Anonymous wrote:I will celebrate my religious traditions as I see fit.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The premise of Judaism and Christianity is really different to me. Jews believe that they have a special relationship to G-d and are the chosen people. It’s tribal and exclusionary. Christianity believes that Jesus died to save everyone. Anyone can be saved, if they believe. There’s not much overlain those two world views, no matter how many shared texts they have
No.
You don’t believe Judaism is a different religion? You do understand that Jews don’t believe Jesus was the son of God, right?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:actually it is. As a Christian I believe in the Passover story. A Jewish person does t actually believe Jesus was Gods son.Anonymous wrote:Jews having a Christmas tree is not the same thing as Christians hosting a seder. But thanks for making it all about Christians.
The Old Testament is part of Christianity. It’s part of the Christian religious tradition. Similarly, much of the Bible also overlaps with the Quran — it’s part of the Islamic religion. I don’t think many Christians realize that Jesus is a prophet in the Quran. Similarly, many Jews discount the relevance of Jewish prophets in Christianity. The three religions have so much overlap that we are called the people of the book.
NP. +1
-1000. Judaism is not a branch or primitive form of Christianity, as much as you would like to make it so.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:actually it is. As a Christian I believe in the Passover story. A Jewish person does t actually believe Jesus was Gods son.Anonymous wrote:Jews having a Christmas tree is not the same thing as Christians hosting a seder. But thanks for making it all about Christians.
The Old Testament is part of Christianity. It’s part of the Christian religious tradition. Similarly, much of the Bible also overlaps with the Quran — it’s part of the Islamic religion. I don’t think many Christians realize that Jesus is a prophet in the Quran. Similarly, many Jews discount the relevance of Jewish prophets in Christianity. The three religions have so much overlap that we are called the people of the book.
Sigh. The New Testament is a new covenant which abrogated the law of the Old Testament. That's ... kind of the whole point of Christianity?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The premise of Judaism and Christianity is really different to me. Jews believe that they have a special relationship to G-d and are the chosen people. It’s tribal and exclusionary. Christianity believes that Jesus died to save everyone. Anyone can be saved, if they believe. There’s not much overlain those two world views, no matter how many shared texts they have
No.
Anonymous wrote:I have Christian friends who celebrate many traditional Jewish holidays. They also have Shabbat every week. They believe in Jesus and follow the way he lived.
PSA there are multiple Christian denominations and some host a seder.
Anonymous wrote:The premise of Judaism and Christianity is really different to me. Jews believe that they have a special relationship to G-d and are the chosen people. It’s tribal and exclusionary. Christianity believes that Jesus died to save everyone. Anyone can be saved, if they believe. There’s not much overlain those two world views, no matter how many shared texts they have
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:actually it is. As a Christian I believe in the Passover story. A Jewish person does t actually believe Jesus was Gods son.Anonymous wrote:Jews having a Christmas tree is not the same thing as Christians hosting a seder. But thanks for making it all about Christians.
The Old Testament is part of Christianity. It’s part of the Christian religious tradition. Similarly, much of the Bible also overlaps with the Quran — it’s part of the Islamic religion. I don’t think many Christians realize that Jesus is a prophet in the Quran. Similarly, many Jews discount the relevance of Jewish prophets in Christianity. The three religions have so much overlap that we are called the people of the book.
NP. +1
Anonymous wrote:Please do not tell people how to practice their religion.
Anonymous wrote:I've never heard of Christians hosting a Seder. As a Catholic, in 4th grade CCD, when we studied the Old Testament, we did sort of a seder. It was a hot mess because no one knew what we were supposed to be doing. Why they didn't just ask a Jew to run it, I don't know.
I'm actually a little irritated that I have a ton of friends (and even family) that are Jewish, and they have never once invited me to a Seder. I'd love to go -- looks so interesting!