They would be called Christians or Notsrim (נוצרים) in Hebrew (literally "Nazerenes").
Notsrim is the proper term for Christians in Hebrew. If you are specifically looking for the term "Messianic Jew" it is "Yehudi Meshikhi" (יהודי משיחי). It is important to note that most Israelis and Jews in general see Messianic Jews to be Christians anyway.
They are called Notsrim (× ×•×¦×¨×™×) whether they keep the Torah or not.
For those who are not fluent in Hebrew, it is hard to read the Torah as the Torah scroll does not have nikkudot (pronunciation indicators).
Those who follow Judaism refer to the Torah for religious guidance. The Torah is a sacred text in Judaism that includes the first five books of the Hebrew Bible. It is considered the foundation of Jewish law, ethics, and belief.
It means laws. Specifically, it refers to those laws of the Torah which don't have any obvious reason to them (Talmud, Yoma 67b).
A:Yes. Most Christians believe this, although those who have studied the Bible are less likely to do so.
The Torah is not "read backward". The Hebrew alphabet goes from right to left as opposed to the Latin alphabet (that English uses) that goes from left to right. The Hebrew is read properly (right to left), which would make it appear to an English-speaker that the Torah is being read backwards when it is actually being read forwards.
Many Traditional Jews believe the Torah was given to Moses directly from God. Others believe God dictated it to Moses. Many non-Orthodox Jews believe the Torah was inspired by God, but written by Moses and/or other annonymous writers. And there are many other views as well, including those Jews who believe the Torah was completely man-made with no divine element at all.
'Jesus' was a Greek translation of the Hebrew name 'Yeshua', which is also more usually translated as Joshua. Yeshua was a very common Jewish name in the first century.Jesus was not a very common name. But Jesus in Spanish (hay-zuse) is a popular name for Mexicans
The Torah is the first five books. Judaism and All forms of Christianity hold that the first 5 Books of the Hebrew Bible are holy; however, individual Jews and Christians interpret those teachings with great variation. So who follows the Torah depends on your definition of "follow."Even among Orthodox Jews, there is variation in how the Torah is interpreted. See this interesting article about the variation in interpreting Torah:A Torah with 70 Different Aspects
Believe it or not, 'Eve' is one of those names that came to English from Hebrew, by way ofKing James and his translation committee.The original Hebrew pronunciation is "KHA-vah".
No. Christianity comes from Judaism (Ancient Israel). Jewish people were the original "Christians" (it wasn't called Christianity then). Jesus of Nazareth (who's name is Yeshua in Hebrew and what you would have heard if you lived then) is Jewish. All of the original "Christians" were Jewish. Yeshua (Jesus) and those that followed him were observant Jews who practiced Judaism. Yeshua said that he was the Messiah foretold by the prophets (in Judaism). Those that followed him believed him to be the Messiah. These beliefs were shared with non-Jews and Greek Jews. People who believed in the Messiahship of Jesus/Yeshua were derogatorily called "Christians". Before the term Christianity came to be, the belief that Yeshua was the Messiah was called "The Way". Eventually, after much persecution from Roman Emperors, Christians were legally accepted in the Roman Empire. Later, Christianity was made the official religion of Rome.
The word 'Tanakh' is a Hebrew TLA ... a Three-Letter Acronym, formed of the initialletters of the words "Torah, Nevi'im, K'tuvim". Those are the Hebrew designationsfor the major divisions of the Bible: Torah, Prophets, and Writings.Thus "Tanakh" is the referential title of the entire Hebrew Bible from Genesis to Chronicles.You may recognize many of its components because of their correspondence to, and yourthorough familiarity with, books of the "old testament", which is after all nothing but atranslation of the Tanakh.