that is a good question. and on top of that Jews think Jesus was not the masiah. i think there was a split in the church and the people who thought they were the true followers of the lord caled themselves christians. christ in christian. you get it
The leaders of Judaism are Rabbis. The followers of Judaism are the Jewish people.
Followers of Judaism worship in synagogues, which are places of worship and community gatherings for Jewish people.
The religion is Judaism. The people are Jews.
Judaism is the religion that was a precursor to Christians. The early Christians, namely the apostles, were Jewish because Jesus was still alive and Christianity had not been developed yet. Jesus himself was Jewish.
Yes. Jesus was Jewish. He was (is) the Jewish Messiah that modern followers of Judaism are still waiting for. In the first century, all of the first followers of Jesus were Jewish.
Jewish clergy are commonly called Rabbi.
For Judaism: http://judaism.answers.com/jewish-history/jerusalem-in-judaism
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.
No. While Christianity is a religion that is derivative of Judaism, the overwhelming majority of Christians have no Jewish blood in them. Christians consider themselves to be "spiritually grafted" into the bloodline of Abraham.
By obeying (as much as they can out of) the 613 commandments, which are the basis of the Jewish law.
Yes, the term "Jewish" should be capitalized when referring to the religion, culture, or people who are followers of Judaism.
It's the other way around. Christianity is a daughter-religion of Judaism.