Catch4catch.com Free Jewish Dating (100% Free) By: David Greenberg | -
At 50, Benjamin's soul aches. Day after day, not only does he encounter people younger than he with kids, but the kids themselves are starting to have kids. He is happy for them and dances joyfully at their simchas. He saves his complaints for God. "There are times when I feel so angry at God, so downtrodden. Dear God, You give me so many talents, but you don't give me the opportunity to serve my Jewish wife with them."
If Benjamin had some significant shortcoming his circu ... Tags:Free Jewish dating
Kippahs: Origins Of This Jewish Custom By: Adam Florence | - The Jewish Kippah is often thought of as being a requirement in the Jewish community. This however is very much so not the case. The Yarmulka (another word for it) is often worn as a sense of pride of being Jewish, it says the statement that I am a proud Jewish male and I attempt to live every day for God.
The Jewish Kippah in reference to biblical times was used as part of the priestly vestments. And in second Samuel 15:30 the covering of one's head and face is regarded as a sign ... Tags:kippahs, jew, jewish, simchas, sicmhot, kippot, yarmulkas, yarmulke, kippa, yamaka, skullcap, skull
The Jewish Kippah Clearly Explained By: Adam Florence | - A Jewish kippah is the skull cap worn by most Jewish people. As the small type hat that goes right on the top of the head and serves as a reminder that God is the authority above us.
Pretty basically it is easy to be on your best behavior and live for God when at a synagogue or near a pastor, however on day-to-day life lots of people forget how to live for God, this is where the Jewish Kippah comes into play.
After the circumcision Kosher wine is presented by the Mohel (the circumciser) to the boy that has born, this is done to reduce the pain of the boy. The Jewish child drinks his mother's milk and wine at his birth. As soon as this happens many pick up the goblet of wine and drink it all the way to the last drops. This is done to celebrate their success and it was the beginning ... Tags:kosher, wine, holidays, festivals, jewish, judaica, religion, religious
Hanukkah: The Jewish Holiday Of Spiritual Triumph By: Adam Florence | - Hanukkah otherwise known as the festival of lights is the most celebrated Jewish holiday. This holiday is celebrated in the month of December and probably a week before Christmas.
The most important reason why this festival is celebrated is to honour the memory of their victory over the Greeks about 2150 years ago and it was more than anything spiritually satisfying.
Kippahs: The Jewish Traditional Head Covering (judaica) By: Adam Florence | - As with many cultures traditional Jewish people have their own mode of dress. In different parts of the world different clothing is suitable for different groups. The head coverings are one of those types of clothing.
Talk of anything Judaica or Jewish and two extreme pictures come to mind. The Nazi extermination camps during WW-II where wearing a star and a number by the Jews from across Europe marked them for impending torture and death.
Sukkah: The Jewish Home For Sukkot (judaica) By: Adam Florence | - When the holiday season or the "Sukkot" arrives, the permanent construction takes a back seat and most people of the Jewish faith are literally required to construct and to move into for stay in a "Sukkah".
This is not out of any urge to rough it out or to live outdoors, but is in line with the terms stated in the Torah, calling for all persons of the Jewish faith to spend the Sukkot holidays in a temporary hut whose "minimum" size is literally to accommodate an adult in a sittin ... Tags:esrog, esrogim, etrog, etrogim, sukkot, sukkos, sukkah, lulav, sukkot, sukkos, sukot, sukos, succot, succos, sucot, sucos, esrog, essrogim, etrogim, e
The Hebrew Kippah: Jewish Skullcap (judaica) By: Adam Florence | - The Judaica or Jewish kippah or skullcap marks out a person following the Hebrew faith. It is so traditional and so common, that a firm believer, and we are not talking of a Rabbi or priest, but even a citizen sporting a tea-shirt and jeans, can be seen sporting a Judaica / Jewish skullcap or kippah.
However, there is not extreme insistence on the wear, though certain places and occasions demand not being seen without a skullcap or kippah. Today, most would wear one compulsorily ... Tags:kippahs, jewish, judaica, holidays, yarmulkas, kippot, kipot, kipahs, bar mitzvah, bar, bat
Sukkot And The Meaning Of The Etrog By: Adam Florence | - The Jewish Sukkot festival commences on the fifth day after "Yom Kippur" and lasts for seven days. The word Sukkot literally means "booths", which is in direct reference to the temporary dwelling construction for a seven day live-in within that holiday period. This is not in anyway repentance or any atonement, though it does symbolize the agony of the past when Jews in order to flee persecution had to undergo a long march through Mount Sinai, while living in tents to almost forty years.