Most notable of them is the Havurat Shalom in Somerville Massachusetts 142 Independent minyan movement is a lay led Jewish worship and study community that has developed independently of established denominational and synagogue structures and combines halakha with egalitarianism 164 International Federation of Rabbis IFR a non denominational rabbinical organization for rabbis of all movements and backgrounds 162 Some Jewish day schools lack affiliation with any one movement 165 162 There are several seminaries which are not controlled by a denomination see List of rabbinical schools Non denominational and Rabbi Seminaries unaffiliated with main denominations Academy for Jewish Religion California AJRCA is a transdenominational seminary based in Los Angeles California It draws faculty and leadership from all denominations of Judaism It has programs for rabbis cantors chaplains community leadership and Clinical Pastoral Education CPE 162 Academy for Jewish Religion New York AJR is a transdenominational seminary in Yonkers NY that trains rabbis and cantors and also offers Master s Program in Jewish Studies citation needed Hebrew College a seminary in Newton Centre Massachusetts near Boston 162 Hebrew Seminary in Skokie Illinois citation needed Other smaller less traditional institutions include 166 Rabbinical Seminary International Jewish Spiritual Leaders Institute Pluralistic Rabbinical Seminary Rimmon Rabbinical School Mesifta Adath Wolkowisk aimed at community professionals with significant knowledge and experience Organizations such as these believe that the formal divisions that have arisen among the denominations in contemporary Jewish history are unnecessarily divisive as well as religiously and intellectually simplistic According to Rachel Rosenthal the post denominational Jew refuses to be labeled or categorized in a religion that thrives on stereotypes He has seen what the institutional branches of Judaism have to offer and believes that a better Judaism can be created 167 Such Jews might out of necessity affiliate with a synagogue associated with a particular movement but their own personal Jewish ideology is often shaped by a variety of influences from more than one denomination Bnei Noah edit Further information Noahidism Noahidism Noahides or Bnei Noah Hebrew בני נח Sons of Noah is a new religious movement which is based upon the Seven Laws of Noah Historically the Hebrew term Bnei Noah has been applied to all non Jews because Jews believe that they are the descendants of Noah 168 Nowadays however it is specifically used to refer to those Righteous Gentiles who observe the Seven Laws of Noah According to Jewish law non Jews Gentiles are not obligated to convert to Judaism but they are required to observe the Seven Laws of Noah in order to be assured that they will have a place in the World to Come Olam Ha Ba the final reward of the righteous The modern Noahide movement was founded in the 1990s by Orthodox rabbis from Israel mainly tied Hasidic and Zionist 169 170 List of contemporary movements editRabbinic Judaism Orthodox Judaism Haredi Judaism ultra Orthodox Hasidic Judaism Hasidic dynasties Belz Bobov Breslov Na Nach Chabad Lubavitch Ger Karlin Stolin Sanz Klausenburg Satmar Shomer Emunim Toldos Aharon Skver Vizhnitz Other dynasties Misnagdim Lita im Lithuanian Musar movement Sephardic Haredim Dor Daim Other Haredim Edah HaChareidis Haredi burqa sect Lev Tahor Neturei Karta Modern Orthodox Judaism Carlebach movement Open Orthodoxy Conservative Judaism Masorti Reform Judaism Other Rabbinic Humanistic Judaism Reconstructionist Judaism Non Rabbinic Haymanot Karaite JudaismSee also editGenetic studies on Jews Groups claiming affiliation with Israelites Jewish culture Jewish diaspora Jewish history Jewish prayer Jewish schisms Jewish views on religious pluralism List of religious organizations Jewish organizations Who is a Jew Notes edit Messianic Judaism is a Protestant movement that emerged in the last half of the 20th century among believers