Lots of those. In more or less the order of most traditional to least traditional, here are some: Modern Orthodox Judaism Masorti (Traditional) Judaism Conservative Judaism Reform Judaism Liberal Judaism Reconstructionist Judaism Renewal Judaism Humanistic Judaism
Reform Judaism is the most lenient branch of Judaism, no matter where you live.
Institute of Traditional Judaism was created in 1990.
Orthodox Judaism.
Orthodox.
the orthodox judaism Actually the previous answer is not true. Orthodox Judaism as we know it today developed in Europe within the last 150 years. Pre Modern Judaism looked a lot different, and was much less unified.
Orthodox Judaism follows the historical and traditional ritual beliefs of Judaism
reform judaism
Most Jews do, yes. The majority of branches of Judaism accept gay people and recognize same-sex-marriage, including:ReformReconstructionistRenewalLiberalProgressiveHumanisticConservativeTraditional ReformSome Masorti congregations (not all)In fact, the only branch of Judaism that says being gay is sinful is the Orthodox branch, and even then, most Orthodox Jews believe that violating the Sabbath is a worse sin.
The major modern Jewish sects are: Orthodox Judaism, the most traditional, which attempts to follow the Torah explicitly; Reform Judaism, the most liberal, containing 42 percent of American Jews; Conservative Judaism, between Orthodox and Reform, based on the teachings of Zacharias Frankel; and Hasidic Judaism, which promotes internal mysticism.
Yes. Catholicism is a major branch of Christianity. Christianity and Judaism are two different religions.
Yes