Nice clothes. Anything modest and tasteful is likely to be okay.
If you are attending Friday Shabbot business attire is good or wear something similar to what you would wear to church on Sunday. A hat can also be worn if that is what you are use to.
The opposite of Jewish (i.e. non-Jewish) would be Gentile.
The entire synagogue is a worship area, but Jewish people generally sit in the chairs.
Anne was a Jewish woman and housewife. She was not a Christian because she was dead before Christianity began. She would have been active in her local synagogue.
Some orthodox men will not touch a woman because they do not know if she is menstruating or not. If they were to touch a menstruating woman, they would have to undergo a ritual before they could engage in certain activities, such as public prayer in a synagogue. non-orthodox Jews do not follow this law.
A kippah, tzizit and if 13+ tephilin in AM,and Talit in AM if Sephardi
Contact the nearest synagogue and explain your interest.
Paul's' typical procedure was to enter a new town, seek out a synagogue, and share the Gospel on the sabbath day. Usually Paul's message caused a division in the synagogue, and Paul and his companions would seek a Gentile audience.
The distinction between Jew and Gentile was relevant because the earliest Christians were born Jewish. The main issue between Jewish-born Christians and Gentiles was a question of whether a Gentile would need to accept all of the Jewish Laws and Precepts before accepting Christ. This would put a major impediment on Peter and Paul's attempts to get Greeks (who were not at all interested in circumcision, eating kosher, or ceasing work on the Sabbath) saved by Jesus. However, they had to contend with the fact that the Law of the Old Testament was an eternal law for the Jewish people. The understanding that they came to was that the Jewish-born Christians (and their descendants) were still bound by the Old Testament Law, but the Gentiles were not intended by that original covenant and therefore only the New Testament applied to them. As a result, this created two streams of Christianity, Jewish-born Christians and the new majority of Gentile Christians within the same church. Eventually, when the Jewish-born Christians became such a small minority that most of them had married Gentile Christians, they stopped following the Jewish Laws and simply merged themselves into the Gentile Christian mentality that the Old Testament Law no longer applied to them.
Witty AnswerMy guess would be the Jewish member of the engaged couple.Serious AnswerSecular Jews are typically the least likely to object to Jewish-Gentile marriages followed by Reform and Reconstructionist Jews. Generally, the more religious a Jew is, the more strongly he will object to intermarriage.
Torah-scrolls are kept in synagogues (Jewish houses of prayer), in the Holy Ark, which is a special cabinet in the front of the synagogue. The scrolls are taken out when they are to be read from in public, which is done several times each week.
Judaism is a congregationalist religion, so there is no central Jewish Synagogue that would be similar to the Vatican for Catholics.
No, i would think not because on Google it never says praying or going synagogue.