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Judaism accepts parts of the Christian Bible as sacred, but treats the entire Jewish Bible as sacred.
Christianity- The bible Islam- The Koran Judaism- The Hebrew bible (first testament of the christian bible)
the Christian bible is an absolute authority in the Christian religion. it is a secondary source in Judaism.
The Jews call these books The Tanakh (Jewish Bible), while the Christian name is the old Testament.
Christianity comes from Judaism. The Jewish Holy Book is the Torah, which is the Old Testament in the Christian's Bible.
There really isn't a need for Christians to study Judaism as Christianity was based on the rejection of Judaism. One of the only similarities between the two religions is that the Christian Old Testament was based on the Tanach (Jewish Bible), however, the Christian OT was altered to support the teachings of Christianity.
The Christian bible has two parts: The old testament and the new testament. Christians believe that when Jesus came and died for our sins, he said that the old testament did not matter any longer. Judaism does not believe in Jesus, so they do not have the new testament. They follow the original old testament, which as I stated, is also in the Christian bible.
No. (And in Judaism, of which the Talmud is a part, it is not canonized in the Jewish Bible. It is a separate, non-prophetic text.)
The question is slanted. Judaism believes that it is a good influence on a Jew's life.
E. P. Sanders has written: 'Paul, the law, and the Jewish people' -- subject(s): Bible, Criticism, interpretation, History, Jewish law, Judaism 'Jewish and Christian Self-Definition' 'Jesus and Judaism' -- subject(s): Views on Judaism, Judaism 'Paul and Palestinian Judaism' 'Jewish law from Jesus to the Mishnah' -- subject(s): History, Judaism, Views on Jewish law, Jewish law, Pharisees, Jesus Christ 'Jewish and Christian Self-Definition (Jewish & Christian Self-Definition)'
For Judaism: http://judaism.answers.com/jewish-history/judaisms-influence
No. Christianity could be considered a Jewish sect that separated from Judaism in the first century CE.AnswerBecause Judaism does not accept Christ as the promised Messiah, it cannot be considered Christian which by definition requires this belief. However, Judaism and Christianity share the Old Testament scriptures in common. Judaism is still looking for the prophecied Messiah, while Christians say the prophecy was fulfilled in Christ. Jewish AnswerNo, Christianity was based on the rejection of Judaism. The Christian concept of messiah (one of the key aspects of being a Christian) doesn't exist in Judaism. Furthermore, although the Christian Old Testament was based on the Tanach (Jewish Bible), the OT was altered to support the teachings of Christianity and is not considered a valid text by Jews.