With a silver pointer called a Yad. It is typically about the size of a pencil or slightly bigger.
a sentence with the word Torah in is: the Torah is the Jewish book.Answer:The Torah contains the words of God (Exodus 24:12).
It's a commandment from the Torah: "And you shall inscribe these words upon the doorposts of your house and upon your gates."
Siddur is the Jewish Prayer Book Dinkadoesn't sound like anything Jewish to me, maybe be Yiddish for "Thanks" Lein is Yiddish and means Reading from the Torah scroll
Shlom ha-bayit (peace in the household) makes a Jewish home sacred.Answer:While the above answer is certainly correct, keeping the mitzvot (Torah) is also required.
No. The blessing for Torah study is: Baruch atah Adonai, Eloheinu Melech haolam, asher kid'shanu b'mitzvotav v'tzivanu la'asok b'divrei Torah. Blessed are You, Adonai our G-d, Ruler of the World, who has sanctified us with your commandments and commanded us to engage in the words of Torah.
If you're talking about TaNaCH, it was written by various prophets and kings. According to Jewish tradition, God was also a coauthor.
A love poem from someone you care for can be a "sacred text". The Declaration of Independence could also be "sacred". All people, all religions, all cultures have a group of words (written or spoken) that are "sacred" and hold a special place of veneration.
"La'ahSOKE b'divRAY toRAH" = "to be involved/occupied with words of Torah"
Hitler stated these words, "The Final Solution." for people of Jewish faith, and others
This is probably an opinion question, so here is my opinion :) In my opinion, I think that Israel and the Jewish people have contributed greatly to the "religions" that exist today. first Judaism, and then Christianity through Jesus (who was a Jew). they both have been around for thousands of years, they contributed the Torah, and the Bible, which is comprised of the Torah and the letters of the apostles and the words of Jesus. :)
God, who created everything.
There is no "original version" of the Torah. The Torah which we possess today has not changed. It contains 79,976 words, which were written by Moses (Deuteronomy 31:24) at God's dictation (Exodus 24:12). The kabbalah has no further (or different) information on this point. The Torah has been vindicated hundreds of times by actual archaeological finds, while theories which claim change have produced zero physical evidence.