In the Biblical Age, Ancient Israel had Priests called Kohanim (literally Hebrew for "Priests") who oversaw the sacrifices in the Great Temple and passed this position to their children. The Kohanim still exist today as the descendants of those Priests and commonly have the last name of Cohen or some variant to indicate their ancestry.
Kohanim, however, do not retain a strong religious function in Modern Judaism. The preacher and Jewish scholar have merged into the "Rabbi" which means "Teacher". These Rabbis run synagogues, interpret Jewish law, and generally guide the religion's various movements.
According to Jewish law, a Kohen can't marry a convert to Judaism.
The leader of Judaism is the patriarch of the family of priests, known in Hebrew as the Kohen Gadol or "high priest". The family are responsible for all services, operations, and activities in the Holy Temple. There has been no Holy Temple, no functioning family of priests, no Kohen Gadol, and no single leader of Judaism, for roughly 1,940 years.
the word Judaism comes from the name Judah
"Rabbi" is the term for a Jewish scholar or teacher, and by extension a religious leader.Any descendant of Aaron is a Kohen (priest) in Judaism (Exodus ch.28-9). Today they number in the tens or hundreds of thousands.
The leader of Judaism is the Kohen Gadol (Hebrew, roughly translates as "high priest"). He is the patriarch of the family of priests who conduct services in the Holy Temple. As of now, there has been no temple, no family of priests, no high priest, and no leader of Judaism for roughly 1,940 years.
Joseph ha-Kohen was born in 1496.
Shabbatai ha-Kohen was born in 1621.
Shabbatai ha-Kohen died in 1662.
the word 'priest' is ultimately from greek via latin presbyter, the term for 'elder'
Joseph Kohen-Zedek has written: 'Neveh tehilah'
Jane Kohen Winter has written: 'USA (south)'
Yonah Kohen-Tsabari has written: 'Lo mibe-reshit'