ABSTRACT

This chapter suggest definitions of religious belief system. Simone Weil tells that any effort made by human beings to pronounce a word about the supernatural is destined to be thwarted every time it aims to provide a definitive, closed, and normalized answer on the topic. It is common knowledge, for instance, that there are different ways to approach a reading of the various religions' Holy Scriptures. In the Talmudic schools, or yeshivot, the texts include the various commentaries on the Torah that the rabbis have made with time. The Talmud is a set of documents that have been produced at different and not always easy times and conditions for the Jewish communities. In rabbinical Judaism, what is written in the Talmud has traditionally been considered as divinely inspired, and the orthodox and ultra-orthodox Jews of today loudly claim that the Talmud is entirely inspired and consequently an unquestionable source of norms and certainties of their faith.