Apologies @Jae that comment was for @Pontifex Geronimo 13
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Yes. But do you think he died for the the glory of a kingdom of the litigious that was already in place? If it was and remains all about the letter of the law, what exactly did Jesus change for them and how would being a Messianic Jew be any different from a legalistic Pharisee, whom Jesus would challenge?
I think you need a bit more nuance in your understanding of the Jewish sects and temple authorities. The Pharisees with whom Jesus argued, were just a Jew arguing with other Jews about Torah; they would eventually become the synagogue/meeting place Jews that we know today. The temple authorities, and those in Jewish society who collaborated with the Romans were more problematic, and more responsible, IMHO, in bringing about his crucifixion.
The reason a Jew cannot become a Christian and remain a Jew is because the Jews believe that Jesus was a prophet, not divine.
Yes, you are right. I was just thinking that though they have been broken off, they could still be grafted back on by simple faith in Jesus.The dichotomy as I've learned it is grafted on vs. cut off.
I already knew that...and about different schools of rabbinic thought, such as Hillel and Shammai. Early Christians were Jews who believed Jesus was divine, though. They were Christian Jews. They studied Torah, if anything, if they were literate - but Jesus changed how they viewed "the law". The New Testament was not around yet. It was the establishment - at least a group therein, who felt Jesus was a threat to their legalistic control - in my understanding. What I am getting at is that if a Jewish sect believes that Jesus is Messiah, and I do believe they can just like religious sects anywhere can branch off, like with Christendom - but also that they must follow the letter of the law in determining who's in and who's out, what difference would Jesus' death and resurrection, actually make for them? How can you be under Grace, and the letter of the law at the same time? So, did Jesus death fulfill the law by keeping it strict and letigious, or did it fulfill the law by recognizing that the spirit of the law is about keeping right relationships towards others - and extending undeserved Grace?I think you need a bit more nuance in your understanding of the Jewish sects and temple authorities. The Pharisees with whom Jesus argued, were just a Jew arguing with other Jews about Torah; they would eventually become the synagogue/meeting place Jews that we know today. The temple authorities, and those in Jewish society who collaborated with the Romans were more problematic, and more responsible, IMHO, in bringing about his crucifixion.
The reason a Jew cannot become a Christian and remain a Jew is because the Jews believe that Jesus was a prophet, not divine.
BetteTheRed said
The reason a Jew cannot become a Christian and remain a Jew is because the Jews believe that Jesus was a prophet, not divine.
Not all Jews are strict legalists about Torah laws. There are the ultra-Orthodox, to the liberal, to the agnostic, to the secular who honour certain traditions. And the completely non-religious who acknowledge their heritage. Divides over the interpretation, and how literally to interpret Torah go way back...I understand, as far back or farther than Hillel and Shammai. Who were both "Pharisees", but with different focuses. Hillel was the one who is said to have told a gentile, who asked Hillel to teach him the whole Torah, while the gentile stood on one foot, "Do not do that which is hateful to you, unto your neighbour. The rest is commentary. Now go learn it." Shammai is thought to have been more strictly legalistic.Where I think we stray into the potential for feelings of superiority, or a subtle anti-Semitism, is when we "diss" their Law. The Law is the Jewish covenant between Jews and the One God, and if the One God breaks covenants, well, why do Christians think their distinct covenant will be unbroken? We have a different law, a simpler distillation - love God, love neighbour as self. We are not Jews. Paul expanded Jesus' message of reformation to include righteous Gentiles, and then the temple was destroyed, the final Jewish diaspora happened, and history took a course. Not one probably intended by Jesus, I think.
which is why Jewish believes in Christ call themselves Messianic Jews and not Christian . Like the Pharisees of old , they still like to define who's in and who's out, there definition does not change the fact that there still born and will die, a Jew.
Ok I can accept that as possiblity.RevJohn said:I think that is actually a misread of Seeler's intent. Claiming that Christianity teaches X and that Christians are poor students of X is not an appeal to the No True Scotsman fallacy. Claiming that Christianity teaches X and that those who ignore X are not Christians would be an appeal to the No True Scotsman fallacy.
Specific to christianity, well as christianity is a derivative of all past religions. They are all much of a muchness. I doubt I would find one abhorrent behaviour specific to christianity. Slavery, Rape, child abuse, genocide, misogyny, gay rights, human rights. etc. Too many to number.RevJohn said:Which doctrine specific to Christianity (for a start) do you feel fits the bill of abhorrent behaviour?
The complete lack of evidence for it.I think @GeoFee was asking for empirical evidence to support your statement in green. How exactly can you prove faith has zero basis in reality?
Already answered " the complete lack of evidence."Hi Pavlos,
Sorry for being unclear. Let me try one more time.
You said:
And I asked:
The question wonders if you are able to produce evidence to verify your statement, "...faith has zero basis in reality...", quoted above?
George
Perhaps @GeoFee is suggesting we cannot be absolutely certain one way or another.
Philosophically speaking I am probably an agnostic but I identify as a Christian/ follower of Jesus.
Pavlos Maros said:They are all much of a muchness.
Pavlos Maros said:I doubt I would find one abhorrent
Pavlos Maros said:behaviour specific to christianity.
Pavlos Maros said:Slavery
Pavlos Maros said:Rape,
Pavlos Maros said:Too many to number.
Since you're probably an agnostic, why don't you identify as an agnostic?![]()
There's my argument, of course, that everyone is agnostic, because, as certain as you may be about your own BS, there's no proof.