R
reen12
Guest
Hi, Catholic Dude,
quote: Catholic Dude
Jews and Christians agree on any number of moral issues, as well.
That does not address my point, I think.
2000 years ago, a Jew who accepted Christianity was
considered an apostate.
If I, having lived for 58 years accepting Christianity, accept
Judaism, thereby rejecting the Christian faith, I will be
considered, technically, an apostate.
Apostasy works both ways.
A careful reading of what I wrote will note that I employ
the word “heretic” for Luther- the term used 500 years ago.
I use the word “apostasy” for the Judaic view of
Christian doctrine - 2000 years ago.
There’s a big difference, IMHO, between heresy and
apostasy.
quote: Catholic Dude
A Christian may say: Thank God I’ve been give the grace
to see the Truth that Jesus is Lord.
A Jew may say: Thank God I’ve been given the Torah
and proclaim: “…the Lord is One…” [not 3 Persons in One.]
It is a matter of faith. Accept the testimony of the
New Testament or retain the Judaic belief in* it’s* fullness.
What gets me rolling is a given Christian thinking that
h/she understands Judaism more clearly than Judaism…
that we are the “fulfillment” and they just didn’t see what the Messianic references meant in their “fullness.”
How many people have ever taken the
time to go to a Judaic website which lists the reasons
why Judaism thinks the Old Testament did not point to
Jesus of Nazareth?
judaism.about.com/library/3_askrabbi_o/bl_simmons_messiah3.htm
Best to you, Catholic Dude,
reen12
quote: Catholic Dude
And your point is…?Both Jews and Catholics REJECT the central pillars of Protestantism, which is Faith Alone and Scripture Alone. Tradition and Works are central.
Jews and Christians agree on any number of moral issues, as well.
That does not address my point, I think.
2000 years ago, a Jew who accepted Christianity was
considered an apostate.
If I, having lived for 58 years accepting Christianity, accept
Judaism, thereby rejecting the Christian faith, I will be
considered, technically, an apostate.
Apostasy works both ways.
A careful reading of what I wrote will note that I employ
the word “heretic” for Luther- the term used 500 years ago.
I use the word “apostasy” for the Judaic view of
Christian doctrine - 2000 years ago.
There’s a big difference, IMHO, between heresy and
apostasy.
quote: Catholic Dude
As far as I can see:So how does faith work in all this?
A Christian may say: Thank God I’ve been give the grace
to see the Truth that Jesus is Lord.
A Jew may say: Thank God I’ve been given the Torah
and proclaim: “…the Lord is One…” [not 3 Persons in One.]
It is a matter of faith. Accept the testimony of the
New Testament or retain the Judaic belief in* it’s* fullness.
What gets me rolling is a given Christian thinking that
h/she understands Judaism more clearly than Judaism…
that we are the “fulfillment” and they just didn’t see what the Messianic references meant in their “fullness.”
How many people have ever taken the
time to go to a Judaic website which lists the reasons
why Judaism thinks the Old Testament did not point to
Jesus of Nazareth?
judaism.about.com/library/3_askrabbi_o/bl_simmons_messiah3.htm
Best to you, Catholic Dude,
reen12