A
afiala2
Guest
No.
Israel is God’s chosen people. Jesus came to save the Jews first, then the world (Matt. 10:5-6, 15:24). Catholicism sees itself as the fulfillment of Jewish Prophesy. The NT is full of references to the OT and other Jewish writings. If we lose our Jewish ties, we no longer have an argument to have been founded by The Messiah, the Son of God.
One must remember that if you are attacking the NT as anti-Semitic, you are attacking the RCC. The RCC wrote, gathered, and approved the books that were included in the NT, through what we believe to be the Divine Inspiration of the Holy Spirit.
The accusation of Catholicism being anti-Semitic is a huge anti-Catholic whopper, if I ever heard one. Jesus who we believe is God and man was a Jew. His Mother, the Blessed Virgin Mary who we hold in more honor and esteem than any other human, was a good faithful Jew. His foster-Father Joseph and His original Apostles were all Jews in nationality and faith. That is until they became Catholic of course, but in nationality they are Jewish or a part of Israel. Catholicism could/should be viewed as the New Jewish faith or New Covenant started by the Son, The Messiah. We believe salvation comes from the Jews in the person of Jesus Christ, who was a descendent of David. We hold men like Abraham, Jacob, Moses, and Solomon in high esteem along with the prophets like Jeremiah. These men and their stories and teachings are in our OT which we also consider to be The Word of God along with the NT. The OT is almost ¾ of the length of the entire Catholic Bible which is made up of Jewish teachings and Jewish Prophets. OT has 46 books, while NT only has 27, which means majority of what we believe is very Jewish in content and origin. We believe we are the New Israel where we are all inclusive of all nations not just the Jews, but Gentiles alike. We are the exact opposite of being discriminatory. If Catholics were to be anti-Semitic, we would be discriminatory against ourselves as we are either actually Jews or believe we are 'adopted Jews’ as a part of God’s family if we are Gentiles.
My wife, through whom our kids are also, is of Jewish decent in race/nationality but not faith, while I am a gentile. But we share the Catholic faith. But if we didn’t believe Christ was the Messiah, my family would most decidedly be Jewish in faith that is if I would be accepted as a gentile and my family as not being fully Jewish in decent.
The perceived “anti-Semitic” -ness of the NT isn’t there; people can have warped perceptions about a lot of things. Just because someone says something unintelligent doesn’t mean they are right. In the NT, Jesus was actually calling out the leaders of the day and saying why aren’t you being better Jews or why aren’t you observing the laws Moses gave you. It was Jesus’ place to say this because He is the Son of God, the Only begotten Son of the God of Israel, sent by His Father to save the world. If someone does something bad, when you recount the story the antagonist of the story will always sound bad, but that doesn’t mean it isn’t true and accurate or that it automatically becomes the source of future hatred. Rather the hatred towards Jesus in the story should show the reader how pointless hatred is and that you should never want anyone to suffer the way Jesus did, if you have any compassion in your heart.
Rather people who are trying to be like the Nazis and not completely condemning the horrific actions of the Nazis are to blame for any continued hatred being spread. Remember Nazis killed Catholics too; St. Maximilian Kolbe was put to death by the Nazis. Many Catholics lost their lives because they were “Jewish sympathizers”. Where does it say you should kill people and persecute people in the NT? Nazis weren’t quoting the NT as their battle cry, and even if someone someday does, it doesn’t mean it is in the NT. It just means those hate filled people hate Catholicism. The only thing the NT is against is sin and death.
Israel is God’s chosen people. Jesus came to save the Jews first, then the world (Matt. 10:5-6, 15:24). Catholicism sees itself as the fulfillment of Jewish Prophesy. The NT is full of references to the OT and other Jewish writings. If we lose our Jewish ties, we no longer have an argument to have been founded by The Messiah, the Son of God.
One must remember that if you are attacking the NT as anti-Semitic, you are attacking the RCC. The RCC wrote, gathered, and approved the books that were included in the NT, through what we believe to be the Divine Inspiration of the Holy Spirit.
The accusation of Catholicism being anti-Semitic is a huge anti-Catholic whopper, if I ever heard one. Jesus who we believe is God and man was a Jew. His Mother, the Blessed Virgin Mary who we hold in more honor and esteem than any other human, was a good faithful Jew. His foster-Father Joseph and His original Apostles were all Jews in nationality and faith. That is until they became Catholic of course, but in nationality they are Jewish or a part of Israel. Catholicism could/should be viewed as the New Jewish faith or New Covenant started by the Son, The Messiah. We believe salvation comes from the Jews in the person of Jesus Christ, who was a descendent of David. We hold men like Abraham, Jacob, Moses, and Solomon in high esteem along with the prophets like Jeremiah. These men and their stories and teachings are in our OT which we also consider to be The Word of God along with the NT. The OT is almost ¾ of the length of the entire Catholic Bible which is made up of Jewish teachings and Jewish Prophets. OT has 46 books, while NT only has 27, which means majority of what we believe is very Jewish in content and origin. We believe we are the New Israel where we are all inclusive of all nations not just the Jews, but Gentiles alike. We are the exact opposite of being discriminatory. If Catholics were to be anti-Semitic, we would be discriminatory against ourselves as we are either actually Jews or believe we are 'adopted Jews’ as a part of God’s family if we are Gentiles.
My wife, through whom our kids are also, is of Jewish decent in race/nationality but not faith, while I am a gentile. But we share the Catholic faith. But if we didn’t believe Christ was the Messiah, my family would most decidedly be Jewish in faith that is if I would be accepted as a gentile and my family as not being fully Jewish in decent.
The perceived “anti-Semitic” -ness of the NT isn’t there; people can have warped perceptions about a lot of things. Just because someone says something unintelligent doesn’t mean they are right. In the NT, Jesus was actually calling out the leaders of the day and saying why aren’t you being better Jews or why aren’t you observing the laws Moses gave you. It was Jesus’ place to say this because He is the Son of God, the Only begotten Son of the God of Israel, sent by His Father to save the world. If someone does something bad, when you recount the story the antagonist of the story will always sound bad, but that doesn’t mean it isn’t true and accurate or that it automatically becomes the source of future hatred. Rather the hatred towards Jesus in the story should show the reader how pointless hatred is and that you should never want anyone to suffer the way Jesus did, if you have any compassion in your heart.
Rather people who are trying to be like the Nazis and not completely condemning the horrific actions of the Nazis are to blame for any continued hatred being spread. Remember Nazis killed Catholics too; St. Maximilian Kolbe was put to death by the Nazis. Many Catholics lost their lives because they were “Jewish sympathizers”. Where does it say you should kill people and persecute people in the NT? Nazis weren’t quoting the NT as their battle cry, and even if someone someday does, it doesn’t mean it is in the NT. It just means those hate filled people hate Catholicism. The only thing the NT is against is sin and death.