Jewish Holidays

From Conservapedia

Jewish holidays are the "holy days" observed according to the Judaism. They are cycled on a lunar calendar as opposed to Christian holidays which are cycled on the solar calendar. Unlike many lunar calendars such as the Islamic calendar the Jewish calendar has leap years to keep it aligned with the solar year.

The following are all the main holidays traditionally observed on the |Jewish calendar:

Biblical holidays[edit]

In many ways Jewish law gives Shabbat the status of being the most important holy day in the Jewish calendar.
  • It is the first holiday mentioned in the Tanakh (Hebrew Bible), and God was the first one to observe it.
  • The Jewish services treats the Sabbath as a bride and queen (along with God the groom).
  • The Torah reading on the Sabbath has more sections of Torah readings than on Yom Kippur, the most of any Jewish holiday.
  • There is a tradition that the Messiah will come if every Jew observes the Sabbath twice in a row.
    Additionally, Orthodox Jews observe 39 restrictions on the Sabbath. These include not cooking, lighting fires (includes using electricity), extinguishing fires, writing, cutting, etc.

Non-Biblical holidays[edit]


Categories: [Holidays] [Judaism]


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