English Deutsch Français Italiano Español Português 繁體中文 Bahasa Indonesia Tiếng Việt ภาษาไทย
All categories

i know this sounds naive but i'm jus wondering becuz i'm leaving tha Christian faith and i've become a Christ Follower yes there is a diff. tha definition of a christian may be a Christ Follower but a Christ Follower is completely diff. i believe whut tha bible really teaches, not whut tha christians preach. i won't get into that becuz when i did tha last time when i asked a question i got a few bad reactions and sum confrontations so to speak. anyvay i've always like tha jewish scene and always thought it was very cool, but there's one problem i'm a Christ Follower i worship Christ. i don't only follow tha laws of moses i follow tha laws of Christ.

2007-02-13 08:58:47 · 15 answers · asked by andrew 2 in Society & Culture Religion & Spirituality

15 answers

there is a branch of christianity that follows the mosaic law and uses jewish symbolism in their churches, which they call "messianic synagogues."

2007-02-13 09:02:28 · answer #1 · answered by Anonymous · 1 0

There is a very small group called "Jews for Jesus," but ALL other Jews don't consider them Jews.

One plain rule in Judaism is that Jesus was not divine. That Jesus was a very admirable person, but not divine. There are some Jewish-scriptural pre-conditions that would need to exist before the Messiah comes, and they do not yet exist (and they didn't exist when Jesus came). I don't know what those pre-conditions are, sorry. Anyway, Jews mostly don't think about the Messiah much at all.

By the way, I'm not Jewish.

2007-02-13 09:04:00 · answer #2 · answered by Anonymous · 2 0

The Jewish Orthodox Catholic in Jerusalem still exist with their Patriarch as the equivalent of the Roman Catholic Pope. Most of their faith practices are still based on the Old Jewish Tradition with Jesus Christ as their patron.
Jesus said he did not come to abolish the law but to fulfill it. So if Jesus came to fulfill the Law which was given to Moses, then how good is your understanding of the law if you claim you are following Jesus law only? One more thing, did Jesus declare a law by himself or did he just make a philosphical definitions on the law of Moses? Make sure that on any place you want to put up your faith, it must be like a house that your foundation is made strong first.

2007-02-13 09:19:54 · answer #3 · answered by Rallie Florencio C 7 · 0 1

the reply relies upon on the Jew giving it. Orthodox Zionists will declare they require the temple and that it truly is God's will to proceed animal sacrifice. yet a lengthy way more beneficial Jews trust that animal sacrifice become God's way of socially weening people removed from human sacrifice and become purely an early component of human progression removed from violence and in the route of God. even if if the Temple become rebuilt, there will be an outcry from the better Jewish inhabitants if animal sacrifices began up lower back. you ought to ask this question of Paperback author or Jewish accountant or perhaps Carl, who ought to provide you with a first hand perspective. Christians hardly ever get it precise even as disgussing Jewish philosophy or religious concept.

2016-11-27 20:58:08 · answer #4 · answered by jandrey 4 · 0 0

Ok, I won't be another smartass. Look up Messianic Judaism. There are messianic temples in most big cities. This may not be what you're looking for or what you've hoped, but Messianic Jews identify themselves as you describe.
Keep prayerfully reading the Bible, Shalom.

2007-02-13 09:27:37 · answer #5 · answered by spit_316 3 · 0 0

No. Any congregation that worships J*sus is not Jewish. You may find some Christian groups that follow some Jewish traditions, but they are not Jews.

2007-02-14 02:58:04 · answer #6 · answered by MaryBridget G 4 · 0 0

No. There are some branches of Chrstianity that use Jewish symbolism and try to follow the Jewish holidays, and they are called Messianic synagogues.

2007-02-13 09:16:08 · answer #7 · answered by LadySuri 7 · 1 0

there are some Messianic Congregations, probably around large cities you might find a few

they are mostly Jewish Christians and I know there are some around New York City and Washington DC but ther are a variety across the country

2007-02-13 09:18:34 · answer #8 · answered by Anonymous · 0 1

No. Judaism doesn't accept Jesus as any more than a prophet/spiritual man. And there aren't any Jewish temples last time I looked, just synagogues, since they're waiting for the temple to be restored in Israel...

2007-02-13 09:03:15 · answer #9 · answered by serf m 2 · 2 2

The Judaists worship their bellies, and their heaven is the uppermost seats of the synagogues.

2007-02-13 10:46:38 · answer #10 · answered by wise.to.Jew! 1 · 0 1

fedest.com, questions and answers