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  2. Rabbi trust - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Rabbi_trust

    An example of a rabbi trust applying where an employee receives compensation the taxation of which is deferrable is a nonqualified deferred compensation plan.. A rabbi trust may be applicable when one business purchases another business but wants to set aside part of the purchase price and defer payment as well as taxability to the payee upon the satisfaction of conditions to which both ...

  3. Rabbinic authority - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Rabbinic_authority

    In practical terms, Jewish communities and individuals commonly proffer allegiance to the authority of the rabbi they have chosen. Such a rabbinic leader is sometimes called the "Master of the Locale" (mara d'atra). [12] Jewish individuals may acknowledge the authority of other rabbis but will defer legal decisions to the mara d'atra. [13]

  4. Judeo-Christian ethics - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Judeo-Christian_ethics

    In this effort, precursors of the National Conference of Christians and Jews created teams consisting of a priest, a rabbi, and a minister, to run programs across the country, and fashion a more pluralistic America, no longer defined as a Christian land, but "one nurtured by three ennobling traditions: Protestantism, Catholicism and Judaism. ...

  5. Strictly Legal: Rabbi is limited purpose public figure - AOL

    www.aol.com/news/strictly-legal-rabbi-limited...

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  6. Re Tuck's Settlement Trusts - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Re_Tuck's_Settlement_Trusts

    Lord Denning MR held the trust was valid, and the Chief Rabbi could resolve any uncertainty. The trust, however, would have been valid even if the Chief Rabbi had not been identified. Sir Adolph Tuck's family. Sir Adolph himself died on 3 July 1926, leaving two sons and three daughters. He was succeeded by his eldest son, Sir William Tuck.

  7. Sephardic law and customs - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sephardic_law_and_customs

    The Polish rabbi Moses Isserles, while acknowledging the merits of the Shulḥan Arukh, felt that it did not do justice to Ashkenazi scholarship and practice. He accordingly composed a series of glosses setting out all respects in which Ashkenazi practice differs, and the composite work is today accepted as the leading work on Ashkenazi halakha.

  8. Conservative Judaism - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Conservative_Judaism

    Despite the centralization of legal deliberation on matters of Jewish law in the CJLS individual synagogues and communities must, in the end, depend on their local decision-makers. The rabbi in his or her or their community is regarded as the Mara D'Atra, or the local Halakhic decisor. Rabbis trained in the reading practices of Conservative ...

  9. Oraynu Congregation for Humanistic Judaism - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Oraynu_Congregation_for...

    Rabbi Karen Levy speaks about what Oraynu stands for “Secular Humanistic Judaism is the smallest movement in the Jewish world today. Yet, our ethical principles -- secularism, equality, democracy, freedom, Jewish rationalism, creativity and social responsibility -- have had as great an impact in the Jewish world as any other set of Jewish ...