Q
Qoeleth
Guest
From another discussion, something I wonder about:
Is it correct or appropriate to say “Christianity was initially a Jewish sect”?
I take Christianity necessarily to involve belief in the Divinity of Jesus. As far as I understand Judaism (which is not that much), such a belief would make one “non-Jewish”. Someone (a Jewish person), recently pointed out to me that “Messianic Jews” and “Jews for Jesus”, were, in fact, better described as “Christians”.
How would a Jewish person feel about the statement: “Christianity started as a Jewish sect”.
Personally, I think Christian is one religion (centered on the belief of the Divinity of Christ), and Judaism is another (in which the idea of ‘God taking flesh’ is untenable). So, Christianity was never simply ‘a branch of denomination of Judaism’, but a whole new religion (acknowledging a certain overlap in what we regard as Sacred writings).
Is it correct or appropriate to say “Christianity was initially a Jewish sect”?
I take Christianity necessarily to involve belief in the Divinity of Jesus. As far as I understand Judaism (which is not that much), such a belief would make one “non-Jewish”. Someone (a Jewish person), recently pointed out to me that “Messianic Jews” and “Jews for Jesus”, were, in fact, better described as “Christians”.
How would a Jewish person feel about the statement: “Christianity started as a Jewish sect”.
Personally, I think Christian is one religion (centered on the belief of the Divinity of Christ), and Judaism is another (in which the idea of ‘God taking flesh’ is untenable). So, Christianity was never simply ‘a branch of denomination of Judaism’, but a whole new religion (acknowledging a certain overlap in what we regard as Sacred writings).