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The first Christians were, like Jesus, Jews resident
in Israel who worshiped on occasion in the Temple in
Jerusalem and weekly in local synagogues. Temple worship
was a ritual involving sacrifice, occasionally including
the sacrifice of animals in atonement for sin, offered
to Yahweh until Jesus became the final sacrificial offering
on Calvary. The New Testament includes many references
to Jesus visiting the Temple, the first time as an infant
with his parents.
The early history of the synagogue is obscure, but
it seems to be an institution developed for public Jewish
worship during the Babylonian captivity when the Jews
did not have access to the Jerusalem Temple for ritual
sacrifice. Instead, they developed a daily and weekly
service of readings from the Torah or the prophets followed
by commentary. This could be carried out in a house
if the attendance was small enough, and in many towns
of the Diaspora that was the case. In others, more elaborate
architectural settings developed, sometimes by converting
a house and sometimes by converting a previously public
building. The minimum requirements seem to have been
a meeting room with adequate seating, a case for the
Torah scrolls, and a raised platform for the reader
and preacher.
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