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Instead a very liberal, revolutionary rabbi and essentially a good man. For some Jews at the time, a heretic as well, while, for others, the Messiah but not G-d.Nothing - not Messiah, not a prophet and certainly not God.
And we know all this how?Instead a very liberal, revolutionary rabbi and essentially a good man.
And a handful of Jews did consider Jesus to be God (the Twelve (most notably, Simon Peter and John, the âbeloved discipleâ), plus at least His Mother, Mary and her husband, Joseph, along with Mary of Magdala and the few other women with Him).Instead a very liberal, revolutionary rabbi and essentially a good man. For some Jews at the time, a heretic as well, while, for others, the Messiah but not G-d.
This. Although Muslims will have a real hard time with calling him Nothing.Nothing - not Messiah, not a prophet and certainly not God.
Goodness, we must always remember to apologise when our beliefs differ from theirs.Although Muslims will have a real hard time with calling him Nothing.
No one spoke about apology. Where is this coming from?Goodness, we must always remember to apologise when our beliefs differ from theirs.![]()
You wrote: âAlthough Muslims will have a real hard time with calling him Nothing.âNo one spoke about apology. Where is this coming from?
MJ
So Not one Jew speak to Muslims about their faith?You wrote: âAlthough Muslims will have a real hard time with calling him Nothing.â
as if it was something that we Jews should find an impressive argument - otherwise why bring it up at all?
What makes you think that Jesus would be the main topic of conversation between a Muslim and a Jew?So Not one Jew speak to Muslims about their faith?
MJ
SooâŚare you saying Jesus Christ had no impact at all on the Jews of his time?Now the problem with all this is that virtually all that is supposedly âknownâ is what appears in the Christian scriptures, early Christian âcommentaryâ and general Christian guess work.
Not only that but the OP didnât ask about âJewsâ, the OP asked about âJudaismâ.
About the views of the Jewish people about Jesus, other than Christian texts, we know very little and thatâs, actually, highly significant - what Iâve called the âSilver Blazeâ effect, âthe curious incident of the dog in the nightâ in the Sherlock Holmes story (the guard dog not barking while a murder and horse theft takes place is the deciding clue).
According to the Christian scriptures, an itinerant rabbi is going around performing all sorts of wonders, some of them large-scale, and the rest of the population donât notice?
Now a Christian might argue that the âauthoritiesâ clamped down on the news - the problem with this is that our whole history is of a people who are not good at being told what to do, in fact weâre useless at it. In ancient times we were hopeless at toeing the line, in the century and a half after the Romans arrived, we died in our hundreds of thousands and got driven into exile rather than behave and for the last couple of thousand years weâve been a captive audience for Christians and Muslims whoâve done a lot to try to tell us what to do and weâve failed miserably.
So, were the Jewish people at the time obeying orders? Or did they think of Jesus as Messiah, great prophet, God? Did they think him as a nice, friendly âreformâ rabbi? Or did they think/do nothing because, basically, nothing happened?
The answer is that, outside Christian texts, we have no idea and thatâs significant in itself.
As to âJudaismâ, well it was going through an entirely different existential crisis.
Iâm saying that we donât know but itâs unlikely that any impact was significant.SooâŚare you saying Jesus Christ had no impact at all on the Jews of his time?