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rabbinic

[ UK /ɹæbˈɪnɪk/ ]
[ US /ɹəˈbɪnɪk/ ]
ADJECTIVE
  1. of or relating to rabbis or their teachings
    rabbinical school

How To Use rabbinic In A Sentence

  • While contemplating the possibility that the Baraita is a Karaite forgery intended to attack rabbinic Judaism, Horowitz finally opted for a rabbinic origin, and concluded that it was composed around the fourth century, in Palestine. Baraita de-Niddah.
  • Indeed, this is where the center of Jewish rabbinic authority came to rest after the Byzantine Empire shut down the Sanhedrin in 363 CE.
  • Hence arose a new form of written Hebrew, called rabbinical from its origin and use among the rabbins. Handbook of Universal Literature From the Best and Latest Authorities
  • Death to the talmud, death to the torah, death to the cabbala, death to the Israeli sanhedrin, death to all hassidim, death to rabbinical mishnah nonsense, death to Judaic racism against "Goyim", death to the Palestinian Apartheid Wall of Judaism, death to all of Israel. Bill Maher's Religulous Documentary is Evidently 'Brilliant' « FirstShowing.net
  • Finding a teacher was a problem -- no Orthodox shochet would train a Conservative rabbinical student. Sue Fishkoff: The New Jewish Food Movement: Jews Who Meet What They Eat
  • Messianic character of which is recognized by both Rabbinical interpreters and New Testament writers (see Condamin, "Le livre d'Isaie" Paris, 1905), graphically describes the servant of Jahveh, that is the Messias, Himself innocent yet chastized by God, because The Catholic Encyclopedia, Volume 12: Philip II-Reuss
  • But an Israeli rabbi, who spent a lifetime searching for the lost tribes, brought 40 Mizo converts to Israel as tourists and enrolled them in a rabbinical school.
  • Her claim that the term impure (teme’ah) is obfuscated because of its biblical connotation of transmission of impurity and the rabbinic usage of unavailability for sexual purposes needs further clarification. Female Purity (Niddah) Annotated Bibliography.
  • Rabbinical courts throughout the rest of the world function without such powers of coercion.
  • The ancient rabbinic text, the Mishnah, states: "A single man was created in the world, to teach that if any man has caused a single soul to perish, scripture imputes it to him as if he had caused a whole world to perish, and if any man saves alive a single soul, scripture imputes it to him as if he had saved alive a whole world... Rabbi Jack Bemporad: An Open Letter To Congress From Leaders of the Faith Community: Don't Cut Foreign Aid!
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