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Religious significance of Jerusalem - Jerusalem Jews and Judaism

Religious significance of Jerusalem - Jerusalem Jews and Judaism: Encyclopedia II - Religious significance of Jerusalem - Jerusalem Jews and Judaism

Religious significance of Jerusalem - Jerusalem in Torah and Tanakh. Jerusalem has long been embedded into the religious consciousness of the Jewish people. Jews have always studied and personalized the struggle by King David to capture Jerusalem and his desire to build the Jewish temple there, as described in the Book of Samuel and the Book of Psalms. Many of King David's yearnings about Jerusalem have been adapted into popular prayers and songs. Religio ...

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Religious significance of Jerusalem, Religious significance of Jerusalem - Jerusalem Jews and Judaism, Religious significance of Jerusalem - Jerusalem in Torah and Tanakh, Religious significance of Jerusalem - Jerusalem and the Jewish religious calendar, Religious significance of Jerusalem - Jerusalem and prayer, Religious significance of Jerusalem - Customs in remembrance of Jerusalem, Religious significance of Jerusalem - Western Wall in Jerusalem, Religious significance of Jerusalem - Rabbis and Jerusalem, Religious significance of Jerusalem - Jerusalem in the Tanakh and Old Testament, Religious significance of Jerusalem - Jerusalem in Christianity, Religious significance of Jerusalem - Jerusalem in Islam, Religious significance of Jerusalem - Jerusalem in Mandaeanism

Religious significance of Jerusalem, Religious significance of Jerusalem - Customs in remembrance of Jerusalem, Religious significance of Jerusalem - Jerusalem Jews and Judaism, Religious significance of Jerusalem - Jerusalem and prayer, Religious significance of Jerusalem - Jerusalem and the Jewish religious calendar, Religious significance of Jerusalem - Jerusalem in Christianity, Religious significance of Jerusalem - Jerusalem in Islam, Religious significance of Jerusalem - Jerusalem in Mandaeanism, Religious significance of Jerusalem - Jerusalem in Torah and Tanakh, Religious significance of Jerusalem - Jerusalem in the Tanakh and Old Testament, Religious significance of Jerusalem - Rabbis and Jerusalem, Religious significance of Jerusalem - Western Wall in Jerusalem

Religious significance of Jerusalem: Encyclopedia II - Religious significance of Jerusalem - Jerusalem Jews and Judaism



Religious significance of Jerusalem - Jerusalem Jews and Judaism

Religious significance of Jerusalem - Jerusalem in Torah and Tanakh

Jerusalem has long been embedded into the religious consciousness of the Jewish people. Jews have always studied and personalized the struggle by King David to capture Jerusalem and his desire to build the Jewish temple there, as described in the Book of Samuel and the Book of Psalms. Many of King David's yearnings about Jerusalem have been adapted into popular prayers and songs.

Religious significance of Jerusalem - Jerusalem and the Jewish religious calendar

Two major Jewish festivals observed by most Jews conclude with the words: "Next Year in Jerusalem" ("l'shanah haba'ah birushalayim") or "Next Year in the Rebuilt Jerusalem" ("l'shanah haba'ah birushalayim hab'nuyah"):

  • At the conclusion of the Passover Seder on each night, participants break out into joyous, repetitious singing of "Next Year in Jerusalem".
  • The holiest day on the Jewish calendar, Yom Kippur, also concludes the synagogue service with the exclamation and singing of "Next Year in Jerusalem".

Each of these days has an associated holy text, the Hagada for Pesach (Passover) and the Machzor for Yom Kippur (Day of Atonement), which stresses the desire to return to Jerusalem.

Today, with over a quarter million Jews practicing Orthodox Judaism living in Jerusalem, the Jewish festivals come to life in the Old and New Cities. The Western Wall, as well as synagogues throughout the city, host tens of thousands of fervent worshippers and celebrants.

The saddest day on the Jewish religious calendar is the Ninth of Av, when Jews traditionally spend the day mourning over the loss of their two Holy Temples and the destruction of Jerusalem. In accordance with Jewish mourning custom, hundreds of people come to the Western Wall, site of the former Temples, throughout the night and day of this 24-hour fast to sit on the ground and cry over the destruction.

Besides the Ninth of Av, two minor, dawn to dusk fast days also commemorate aspects of the destruction of Jerusalem. On the Tenth of Tevet, Jews mourn the time when Babylonia laid siege to the First Temple. On the Seventeenth of Tammuz, the mourning recalls the day that the army of Rome broke through the outer walls of the Second Temple.

