Well, honey, back in the day, some Jewish folks believed that mixing with non-Jews could lead to adopting their customs or beliefs, which was a big no-no. It was all about preserving their own traditions and identity, like a cultural quarantine, if you will. But hey, times have changed, so now it's more about personal choice and respect for different cultures.
If it ever leaked it would be comming out under house and you could blow up your house.
A mural of a tiger eating a baby would be the best.
The Anti Christ. After that, all people will be believers.
The opposite of Jewish (i.e. non-Jewish) would be Gentile.
You may have the definition of "gentile" confused with another word. "Gentile" refers to anyone who is not of the Jewishrace or faith. There is nothing inherent in being a gentile that would prevent one from celebrating Christmas.
Considering that just to place the bugs you would be entering their house WITH a criminal intent, you are committing Burglary - a felony. Anything you did after that would simply be another charge added on to the felony Burglary charge you already have.
The benefit of painting your house on the outside in a very colorful color is that you will never mistaken yourself from entering someone else's house that looks the same as yours.
I think any good therapist, psychologist or psychiatrist would probably say, "What does it mean to YOU?".
To enter a paralegal school in your area I am sure that you would need a high school diploma. Also, depending on your school you would have to have a certain score on the SAT.
To say "welcome to my house" in Spanish, you would say "bienvenido a mi casa." In French, it's "bienvenue chez moi." In Italian, you would say "benvenuto a casa mia." Each phrase conveys a warm invitation to guests entering your home.
Sure. Who else would? It's your religion. Enjoy it with our blessings. Mazal tov.
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.