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I know that in the Judaism, you don't believe in the resurrection of Jesus Christ. What is your opinion on this?
I know that in the Judaism, you don't believe in the resurrection of Jesus Christ. What is your opinion on this?
Yes. Generally speaking, Judaism does not believe in any resurrection of the dead, save for that prophesied to come at the Judgment Day at the end of time (and many, many Jews feel that is not literal resurrection, but actually refers to the eternality of the soul).
This ties in with two other important beliefs in Judaism about Jesus: first of all, that he was not in any way divine, or the Son of God (a concept utterly incompatible with Jewish thought, which holds that God does not reproduce, and certainly not by impregnating human women). Thus, in our view, he has no unique prerogative or power that would explain why, alone among human beings, he is permitted to return from death. Second of all, that, while Jesus may have been a well-intentioned man, perhaps even somewhat saintly in his way, he was not the messiah, nor a prophet, nor had he any kind of tremendous spiritual potency that might explain why God would resurrect him from the dead, alone among human beings.
So, for us, it makes no more sense to believe that Jesus was resurrected than it would be to believe that, say, Abraham Lincoln, or Ghandi came back to life after their deaths. Great people, sure. But just human beings, after all.
I know I'm not the OP, but, that's quite a good response, and, not to get OT or hijack the thread, in Judaism, would it be seen as possible for Jesus, or other Holy men & women (or not so Holy people) to wield the types of powers Jesus had (or is said to have had anyway), even without being God?.
There have certainly been people in the tradition who are said to have worked wonders. With the exception of raising the dead, exploits such as producing food, curing ailments, exorcism, or other such marvels have been ascribed not only to some of the prophets in the Tanakh, but also to some of the Rabbis of the Talmud, and very occasionally to other rabbis in the ages since. However, aside from the prophets, who did what they did because God directly invested them with the authority and power to do so, it is generally believed that only through great personal saintliness, endless hours of learning Torah, and long, long study of the Kabbalah can one attain such gifts from God.
And in any case, they may make one special, but not superhuman or divine.
Also, there is nothing in the tradition that says that at least some of those kinds of wonders may not be replicable with magic, in ways not necessarily having anything whatsoever to do with God or saintliness or Torah.
Oh no no no. Don't even go there. There is no similarity.
Bill Maher can be a funny guy,
I know that in the Judaism, you don't believe in the resurrection of Jesus Christ. What is your opinion on this?
I know that in the Judaism, you don't believe in the resurrection of Jesus Christ. What is your opinion on this?
Judaism doesn't use the phrase 'Jesus Christ', FYI.
All stories about Yeshua's death... or birth for that matter... are unimportant to Jews.
Notice my religion title. Even though Yeshua is quite important to me, these issues are not. It's not the man, but his message, which is of importance.
In Jewish tradition, Jesus of Nazareth is considered a false messiah, formally and officially, the New Testament is not part of the Jewish library in anyway, therefore the miracles of the New Testament are rejected by Jews.I know that in the Judaism, you don't believe in the resurrection of Jesus Christ. What is your opinion on this?
That's what I meant, not resurrection in general, which as you point out is one of the 13 principles of faith. Whether he resurrected or not proves nothing..... As for yushka... That's a different story. He probably did ressurect from the dead. But all the taanaim could ressurect the dead as well. So, it's really nothing unique...
The problem is, the entire movement he started was the equivelant of something a long the lines of what masorti Judaism is today. I.e. Discarding certain halakhas which are viewed as useless.
Tell me, as a messianic Jew - whether you see the Talmud as valid and binding or not, do you celebrate Purim or channukah or ever wear a kippa?
Not sure how Karaites wear them, do they have tekhelet? I know a lot of people think they now have the right dye from the right muscle or whatever, but I've only worn mine white.Interesting. Do you wear the rabbinic style tzitzit or the karaite ones?
See, that's just the thing... the sources recording what Yeshua actually taught are all gentile, and not only that but gentile with an agenda. Are the accounts truthful and accurate? Perhaps not! All I ever really identify with is the so-called 'Sermon on the Mount'. I've heard some scholars claim that this is most probably genuine records of his teachings, from those who were actually there, and not composed long after the fact as the so-called 'gospels' are. To me, the whole of Yeshua's teachings boil down to - 'where is your heart? Do the Mitzvot change your heart, or are they just done to comply?' See? No debate about what Rabbinic decisions to accept or reject, it's not about that... as I said, it's all about Kevanah!I'm not 100% sure that Jesus rejected halakha. In fact, a lot of them he out right kept. What he rejected was rabbinic halachas.
... Tell me, are G-d's laws eternal? Will there come a day when we don't have to do everything G-d said for us to do?
...Maybe you should answer me this, why is it that Jesus never fulfilled the role of moschiach Ben Yosef?
Also, you do realize that Jesus' best sellers were basically, no - literally, teachings of hillel, right? He who is with out sin shall cast the first stone, turn the other cheek, etc, etc, etc... Those are all more or less already pre-existing Jewish teachings, you do know this, right? I really must ask, have you ever learned Talmud?