The words used when Jews console any mourner during the customary Seven Days of Mourning are:

"May God comfort you among all the mourners of Zion and Jerusalem"

Religious significance of Jerusalem - Jerusalem and prayer

The daily prayers, recited by religious Jews three times a day over the last two thousand years, mention Jerusalem and its functions multiple times. Some examples from the siddur and the amidah are:

(Addressing God): "And to Jerusalem, your city, may you return in compassion, and may you rest within it, as you have spoke. May you rebuild it soon in our days as an eternal structure, and may you speedily establish the throne of (King) David within it. Blessed are you God, the builder of Jerusalem...May our eyes behold Your return to Zion in compassion. Blessed are you God, who restores his presence to Zion."

Additionally when partaking of a daily meal with bread, the following is part of the required "Grace After Meals" which must be recited:

"Have mercy Lord our God, on Israel your people, on Jerusalem your city, on Zion the resting place of your glory, on the monarchy of (King David) your anointed, and on the great and holy (Temple) house upon which your name is called...Rebuild Jerusalem, the holy city, soon in our days. Blessed are you God who rebuilds Jerusalem in his mercy, amen."

After partaking of a light meal, the thanksgiving blessing states:

"...Have mercy, Lord, our God, on Israel, your people; on Jerusalem, your city; and on Zion, the resting place of your glory; upon your altar, and upon your temple. Rebuild Jerusalem, the city of holiness, speedily in our days. Bring us up into it and gladden us in its rebuilding and let us eat from its fruit and be satisfied with its goodness and bless you upon it in holiness and purity. For you, God, are good and do good to all and we thank you for the land and for the nourishment..."

When the Jews were exiled, first by the Babylonian Empire about 2,500 years ago and then by the Roman Empire 2,000 years ago, the great rabbis and scholars of the mishnah and Talmud instituted the policy that each synagogue should replicate the original Jewish temple. Moreover, it should be constructed in such a way that all prayers in the siddur (prayer book) would be recited while facing Jerusalem, as that was where the ancient temple stood and that location was the only permissible place for the sacrificial offerings.

Thus synagogues in Europe face south, synagogues in North America face east, synagogues in countries to the south of Israel, such as Yemen or South Africa, face north, and synagogues in countries to the east of Israel, such as India or Thailand, face west. Even when a Jew prays privately, he faces Jerusalem, as mandated by Jewish law compiled by the rabbis in the Shulchan Aruch. In Jerusalem itself, he should face the direction of the Western Wall in the Old City, and when he is standing at the Western Wall, he turns slightly to the left to face the location of the Holy of Holies (which is currently covered by the Dome of the Rock.

Religious significance of Jerusalem - Customs in remembrance of Jerusalem

Image:Breaking glass by groom.jpg In some circles, a tiny amount of ash is touched to the forehead of a Jewish groom before he goes to stand beneath the bridal canopy. This symbolically reminds him not to allow his own rejoicing to be "greater" than the ongoing need to recall Jerusalem's destruction. The well-known custom of the groom breaking a glass with the heel of his shoe after the wedding ceremony is also related to the subject of mourning for Jerusalem. The groom recites the sentence from Psalms, "If I forget thee, O Jerusalem, let my right hand forget her cunning." (Psalms 137:5). The translation given is from the KJV, the italicized words are not present in the Hebrew. All traditional Jewish commentators, however, agree with this translation; it was common in Biblical Hebrew to not explicitly express any possible negative consequence.

Another ancient custom is to leave a patch of interior wall opposite the door to one's home unpainted, as a remembrance of the destruction (zecher lechurban), of the Temples and city of Jerusalem.

Religious significance of Jerusalem - Western Wall in Jerusalem

The Western Wall, in the heart of the Old City of Jerusalem, is generally considered to be the only remains of the Second Temple from the era of the Roman conquests. There are said to be esoteric texts in Midrash that mention God's promise to keep this one remnant of the outer temple wall standing as a memorial and reminder of the past. Hence the significance of the "Western Wall" (kotel hama'aravi) - also called the "Wailing Wall" by non-Jews, attesting to their perception of Jews' propensity to cry whenever they came before it.

Religious significance of Jerusalem - Rabbis and Jerusalem

The Talmud records that the rabbinical leader Yohanan ben Zakkai (c. 70 C.E.) urged a peaceful surrender, in order to save Jerusalem from destruction, but was not heeded as the city was under the control of the Zealots.

An early expression of the Jewish desire to "return to Zion" is the journey of Yehuda Halevi, who died in about 1140. Jewish legend relates that as he came near Jerusalem, overpowered by the sight of the Holy City, he sang his most beautiful elegy, the celebrated "Zionide" Tzion ha-lo Tish'ali and that at that instant he was ridden down and killed by an Arab.

He was followed by Nahmanides, the Ramban, who, in 1267 emigrated to the land of Israel, and came for a short stay to live in Jerusalem. He wrote that he found barely ten Jews, as it had been desolated by the Crusades, nevertheless, together they built a synagogue that is the oldest that still stands to this day, known as the "Ramban Synagogue".

