K
Kaninchen
Guest
The point I was making was about what was within the ‘normative’ range - in the far future somebody might say that there were Catholics who believed in all sorts of things and that statement or set of statements might well be ‘true’ but time would have removed any way to measure that ‘truth’ ie about what some Catholics believed in 2013, how many such groups existed and how many people were involved in these non-normative ideas.I get the 2nd part
But not the first. Too peculiar for my slow brain maybe
But let me give my thought process. Catholics are free to disagree with Church teachings. However, all those you mention has basically no compromise. Non are acceptable to the Church. But neither points have anything to do with accepting the Messiah via “back door”. seems way too sinister
MJ
What we get in this context are lots and lots of conjecture about a whole range of interpretations of ‘Messiah’ but nobody can say how deeply, or widespread, any particular set of ideas were held at a differently crucial time for both religions.
What both sides (Jews and Christians) have are how things developed within our different paradigms.