who were ethnically Jewish but had adopted an Evangelical Christian faith By the 1960s a new effort to create a culturally Jewish Protestant Christianity emerged among individuals who began to call themselves Messianic Jews 155 References edit a b Blau Joseph Leon 1966 Modern Varieties of Judaism New York Columbia University Press ISBN 0 23108 668 7 a b c Tabory Ephraim 2004 1990 Reform and Conservative Judaism in Israel In Goldscheider Calvin Neusner Jacob eds Social Foundations of Judaism Reprint ed Eugene Or Wipf and Stock Publ pp 240 258 ISBN 1 59244 943 3 a b c d Tabory Ephraim 2004 The Israel Reform and Conservative Movements and the Marker for the Liberal Judaism In Rebhum Uzi Waxman Chaim I eds Jews in Israel Contemporary Social and Cultural Patterns Brandeis University Press pp 285 314 Deshen Liebman amp Shokeid 2017 Ch 18 Americans in the Israeli Reform and Conservative Denominations a b c Beit Hallahmi Benjamin 2011 Jewish Religious Life in State of Israel In Berlin Adele ed The Oxford Dictionary of the Jewish Religion 2nd ed Oxford New York Oxford University Press pp 385 387 ISBN 978 0 19 975927 9 Deshen Liebman amp Shokeid 2017 pp 33 62 Ch 3 Demensions of Jewish Religiosity a b Sarna Jonathan D 2004 American Judaism A History New Haven Conn Yale University Press pp xix xx notes the newfound popularity of the term denomination ISBN 9780300129106 a b Philipson David 1907 The Reform Movement in Judaism London New York Macmillan Archived from the original on 2009 06 16 a b Sklare Marshall 1955 Conservative Judaism An American Religious Movement Glencoe Il The Free Press ISBN 0819144800 Rudavsky David 1979 1967 Modern Jewish Religious Movements A History of Emancipation and Abjustment 3rd rev ed New York Behrman House ISBN 0 87441 286 2 a b c d e f Neusner Jacob ed 1975 The Sectors of American Judaism Reform Orthodoxy Conservatism and Reconstructionism Understanding American Judaism Toward the Description of a Modern Religion vol 2 New York KTAV Publ House ISBN 0870682792 Cohen Arthur A Mendes Flohr Paul eds 2009 1987 20th Century Jewish Religious Thought Original Essays on Critical Concepts Movements and Beliefs Philadelphia Pa JPS The Jewish Publication Society ISBN 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ISBN 9780881258134 a b Grabbe Lester L 2010 An Introduction to Second Temple Judaism History and Religion of the Jews in the Time of Nehemiah the Maccabees Hillel and Jesus London New York T amp T Clark International ISBN 978 0 567 05161 5 Neusner Jacob 2002 Rabbinic Judaism Theological System Boston Leiden Brill Academic Publ ISBN 0 391 04143 6 Rabbinic Judaism Encyclopaedia Britannica Online Retrieved 2020 11 07 Sela Shulamit 1994 The Head of the Rabbanite Karaite and Samaritan Jews On the History of a Title Bulletin of the School of Oriental amp African Studies 57 2 University of London 255 267 doi 10 1017 S0041977X00024848 S2CID 162698361 nbsp This article incorporates text from a publication now in the public domain Kohler Kaufmann Harkavy Abraham de 1901 1906 Karaites and Karaism In Singer Isidore et al eds The Jewish Encyclopedia New York Funk amp Wagnalls a href Template Cite encyclopedia html title Template Cite encyclopedia cite encyclopedia a CS1 maint multiple names authors 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9780191726446 Assaf David Hasidism Historical Overview YIVO Encyclopedia of Jews in Eastern Europe YIVO Institute for Jewish Research Retrieved 2020 11 25 a b Telushkin Joseph Orthodox Judaism Hasidim and Mitnagdim Jewish Virtual Library A Project of AICE Retrieved 2023 06 16 Rudavsky 1979 pp 135 139 Nadler Allan 1997 The Faith of the Mithnagdim Rabbinic Responses to Hasidic Rapture Johns Hopkins Jewish studies Baltimore Md Johns Hopkins University Press ISBN 9780801861826 Nadler Allan Misnagdim YIVO Encyclopedia of Jews in Eastern Europe YIVO Institute for Jewish Research Retrieved 2020 11 02 Jacobs Louis 2003 Mitnaggedim A Concise Companion to the Jewish Religion Online Version Oxford