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2006-08-28 15:33:32 · 36 answers · asked by Petals 2 in Society & Culture Religion & Spirituality

36 answers

Jesus Christ is God.

2006-08-28 15:40:51 · answer #1 · answered by JasonLee 3 · 1 2

Jesus is a Greek God and Christ was a prophet to Israel.

Catholics and Protestants are pagans who cant make up their minds about the Trinity and
who is the Father of the child who grew up to be the father
and whether the Holy Dove is also the father
and how come the Son is not the Holy Spirit
although three-are-one and each is one-and-three in the Trinity and how come the Son is also the father of the child
in an incestuous relationship within the Trinity
with Protestaments dumping the mother from the Trinity,
because woman is the curse of man in the Bible.

Amen!

2006-08-28 15:44:22 · answer #2 · answered by mythkiller-zuba 6 · 0 2

Ethnically, He was Jewish, but religiously, He was the 1st Catholic.
He didn't call His beliefs Catholicism, because He was and is beyond simply naming things like we mortals.
That created the possibility for much future speculation by His followers or others who are just curious like you as to what religion He started.
If you follow the NT to the end and match it with the teachings of the Catholic Church, you will find a near perfect correspondence.
Protestantism was founded about 15 centuries later by Martin Luther in response to the corruption and scandal in the Catholic Church.

2006-08-28 15:56:18 · answer #3 · answered by STILL standing 5 · 0 1

I believe that the celebrated deity figure of a religion (Protestants and Catholics both worshiping Jesus Christ) is unlikely to possess his own religion (discounting his Judaism while a mortal man) when he is already the focal point of one on earth. Can a man worship himself? Would Jesus?

2006-08-28 15:39:45 · answer #4 · answered by Dave F 1 · 0 1

Neither. During the life of Jesus Christ, Christianity did not exist. The Christian faith came into being after Jesus's death. In his life, Jesus was raised a Jew. He prayed in Jewish temples, observed most Jewish customs (he did work miracles on the Sabbath, however), and was counted as a Jew in every sense of the word. His disciples called him Rabbi (A role in the Jewish Synagogue), and on his crucifixion, the Romans put a sign above him saying "King of the Jews". Jesus was Jewish.

2006-08-28 15:44:46 · answer #5 · answered by dragonking862003 2 · 0 1

Umm... are you aware that Jesus was before the Catholic church and way before any of the Protestant churches? Are you also aware that both Christian religions are based on His teachings? If He were either a Catholic or a Protestant how's that we call both religions Christian?

2006-08-28 15:37:13 · answer #6 · answered by Anonymous · 2 1

Jesus Christ Was Jewish. However, He Founded the Catholic Church, when He Appointed St. Peter to be His Rock(The Gospel according to St. Matthew chapter 16).

2006-08-28 15:44:42 · answer #7 · answered by clusium1971 7 · 0 2

According to research and everything I've ever read, Jesus was Jewish. That's why I find it humorous that Christians worship him but hate Jews.

Also, a little fact that most people don't realize: Adolf Hitler hated Jews so badly that he murdered thousands and thousands of them when in actuallity, he, himself, was Jewish. Some people are way too confused about life to breath past birth!

2006-08-28 15:46:32 · answer #8 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

Jesus was born a Jew who established Christianity.
The first Christians were Catholic, which means "universal".
All people are called to His Church which is the body of Christ.
Christ himself is the head of the Church.

Early Christians, such as Saint Ignatius of Antioch (who was martyred in about 110), used the term to describe the whole Church, as opposed to the local Church, and excluding adherents of sects or heretical groups.

A letter that Saint Ignatius wrote to Christians in Smyrna[2] in about 107 is the earliest surviving witness to the use of the term "catholic Church" (Smyrnaeans, 8). By it Saint Ignatius designated the Christian Church in its universal aspect, excluding heretics, such as those who disavow "the Eucharist to be the flesh of our Saviour Jesus Christ, which suffered for our sins, and which the Father, of His goodness, raised up again" (Smyrnaeans, 7).

When Jesus spoke to Peter about who He was Peter answered that He was the son of the living God.
Matthew Ch.16:17-18
Jesus said to him in reply, "Blessed are you, Simon son of Jonah. For flesh and blood has not revealed this to you, but my heavenly Father.

And so I say to you, you are Peter, and upon this rock I will build my church, and the gates of the netherworld shall not prevail against it.

Notice Jesus said "church" not "churches" , that is what we have now, many churches.

The only church that has been around since apostolic times has been the Catholic Church, because Jesus started it. He is the head of the Catholic Church.

2006-08-28 16:00:10 · answer #9 · answered by mr_mister1983 3 · 0 1

Neither,Jesus started Christianity,as set out in God's Holy Word,the Bible.After the death of the apostles,apostacy crept in and Christianity was tainted with pagan teachings and beliefs.Hence,today we have so many variations of Christianity,all except one are teaching man made doctrines and pagan beliefs.The only organisation that is holding to the Bible as its only source of knowledge and guidance are Jehovah's Witnesses.Jehovah's Witnesses follow Christ's teachings closely and obey his command to "go and make disciples of people of all the nations..."(Mat28:18,19)

2006-08-28 15:56:42 · answer #10 · answered by lillie 6 · 0 1

He was a Jew who became the Head of the Church, which is the union of all those who have been reborn through faith in Him. That group transcends the bounderies of Catholic, Protestant, and any other group, denomination, or label.

2006-08-28 15:42:43 · answer #11 · answered by dewcoons 7 · 0 1

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