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Christians believe in the Torah and Tanakh, except it is named the old testament in christianity. so why not Talmud?For the same reason Christians don't believe in the Quran, the Bhagavad Gita, or the Gospel of the Flying Spaghetti Monster.
It's not Christian scripture.
Do you think that Jews believe in the Talmud and, if so, what would does that mean to you?Why do not christians believe in the Talmud?
Christians believe in the Torah and Tanakh, ...
Christians do not recognize the legitimacy of rabbinic teaching because Christianity isn't a form of Judaism.Why do not christians believe in the Talmud?
early christianity was a form of judaismChristians do not recognize the legitimacy of rabbinic teaching because Christianity isn't a form of Judaism.
I would argue that Christianity is a form of Hellenization, with "early Christianity" spending much of its time and energy purging itself of its Judaic roots.early christianity was a form of judaism
Not quite. Christianity is an offshoot of Second Temple Judaism which branched off to become its own religion. Rabbinic Judaism (what most religious Jews practice today) is its own separate development which emerged around the same time as Christianity. These are two distinct religions and there is no more reason for Christians to accept the Talmud than there is for them to accept the hadith literature.early christianity was a form of judaism
Is there any good reason for them to believe it?Why do not christians believe in the Talmud?
A compilation of traditional oral law, containing Jewish civil and religious regulation that consists of two main parts—the Mishnah, a law code, and the Gemara, a commentary on that code.
There are two Talmuds—the Palestinian (c. 400 C.E.) and the Babylonian (c. 600 C.E.). The latter is more extensive and is regarded as the pillar of rabbinic law. Considered by the Jews to be a complement to the Hebrew Scriptures, the Talmud sets out an exhaustive code of conduct that addresses every aspect of life. By the time of the Middle Ages, many Jews revered the Talmud more than the Scriptures.
Although the Talmud provides interesting background information on Jewish traditions and interpretation of the Scriptures, it teaches people to think legalistically, not in terms of God’s justice and love. (Mt 23:23, 24; Lu 11:42) The Talmud also reflects the influence of superstition and Greek philosophy on Jewish thinking, including the notion that the soul is immortal.
Why do not christians believe in the Talmud?
This is actually not historically accurate. Early Christianity, if you want to call it that, was simply made up of Jews who had a particular beleive about a particular individual. Who those early Jews were and what they actually beleived about their neither was not ever Judaism, nor is there any evidence that they called their beleive system "Judaism. Further, the early Jewish beleivers in Jesus as a group disappeared off the historical map within two generations of their start. The Talmud did not exist in written form at that time. (I.e. meaning the actual text consisting of the Mishnah and Gemara)early christianity was a form of judaism