Jews pray to thank God for what He created and gave us and show our appreciation. We pray for the well being of others. Please see the related link for a wonderful article explaining why we daven (pray).
Jews pray to God
Jews pray to God.
Jews pray to God.
Christians and Jews believe that there is one true God. Christians and Jews pray to the same God.
Jews pray only to God, not to any person or prophet. Muslims also pray only to God and definitely do not pray to their prophet!
Jewish people only pray to G-d.
Yes. Jews pray to God in synagogues. Christians pray in churches.
When we pray for rain, we are asking for the spirit of God to fall on us like rain.
Only God is worshiped by Jews.Jews have immense respect for Abraham and consider him a prophet because he abandoned the polytheism of the Chaldeans in Mesopotamia and followed God's command without question and become the progenitor of numerous peoples: Israelites, Edomites, Ishmaelites/Arabs. But he is not worshiped.Absolutely not. Judaism is a monotheistic belief system in which God is the only one to be worshiped. Worshiping mortals or any physical objects is considered idolatry.
Jews pray to God, or as we call God, Adonai. We do not call God Yahweh. Jews can pray by themselves, but we also pray in community in the synagogue. We are commanded to pray three times a day. Yahweh, by the way, is the way some people pronounce the Hebrew letters, yud, hey, vav, hey as the name of God is written in the Torah, and which Jews pronounce Adonai. The word yud, hey, vav, hey is actually a form of the Hebrew verb to be. We do not know the name of God, and therefore do not believe we are allowed to pronounce it. Orthodox Jews refer to God as HaShem, which is translated as "The Name."
Yes. Praying directly to God, with no intermediary, is one of the fundamental Jewish beliefs and practices.
Every Jew may pray directly to G-d. No intermediary necessary.