Messianic Jews usually have a trinitarian view of God that is similar to that of most evangelical Protestants. As such, their view of God to have a three-in-one nature, where Jesus is one of those three.
This is very different from Judaism, where belief in an incarnate God is considered idolatrous.
Christians do not worship Jesus. They worship God.
The majority of Ukranians are Eastern Orthodox Christians; they worship God and Jesus. There are also a small number of Jews, and they worship God.
Christianity believes that Jesus Christ is the son of God. This belief is central to Christian theology and is a fundamental tenet of the faith.
to answer the prevois question i beleve it is 2 the rest found a better god to worship
Messianic Jews believe in Jesus as the Messiah and follow Jewish traditions, while Christians believe in Jesus as the Son of God and may not follow Jewish customs. Both groups share core beliefs in Jesus, but differ in their cultural and religious practices.
Jesus was a Jew. His disciples and followers are called ChristiansAnswer:The majority of Christian sects as well as, Messianic Jews consider Jesus to be the Son of God - Divine and Eternal (John 1:1-5).
Jews worship God in 3 ways: With prayer With study With deeds of kindness.
Jews do not worship "activities"; they worship the singular God.
Christian answerThe Jews had been yearning for a Messiah who can bring relief from the Roman yoke. Many believe Jesus of Nazareth to be that long-awaited Savior. Jewish answerWe cannot and do not believe that Jesus is god or the son of God.. Such a belief is forbidden in Judaism. In Judaism, Jesus was a regular human being who lived in olden times, and is not part of Jewish religious belief.
Jews worship God.
Jews worship God whether or not synagogues are available.
Jews and Muslims do not worship any prophet. Both Judaism and Islam hold that God and only God is the appropriate object of worship. Muslims consider Jesus a prophet, and Christians do worship Jesus. Christians do not worship any of the other people that both Jews and Muslims respect as prophets.Perhaps the question should have been "what prophets are accepted as legitimate by Jews, Christians and Muslims." In that case, all of the prophets accepted by Judaism are on the list, not just one single prophet. Moses, yes, but also Abraham and Isaiah are on the list.