A Jewish family visits the synagogue on Saturday morning to observe Shabbat. A Jewish girl compares worshipping at home to worshipping at the synagogue. During the service, the Torah is taken out from the Ark, behind the curtains, and a Rabbi Reads from it in the Hebrew before the scrolls are carefully put away again.
We go to the synagogue to pray and to read the Torah. In the home, three festive meals are held during the course of the Sabbath. The forbidden forms of work are avoided throughout the day.
There are a great number of things you can do. The following list has the most commonly done things: Pray in a Synagogue, Eat Meals, Socialize with your Family, Read, Sleep, Play Games, and Study.
They attend synagogue and visit with friends and family.
they go to the synagogue and pray; they hold the three festive meals; and refrain from work. Other than that, they may spend time together, visit others, take walks, read, etc. It's a time of relaxation.
Its there tradition and they wanty to fallow off there ancestros religion thx jodie
Yes. She grew up in a Jewish family. Her father had been the President of the Beth El Synagogue in New Rochelle, New York.
The synagogue is important to the family as it serves as a place of worship, community, and education. Families gather at the synagogue to pray together, observe religious traditions and festivals, and connect with other members of the Jewish community. It also provides a space for children to learn about their faith and heritage through programs and religious education.
Shabbat is a time of relaxation, people will read, study, and visit with family and friends.
The Jewish Sabbath is Saturday. It begins at Friday sundown and ends on Saturday after dark. The Sabbath is a day of rest during which many forms of work are forbidden (Exodus ch.20; Talmud Shabbat 73b). Time is spent in prayer, Torah-reading, festive meals with the family, and other family activities.
In all honesty, most practicing Reform Jews do not observe anything beyond going to the synagogue on Friday nights and/or saturday mornings. They may also do a festive meal on Friday nights.But there are a significant number of Reform Jews who observe Shabbat with family time at home throughout the day. A small number are even shomer shabbas (strictly shabbat-observant).
Mitt Romey observes the Sabbath Day on Sunday. He attends worship services or worships privately at home. He avoids working, shopping, attending sporting events, etc and spends the day in rest and worship with his family.
Jews celebrate Shabbat, not Sabbat (which is a Wiccan holiday). Jewish people observe their Sabbath as a day of rest because it is written in scripture to do so: "Remember the Sabbath day by keeping it holy" (Exodus 20:8; Deuteronomy 5:12). The reason for this commandment is that God wants His people to rest or cease from their normal work schedules.
If they care to observe the practices referred to as "Family Purity", then yes.