Both Elijah ben Solomon (d. 1797) known as the Vilna Gaon, and Israel ben Eliezer (d. 1760) known as the Ba'al Shem Tov instructed and sent small successive waves of their disciples to settle in Jerusalem then under Turkish Ottoman rule. They created a Jewish religious infrastructure that remains the core of the Haredi Jewish community in Jerusalem to this day.

The British Mandate of Palestine authorities created the new offices of "Chief Rabbi" in 1921 for both Ashkenazi Jews and Sephardic Jews with central offices in Jerusalem. Rabbi Abraham Isaac Kook (d. 1935) moved to Jerusalem to set up this office, associated with the "Religious Zionist" Mafdal group, becoming the first modern Chief Rabbi together with Sephardic Chief Rabbi Yaakov Meir. The official structure housing the Chief Rabbinate was completed in 1958 and is known as Heichal Shlomo.

Jerusalem is also home to a number of the world's largest yeshivot (Talmudical and Rabbinical schools), and has become the undisputed capital of Jewish scholarly, religious and spiritual life for most of world Jewry.

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1016, 1022, 1099, 1140, 1187, 1267, 135, 15 July, 17, 1760, 1797, 17th, 1839, 1861, 1921, 1935, 1958, 1967, 19th century, 27, 336, 451, 638, 688, 692, 728, 751, 758, 775, 818, 831, AH, Abd al-Malik, Abd-ul-Mejid I, Abraham Isaac Kook, Acts of the Apostles, Adonai, Al-Aqsa Mosque, Al-Ma'mun, Al-Mahdi, Alexandria, Antioch, Antonia Fortress, Armenians, Ashkenazi Jews, Babylonia, Babylonian Empire, Biblical cities, Book of Psalms, Book of Revelation, Book of Samuel, British Mandate of Palestine, Buildings, Bukhari, Buraq, Byzantine, Caesarea, Calif Umar, Calif al-Hakim, Caliph, Chaldean, Charles George Gordon, Christianity, Christians, Church of All Nations, Church of the Holy Sepulchre, Constantine I, Constantinople, Copts, Council of Chalcedon, Crusades, David, Day of Judgement, Demographics, Dome of the Rock, Eastern Christians, Education, Eids, Elijah ben Solomon, Euphrates, Europe, First Crusade, First Temple, Franciscans, Gates, Gethsemane, Ginza Rba, Gnostic, Golgotha, Gospels, Hadrian, Hagada, Haredi, Hebrew Bible, History, Image:Breaking glass by groom.jpg, India, Iran, Iraq, Islam, Isra, Isra and Miraj, Israel ben Eliezer, James the Just, Jerusalem, Jesus, Jewish, Jewish Christians, Jewish temple, Jews, John Wansbrough, John the Baptist, Jordan, Judaism, KJV, Kaaba, Karbala, King David, King James Version, Knesset, Last Supper, Luke, Machzor, Mafdal, Mandaeanism, Mark, Mashhad, Mayors, Mecca, Medina, Mi'raj, Midrash, Mishnah, Mount of Olives, Muhammad, Nahmanides, Najaf, Names, New Testament, Ninth of Av, North America, Old City, Old Testament, Oral Law, Orientalists, Orthodox Judaism, Ottoman, Ottoman Empire, Passover, Patriarchs of Antioch, Patricia Crone, Pauline Epistles, Places, Pontius Pilate, Pope, Prophets of Islam, Psalms, Qur'an, Rajab, Religion, Roman Empire, Rome, Ruha d-Qudsha, Saladin, Second Temple, Seder, Sephardic Jews, Seven Days of Mourning, Seventeenth of Tammuz, Shulchan Aruch, Shulkhan Arukh, Solomon, South Africa, Syriac Orthodox, Talmud, Tanakh, Temple, Temple Mount, Ten Commandments, Tenth of Tevet, Thailand, Theophanes Confessor, Timeline, Torah, Transport, Turkish, Umar ibn al-Khattab, Via Dolorosa, Wahhabis, Walls, Western Wall, Written Law, Yahya, Yehuda Halevi, Yemen, Yohanan ben Zakkai, Yom Kippur, Zealots, al-Haram al-Sharif, al-masjid al-Aqsa, amidah, ascension, baptism, covenant, dawn, dusk, earthquakes, east, firman, fornication, hadith, heaven, lewdness, list of Jewish prayers and blessings, mishnah, patriarch, perversion, planets, qibla, rabbis, resurrection, siddur, south, synagogue, west, yeshivot



Adapted from the Wikipedia article "Jerusalem Jews and Judaism", under the G.N U Free Docmentation License. Please also see http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki

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