University Press ISBN 9780191726446 Karz Dov 1977 The Musar Movement Its History Leading Personalities and Doctrines Vol 1 Translated by Leonard Oschry Tel Aviv Orly Press Bacon Gershon C 2005 Musar Movement In Jones Lindsay ed Encyclopedia of Religion 15 volume Set 2nd ed Farmington Hills Mi Macmillan 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The Blackwell Companion to Judaism Reprint ed Malden Mass Blackwell Publ pp 291 310 ISBN 1 57718 058 5 Kaplan Dana Evan 2007 Reform Judaism In Berenbaum Michael Skolnik Fred eds Encyclopaedia Judaica Vol 17 2nd ed Detroit Macmillan Reference ISBN 978 0 02 866097 4 Karesh Sara E Hurvitz Mitchell M 2005 Reform Judaism Encyclopedia of Judaism Encyclopedia of World Religions J Gordon Melton Series Editor New York Facts On File pp 419 422 ISBN 0 8160 5457 6 Neusner Jacob ed 1993 The Reformation of Reform Judaism Judaism in Cold War America 1945 1990 vol 6 New York London Garland Publ ISBN 9780815300762 Kaplan Dana Evan 2013 The New Reform Judaism Challenges and Reflections Lincoln Na Philadelphia Pa University of Nebraska Press Jewish Publication Society ISBN 9781461940500 a b Wertheimer Jack ed 2002 Jews in the Center Conservative Synagogues and Their Members New Brunswick NJ Rutgers University Press p 68 ISBN 0 8135 2821 6 Wertheimer 2018 pp 103 120 Rudavsky 1979 pp 186 217 Wertheimer 2018 pp 121 142 Rudavsky 1979 pp 317 346 Raphael 1984 pp 79 124 Gillman Neil 1993 Conservative Judaism The New Century New York Behrman House ISBN 0 87441 547 0 Gordis Daniel 2003 2000 Conservative Judaism The Struggle between Ideology and Popularity In Neusner Jacob Avery Peck Alan J eds The Blackwell Companion to Judaism Reprint ed Malden Mass Blackwell Publ pp 334 353 ISBN 1 57718 058 5 Silvan Gabriel 2011 Neology In Berlin Adele ed The Oxford Dictionary of the Jewish Religion 2nd ed Oxford New York Oxford University Press p 533 ISBN 978 0 19 975927 9 a b Syme Daniel B 1988 The Jewish Home A Guide for Jewish Living URJ Press ISBN 0874419883 a b Donin Hayim Halevy 1972 To Be a Jew A Guide to Jewish Observance in Contemporary Life Basic Books ISBN 1541674022 Roden Claudia 1996 The Book of Jewish Food An Odyssey from Samarkand to New York Knopf ISBN 0 394 53258 9 Johnson Paul 1987 A History of the Jews Harper amp Row ISBN 0 06 091533 1 Hazony Yoram 2000 The Jewish State The Struggle for Israel s Soul Basic Books ISBN 0 465 02966 3 Kushner Lawrence 2001 Jewish Spirituality A Brief Introduction for Christians Jewish Lights Publishing ISBN 1580231500 Morinis Alan 2007 Everyday Holiness The Jewish Spiritual Path of Mussar Trumpeter ISBN 1590306090 Herberg Will 1983 Protestant Catholic Jew An Essay in American Religious Sociology Chicago University of Chicago Press reprint ISBN 0 226 32734 5 OCLC 9686985 Ticker Jay 1975 The Centrality of Sacrifices as an Answer to Reform in the Thought of Zvi Hirsch Kalischer Working Papers in Yiddish and East European Studies vol 15 New York YIVO Institute for Jewish Research a b c d Halpern Ben 2004 1990 The Rise and Reception of Zionism in the Nineteenth Century In Goldscheider Calvin Neusner Jacob eds Social Foundations of Judaism Reprint ed Eugene Or Wipf and Stock Publ pp 94 113 ISBN 1 59244 943 3 a b Aran Gideon 2004 1990 From Religious Zionism to Zionist Religion In Goldscheider Calvin Neusner Jacob eds Social Foundations of Judaism Reprint ed Eugene Or Wipf and Stock Publ pp 259 282 ISBN 1 59244 943 3 a b Ravitzky Aviezer 1996 1993 Messianism Zionism and Jewish Religious Radicalism Translated by Michael Swirsky and Jonathan Chipman Chicago Mi University of Chicago Press ISBN 0 226 70577 3 Deshen Liebman amp Shokeid 2017 Part 4 Nationalist Orthodoxy Waxman Chaim I ed 2008 Religious Zionism Post Disengagement Future Directions Orthodox Forum Series New York Michael Scharf Publ Trust Yeshiva University Press ISBN 978 1 60280 022 9 a b Karesh Sara E Hurvitz Mitchell M 2005 Reconstructionist Judaism Encyclopedia of Judaism Encyclopedia of World Religions J Gordon Melton Series Editor New York