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In Judaism, the Yom Kippur Temple service was a special sacrificial service performed by the High Priest of Israel on the holiday of Yom Kippur, in the Temple in Jerusalem (and previously in the Tabernacle). Through this service, according to the Bible, the Jewish people would achieve atonement for their sins once each year.
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Temple Israel elected its first woman trustee in 1921, [6] dedicated its new building in 1922, and in 1924 officially changed its name to Temple Israel of the City of New York. [7] By 1929, membership exceeded 950. [7] William Franklin Rosenblum succeeded Harris as Temple Israel's second rabbi in 1930, and Harris died just a few months later ...
The Temple Israel congregation has endured a lot of challenges in the past four years.. The biggest was the lack of a place to call home. That ended on Sunday. The oldest synagogue in Greater ...
Temple Israel (Lafayette, Indiana) Temple Israel (Paducah, Kentucky) Temple Israel (Boston, Massachusetts) Temple Israel (West Bloomfield, Michigan) Temple Israel (Minneapolis, Minnesota) Congregation Temple Israel (Creve Coeur, Missouri) Temple Israel of the City of New York; Temple Israel (Charlotte, North Carolina) Temple Israel (Kinston ...
In addition, the order contains a description of the Second Temple (tractate Middot), and a description and rules about the daily sacrifice service in the Temple (tractate Tamid). [ 21 ] [ 22 ] [ 23 ] According to the Babylonian Talmud , [ 24 ] the Temple lacked the Shekhinah (the dwelling or settling divine presence of God) and the Ruach ...
Temple Israel, originally called Shaarai Tov ("Gates of Goodness"), was founded in 1878 by German-speaking Jewish merchants. [1] Their first house of worship, built in 1880, was located on Fifth Street between First Avenue (later Marquette Avenue) and Second Avenue South; it was a small, wooden synagogue in the popular Moorish Revival style.
Following the Temple's destruction at the end of the First Jewish–Roman War and the displacement to the Galilee of the bulk of the remaining Jewish population in Judea at the end of the Bar Kochba revolt, Jewish tradition in the Talmud and poems from the period record that the descendants of each priestly watch established a separate residential seat in towns and villages of the Galilee, and ...