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Our view is one of deep gratitude. The Exodus from Egyptian slavery is one of the motivations for keeping God's commands in gratitude to Him; and it is mentioned many times in the Torah.

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Q: What are Jews view on God after He brought them out of slavery?
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What do Jews believe god did?

He brought them out of Egyptian slavery and gave the Torah to them (the Jews).


Who did God have bring out the Hebrews from slavery and Canaan?

Moses (משה) brought the people out of slavery, but no one "brought them out of Canaan"


Who did god tell to lead the Jews out of slavery in Egypt?

moses


Who did god tell to lead Jews a out of slavery in Egypt?

Moses


Why did the Jews respect Moses?

because moses was send by God to free them from the slavery.


What view of god do both Jews and Christians have?

They both believe in a god that made the earth


Does messianic Jews worship God or Jesus?

Messianic Jews usually have a trinitarian view of God that is similar to that of most evangelical Protestants. As such, their view of God to have a three-in-one nature, where Jesus is one of those three.This is very different from Judaism, where belief in an incarnate God is considered idolatrous.


What point of view did congress have about slavery?

that it was unfair and injustice that it shouldn't matter what race you are as long as you are a creature of God


Who did God tell to lead the Jews out of slavery?

moses was the man who god blessed to lead the Jews out of slaveryMoses was the man. Because he born during slavery in Egypt. And that's why the whole moses in a basket came along. The Torah said all Hebrew males should be killed. And yes, moses was Hebrew.


What event do Jews remember when celebrating the Passover?

The Exodus, in which God took us out of Egyptian slavery (Exodus ch.12).


Why jews celebrate Passover?

Passover is commanded in the Torah (Leviticus ch. 23) to mark the Exodus (Exodus ch. 12-13) when God took the Jews out of Egyptian slavery.


Why do Jews not love Allah?

Answer 1Jews surely do love "Allah" for the term's translation in English is GOD.Allah in Arabic = God in English = Dios in Spanish= Elohim in Hebrew.Answer 2The underlying supposition of this question, namely that Jews do not love God, is not only inaccurate but completely contrary to actual established Jewish practices. Religious Jews pray to God three times a day, a devotion that costs them 80 minutes (approximately) every week day and nearly 4.5 hours (approximately) every Saturday. During this time, God and his virtues extolled as well as the love he expresses for the Jews and Jews reciprocate.As for the actual name "Allah", Allah is not a Name of God in either Islam or Judaism, but merely the word "God" in Arabic. (This is as opposed to "Jehovah" in certain Christian Sects being the actual name of the God they worship.) When worshiping Jews address God by a variety of titles befitting the aspect of God that they are trying to invoke. (This is similar to the Islamic Concept of the 99 Names.) In common parlance, Jews use the word "God" in whatever language they are commonly speaking. This lead to Jews in the Arab World (Mizrahim) using the word Allah often in common speech to refer to God and using many of the same Allah-based phrases that the Moslems use (like "Bismillah" or "Hamdullah" or "Inshullah" etc.).Jews specifically love God because, in their view, God brought them out of slavery in Egypt and gifted them the Mosaic Law, which they see as the true Divine Law. In the Jewish View, this was an incredible act of Divine Compassion and the fomenting of a relationship with the Jewish People. Throughout the Bible, the relationship of God and the Jews is viewed as a love affair between a husband (God) and a wife (the Jewish people). This view of the Divine-Jewish relationship persists to this day.The one difference that Jews have with Moslems is accepting the prophecy of Mohammed. Jews do not believe that it is possible to prophesy after the Biblical Period and as such, Mohammed clearly could not have received prophecy in the 7th Century C.E. Some Jews regard Mohammed as someone similar to Mohandas Gandhi in that he brought a new understanding, moderation, and union to a divided and repressed people. Some Jews regard Mohammed as a trickster, liar, and a thief because he defrauded people into believing that he received prophesy when such a thing is impossible. Most Jews hold an opinion closer to the former than the latter on that spectrum. Regardless of whatever opinion a Jew may have of Mohammed, almost no Jew loves him.