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・ Saber Mirghorbani
・ Saber Nakdali
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・ Sabbas of Storozhi
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・ Sabbas the Goth
・ Sabbas the Sanctified
・ Sabbat (disambiguation)
・ Sabbat (English band)
・ Sabbat (Japanese band)
・ Sabbat (rock opera)
・ Sabbatai Zevi
・ Sabbatarianism
・ Sabbatarianism (disambiguation)
Sabbateans
・ Sabbath
・ Sabbath (disambiguation)
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・ Sabbath Bloody Sabbath
・ Sabbath Bloody Sabbath (song)
・ Sabbath Day House (Billerica, Massachusetts)
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・ Sabbath Dubs
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・ Sabbath in Christianity
・ Sabbath in Paradise
・ Sabbath in seventh-day churches
・ Sabbath mode


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Sabbateans : ウィキペディア英語版
Sabbateans

Sabbateans (Sabbatians) is a complex general term that refers to a variety of followers of, disciples and believers in Sabbatai Zevi (1626–1676), a Jewish rabbi who was proclaimed to be the Jewish Messiah in 1665 by Nathan of Gaza. Vast numbers of Jews in the Jewish diaspora accepted his claims, even after he became a Jewish apostate with his conversion to Islam in 1666. Sabbatai Zevi's followers, both during his "Messiahship" and after his conversion to Islam, are known as Sabbateans. They can be grouped into three: "Maaminim" (believers), "Haberim" (associates), and "Ba'ale Milhamah" (warriors).
==Sabbateans who remained Jews==


In Jewish history during the two centuries after Zevi's death in 1676, many Jews (including some Jewish scholars) who were horrified by Zevi's personal conversion to Islam nevertheless clung to the belief that Zevi was still the true Jewish Messiah. They constituted the largest number of Sabbateans during the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries. They were vigorously opposed and were eventually forced into hiding their beliefs by the methodical opposition of almost all the leading rabbis who were determined to root out Zevi's kabbalistically derived anti-traditional teachings and his influence upon the Jewish masses. By the nineteenth century Jewish Sabbateans had been reduced to small groups of hidden followers who feared being discovered for their beliefs that were deemed to be entirely heretical and antithetical to classical Judaism (particularly since the head of the movement, Zevi, had become an openly practicing Muslim for the last ten years of his life until the time of his mysterious and premature death at the age of fifty.)
When the founder of Hasidic Judaism, Rabbi Yisrael ben Eliezer, the Baal Shem Tov (1698–1760), emerged and made his teachings and influence felt through his own disciples, many rabbinical opponents of Hasidism were suspicious that he and his Hasidim were a class of Sabbateans. Some historians have written that many Sabbateans became followers of Hasidism, which unlike Zevi's movement, followed Halakha (Jewish law) and eventually opponents of Hasidism were convinced that the Hasidim were not Sabbateans.

抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
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