The teaching of BIBLICAL STUDIES aims at introducing the theological
system and history of the Jews of the Biblical age. The subject focuses on the comparative
analysis of the events of world and local history and on the detailed grammatical analysis
of the millennia-old text. It
consists of the following parts:
BIBLICAL
STUDIES |
Introduction to the
Scriptures |
| Pentateuchus |
| Prophetae Priores |
| Prophetae Posteriores I |
| Prophetae Posteriores II |
| Hagiographia |
| Scriptures and
Septuagiutha |
| Scriptures and Vulgata |
|

The two units of the TALMUDIC STUDIES subject group, the
Talmud Statariae and the Talmud Cursoriae , constitute the
basic material of our teaching, in the course of the explanatory as well as the
consolidatory section of the training. Following a tradition of many centuries, one of our
primary objectives is to prepare our graduates for the independent, in depth examination
and interpretation of the text, as well as for the effective and thought-provoking
teaching of the Scriptures to subsequent generations. The subject group consists of the
following parts:
TALMUDIC
STUDIES |
| Introduction to the oral
and written Law |
| Introduction to the
Talmud-Mishna |
| Talmud Statariae I |
| Talmud Statariae II |
| Talmud Cursoriae I |
| Talmud Cursoriae II |
| Literature of the Aggada
in the Talmud |
|

The teaching of RABBINICAL STUDIES endeavors
to qualify our students for the declaration of authoritative precedents. In addition,
besides the interpretative literature, it aims at introducing them to the following four
literary genres:
-decrees
-law-books
-Responsa literature
-ethical writings
The knowledge of these interrelations
fosters the making and the actualization of logical decisions. The Halachaic decision of
today clearly infers the ability to view retrospectively and to study the sources in
Hebrew. The subject group consists of the following parts:
RABBINICAL
STUDIES |
| Introduction to Midrash
Literature |
| Halacha |
| Liturgy - Sulchan Aruch
I. |
| Liturgy - Sulchan Aruch
II |
| Responsa literature -
Midrash |
|

The aim of the HISTORY AND LITERATURE subject group is to acquaint the
students with the 3500 years old secular history of the Jews (the people, the nation, the
state and the religious community) in alternating periods and geographical scenes. The
courses touch in detail upon the emergence and evolution of the Hungarian line of the Jews
from the beginnings to the present. The emphasis is laid on continuity, on the unbroken
and living history that marked, both actively and passively, the living conditions of one
of the world’s oldest cultures. The subject group consists of the following parts:
HISTORY
AND LITERATURE |
| Universal Jewish History |
| The History of Hungarian
Jews |
| Shoah |
| The History of Zionism |
| Israel and the Diaspora
1948-1998 |
| The Literary forms of the
books of the Scriptures |
| The Ideals, motives,
stories and forms of the Scriptures in World Literature |
| The Effect of the
Scriptures on Contemporary Literature |
| Rasi Commentarium |
|

The RABBINICAL PASTORAL PRACTICE subject group focuses on the
theoretical teaching of the rabbinical profession, its aim is to prepare the students for
the rabbinical service. As the religious and spiritual leader of the community, the rabbi
manages religious worship in the synagogue and also directs the community’s religious
ceremonies outside it. He plays an essential role in the educational life of his
community; as a pedagogue he teaches in all areas of life. His personal genuineness must
be exemplary. The course is based organically on Biblical,
Talmudic and Rabbinical literature, and on the theoretical
subjects taught within the History and Literature subject group. The teacher builds his
subject on this theoretical grounding.
RABBINICAL
PASTORAL PRACTICE |
| Pastoral Psychology |
| The Olam hatfilah. The aim of the World
of Prayer course |
| Prayer Translation Course |
| Homiletics Rhetoric |
|

