PHARISEE - vertaling naar arabisch
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PHARISEE - vertaling naar arabisch

JEWISH SOCIAL MOVEMENT AND SCHOOL OF THOUGHT
Pharisee; Phariseeism; Pharisaic; Pharisaism; The Pharisees; פרושים; Parush; A Kingdom of Priests; Pharisees and Christianity
  • ''Jesus at the house of the Pharisean'', by [[Jacopo Tintoretto]], Escorial
  • John Hyrcanus from [[Guillaume Rouillé]]'s ''[[Promptuarii Iconum Insigniorum]]''.
  • [[Gustave Doré]]: Dispute between Jesus and the Pharisees
  • ''Pompey in the Temple of Jerusalem'', by [[Jean Fouquet]]

PHARISEE         

ألاسم

فَرِيسِيّ

Pharisee         
اسْم : المرائي . المتظاهر بالتقوى
Pharisee         
فريسي منافق ، مراء يتظاهر بالتقوي

Definitie

Pharisee
(Pharisees)
The Pharisees were a group of Jews, mentioned in the New Testament of the Bible, who believed in strictly obeying the laws of Judaism.
N-PROPER-PLURAL

Wikipedia

Pharisees

The Pharisees (; Hebrew: פְּרוּשִׁים, romanized: Pərūšīm) were a Jewish social movement and a school of thought in the Levant during the time of Second Temple Judaism. After the destruction of the Second Temple in 70 CE, Pharisaic beliefs became the foundational, liturgical, and ritualistic basis for Rabbinic Judaism.

Conflicts between Pharisees and Sadducees took place in the context of much broader and longstanding social and religious conflicts among Jews, made worse by the Roman conquest. One conflict was cultural, between those who favored Hellenization (the Sadducees) and those who resisted it (the Pharisees). Another was juridical-religious, between those who emphasized the importance of the Temple with its rites and services, and those who emphasized the importance of other Mosaic Laws. A specifically religious point of conflict involved different interpretations of the Torah and how to apply it to current Jewish life, with Sadducees recognizing only the Written Torah and rejecting Prophets, Writings, and doctrines such as the Oral Torah and the resurrection of the dead.

Josephus (c. 37 – c. 100 CE), believed by many historians to have been a Pharisee, estimated the total Pharisee population before the fall of the Second Temple to be around 6,000. He claimed that the Pharisees’ influence over the common people was so great that anything they said against the king or the high priest was believed, apparently in contrast to the more elite Sadducees, who were the upper class. Pharisees claimed Mosaic authority for their interpretation of Jewish religious law, while Sadducees represented the authority of the priestly privileges and prerogatives established since the days of Solomon, when Zadok, their ancestor, officiated as high priest.

Pharisees are notable by the numerous references to them in the New Testament. While the writers record hostilities between the Pharisees and Jesus, they also reference Pharisees who believed in him, including Nicodemus, who said it is known that Jesus is a teacher sent from God, also Joseph of Arimathea, who was a disciple, and an unknown number of "those of the party of the Pharisees who believed", among them the Apostle Paul – a student of Gamaliel, who warned the Sanhedrin that opposing the disciples of Jesus could prove to be tantamount to opposing God – even after becoming an apostle of Jesus.

Voorbeelden uit tekstcorpus voor PHARISEE
1. He shopped her not to right a wrong but for the simple pleasure in shopping: and to admire his own smug Pharisee golfers virtue.
2. He told a parable about two men who went to the temple to pray – one was a Pharisee, the other a publican, or tax collector.
3. The Pharisee prayed "God, I thank thee, that I am not as other men are, extortioners, unjust, adulterers, or even as this publican.
4. By Simon Barnes GOLF IS THE GAME of the Pharisee: the game of the man who thanks God that he is not as other men are.
5. No doubt every "settler rabbi" issuing edicts approving the killing of Arab civilians or blessing a cruise missile bound for a Beirut apartment complex believes he is a worthy heir of Rabbi Hillel, the great Pharisee who, when challenged to reduce God‘s law to a single statement, replied: "What is hateful to yourself, do not do to others.