Both. Neither of the two is enough by itself.
It depends on the Jewish movement. Every movement of Torah Judaism (Secular Orthodoxy, Modern Orthodoxy, Hasidim, Haredim, Ultra-Orthodoxy, etc.) would not allow a non-Jew to ascend to the bima. In Liberal Judaism, it is likely that Reform and Reconstructionist Judaism would allow a non-Jew to ascend to the bima. With Conservative and Conservadox Judaism, it is much more contingent on the congregation than any overriding principle.
There are not three sects of Judaism. It is just that three movements of Judaism: Orthodoxy, Conservatism, and Reform are the most dominant movements in Judaism. The others merely command fewer followers.
Judaism is not limited to race and is open to all.
Christine C. Shepardson has written: 'Anti-Judaism and Christian orthodoxy' -- subject(s): Christianity and antisemitism, History and criticism, History of doctrines, Hymns, Syriac, Judaism (Christian theology), Syriac Hymns
Your question depends on the level of Judaic orthodoxy you intend. For example, in some of the stricter interpretations of Judaism, women are currently unable to become pulpit rabbis. Whilst I cannot offer a percentage, the number of female rabbis is increasing worldwide.
ano ang aristotelian orthodoxy?
eastern orthodoxy was a church tranditions descending from the eastern roman empire, the leaders of the eastern orthodoxy were roma and the patriarch
Orthodoxy is the noun form of orthodox.
Greek orthodoxy- It comprises of the people who preserve the ancient greek culture. It has the highest number of people. Roman and greek catholism A few will be found following protestanism Then we have Islam and a minority with judaism
Orthodoxy is the teaching of some specific religious sect; heresy would be anything that disagrees with that orthodoxy. Of course, since different people belong to different religious sects, one man's orthodoxy is another man's heresy. It is a highly subjective judgment.
Neo is new. Paleo is old or ancient.