You refer to someone as a Samaritan if they help you when you are in difficulty. A good Samaritan offered us a room in his house. good Samaritan someone, especially a stranger, who helps you when you have problems or need something (From the Bible story of a person from Samaria (an area of ancient Palestine) who stopped and helped a man who had been attacked and robbed). Member of a now nearly extinct Jewish community. Calling themselves Bene-Yisrael ("Children of Israel"), or Shamerim ("Observant Ones"), they claim to be related to those Jews of ancient Samaria who were not deported from Israel by the Assyrians in 722 BC. The Pentateuch (first five books of the Old Testament) is their sole norm of religious observance. Jews who returned to their homeland after the Babylonian Exile would not accept their help in building the Second Temple of Jerusalem. Consequently, in the 4th century BC the Samaritans built their own temple in Nbulus, at the base of Mount Gerizim, in the present-day West Bank. The modern population (about 500 persons) is distributed between Nbulus and the city of olon in Israel. All live in semi-isolation, marrying only within their own community. They pray in Hebrew but have adopted Arabic as their vernacular
a British organization that offers a free telephone service that people who are very sad, worried, or confused can call to talk to someone. The Samaritans listen to people who feel uncomfortable talking to someone they know about their problems, or who feel so unhappy that they want to kill themselves
Inhabitants of the city or territory of Samaria, the central region of Palestine lying west of the Jordan River According to a probably biased southern account in 2 Kings 17, the Samaritans were regarded by orthodox Jews as descendants of foreigners who had intermarried with survivors of the northern kingdom's fall to Assyria (721 b c e ) Separated from the rest of Judaism after about 400 b c e , they had a Bible consisting of their own edition of the Pentateuch (Torah) and a temple on Mount Gerizim, which was later destroyed by John Hyrcanus (128 b c e ) (Matt 10: 5; Luke 9: 52; John 4: 20-21) Jesus discussed correct worship with a woman at Jacob's well in Samaria (John 4: 5-42) and made a "good Samaritan" the hero of a famous parable (Luke 10: 29-37)
Demographically a group of people who lived in the former northern kingdom of Israel, centered around the ancient capital of Samaria, who after the Assyrian destruction and exile (721 BCE) had remained and intermarried with the non-Israelite peoples transported to the region by Assyria Religio-politically, a conservative Jewish group that maintained the ancient paleo-Hebrew script for their sacred writings (as opposed to the square script introduced by foreign powers during Assyrian and Babylonian hegemony), and, more importantly, who recognized only the Torah as legitimate scripture (as opposed to Judean Jews, who had expanded scripture to include the prophets and the writings) The Samaritans have maintained their own temple and cult of Jewish festivals on Mount Gerizim near Shechem from the late fourth century bce to the present day
Another of the numerous sub-groups in early Judaism and residents of the district Samaria North of Jerusalem and Judah and what is now Israel They are said to have recognized only the Pentateuch as Scripture and Mt Gerizim as the sacred center rather than Jerusalem There was ongoing hostility between the Samaritans and the Judaites Samaritans communities exist to the present
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