arunma said:
Personally, I don't really mind if people try to emulate first century Jewish Christians.
To me more accurate, Im trying to emulate my Messiah, Jesus which is what a disciple is suppose to do.
arunma said:
But others go off the deep end by reading the Talmud, studying Rabbinic literature,
..
I guess Ive gone off the deep end then because I study the Talmud, Mishnah and rabbinic Midrash regularly. For me the context in which the Scriptures were written is huge. When we lift the Scriptures out of their historical and cultural context we create a hermeneutical gap in which fallible man can (and regularly does) create their own meaning to the Text.
For us to know Jesusand thus God the Father and the Holy Spiritmore intimately, we must carefully assess our 21st-century culture and Western attitudes in relation to and in light of the 1st-century world of Jesus. We must immerse ourselves in the culture of Scripture and Jesus of Nazareth. And we must learn to "think Hebrew"in the way that the original writers of the Text thought.
arunma said:
Seeing as how modern Judaism denies the supremacy, deity, and messiahship of Jesus, any mention of Jewish practices makes me worried that people are abandoning the theology that Christ and his apostles taught us.
One note (well maybe several), modern Judaism and 1st century Judaism are two different animals.
Something also to keep in mind, at no point were Jesus or the apostles not Torah observant Jews. No where in the New Testament are Torah observant Jews who believe that Jesus is the promised Messiah told no to be Torah observant. BTW Galatians was written to Gentiles not Jewish Christians.
[Note: this could verge on a theological discussion and deviate from the OP as a rabbit trial]
arunma said:
However, that doesn't sound at all like what you're doing. Sorry for the misunderstanding.
No problem.
arunma said:
Oh, just one more thing. Actually, there is a Christian Passover. Here in the west, it's been a bit obscured, because we call it "Easter." But in the eastern church, it has historically been called Pascha (Greek for Passover). The Orthodox Church does celebrate something that they call "Passover." But the emphasis is shifted from Israel's deliverance out of Egypt to the entire world's deliverance in Christ
Actually the Hebrew word for feast/festival is the word
mikrah and means rehearsal, in this case for the Messiahs coming in our case for His return.
Something to keep in mind, Easter is no the Christian Passover Passover (Pesach)is Passover no where in the New Testament did this change. The Old Testament is very clear we are not to adopt pagan practices. Easter (or Eastre in ancient times) was a pagan fertility celebration (thus the eggs and rabbits) the early church ~300 AD adopted this pagan celebration (much like Christmas) and turned it into a Christian holiday. Im all for observing resurrection Sunday, but resurrection Sunday occurred the Sunday after Passover. It bothers me that for thousands of years the church has allowed itself to succumb to these pagan influences.
arunma said:
Well, technically we're both right (sort of). The Torah tells us the specific date of the Passover, but it uses a lunar calendar, which doesn't quite match up with the solar calendar. The early church decided to fix Passover with the solar calendar, while Jews stuck with the lunar calendar, which is why Easter differs from the Jewish Passover.
Not to mention the fact that the early church (again around 300 AD) was rabidly anti-Jewish and sought to break all ties with Judaism. The interesting thing is that up to the end of the book of Acts, Christianity was a sect of Judaism thus the need for the Jerusalem council to figure out what to do with all the Gentiles converts regarding Torah observance.
arunma said:
Now, certainly I respect Jews and their religion, in the same way I respect Islam and various other religions that promote moral behavior. But just as I don't believe in the Qu'ran, I don't believe in any Jewish scriptures (except for the Old Testament, because Christ's church has canonized it).
This is where you and I diverge. There is a HUGE difference between Judaism and say Islam and Hinduism. First, Jesus was a Jew, He was the promised Jewish Messiah He didnt come to start a new religion He came to complete and perfect what was started.
So IMO to equate Islam and Judaism is in effect an insult to Jesus and how He lived as a 1st century Jewish rabbi.
arunma said:
In fact, some churches have gone so far as to consult rabbis on how to perform the Passover the "right" way. And when you do this, the Christian emphasis is completely lost.
Well considering the first Lords Supper was a Passover Seder whats the problem. We are called to be disciples of Jesus right? A disciples in Jesus day was someone whos WHOLE LIFE centered around learning what their rabbi knew (in this case Jesus), doing what their rabbi did (in this case Jesus), so that we can become like our rabbi (in this case Jesus). So if a church wants to learn how they did a Passover Seder in Jesus day, more power to them its what Jesus did.
One other thing to consider (unless of course you subscribe to replacement theology in which we can kindly end the discussion here) is that the Church is grafted into the Tree of Israel so it would seem that the Church and Israel are connected in some mysterious way.
Anyway, I certainly dont post this as a volley in a raging debate but to where Im coming from. Feel free to disagree
..
Shalom
[note: Im not a Messianic or trying to be Torah observant so this is not posted as a Hey this is what I do so Im trying to justify my actions or lifestyle]