Facts On File pp 416 418 ISBN 0 8160 5457 6 Deshen Liebman amp Shokeid 2017 Ch 10 Religious Kibbutzim Judaism and Modernization a b Ravitzky Aviezer 1999 Ultra Orthodox and Anti Zionist In Jacob Neusner et al eds The Encyclopedia of Judaism Vol 3 Leiden New York Brill Continuum ISBN 9780826411778 via Myjewishlearning com Neusner Jacob 1991 Judaism outside of Rabbinic Judaism Zionism An Introduction to Judaism A Textbook and Reader Louisville Kentucky Westminster John Knox Press pp 309 322 ISBN 0 664 25348 2 Tobin Gary A G Simon Katherine 1999 Rabbis Talk About Intermarriage Institute for Jewish and Community Research ISBN 1 893671 00 3 OCLC 44759291 Bloom Mark et al 2004 A Place In The Tent Intermarriage And Conservative Judaism Eks Publ ISBN 0 939144 46 8 OCLC 179259677 Berlin Adele ed 2011 Cripto Jews The Oxford Dictionary of the Jewish Religion 2nd ed Oxford New York Oxford University Press pp 195 96 ISBN 978 0 19 975927 9 Are American Jews the New Secret Jews Interview with Rabbi Jacques Cukierkorn Chicago Jewish Cafe 2018 10 03 Archived from the original on 2021 12 21 Retrieved 2018 10 08 Beta Israel Encyclopaedia Britannica Online Retrieved 2020 11 07 Kizilov Mikhail Karaites and Karaism Recent Developments Religion and Democracy An Axchange of Experiences between East and West The CESNUR 2003 International Conference organized by CESNUR Center for Religious Studies and Research at Vilnius University and New Religions Research and Information Center Vilnius Lithuania April 9 12 2003 CESNUR Moroz Eugeny 2004 Ot iudaizma k tengrianstvu Eshyo raz o duhovnyh poiskah sovremennyh krymchakov i krymskih karaimov From Judaism to Tengrism Once again about the spiritual quest of the contemporary Krymchaks and Crimean Karaites Narod Knigi v mire knig People of the Book in the world of books in Russian 52 1 6 Bruder Edith 2008 The Black Jews of Africa History Religion Identity Oxford New York Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0 19 533356 5 p 143 nbsp This article incorporates text from a publication now in the public domain Rosenthal Herman Hurwitz S 1901 1906 Subbotniki Sabbatarians In Singer Isidore et al eds The Jewish Encyclopedia New York Funk amp Wagnalls Dynner Glenn 2011 Holy Dissent Jewish and Christian Mystics in Eastern Europe Detroit Mi Wayne State University Press pp 358 9 ISBN 9780814335970 Archived from the original on 2023 02 10 Weiss Ruchama Brackman Levi December 9 2010 Russia s Subbotnik Jews get rabbi Israel Jewish Scene Archived from the original on 2021 05 01 Retrieved 2015 08 22 Eichner Itamar March 11 2014 Subbotnik Jews to resume aliyah Israel Jewish Scene Archived from the original on 2014 04 09 Retrieved 2014 04 09 Bruder 2008 Landing James E 2002 Black Judaism Story of an American Movement Durham NC Carolina Academic Press ISBN 978 0 89089 820 8 Maltz Judy 2020 01 05 In First a Ugandan Jewish Wedding in Israel Haaretz Retrieved 2020 01 07 Over 250 Africans convert to Judaism in Uganda Jerusalem Post July 16 2008 permanent dead link http fr jpost com servlet Satellite cid 1215331079553 amp pagename JPost JPArticle ShowFull permanent dead link Kestenbaum Sam 2016 02 27 last updated April 10 2018 Rabbi From Tiny Ugandan Jewish Community Wins Seat in Parliament Haaretz Archived from the original on 2021 01 26 The Abayuday Judaism Emerging A 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10 18 Lazerwitz et al 1998 p 24 Salkin Jeffrey K 2003 2000 New Age Judaism In Neusner Jacob Avery Peck Alan J eds The Blackwell Companion to Judaism Reprint ed Malden Mass Blackwell Publ pp 354 370 ISBN 1 57718 058 5 Puttick Elizabeth 2006 Kabbalah In Clarke Peter B ed Encyclopedia of new religious movements London New York Routledge pp 322 323 ISBN 9 78 0 415 26707 6 Myers Jody Elizabeth 2007 Kabbalah and the spiritual quest the Kabbalah Centre in America Westport Conn Praeger ISBN 978 0 275 98940 8 Fogelman Shay March 9 2012 Lev Tahor Pure as the driven snow or hearts of darkness Haaretz Archived from the original on 2014 05 17 