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hakodesh

Hakodesh, transliterated from Hebrew ha-kodesh, means "the holy" or "the sacred." It is a form used in Jewish religious language to denote holiness, sanctity, or things set apart for sacred purposes. The definite article ha- signals the particular sense of the sacred in various contexts.

In scriptural and rabbinic usage, hakodesh can refer to God as the Holy One, a title you

A key technical use is in describing the Holy of Holies, the innermost sanctuary of the ancient

In Jewish liturgy, hakodesh underpins concepts of sanctity and reverence. The Kedushah portion of the service

In modern Hebrew, hakodesh remains a general descriptor of sacred things and spaces, as well as a

See also: Holy of Holies; Kedushah; Kodesh.

encounter
in
liturgical
and
devotional
expression.
Phrases
such
as
HaKadosh
or
HaKadosh
Baruch
Hu
appear
in
Jewish
prayer
and
rabbinic
literature
to
denote
the
divine
sanctity
and
transcendence.
Temple
in
Jerusalem.
The
Hebrew
term
is
Kodesh
HaKodashim
(the
Holy
of
Holies),
the
chamber
believed
to
house
the
Ark,
into
which
only
the
high
priest
could
enter
on
Yom
Kippur.
explicitly
extols
holiness,
and
the
term
kedushah
(holiness)
appears
broadly
in
prayers
and
blessings
as
a
theological
and
ethical
ideal.
theological
concept
in
Jewish
thought
and
practice.
It
appears
in
religious
education,
discourse
on
ritual
purity,
and
discussions
of
sacred
geography
and
ritual
objects.