It would help if you specified the period and country.
There are approximately the same number of Jews and Mormons (members of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints) in America - about 6 million members each.
Galatians 6 is written as a letter to the church at Galatia. It is exhorting and instructing church members on the right way to relate to one another. the majority of the members were conveted Jews still struggling with relinquishing the Law.
Key areas to focus on include these: * Did the church largely create anti-Judaism in the first place (especially around the time of the Crusades)? * What did the medieval church do (if anything) to counteract the demonization of the Jews? * Did the medieval church actively encourage the demonization of the Jews? * Did the medieval church order Jews to wear a distinctive badge and live in ghettos? * Why did Rome itself establish a ghetto? Which pope ordered this and when and why? Moving on to more recent times: * Why did the church often resist the emancipation of the Jews in the 1800s? * What was the role of the church in the Dreyfus Affair? In the Nazi period: * Did the Pope speak out publicly against the Holocaust? * In practical terms, what did the church do to help Jews facing deportation to extermination camps?
No.
Jews typically do not go to church and if they do, they would likely read Christian liturgical materials. Jews read the Torah in their synagogues.
a synagouge is the temple of the jews. a church is the temple of the christians.
Yes
The medieval trade guilds did not accept Jews as members, and the church did not allow Jews to own land. Since it was therefore difficult or impossible for Jews to farm or to practice most trades, the Jews who practiced usury did so in order to make a living and, literally, to survive.
There is no such thing as the "reform church" or a church of any kind in Judaism.
The Jews
The Thessalonians were inhabitants of Thessalonica, on the road from Athens to Philippi, and the capital of Macedonia. Paul and Silas had organized a church there during his second missionary journey. The church there consisted of both ethnic Jews and Gentiles whom had conveted to Christianity. The Thessalonian church suffered persection and this is reflected in the letters Paul wrote to encourage and instruct them.
America not 'save the Jews from Hitler's attack'. The Holocaust was not some sentimental B-movie with a happy ending.