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They are the Most High's chosen people whom He values as a treasure; since our Creator is the Most Important of anything or anyone, whoever He chooses to hold worthy and valuable definitely becomes very significant because He chose them.

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12y ago
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7y ago

The Israelites have served as a conduit of prophecy, and of tradition concerning morals, social justice and law in general.

Israelite teachings have given the Western world much of its shape today. Many of the laws, traditions, culture and values are directly attributable to Judaism. Here are a few examples:
1) The Jews' monotheistic religious tradition (Deuteronomy 6:4) shaped the Western beliefs about God.
2) The right to a day of rest (Exodus ch.20) for everyone. This weekly rest was a concept unique to the Israelites.


3) The concept of morality (Leviticus ch.18-19) was also the work of the Israelites, including the dignity (Genesis 5:1) and value of a person (whereas idolatry had tended to go hand in hand with cruel, licentious and excessive behavior, since the caprices which were narrated concerning the idols were adopted as an excuse to imitate those types of behavior).


4) Women's rights were carefully maintained in Judaism. Israelite women could own property, could initiate court cases, could have their own servants, and could own fields and businesses; and the Torah specifies marital rights for women (Exodus 21:10).


5) Under Israelite law, everyone had recourse to the courts. A child, widow, wife, poor person, etc., could initiate legal action against any citizen to redress perpetrated harm. Compare this to those societies in which only mature, land-owning males had any legal status.


6) The Western diet is a reflection of much of the Judaic dietary law. With the exception of the pig, Western society does not eat species not contained in kosher law (Deuteronomy ch.14). Owls, mice, insects, rats, snakes, cats and dogs are not eaten by most Westerners and it is a direct result of Jewish culture.


7) Parents are responsible for teaching children (Deuteronomy ch.11). Illiteracy among Israelites, in every generation, was rare. Universal education in the Western world is taken for granted today, yet this is a recent development. In Judaism, however, it goes back for more than 3300 years. Judaism has always maintained that education is the highest goal of man in his pursuit of godliness. This tradition has now been passed on to Western culture.


8) Infants are to be cherished, protected and cared for, whether or not they turned out to be the gender you were hoping for. Compare this to societies in which unhealthy babies, or females, were killed.


9) Cruelty to animals is not acceptable.


10) Government is accountable to a higher authority. In other ancient societies, the monarch was all-powerful. Among the Israelites, however, the king was under the constant scrutiny of the Divinely-informed prophets, who didn't hesitate to castigate him publicly for any misstep in the sight of God. And, other than for the crime of rebellion, the king couldn't punish any citizen by his own decision. He was obligated by the Torah-procedures like everyone else (Talmud, Sanhedrin 19a).


11) A robber repays double to his victim (Exodus 22:3), or works it off. Cutting off the hands of a robber is a punishable crime. Debtors are not imprisoned or harmed. They are made to sell property and/or work to repay what they owe. Compare this to the Roman practice by which anyone could accuse a man of owing them money and the debtor could be killed (Roman "Twelve Tables of Law" code, 3:10).


12) Western jurisprudence in general is based in part upon Judaic Torah-observance. A quick look at the Ten Commandments (Exodus 20) and the laws that follow (Exodus ch.21-23) gives a summary of most modern law.


13) It is the responsibility of the community to support the poor (Deuteronomy ch.15), the widow, the orphan, and the stranger passing through (Exodus 22:20-21).


It is important to note that all of the above were instituted among the Hebrews (a.k.a. the Israelites) thousands of years earlier than in other nations. Here's one example: Infanticide was practiced among classical European nations until it was stopped by the influence of Judaism and its daughter-religions. Professor and former President of the American Historical Association, William L. Langer (in The History of Childhood): "Children, being physically unable to resist aggression, were the victims of forces over which they had no control, and they were abused in almost unimaginable ways."

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More about Judaism's impact

How did Jewish ideas spread?

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7y ago

There is an assumption inherent in the question that Israelites are actually important compared to citizens of other nations. If this is not really true, it may lead to answers that are self-serving, which is a shame. Development of the 7-day week is sometimes attributed to the ancient Hebrews, but it is more likely that this was invented by the Babylonians and, in any case, other ways of measuring the passage of time would be just as useful today. Much of Christian teaching on morality seems more aligned to the teachings of Greek philosophers than to pre-Christian Judaism.

The ancestors of today's Israelites were important because they provided the milieu and context for Christianity to develop and spread around the world, with Islam following suit some six centuries later. So, it was the development of new religions of world significance that made the ancient Jews important.

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12y ago

they weren't in particluar, they were just a civilization, they are only special if you make them special

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11y ago

It was the land promised to them by God (Genesis ch.12, ch.15 and elsewhere); and it is the location of the events and stories of the Hebrew Bible.

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Q: What is the importance of Israelites?
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Like the Greeks, they based their own alphabet on it.


Why were the israelites to perform the passover ritual?

The importance to the Israeli's on passover is that the Jews came out of Egypt from slavery.


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In order to demonstrate the importance of God's covenant with the Forefathers.


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What is the importantance of passover?

The importance of Passover is that all the Israelites had been slaves in Egypt for 400 years. In the story of Passover God sends 10 plagues down on the Pharaoh and the rest of Egypt, and after the last one, the death of the first born, the Israelites were finally set free.


What is the israelites exodus?

the departure of the israelites from egypt


What is the importance of mt sinai?

This is where Prophet Moses received the Bible or the ten commandants.


What did the israelites invent?

The Israelites invented the MAC 11.


Who are the israelites of today?

The Jewish people are descendants of the Israelites.


What inventions did the israelites make?

The Israelites make ugly


What did the Israelites communicate using?

The Israelites communicated using Ambassadors.


How many syllables in the word Israelites?

Israelites has three syllables.