T
thephilosopher6
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Christianity arose within the context of Second Temple Judaism. We all know the details, Jesus was a Jew, all his early followers were Jews, but the apostles began to allow gentile converts about a decade after the movement began by people like Paul (himself a Jew). The Council of Jerusalem (45 A.D) decreed that gentile converts did not need to convert to Judaism or follow Jewish laws to become Christians. Within the next decades of the 1st century, gentile Christianity came to dominate over Jewish Christianity; though even by the end of the 1st century there were still large Jewish Christian communities in Palestine, Syria, Asia Minor, and Egypt. Indeed, about 100 years after Jesus, Jewish Christianity was still the dominate mode of Christianity in Palestine, and a full break in this region hadn’t been realized yet on both sides. But, by the time of the Bar Kokhba revolt (132 A.D. - 135 A.D.), the Palestinian Church largely went into diaspora, and the original Palestinian Christianity community was replaced by a gentile Church. This signaled the final break of Judaism and Christianity.
Yet it seems that there has always been somewhat of a link. Up until the 13th century A.D., there were small surviving remnants of Jewish Christian groups like the Ebionites and the Nazarenes (granted they were heretical). And even today, there is a Hebrew Catholic community in Israel and abroad, and there is also the movement of “Messianic Judaism”, who are basically Evangelicals with yamakas, and about half of all “Messianic Jews” are ethnically Jewish and/or were raised in Jewish households. What I want to know is if Christianity still has small chain in Judaism. I know a lot of conservative Jews on here will brush off Messianics as not a true Jewish movement (when I say Messianics I mean all Hebrew Catholics, Messianic Jews, and others), and many Christians will also brush them off as a Jewish movement but include them as a movement within Christianity; but is it possible they’re in-between/both coming from a purely neutral point of view and taking in all sociological, cultural, and religious factors into account.
Yet it seems that there has always been somewhat of a link. Up until the 13th century A.D., there were small surviving remnants of Jewish Christian groups like the Ebionites and the Nazarenes (granted they were heretical). And even today, there is a Hebrew Catholic community in Israel and abroad, and there is also the movement of “Messianic Judaism”, who are basically Evangelicals with yamakas, and about half of all “Messianic Jews” are ethnically Jewish and/or were raised in Jewish households. What I want to know is if Christianity still has small chain in Judaism. I know a lot of conservative Jews on here will brush off Messianics as not a true Jewish movement (when I say Messianics I mean all Hebrew Catholics, Messianic Jews, and others), and many Christians will also brush them off as a Jewish movement but include them as a movement within Christianity; but is it possible they’re in-between/both coming from a purely neutral point of view and taking in all sociological, cultural, and religious factors into account.
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