attofishpi wrote: ↑Mon Jan 16, 2023 2:05 pmMost of them don't believe Jesus did as the Messiah was supposed to do (and was not in fact their Messiah from...dunno what? the Torah?) - Obviously overlooking the fact that their land of Israel was provided by the lovely Christian nation (that Jesus obviously set up as part of the master promise) - England - and is still protected by many predominantly Christian nations - ergo the Messiah did as promised.
A Jew who believes in Jesus is no longer a Jew but a Christian. Good work Atto!
True, the Orthodox Jewish notion of
Moshiach is radically different from anything Christian so Jesus cannot be seen as that figure. Given what resulted to Judea (Exile) and Jewish experience in Europe at the hands of Christians, Jews don't have too many options left but to define Jesus Christ as a demon. And those associated with this figure as demonic. Within strictly Orthodox Judaism this, of course, defines what Jews at this level believe about both Jesus Christ and Christians.
No Orthodox Jew would ever say that Israel was 'provided' by England but only that Israel was given to Jews by god. This, and 'chosenness', are the two core pillars of Judaism. You have inadvertently done some stunning work! You seem capable of much more. Is it best to 1) keep the bottle corked, o r2) uncork it and proceed? What works best for you?
But you have encountered one non-minor problem. That is when we focus *within the narratives*. If you believe the traditional narratives then the Exile of Jews from Judea which, in Christian interpretation, resulted in Exile and the destruction of the former Jewish temple, then only god could restore the Jews to Israel in our present.
So does it follow that a) because there is a Jewish nation now reestablished in Judea that god did this? and b) is the god who did this the same Moshiach the Jews predict
will come? But c) if the Jews are indeed in Israel (again) what then is the function of
Moshaich since Israel is a
fait accompli?