1.02 MONOTHEISTIC RELIGIONS
Biblical or ancient name for the lands of modern Israel that lie between the Jordan River and the Mediterranean Sea
Canaan
builds on the Torah by adding the stories and teachings of Jesus
Christian Bible
Holy Sepulchre is the location of Jesus' crucifixion, burial, and resurrection. Church of the Nativity in Bethlehem is location where the gospels of Matthew and Luke show where Jesus was born. Under the church
Christianity, Sacred Sites and Symbols
in Jewish and Christian tradition, the first ten laws revealed by God to Moses on Mount Sinai as part of the covenant between God and the Jewish people
Ten Commandments
Those of Jewish faith consider Israel the homeland promised to them by God and hold the Holy Land central to Jewish beliefs and practices; Christian, faith's prophets, including Jesus Christ, lived, taught, and died there.; For Muslims, Jerusalem is also honored as the "land of many prophets" and is recognized as the site of a miraculous journey by Muhammad.
The holy land
Moses and jesus
Abraham's two descendents
Isaac and Ishmael
Abraham's two sons
Isaac's descendant Moses led enslaved people in Egypt to freedom, escaping with the Jewish people in a journey known as the Exodus (40 years wandering in the deserts of the Sinai Peninsula before Yahweh spoke to Moses on Mount Sinai)
1300 BCE
the movement of the Jewish people, or Israelites, led by Moses from ancient Egypt
Exodus
Moses and Jesus, are considered the founders of Judaism and Christianity respectively and muslims believe Muhammad founded Islam.
Faiths
Yahweh called on Abraham to sacrifice Isaac. All three monotheistic faiths hold that Isaac went on to father the Jewish race.
Isaac (Judaism)
honors both the Hebrew and the Christian Bible but considers the Qur'an to be the latest, and most accurate, revelation. ( literal word of God, or Allah, as revealed to Muhammad through the angel Gabriel; organized in 114 chapters called suras that record Muhammad's teachings in verse )
Islam
star and crescent, congregations are led by imams. holiest site in Islam, the Kaaba built by Abraham and his son Ishmael, Green Dome is where Muhammad and his followers once took refuge.
Islam, Sacred Sites and Symbols
the holy book is the Torah (comprised of the first five books of what Christians call the Old Testament) 39 books of the Hebrew Bible
Judaism
star of david ( 12 sides = 12 tribes) Congregations led by rabbi Old Jerusalem is home to the Temple Mount, mosque known as the Dome of the Rock sits where the temple once stood, the place where Muslims believe that Muhammad rose into heaven. Cave of the Patriarchs in Hebron its over the place where Abraham is believed to have been buried.
Judaism, Sacred Sites and Symbols
persons who practice religion in a way that emphasizes the personal spiritual experience of the divine, generally outside the mainstream or common practice of the larger religious group
Mystics
second covenant, when Moses and his people accepted the laws of their god, to be the true start of Judaism
Second Covenant
groups within a larger religion with distinctive beliefs that set them apart
Sects
Judaism, Christianity, and Islam, all share common roots; Began in Southwest asia
Three major monotheistic religions
branches or subgroups of a religion with specific beliefs or practices that distinguish them from other branches
denominations
A man named Abraham started the family nearly 4,000 years ago in a land known then as Canaan.
Who started these three faiths?
Abraham made what is known as the first covenant, or agreement, with God (Moses renewed that covenant centuries later)
Yahweh (Hebrew)- Judaism
home to holy sites that are sacred to Judaism, Christianity, and Islam
modern city of Jerusalem