C
Curious11
Guest
And not once, but twice. But especially the second, how come it did not disappear? Now would be a good time to call your friend @PianistClare 
Last edited:
Thatās how I see it too. The Rabbinic Judaism we encounter today is a fundamentally different religion than the one Jesus practiced. If Biblical Judaism is the parent religion, then Christianty and Rabbinic Judaism are siblings.Judaism did not survive the destruction of the Temple. Judaism without sacrifices means Judaism without atonement. What follows is a question of authority: did the Pharisees at the Council of Yavne have the authority to redefine the basic norms of Judaism to exclude the Temple cult and define the canon of the Old Testament?
Or did the Church, Hebrew and non, by embracing the Messianic Redemption and the authority of the Messiah as mediated by the Apostle Peter, have the definitive and Divine sanction to continue the priesthood and the sacrifices through the Eucharist?
Itās a question of whether or not post-Temple Rabbinic tradition or Apostolic Tradition from Christ resolves the issue of atonement. As a Christian I can only say that the Talmud is instructive and intellectually interesting (and I enjoy Sephardic music quite a bit, as an aside), but the Kabbalistic tradition stemming from it and the Zohar are utterly foreign to the Scriptures.
Which leaves us with the One, Holy, Catholic and Apostolic Church.
Respectfully opinion only.And not once, but twice. But especially the second, how come it did not disappear?
Commanded repeated all through out the whole Bible what He ask? Repent Repent Repent return to Me and I Will return to you?Judaism without sacrifices means Judaism without atonement.