1) The large majority of the Torah's commands such as ritual purity, Shabbat and keeping kosher, are obligatory only for Jews.
2) Non-Jews are expected to learn from the Torah's moral imperatives such as mutual respect (etc.), and worldwide traditions such as the abhorrence of cannibalism (etc).
Because your last name is clearly Jewish._________ The above "answer" is completely wrong. Christians think someone is Jewish regardless of which parent is Jewish because they don't know the facts about Judaism and what our laws/rules are.
Why Are Hospitals Exempt from Antitrust Laws
There are no Jewish Christians.
The recipients of the Gospel of Matthew are believed to be Jewish Christians, as the book emphasizes Jesus as the fulfillment of Jewish prophecies and the importance of following Jewish laws and customs.
The majority of people who refer to themselves as "Jewish Christians" have zero Jewish heritage, they are mainly Christians.
Judaism is the source of most of The Bible (the Christians call the Jewish-accepted portions "the Old Testament"), the origin of the concept of Messiah is from Judaism, both are monotheistic religions, and Jesus himself was Jewish and was learned of Jewish traditions and laws--he was a rabbi.
The first Christians were Jewish.
Congress is not exempt from the laws they pass. Laws passed by the federal government apply to all citizens of the United States, even the people who make them.
Christians believe that Jesus was the Jewish Messiah. Jews disagree.
The distinction between Jew and Gentile was relevant because the earliest Christians were born Jewish. The main issue between Jewish-born Christians and Gentiles was a question of whether a Gentile would need to accept all of the Jewish Laws and Precepts before accepting Christ. This would put a major impediment on Peter and Paul's attempts to get Greeks (who were not at all interested in circumcision, eating kosher, or ceasing work on the Sabbath) saved by Jesus. However, they had to contend with the fact that the Law of the Old Testament was an eternal law for the Jewish people. The understanding that they came to was that the Jewish-born Christians (and their descendants) were still bound by the Old Testament Law, but the Gentiles were not intended by that original covenant and therefore only the New Testament applied to them. As a result, this created two streams of Christianity, Jewish-born Christians and the new majority of Gentile Christians within the same church. Eventually, when the Jewish-born Christians became such a small minority that most of them had married Gentile Christians, they stopped following the Jewish Laws and simply merged themselves into the Gentile Christian mentality that the Old Testament Law no longer applied to them.
No.
They didn't.