It depends whether that person is a Jew or a Gentile (Non-Jew). If they are a gentile then
they just have to obey the 7 commandments to the Sons of Noah (aka the Noachide laws), which are;
Refrain from idolatry
Refrain from murder
Refrain from theft
Refrain from Sexual immorality
Refrain from blasphemy
Do not eat the flesh of an animal while it is still alive
Establish courts of law
If they are a Jew then they have to follow the 613 Mitzvot... that's pretty hard!
It can be either. According to the laws of Judaism, a person born to a Jewish woman is a Jew. Alternatively, a person can become a Jew through valid conversion. However, a person who is a Jew, can convert to another religion and is seen as being cut off from the Jewish Nation. This person would technically be a Jew, however, they would not be Jewish.
A Jew is a person who follows the religion of Judaism. As the Church of England is Christian, the answer would be no.
If that happened - and it sometimes did happen - the person concerned would have to prove that he or she wasn't a Jew.
The Biblical Prophet Amos was a Jew. As for whether any other person who has the name Amos is Jewish, this would require a surname.
It depends on the person, but for many, it is a life-changing event to become Jewish.
Mary was born a Jew and spent most of her life as a Jew. She went to Heaven as a Christian Catholic, however.
as a Jew when i go i feel very religious and i feel like if i do something bad there (talk,text,phone goes off) i feel like gods gonna get mad at me and not allow me into heaven.
It is not required for a non-Jew to become Jewish. Without going into detail, Judaism holds that if the non-Jew is a good, decent person, and fulfills a relatively short list of prerequisites, he/she is eligible for heaven. These are: not to commit murder, adultery or idolatry, not to eat the limb of a living animal, not to curse God, not to steal; and to uphold and/or not undermine the existence of courts of law.
If the Jew is a woman, you get a black Jew. If the mother isn't Jewish, then the child isn't either.
Yes, the word Jew is a proper noun, the name of a specific group of people. A proper noun it the name of a person, place, thing, or a title; a Jew is a person.
jew
The requirements to be considered for the position of pope - one must be a male Catholic. That pretty much eliminates a Jew from consideration. The only way it could happen would be if the person was an ethnic Jew who had converted to Catholicism. Saint Peter was a Jew before he became a Catholic. Does that count?