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Reply to "Really don't like seeing the signs on Christian churches offering Seders"
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[quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous]Another Jew here. I too find it strange that Christians would have seders and call them seders. If they have a commemorative meal around Easter, that's one thing, but to call it a seder implies (to me anyway) that it is the same as or a close variation on a Jewish seder. And that is strange to me. The traditional seder celebrates liberation from bondage and calls upon Jews to remember their history of persecution and slavery, and to work for the coming of the Messiah. Christians, as far as I know, don't have the same cultural memory of persecution, and they believe the Messiah has already come. [b]So how can they hold a traditional seder? It just doesn't compute.[/b] I may be more sensitive than most because in college I had Jewish friends who went to seders held by Jews for Jesus and then tried to convert me, which was intensely uncomfortable. Most Jews really don't do the Jews-for-Jesus thing. Also, for those who contend that Christian seders are just recreating Jesus' experience ... not if it's based on a modern Jewish seder, they aren't. Historical seders were completely different. The rules were different, the foods were different. Pretty much all religious traditions (other than perhaps the rules of kashruth/keeping kosher) were completely different in the days of the Temple, when Jesus lived. Current religious traditions and rules grew up after the Temple was finally destroyed. Whatever seder Jesus attended wouldn't look anything like a modern seder. So, anyway, I understand where OP is coming from.[b] I can't imagine Catholics would like it if Jews decided to start celebrating mass [/b]but did it completely differently from centuries of tradition, and claimed it was still somehow authentic.[/quote] What does it matter what you "like" or not? Why should Catholics care if some group of Jews starting celebrating mass? We have freedom of religion ( and from religion) in this country. If you don't approve of what some religious group does, move on and mind your own business. Worship or don't worship any way you want and let others do the same.[/quote] I can like or not like anything I please. I didn't say I would try to legislate against it or prevent people from doing it -- I wouldn't, of course. But I can still be mildly offended or dubious. Catholics or anyone else don't have to care what I think. But should they be curious or want to explore inter-faith cooperation -- as some on this thread have mentioned -- then they might care.[/quote]
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