Retrieved 2014 05 29 Ginsberg Johanna August 16 2017 Closing A Chapter On Open Orthodoxy The New York Jewish Week Retrieved 2020 12 30 A Jewish Movement to Shroud the Female Form NPR March 17 2008 Archived from the original on July 29 2018 Retrieved February 27 2019 Novick Akiva February 6 2011 Taliban women A cover story Ynetnews com Feher Shoshana 1998 Passing over Easter Constructing the Boundaries of Messianic Judaism Walnut Creek Ca AltaMira Press ISBN 9780761989523 Cohn Sherbok Dan 2000 Messianic Judaism London New York Continuum ISBN 978 0 8264 5458 4 Melton J Gordon ed 2005 Messianic Judaism Encyclopedia of Protestantism Encyclopedia of World Religions New York Facts On File p 373 ISBN 0 8160 5456 8 Israeli Court Rules Jews for Jesus Cannot Automatically Be Citizens The New York Times December 27 1989 Archived from the original on 2008 05 23 Retrieved 2010 05 07 Foreman Esther 2006 Messianic Judaism In Clarke Peter B ed Encyclopedia of new religious movements London New York Routledge pp 397 399 ISBN 9 78 0 415 26707 6 p 399 Wertheimer 1991 pp 86 88 Ettinger Yair June 11 2013 Poll 7 1 Percent of Israeli Jews Define Themselves as Reform or Conservative Haaretz Retrieved 2023 06 26 Ferziger 2012 Lesson 10 Beyond Denominationalism Heilman Uriel February 11 2005 Beyond Dogma The Jerusalem Post a b c d e McHenry Terry W 2018 Ch 5 1 2 Judaism Modern Religious Sects Truth Versus Man S Religious Systems Xlibris US ISBN 9781543470857 Wertheimer 2018 pp 160 180 Salmon Jackquelin L June 6 2009 New Judaism The Washington Post Mendelsohn Martha August 22 2002 High School Without Labels The Jewish Week Lobel Andrea 2021 A Different Path to Ordination Tablet Rosenthal Rachel 2006 What s in a name Kedma Winter nbsp This article incorporates text from a publication now in the public domain Singer Isidore Greenstone Julius H 1901 1906 Noachian Laws In Singer Isidore et al eds The Jewish Encyclopedia New York Funk amp Wagnalls Feldman Rachel Z October 8 2017 The Bnei Noah Children of Noah World Religions and Spirituality Project Archived from the original on 2020 01 21 Retrieved 2020 11 03 Feldman Rachel Z August 2018 The Children of Noah Has Messianic Zionism Created a New World Religion PDF Nova Religio The Journal of Alternative and Emergent Religions 22 1 115 128 doi 10 1525 nr 2018 22 1 115 S2CID 149940089 via Project MUSE Further reading editNeusner Jacob Avery Peck Alan J Green William Scott eds 1999 The Encyclopedia of Judaism Vol 1 3 Leiden New York Brill Continuum ISBN 9789004105836 Skolnik Fred ed 2007 Encyclopaedia Judaica Vol 1 22 2nd rev ed Farmington Hills Mi Macmillan Reference USA ISBN 978 002 865 928 2 External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Jewish denominations nbsp Wikisource has the text of the 1905 New International Encyclopedia article Jewish Sects Neusner Jacob et al eds Encyclopedia of Judaism Online Emergence of Jewish Denominations MyJewishLearning com Jewish World Today Overview State of the Denominations MyJewishLearning com Jewing Movements How Jewish movements will and have evolved Orthodox Haredi Orthodox Judaism The Orthodox Union Chabad Lubavitch Rohr Jewish Learning Institute The Various Types of Orthodox Judaism Archived 2005 11 03 at the Wayback Machine Aish HaTorah Ohr Somayach Traditional Conservadox Union for Traditional Judaism Conservative The United Synagogue of Conservative Judaism Masorti Conservative Movement in Israel United Synagogue Youth Reform Progressive The Union for Reform Judaism USA Reform Judaism UK Liberal Judaism UK World Union for Progressive Judaism Israel Reconstructionist Jewish Reconstructionist Federation Renewal ALEPH Alliance for Jewish Renewal OHALAH Association of Rabbis for Jewish Renewal Humanistic Society for Humanistic Judaism Karaite World Movement for Karaite Judaism Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Jewish religious movements amp oldid 1226418627, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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