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Reform

(3,767 words)

Author(s): Meyer, Michael A.
Proceeding from the aim of modernizing the faith and religious practice of all Jews, the Reform movement gradually developed into a religious trend within Judaism, referred to as Reform Judaism, liberal or progressive Judaism. The Reform movement had its origins in Germany, spread to other European countries, and finally achieved its greatest influence in the United States, where today it is followed by the majority of practicing Jews. Conceived as a …
Date: 2022-09-30

Reform

(3,600 words)

Author(s): Meyer, Michael A.
Ausgehend von dem Ziel, den Glauben und die religiöse Praxis aller Juden zu modernisieren, entwickelte sich die Reformbewegung allmählich zu einer religiösen Richtung innerhalb des Judentums, die als Reformjudentum, liberales oder progressives Judentum bezeichnet wird. Die Reformbewegung hatte ihren Ursprung in Deutschland, breitete sich auf andere europäische Länder aus und erreichte ihre größte Wirkung schließlich in den Vereinigten Staaten, wo sich heute die Mehrzahl aller religiösen Juden zu…

Society

(6,607 words)

Author(s): Herms, Eilert | Kippenberg, Hans G. | Thiel, Winfried | Wehr, Lothar | Münch, Richard | Et al.
[German Version] I. Terminology The word society ( societas, société) has changed from a term denoting particular forms and modes of human coexistence to a term (in both sg. and pl.) denoting the totality of human coexistence; it has thus become the basic term of the theoretical sciences that deal with human coexistence. The German equivalent, Gesellschaft (from OHG sal, “room,” and selida, “dwelling place”), suggests ties that arise from sharing the same room (cf. Geselle, “apprentice,” etymologically “someone ¶ sharing accommodations” with a master) or belonging to the sa…

Judaism

(9,291 words)

Author(s): Schwartz, Seth | Gotzmann, Andreas | Meyer, Michael A.
[German Version] I. From the Exile to the Arab Conquest – II. To 1800 – III. 1800 to the Present I. From the Exile to the Arab Conquest In 539 bce, the Persian ruler Cyrus conquered the kingdom of Babylonia. He is reputed to have permitted a group of Judahites deported to Mesopotamia to return to their homeland (“Babylonian Exile”). It would have been consonant with the restorative policies of Cyrus to present himself as the liberator of various nations, reestablishing their gods and cults destroyed by the Babylonians, bu…

Reform Judaism

(575 words)

Author(s): Meyer, Michael A.
[German Version] The Reform movement in Judaism (III) emerged as a religious response to the increasing intellectual, social, and political integration of Jews in Central Europe, especially Germany, during the first decades of the 19th century. The debate with the Enlightenment had raised questions as to the viability of traditional Judaism in the modern world and evoked a clearly perceptible need to adapt Judaism to the new conditions of Jewish life outside the medieval ghetto. Reforms were introduced in worship, including greater emphasis on external norms of conduct…

Judaism and Christianity

(5,219 words)

Author(s): Schaller, Berndt | Lindemann, Andreas | Meyer, Michael A. | Beintker, Michael
[German Version] I. Problems of Terminology – II. Early Judaism – III. New Testament and Primitive Christianity – IV. Early Church – V. Middle Ages to the Present – VI. The Church and Judaism Today I. Problems of Terminology The terminological distinction between Judaism and Christianity (Ἰουδαϊσμός – Χριστιανισμός) made its first appearance at the beginning of the 2nd century, initially in the Ignatian Epistles (Ign. Magn. 10.3; Phld. 6.1). It was a product of Christian usage, borrowed from the contrast between Judaism and Hellenism (Ἑλληνισμός) current in Jewish circles;…

Emancipation

(2,048 words)

Author(s): Schieder, Rolf | Meyer, Michael A. | Lienemann-Perrin, Christine
[German Version] I. Terminology – II. Emancipation as a Socio-historical Process – III. The Significance of Emancipation in Judaism – IV. Emancipation of Women – V. Practical Theology and Education Theory I. Terminology The etymological meaning of emancipate is “to deliver from mancipium”; in Roman law, mancipium meant the solemn act of taking ownership through imposition of hands. As a technical term, emancipation meant the act of freeing a child from the authority of the pater familias

Reconstructionism

(371 words)

Author(s): Meyer, Michael A.
[English Version] Reconstructionism, jüdisch. Der R. ist die jüngste und einzige rel. Hauptrichtung des modernen Judentums (: III.), die ihren Ursprung in Amerika hat. Ihr Begründer ist der Rabbiner M.M. Kaplan. Er definierte das Judentum als eine »Zivilisation«, die neben der Rel. auch andere Lebensbereiche wie Kunst und Musik einschloß. Die Bewegung begann als eine Geistesströmung, die aus dem fortschrittlichen Flügel des konservati…

Reformjudentum

(587 words)

Author(s): Meyer, Michael A.
[English Version] . Die Reformbewegung im Judentum (: III.) entstand als eine rel. Antwort auf die zunehmende geistige, soziale und polit. Integration von Juden in Mitteleuropa, v.a. in Deutschland, während der ersten Jahrzehnte des 19.Jh. Die Auseinandersetzung mit der Aufklärung hatte Fragen nach der Lebensfähigkeit des traditionellen Judentums in der modernen Welt aufgeworfen und ein deutlich wahrnehmbares Bedürfnis hervorgerufen, das Judentum den neuen Bedingungen jüd. Existenz außerhalb des ma. Ghettos anzupassen. Reformen wurden im Bereich des Gottesdienstes…