rabbinical in English

adjective
1
of or relating to rabbis or to Jewish law or teachings.
adjective

Use "rabbinical" in a sentence

Below are sample sentences containing the word "rabbinical" from the English Dictionary. We can refer to these sentence patterns for sentences in case of finding sample sentences with the word "rabbinical", or refer to the context using the word "rabbinical" in the English Dictionary.

1. Rabbinical Approbations Rabbi Chaim Eisen is a

2. Rabbinical Approbations Rabbi Chaim Eisen is a rare gem

3. He received his rabbinic ordination at the Rabbinical College of Canada in 1969.

4. Thankfully this fate has not Befallen a splendid exponent of rabbinical humour, Rabbi Lionel Blue

5. According to rabbinical sources, 13 treasury chests were placed around the walls of that court.

6. Thankfully this fate has not befallen a splendid exponent of rabbinical humour, Rabbi Lionel Blue.

7. In Judaism both the Bible and rabbinical thought reflect the belief that God's chosen Explanation of Atonements

8. 2 When I was studying at the rabbinical seminary, I had borrowed a copy of Pan Tadeusz from her.

9. These ideas were recorded in the Talmud and in thousands of rabbinical decisions and writings about the Talmud.

10. 17 The Jewish Theological Seminary first began admitting openly LGBT students to its rabbinical and cantorial programs in 200

11. Magneto Amyctic, yours rabbinical xyzal online portugal Chorioptes, overreduced multiengined KS pentamidine concerning a cool way to improve those intensimeter

12. Rabbinical literature interpreted Beelzebub as “King of Dunghill”; other interpretations have the title as “King (or) Lord of filth,” hence “Lord of Flies”.

13. HAggadah is sometimes confused with Aggadah, which is the name of a collection of texts from the Talmud or other rabbinical literature

14. An esoteric theosophy of rabbinical origin based on the Hebrew scriptures and developed between the 7th and 18th centuries Synonyms: Cabala, Cabbala, Kabala, Kabbala, Kabbalah, Qabbala, Qabbalah; Cabbalah noun

15. An esoteric theosophy of rabbinical origin based on the Hebrew scriptures and developed between the 7th and 18th centuries Synonyms: Cabala, Cabbala, Kabala, Kabbala, Kabbalah, Qabbala, Qabbalah; Cabbalah noun

16. ‘The same applies to Protestant and Orthodox Christian leaders, the Dalai Lama, the Muslim Ayatollahs, Jewish rabbinical councils, and all other modern-day religious patriarchs.’ ‘Najaf is the seat of the Shi'ite's Ayatollahs, or spiritual leaders.’

17. Modern Jews cling to the rabbinical view that the lamb was to be slaughtered near the end of Nisan 14, between the time when the sun began to descend (about three o’clock) and the actual sunset.

18. It was at the rabbinical school in Zhytomyr that he was given a copy of the New Testament in Hebrew which had been produced by the London Society for Promoting Christianity amongst the Jews.

19. â In Rabbinical and Apocryphal Literature: In the Ḥasidic circles from which the apocalyptic literature emanated and where all Angelologic and demonologic lore was faithfully preserved, Belial held a very prominent position, being identified altogether with Satan.

20. Akiba and Elisha ben Abuyah (Aher) seems clear, in that they are Antitypes in Rabbinical literature; Akiba is the quintessential sage of Talmudic tradition, whereas Elisha ben Abuyah is the quintessential heretic who abandoned Judaism to pursue Greek philosophy later in life.

21. A curious fact, characteristic of the varied mental gifts of the Polish Jews, is that Moses Isserles, called Rama (), the greatest rabbinical authority of Poland in the sixteenth century, imitated the Provençal allegorists, some two hundred years after them, by Allegorizing the Book of Esther