Judaism-believes the Old Testament and that the messiah which the Old Testament fortells has not come.
Christianity- believes the Old Testament and the New Testament and that the Messiah which the Old Testament fortells has already come.
John 3:16 (in New Testament) "For God so loved the world that he gave his only begotten Son, that who so ever believes in Him shall not parish but have everlasting life. " Jesus Christ is this Son/Messiah, according to the New Testament.
The term "Judeo-Christian" was created by Christians to reference their perceived similarities between Judaism and Christianity.
power of the individual
There is nothing democratic about the Judeo-Christian tradition. The political tradition derived from Judeo-Christianity is tyrrany and authoritarianism. Democratic concepts were derived from Hume, Locke and Hobbes.
It is called (the set of) Judeo-Christian values. Christianity is a daughter-religion of Judaism.
no. Muslim religion comes from Judeo-Christianity. According to the Koran, the angel Jibril (Gabriel) revealed it to Mohammed. Of course, Judeo-Christianity comes fromZoroastrianism which does have some roots in Vedic Hinduism, so there is a connection of sorts.
These principles and concepts are called Judeo-Christian values. Much of Western society was founded on and still adheres to Judeo-Christianity.
Judeo-Christianity is not a religion. "Judeo-Christian Ethics" is used by many Christians as an adjective to give the longevity of the Jewish experience to buttress much of their religious ideology which they may or may not share with Jews. Judaism came into existence between 4000 and 3200 years ago with the Divine Revelations to Abraham and Moses and Christianity came into existence between 2000 and 1700 years ago when the Apostles of Jesus recognized his Divinity and Sacrifice for Humanity.
One fundamental difference is the belief in monotheism in Judeo-Christianity compared to polytheism in Greco-Roman religion. Judeo-Christianity emphasizes a single all-powerful God, while Greco-Roman religion involved worship of multiple gods and goddesses. Additionally, the Judeo-Christian belief system places strong emphasis on morality and ethics, guided by sacred texts like the Bible, while Greco-Roman religion focused more on rituals and interactions with various deities.
Judeo-Christian is not a religion, but a cultural attitude that reflects the beliefs of both Judaism and Christianity, which is its daughter religion, although it has influences from Greek philosophy and pagan sources. Its principle feature is a conviction in the worth of the individual.
There is no demon within judeo-christianity that uses this title.
Some examples of Judeo-Christian faiths include Christianity, Judaism, and Messianic Judaism. These faiths share common roots in the belief in one God, the Hebrew Scriptures (Old Testament), and ethical teachings such as the Ten Commandments.
Faith is belief, and without faith there can be no followers, from which it follows that the religion would soon disappear from history. Faith is important to all religions.