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Sifra
(168 words)
[German Version] (סִפְרָא), Aramaic for “book” (also traditionally called
torat kohanim, “priestly law”), is a tannaitic (early rabbinic) exposition (Rabbinic literature) of Leviticus; it is assigned to the second group (school of Rabbi Akiba) of halakhic midrashim. The work is a continuous commentary on Leviticus and hence contains primarily halakhic traditions (Halakhah), many of which exhibit parallels to the Mishnah and Tosefta. The version of
…
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Religion Past and Present
Tosefta
(512 words)
[German Version] In rabbinic usage, Aram. אתפסות (“addition, supplement”) is a general term for Tannaitic traditions (Tannaim) that were considered supplementary to existing teachings (
b. Šabb. 8:1 [11a]). In some cases the term refers to collections of extra-mishnaic Tannaitic traditions (
baraitot; b. Meg. 28b). Today it serves as the title of a surviving Tannaitic work that largely echoes the structure and thematic material of the Mishnah (see the detailed outline of the Mishnah). Except for the tractates
Avot, Tamid, Middot, and
Qinnim, all the tractates of the Mishnah ar…
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Religion Past and Present
Sifre
(415 words)
[German Version] (סִפְרֵי), Aramaic for “books,” is the traditional designation of tannaitic (early rabbinic) collections (Rabbinic literature) of exegetical traditions in relation to Numbers and Deuteronomy (and sometimes also Exod.). Today a distinction is made between three different halakhic midrashim (Halakhah) on Numbers and Deuteronomy.
I. Sifre Bemidbar (SifBem) is an expository work on Numbers, containing expositions of Num 5–12; 15; 18f.; 25:1–13; 26:52–30:1 (Eng. 29:40); 30:2*–31:24; and 35:9–34.…
Source:
Religion Past and Present
Death Penalty
(3,790 words)
[German Version] I. Old Testament – II. New Testament – III. Judaism – IV. Law – V. Ethics
I. Old Testament The death penalty in the Old Testament has three causes: 1. blood revenge as a direct legal reaction by a family damaged by a homicide; 2. cultic law involving severe violations of religious …
Source:
Religion Past and Present
Interest
(3,846 words)
[German Version] I. Concept – II. Legal Aspects – III. Economics – IV. Non-Christian Antiquity – V. Bible – VI. Christianity – VII. Judaism – VIII. Islam
I. Concept Interest is payment in exchange for a right of use or exploitation, typically on a temporary basis and always agreed for a fixed period of time. Money later gained increasing importance as an object of lending and now occupies a dominant position, although other items or rights remain possible as objects of lending, as for example rent. In economics (see III below), this mutual commitmen…
Source:
Religion Past and Present
Dietary Laws
(4,404 words)
[German Version] I. Religious Studies – II. Old Testament – III. New Testament – IV. Christianity – V. Judaism – VI. Islam – VII. Buddhism – VIII. Indian Religions
I. Religious Studies A human society's dietary laws and prohibitions give us an excellent insight into its symbolic and ritual practices. The choice of nourishment (preferences and prohibitions) is closely tied to the overall image that a culture develops of itself, with which it encounters other cultures and which presupposes a specific relationship to…
Source:
Religion Past and Present