According to the New Testament, Jesus was Jewish, and virtually all of his teachings are distortions of things from the Torah.
According to the New Testament, Jesus was Jewish, and virtually all of his teachings are distortions of things from the Torah.
Jesus and his disciples were Jews, and their teachings were initially rooted in the philosophy of Judaism.
The Scriptures, Rabbinical teaching, the Kingdom of God and being God himself.
Catholic believe and follow the works of Jesus, but Judaism did not agree of it because they await the messiah to come.Most of their teaching based from the law of Moses.
if you mean at the age of 12 arguing about Judaism (what Christianity is based on) then about the symbolism and scarification Judaism had turned to, against god's wordI do not mean to offend the Jewish, yet that is what Jesus thought.Deep apologies if this is offensive to you
Christianity is based on the teachings of Jesus Christ, but obviously has a great deal in common with the the moral precepts of Judaism.
There were not any new religions in the Roman Empire from which Christian beliefs and customs were rooted. Christianity itself was a new religion. Originally it was a sect of Jews and it was rooted in many of the beliefs and customs of Judaism. Then it strove to differentiate itself from Judaism. Judaism was an old religion, not a new one.
In Tagalog: Jesus = Jesus (pronounced similar to Spanish). Judaism = hudaismo
Judaism makes no comment on Jesus as he is a part of Christianity and plays no role in Judaism.
Judaism believes that Jesus was a regular human being, not divine and not a prophet.
We don't a 'teaching priest' in Judaism.
No. Reform Judaism does not believe in Jesus. Individual Jews have varying opinions about Jesus, but he is not part of the religion at all.
No. Kabbalah consists of those mystical texts, and tradition, which are found in Judaism, and Judaism holds that Jesus was a regular human being. See also:What does Judaism say about Jesus?