English to Portuguese Dictionary rabbi

rabbi

rabino
definition
noun
With my rabbi teaching me Torah and how to ask the big questions, it became harder and harder to travel and feel good about it.
a Jewish scholar or teacher, especially one who studies or teaches Jewish law.
translation of 'rabbi'
noun
rabino,
rabi
example
Most are too insecure to consult a 'rabbi' or join a religious community.
So before going ahead with any procedure, consult with a 'rabbi' well-versed in Talmud and Jewish law.
A few years later the 'rabbi' was studying and came across some money stuck in his book.
The interviewee began to study with a 'rabbi' and to consider conversion to Judaism.
A 'rabbi' differs from clergymen in other religions in a number of ways.
The day after my father died, his 'rabbi' came to talk to the family in preparation for the funeral.
Perhaps his father served as a community 'rabbi' and he naturally chose the same calling.
They did not take the time to find out which pastor or 'rabbi' was a leader in an area and which congregations people attended.
My husband waited for me in the anteroom while I entered the 'rabbi' 's study to speak with him privately.
With my 'rabbi' teaching me Torah and how to ask the big questions, it became harder and harder to travel and feel good about it.
The 'rabbi' had taught that the only causal force in the universe is God.
They do this through courses, or by individual study with a 'rabbi' .
The ideal 'rabbi' is a Torah scholar who guides the members of the Jewish community he serves.
He gave us the name of a 'rabbi' in New York who was an acknowledged expert in these questions.
Does it matter if one of her professors, himself a 'rabbi' , teaches with an eye toward pastoral work?
When a community accepts a 'rabbi' as their religious leader, his decisions are binding in all cases.
Talk with your 'rabbi' , priest, pastor or other spiritual leader about resources.
Every now and then the loudspeakers burst into life and one of the 'rabbis' or the religious leaders inside relays a message to those outside to tell them to keep up the fight, to keep being strong.
There are, the report said, 'rabbis' and imams in Jewish and Muslim neighborhoods.
Jewish 'rabbis' and Islamic imams derive their authority from their mastery of a specific set of religious legal texts and the application of those texts to everyday life.
Until the late nineteenth century, with few rabbis to offer spiritual leadership, the 'rabbinate' in England resolved questions of Jewish law.
After 1878 a chief 'rabbinate' was created, headed by a chief rabbi.
The Oral Torah came with the implicit threat of karet-mess with the 'rabbis' and you will be cut off - and established a scholar caste of educated men.
Other factors may also make the 'rabbinate' attractive, including the esteem in which Jewish congregations hold their rabbis and the freedom, even encouragement, rabbis have to be active in civic and cultural activities.
If only all priests and mullahs and 'rabbis' exercised the same responsibility and rigour in their pronouncements.
Those 'rabbis' , priests, imams, gurus and other religious leaders have had it good too long.
The text of the Gemara is quoting the 'rabbis' who lived from about 200 CE to about 500 CE.
Since the Middle Ages, 'rabbis' served as spiritual leaders of communities.
It is regarded as a good thing by just about every Jew that there are Talmudic scholars and 'rabbis' .
The argument is effectively advocating locking up priests, 'rabbis' and imams for doing nothing more than professing their beliefs.
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