The RELIGIOUS PHILOSOPHY subject group during its course of 12
semesters, touches upon 13 philosophical disciplines. Its aim is to establish a full and
comprehensive picture of all that, within Jewish religion, belongs to the domain of philosophia perennis. The subject attempts at mobilizing the full
repository of philosophy, from its conceptual apparatus to its wide range of disciplines,
and from explanation of individual problems to the elucidation of the universal cultural
historical background.
The various dimensions of the subject attempt to cover not only the large scope of
narrowly conceived philosophy. They also reflect, in disciplinary terms, on philosophical
problems originating in Jewish religion. Religious Philosophy focuses on a wide range of
philosophical issues, but it also examines such immutably important problems (not only for
the Jewish seminarist, but for the everyday Jew) such as the Shoah, the Galut, modern
Zionism, Jewish religious trends, the Tanach and computerization, the Christian-Jewish
dialogue, anti-Judaism, or anti-Semitism. The subject group consists of the following
parts:
| Religious
Philosophy |
| Ethics and Moral
Philosophy |
| The History of Philosophy |
| Israel’s philosophy |
| Jewish problems in
philosophy |
|

The teaching of subjects embracing LANGUAGE STUDIES aims at
grounding the subsequent generation of rabbis with the essential knowledge of Hebrew and
the international language of English.
The Hebrew Language
and Style Practice course. The subject endeavors to acquaint our students
with modern Hebrew.
The Biblical Grammar course. The subject aims at introducing
our students to the basic rules of Hebrew grammar, teaching them to read the Scriptures,
and analyze the texts grammatically by the use of Latin terminology.
The Aramean grammar course. Its aim is to introduce students
to the rules of Aramean grammar and to compare the Aramean translation of Onkelos with the
original Hebrew text.
English Language course. The teaching of English at
the Seminary aims at acquainting the students with a conversational level of English.
| LANGUAGE
STUDIES |
Hebrew Language and Style Practice |
| Biblical
Grammar course |
| Aramean
grammar |
| English
Language |
|

The aim of the PRACTICAL SUBJECT GROUP is
to adapt theoretical knowledge to practice, and to acquire skill and experience in all the
fields of religious practice. These include pastoral activity in the synagogue within the
community or in the private sphere of the people in the congregation, the reading of the
Torah during weekdays, the Sabbath and during the period of High Holidays (Rosh Hashana,
Kol Nidre, Yom Hakippurim), and the delivering of sermons outside the synagogue (e.g. at
the so called memorial services held in provincial cemeteries). They also include the
direction of Biblical study circles and pastoral and charity work in our denominational
hospital among mobile patients, at the Chronic Patient Ward,
and in the Jewish Communal Home in Újpest. The subject group consists of the following
parts:
PRACTICAL
SUBJECT GROUP |
| Torah reading - Prayer
leading |
| High Holiday Service
Practice |
| Homiletic Practice |
| Dvar Torah - Homily
interpretation |
| Bible Study Circle group
leading practice |
| Pastoral Practice |
| Gmilut Chasadim |
| Talmud-Torah informal
educational practice |
| Field Practice Preceding
the rabbi examination-practicing semester |
|

COMPULSORY ELECTIVE SUBJECT GROUP aims at providing wider possibilities for our students to pursue
further studies in the fields of Biblical studies, rabbinical studies, psychology and
pedagogy. The subject group consists of the following parts:
COMPULSORY
ELECTIVE SUBJECT GROUP |
| Biblical Studies: |
| The Biblical text
mirrored in interdisciplinary research |
| The method of teaching
the Bible |
| Rabbinical Studies: |
| Excerpts from the
Jerusalem Talmud |
| The source analysis of
Rambam’s Guide of the Perplexed |
| Medieval Hebrew Religious
Poetry |
| Psychology |
| The psychology of
conflict resolution |
| Personality development
training |
|

The aim of the OPTIONAL SUBJECT GROUP is
to acquaint students with supplementary, but in the new millennium indispensable knowledge
of informational technology and communication. These constitute the integral part of all
general intellectual training, and provide effective assistance for the students both in
their studies and in their future professional carrier. The subject group consists of the
following parts:
| OPTIONAL SUBJECT
GROUP |
| Kicur Sulchan Aruch |
| Computer Studies |
| Library Systems and the Internet |
| Yiddish language |
| Hebrew slang |
| Art of Speech |
| Archeology and the Oral Law |
|
|