Y
YKohen
Guest
There is a Jewish principle laid out by our sages that: “A Jew, even if he sins, remains a Jew”. The Torah tells us time and again that we are a nation (as opposed to a religion). But unlike modern-day nations, once a Jew, always a Jew- no matter what (sort of like a Catholic weddingHarsh words maybe but…the truth. Which led me to thinking…can a Jew lose his / her Jewish soul with baptism? Can a Jew lose his / her Jewish soul at all? Someone can reject his / her responsibility as a Jew by getting baptised, but can he cease being a Jew?
That having been said, as long as one remains an apostate (.i.e. joining a different group,no matter if it is Christian, Muslim, or other), one is not considered to be part of the Jewish community. A willing convert, whether formally or informally, forfeits his/her legal and social rights, which express a Jew’s belonging to the Jewish people.
However, if that person, or their descendants (if Jewish: any person whose mother was a Jew or any person who has gone through the formal process of conversion in full compliance with Jewish law) decide to “return” to Judaism and the Jews, they are accepted- no conversion required.
A few years ago I was abroad on business (so I wasn’t with my family), and for the Sabbath meals, I was invited to a family. They invite a very eclectic group every Sabbath, and I’m sure it’s always interesting. Mine was. In any case, one of the people there was a woman who had decided to convert to Judaism for whatever reason (I always wonder why someone would do that). She went through the whole lengthy process,and at the end, the rabbi asked about her maternal grandmother. Turns out that she was Jewish- so her mother was Jewish and so was she. So she didn’t have to convert at all- even though she was brought up in a different religion.