By religion it is ok for an Orthodox Jew to put their baby up for adoption, but to Jewish adoptive parents.
No,he's a Greek American. His religion is Greek Orthodox
From the Jewish perspective, you are not a Jew. However, if you are raised as a Jew, the reform movement would consider you a Jew. Conservative and orthodox groups would require you to undergo conversion.
No he was not a Jew he was eastern orthodox which is a christian church.
Both believe in God, both believe in all the same Biblical things, just have different views on practical religion, ie, Shabbat and keeping Kosher.
Bury them
The term "normal Jew" has no actual meaning.If the question intends to ask about the differences between Reform Jews and Orthodox Jews, there are certainly more requirements and difficulties inherent in being an Orthodox Jew.
A non-Orthodox Jew is a Jew who either does not believe in the binding nature of Halacha (Jewish Law) or who believes in Halacha but interprets the rules in a more modern fashion. Non-Orthodox Jews generally place a large amount of value on personal responsibility.
Everyone celebrates just like in all other faiths. If the baby is a boy, he receives a baby skullcap and he gets circumcised at 8 days old.
Yes. he is an Orthodox Jew.
No, and neither is his father.
No.
Rahm Emanuel is a Modern Orthodox Jew. Modern Orthodox is a movement within Orthodox Judaism that attempts to blend tranditional Orthodox Judaic observance (Old Testament biblical) with the secular, modern world. It is a blend of philosophies that detracts from the pure Orthodox Jewish religion. He is not a Christ follower and belows to a branch of Judaism that does not recognize Jesus as relevant for Jews. This differs from a born again Jew who is Jewish by culture and ethnicity, however has accepted Jesus Christ as Savior.