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Employees of all faiths might break the law at work.
As a quintessential, or perfect and typical, Jew, Jesus would have accepted without question the Mosaic law, including the law that forbade work on the Sabbath. By failing to observe these laws, Jesus could not have been the quintessential Jew.
By Jewish law, no.
yes it is a law,everybody must have a 20 hours break and 4 hours to work Above answer is false. No national law requires specific breaks. Some state laws do.
Jewish law specifies that a Jew is a person who was born to a Jewish woman or who has converted to Judaism as per Jewish law.
my family are not jews so they would have not been affected by this, but if they was a jew it would have been tragic for them.
It would not be a valid contract. A contract to break the law is illegal.
No, it wasn't.
Animals do not know what the law is, so they may, by mistake, break it. Most animals have no intent to break the law or do wrong, so I would say the answer is no.
According to Jewish law, a person who is born to a Jewish woman or who converts according to Jewish law, is a Jew. If your father is Jewish but your mother is not, Jewish law does not consider you to be a Jew unless you convert. The reform movement accepts children born to a Jewish man and non-Jewish woman as Jews if they are raised as Jews.
No, that is a forbidden relationship according to Jewish law.
If you break the law, you will be a criminal in the particular law-enforcement and will be penalized.
If someone broke the law in Ancient Greece, most of the time, the punishment would be death. If a slave were to break the law, then the punishment would probably be death. But, if someone like a a Queen, or King, or someone with a very important job, they would probably be let off with a warning.