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To: Emile Vidrine who wrote (10892)1/18/1998 8:06:00 PM
From: Alan Markoff  Respond to of 39621
 
Emile;

So you have no problem with me being Jewish and accepting Jesus as my savior and reading the Old and New Testament, as well as celebrating Jewish holidays, and some Christian ones. Why is what I have stated to you false doctrine.

Alan



To: Emile Vidrine who wrote (10892)1/19/1998 2:55:00 AM
From: Alan Markoff  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 39621
 
Emile;

Here is a link to how Jews view Judaism and Christianity. I see no hate for Jesus nor do I see a Judgmental spirit that you seem to profess. I read there words and I see a kinder spirit in them since they Judge no one. I also do not see the sick interpretation of the Talmud that you profess, This is what you call Satan worship I think not here is the link and here are some of there comment's.

Also don't shove false doctrine in my face for I wish nothing more than for Jews to accept Jesus, but if you followed there example of ethic's they would certainly be more open to it. The bottom line is that false Christians have served Satan well by putting a wedge between the Jews and there Messiah.

Below are comments from; by Dr. Lawrence J. Epstein (a non believing Jew)

The differences between the two religions will be explored in this section. As a preface, it is useful to repeat Judaism's central belief that the people of all religions are children of God, and therefore equal before God. All people have God's love, mercy, and help. In particular, Judaism does not require that a person convert to Judaism in order to achieve salvation. The only requirement for that, as understood by Jews, is to be ethical. While Judaism accepts the worth of all people regardless of religion, it also allows people who are not Jewish but who voluntarily wish to join the Jewish people to do so.

To Jews, whatever wonderful teacher and storyteller Jesus may have been, he was just a human, not the son of God (except in the metaphorical sense in which all humans are children of God). In the Jewish view, Jesus cannot save souls; only God can. Jesus did not, in the Jewish view, rise from the dead.

Jews vary about what they think of Jesus as a man. Some respect him as an ethical teacher who accepted Jewish law, as someone who didn't even see himself as the messiah, who didn't want to start a new religion at all. Rather, Jesus is seen by these Jews as someone who challenged the religious authorities of his day for their practices. In this view, he meant to improve Judaism according to his own understanding not to break with it.

Many Jewish thinkers noted that since, essentially, God is filled with mercy and love, punishment is not to be considered to be eternal.

Judaism does not believe people who are Gentiles will automatically go to Hell or that Jews will automatically go to Heaven on their basis of their belonging to the faith. Rather, individual ethical behavior is what is most important.


convert.org

Alan