Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:For Jews who are fine with Christians holding a Seder, is it still fine if they don't use the Haggadah, but rather a Christian version that tells the story of Jesus?
Just don’t say you’re having a Passover Seder. Call it something different.
It’s offensive to me—not saying all Jews, but me—to subvert a sacred ritual where we tell the story of our escape from slavery and impose Jesus on it.
this. I can respect the “who cares” position, but what people may not realize is that a “Christian seder” basically imposes Jesus into the ritual as the paschal sacrifice. This is basically Easter, but for some unknown reason, some Christians feel like there’s some reason to have a “Christian seder” in commemoration of the last supper instead of just calling it Easter.
Christians, if you are so curious about passover, there is likely an *interfaith* group in your town where you can attend a seder led by the Jewish community. or just make some Jewish friends and ask to be invited.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:For Jews who are fine with Christians holding a Seder, is it still fine if they don't use the Haggadah, but rather a Christian version that tells the story of Jesus?
Just don’t say you’re having a Passover Seder. Call it something different.
It’s offensive to me—not saying all Jews, but me—to subvert a sacred ritual where we tell the story of our escape from slavery and impose Jesus on it.
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
Hmmm. Incorrect - and mildly racist. Jews do not believe that are the chosen people b/c we are somehow smarter, more morally pure, or better looking. We believe that despite all of our manifest flaws - we were lucky enough to be chosen to receive and spread the oral law. G-d could have chosen (and maybe should have chosen) some other tribe - but we won the lottery of receiving a monotheistic moral code for reasons unknown. To the extent that Judaism became insular and exclusionary - it is because we were murdered for allowing conversion/commingling (or merely existing). Christianity believes that Jews and Muslims, etc. are going to hell and that the conversion of Jews (even under pain of death/torture) is necessary for the "second coming." In practice, Christians, under instructions from clergy have raped, murdered, tortured, etc. Jews and Muslims for millennial as their form of tribalism/exclusion/for kicks.
Anonymous wrote:For Jews who are fine with Christians holding a Seder, is it still fine if they don't use the Haggadah, but rather a Christian version that tells the story of Jesus?
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: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.
By that definition do you think PP is saying that Christianity is a primitive form of Islam?
Anonymous wrote:For Jews who are fine with Christians holding a Seder, is it still fine if they don't use the Haggadah, but rather a Christian version that tells the story of Jesus?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I will celebrate my religious traditions as I see fit.
+1. People are allowed to do whatever they want in their own homes. Get a life and stop worrying about what other people are doing. It's getting old
Anonymous wrote:https://religiondispatches.org/why-christians-should-not-host-their-own-passover-seders/
Anonymous wrote:In Catholic school, we had a Sedar because this was Jesus’ Last Supper, when He was celebrating the Jewish feast of Passover with His apostles. After that, He led Peter, James, and John to the Garden of Gethsemane and urged them to stay awake with Him to pray, but they were weak and fell asleep. He sweated drops of blood He was in such agony and asked His Father to let the cup pass (let Him avoid the excruciating death He knew was in front of Him) but acknowledged that He would of course do His Father’s will. Then Judas arrived with the high priests and guards to arrest Him.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I will celebrate my religious traditions as I see fit.
+1. People are allowed to do whatever they want in their own homes. Get a life and stop worrying about what other people are doing. It's getting old