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| Judaism Judaism and the Jewish faith: issues and dicussions |
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#2 (permalink) |
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Super Moderator
Join Date: Sep 2003
Location: London, UK, Malkhut she'be'Assiyah
Posts: 1,464
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Re: Jesus and The Jewish
geist,
there are a whole bunch of laws and tests to recognise the Moshiach (Messiah) which derive from various authorities. jesus doesn't pass them. simple as that. incidentally, he's not the only person who a lot of people thought was the Moshiach over the last two millennia. for an overview of the issue: http://www.jewfaq.org/moshiach.htm b'shalom bananabrain |
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#3 (permalink) | |
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I am oblivion
Join Date: Mar 2005
Location: Wales
Posts: 160
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Re: Jesus and The Jewish
Quote:
I asked because I took Relgious Studies for GCSE and the topics were Judaism and Christianity. But we never really went into detail about the Moshiach. All we really needed to know was that Jesus wasn't the Moshiach and were never really given a reason for it. Which is why I asked. |
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#4 (permalink) |
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Soul Rebel
Join Date: Jul 2003
Location: The Highlands of Scotland
Posts: 4,604
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Re: Jesus and The Jewish
There's nothing wrong with asking.
![]() Messianic issues so relating to Judaism have been fairly common of late, so feel free to watch out for anything else that may cover this issue from different angles. ![]() |
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#6 (permalink) |
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I am the Grail
Join Date: Aug 2005
Location: Southern United States, Bible Belt
Posts: 45
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Re: Jesus and The Jewish
Hi, I recently attended a "Messianic Synagog" and group for 5 years. I am not jewish, I am a Christian that is searching for deeper meaning in my faith. Originally, I just wanted to know what happened in my own religious beginnings: first Century Christianity. As I searched, I discovered something called "Messianic Judaism" and decided to give it a whirl, not knowing that Jews might be offended by it, etc. It was just "learning" for me. We learned that apparently, according to the New Testament, about 80% of the Jewish population at the time of Christ DID accept Christ as their Messiah, which is why the Sanhedron was so upset. The Sanhedron had made a political "promise" to Rome to never elect a King, and if they did, Rome would consider it treason, and send troops in to basically ahnilate the general population, and take away the nation of Israel from the Jewish leadership. So the Leadership had to make a tough choice - kill Jesus, whom the population wanted elected as King, or allow Rome to kill everyone and wipe the nation off the map. They didnt dislike Jesus, they thought he was peculiar, and had a wierd take on their faith...but that is it.
I had good and bad experiences with the messianic synagog. While the teachings helped me alot, the people got "cult-like", and would not bend in any way with opinion. If you did not believe as they told you, you were "the devil", at least with some people. Then again, I live inthe Bible belt, where every one is the "Devil" if they do not what "everyone" else does, so that mentality pervaded here in the Messianic Synagog I visited. Alot of "converts" to them were from Baptist Churches, and they wanted to "go back to being jewish", having been convinced that at one time in their geanological history, they were actually jews who somehow converted to christianity many centuries ago, and that the spirit of God had shown them their true religion. The Messianic synagogs in the south also treat the non-jewish members in a different capacity than their jewish converts, making people upset. My mom had visited a MJ congregation up north and said this was absolutely not the case, and it isnt in Arazona either where my mother in law lives. So I think it is the Bible belt. At any case, IF you get brave enough to read the New Testament, you will find that Jesus was not the monster that some groups think, he was "a good jew", he did work miracles, he did offer his opinion to the religious leaders of his time, disagreed with them, and took authority to say what he thought his religion taught instead of relying on the opinions of other authorities. He had a grass roots following with many regular people, and his death/resurrection caused alot of good changes for people. By the way, the New TEstament referrs to the religious leaders as "the jews", since the entire population was jewish. The "Bad" jews in the text are really the hippocrites in the homogenous jewish society, and not jews generally. |
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#7 (permalink) | |
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Soul Rebel
Join Date: Jul 2003
Location: The Highlands of Scotland
Posts: 4,604
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Re: Jesus and The Jewish
Quote:
It would also be great to see the source of the claim of 80% of Palestinian Jews being followers of Jesus - we simply don't get that mentioned in the surviving texts, and Josephus certainly doesn't list them as a major influence, though he has great respect for the austerity of the Essenes. |
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#8 (permalink) | ||
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I am the Grail
Join Date: Aug 2005
Location: Southern United States, Bible Belt
Posts: 45
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Quote:
Quote:
While you may not get a number of people who followed Jesus, I really doubt it was just a few families, or 20% of the population or some small number, because his populariety with the people apparently offended the Jewish Leadership enough that they spoke with him privately (Nicodemus and Joseph of Aramathea, for example), and held a meeting or two about him, and implored the Roman Governor, Pontius Pilot to execute him. I dont think a government would approach a supervising government about some dinky-dork small level neighborhood person who "says" things that only a few believe - it doesn't make sense. Think of it in today's context, either in American Government, or Israeli for that matter. There's millions of private citizens living in both countries, free to say what ever they want to. If I announced publically, to my entire neighborhood in the Newspaper that I planned to become president, or that I was a religious leader, I doubt many people would take me seriously or even bother to read it, and those that did would have a good chuckle, but that's it. On the other hand, look at someone who really "did" something that caused national attention: OJ Simpson, David Koresh, 9-11 Bombings - you have to do something pretty large scale to get noticed by the government, and for one large Government to take your case to a higher power...it must have been a pretty big deal, even in those days. Do you think that makes sense? Maybe I'm wrong. Anyway, the Messianic Jewish Congregation also told us this, and the way they presented it, it made sense. As far as my own personal knowledge and ability to back stuff up, I really can't...But I would like to know some sources, if you have any, please share. ![]() |
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#9 (permalink) | |||||||||||||
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Super Moderator
Join Date: Sep 2003
Location: London, UK, Malkhut she'be'Assiyah
Posts: 1,464
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Re: Jesus and The Jewish
Quote:
point two: "according to the new testament" is not exactly what i call an accurate reflection of the jewish socio-political context of the time, being edited later by people with a vested interest in pointing out how important jesus was and, lest we forget, pointing out how judaism was nothing more than the prelude to christianity. point three: there is a considerable body of C1st-2nd jewish literature, none of which thinks jesus is terribly important until his followers gain access to the levers of power and start to influence policy and implement anti-jewish measures, all of which becomes possible after the failure of the jewish revolt against the romans and the destruction of the Temple, as well as the end of the power of the sanhedrin. Quote:
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b'shalom bananabrain |
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