enow.com Web Search

Search results

  1. Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
  2. Corpse uncleanness - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Corpse_uncleanness

    Corpse uncleanness (Hebrew: tum'at met) is a state of ritual uncleanness described in Jewish halachic law.It is the highest grade of uncleanness, or defilement, known to man and is contracted by having either directly or indirectly touched, carried or shifted a dead human body, [1] or after having entered a roofed house or chamber where the corpse of a Jew is lying (conveyed by overshadowing).

  3. Av HaTumah - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Av_HaTumah

    In the realm of tumah and taharah terminology, the term Av HaTumah ("father of uncleanness," or simply Av) is a rabbinic term for a person or object that is in a state of tumah (ritual impurity), second in severity only to corpse uncleanness.

  4. Midras uncleanness - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Midras_uncleanness

    Woman in niddah state standing on elevator rug using her full body weight, thereby rendering the rug a "midras tmeiah" (unpure midras) Midras uncleanness (Hebrew: טומאת מדרס) is one of the forms of ritual impurity in Judaism which can be transmitted by either an object or person. The term may be translated as pressure uncleanness. [1]

  5. Ritual purification - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ritual_purification

    Taking the bride to the bath house, Shalom Koboshvili, 1939. Male Wudu Facility at University of Toronto's Multifaith Centre.. Ritual purification is a ritual prescribed by a religion through which a person is considered to be freed of uncleanliness, especially prior to the worship of a deity, and ritual purity is a state of ritual cleanliness.

  6. Tumah and taharah - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tumah_and_taharah

    Tumat sheretz - the dead body of a swarming animal (sheretz) listed in Leviticus 11:29–30; Tumat nevelah - the body of a land animal which died without ritual slaughter; the body of a non-kosher land animal which died in any manner; a kosher bird which died without ritual slaughter receives this status in relation to its consumption but not ...

  7. Water of lustration - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Water_of_lustration

    The Hebrew Bible taught that any Israelite who touched a corpse, a Tumat HaMet (literally, "impurity of the dead"), was ritually unclean.The water was to be sprinkled on a person who had touched a corpse, on the third and seventh days after doing so, in order to make the person ritually clean again. [2]

  8. Ritual washing in Judaism - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ritual_washing_in_Judaism

    A silver washing cup used for netilat yadayim Ancient mikveh unearthed at Gamla. In Judaism, ritual washing, or ablution, takes two main forms. Tevilah (טְבִילָה) is a full body immersion in a mikveh, and netilat yadayim is the washing of the hands with a cup (see Handwashing in Judaism).

  9. Prohibition of Kohen defilement by the dead - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Prohibition_of_Kohen...

    A Kohen is forbidden to enter any house or enclosure ("ohel", tent) in which a dead body (or part thereof), may be found (Leviticus 10:6, Leviticus 21:1–5, Ezekiel 44:20, Ezekiel 44:25). Practical examples of these prohibitions include: not entering a cemetery or attending a funeral ; not being under the same roof (i.e. in a home or hospital ...