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What did you learn about this religion that was new to you?

(2) What did you learn about this religion which surprised you pleasantly?

(3) What did you learn about this religion which surprised you unpleasantly?

(4) In what way(s) is this religion similar to your religion?

(5) In what way(s) is this religion dissimilar to your religion?

(6) In what way(s), if any, might learning about this religion influence your perspective toward your religion?

2007-01-03 17:06:10 · 6 answers · asked by Anonymous in Society & Culture Religion & Spirituality

6 answers

i take it this was on one of your homework assignments... and what if you had someone who was let's say buddhist.. or muslim or any religion give you what they think.. and you end up putting that on your paper... and get an F for being stupid.. come on.. think about it... this is not something you can just look up in a book... well.. 4 and 5 are.. but these are opinionated questions... oh i'm sorry that's probably a big word for you!!!

2007-01-03 17:11:22 · answer #1 · answered by Anonymous · 1 0

1) It was all new to me somewhen.
2) It doesn't condemn "nonbelievers" to hell, a wonderful difference to Christianity and Islam.
3) The violence in its holy scriptures, but as this is somehow interpreted in a non-violent way and is not practiced as you could think when you read it without further knowledge it is not such a big problem.
4) I don't have a religion, but its general moral values match mine.
5) As I said I don't have a religion and so there is a difference between "religion" and "no religion", the biggest difference is that I don't believe in God.
6) It doesn't.

2007-01-04 00:36:47 · answer #2 · answered by Elly 5 · 0 0

Don't know alot about the Faith yet what I have learned has actually brought me closer to my Father since He was raised a Jew as He walked this Earth in physical body.
Much of what He has taught throughout History to His Disciples is a direct influence to the traditions of the Jewish Faith.
What has always amazed me is how one man can absolutely and so obviously fulfill every and all Messianic Prophecies and the people who have faithfully watched for Him throughout History could still miss Him. Boggles the mind.
I guess the only dissimilarity I can see between my Chrisianity and Judeism is that my Faith seems more relational and theirs more traditional. That's certainly not to assume I am more devout than them, no.
Only that my personal relationship with Christ especially since His Sacrifice for me allows me access to Him without the practice of rituals.

2007-01-03 17:23:24 · answer #3 · answered by Anonymous · 1 1

No. A prophet in Talmudic Judaism has to: a) carry out miracles b) no longer contradict the training of Moses and the Torah. even nonetheless it is asserted that Jesus achieved miracles, he promptly contradicted the guidelines of the previous testomony and claimed they have been no longer proper. even nonetheless he would have had a case, it disqualifies him from prophethood.

2016-10-06 10:10:45 · answer #4 · answered by wiemer 4 · 0 0

Judaism, like the rest, is full of corruption because very few of the people are spiritual. Spirituality is this: the living of and promotion of peace, justice, harmony, love, obedience to God, unassuming charity, humility, personal investigation of the truth and on and on. Is that the Judaism we see today? God commanded us all to love one another. What does that mean? It doesn't mean to kill or let someone kill the neighbor. You take care of your neighbor and he will look out for you. Its the Golden Rule. The real Golden Rule not the other one that goes like this: He who has the gold makes the rules. That is truly satanic. It is the mind of man turned away from God, from Allah, from Yahweh.

2007-01-03 17:20:47 · answer #5 · answered by regmor12 3 · 0 1

no thanks

2007-01-03 17:07:45 · answer #6 · answered by Dr. Brooke 6 · 1 0

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