Saturday
Jews worship in synagogues. The weekly Jewish day of worship is Shabbat (Saturday; beginning at Friday sundown). Shorter prayer services are held every day of the week.See also:Jewish worship
Jewish people worship God...every day, not just during Hanukkah.
Religious Jews pray 3 times a day and 4 times on Saturday.
Jews worship God in daily prayer-services in synagogue, every day of the year. The Jewish Shabbat, during which there are longer prayer-services, is on Saturday, starting at sundown on Friday night, until Saturday after twilight.
Jews worship God in synagogues, every day of the year.
Jews pray 3 times a day.
The Jewish day of worship is Friday evening to Saturday evening. This is known as the Sabbath. Jews do perform the daily prayers on Sunday, just as they do on other weekdays. The longer services and holy day is the Sabbath.
Although Saturday is the 'holy' day of the jews, in the early Church the first Jewish Christians began to worship on Sundays instead of the seventh day of the week (Saturday - the 'Sabbath') because it was on a Sunday that Jesus rose from death. This was considered such an important day that Sundays were chosen instead as a day of worship - a tradition that carries on to this day.
Saturday is Shabbat for Jews, which starts at sundown every Friday. There are services held Saturday morning at Jewish temples for Shabbat. It's considered God's day of rest. Saturday is the seventh day of the week, and when God was creating the world, he rested on the seventh day.
Every week, pious Jews observe the Jewish holy day of Sabbath and follow its commandments and practices. The Sabbath begins at sunset on Friday and ends at sunset on Saturday.
A holy day for rest and worship is Friday for the Muslims, Saturday for the Jews and Sunday for the Christians
Religiously observant Jews worship 3 times a day, every day and four times on Saturday. The day of rest is called Shabbat and starts sundown Friday and ends sundown Saturday.