by Mitera Nikkou » Tue Aug 19, 2008 11:40 pm
You misunderstand. He wasn't a Jew because he didn't practice what the majority of Jews practiced. And he didn't start a new Jewish sect or else that is what it would have become, because he would have stated so and those following him would have known and spread the name of the sect around. You can compare what Jesus did as a rabbi to what the Jehovah's Witnesses do as Christians today: they don't break away from the mainstream because they have a different idea about what a (the) doctrine(s) means, but rather that the mainstream strayed away from the true practice and meanings and they're returning to it. Which in turn means that they do have differing ideas, but so did Jesus.
Jesus' teachings and life inspired the Christian religion, a new religion, not a sect of the Jewish religion. You can tell people that Christianity is a sect of Judaism today, and you can probably imagine what their reaction would be. It would be understandable since the basis of the New Testament requires the Hebrew scriptures (Old Testament), but I reckon that it's some sort of reconciliation. I mean, imagine if you started a new sect that taught that the other sects were wrong. Do you think people of the other sects would be happy with that? Both Jews and Christians had a hard enough time with how they were treated by the Roman empire, and it was so in particular for the Jews. The last thing that a new Jewish sect would need, one that denounced other Jewish sects, would be to have both the Roman empire and other Jewish sects on their backs. They may not have survived if they had. What better than to break away from the Jewish religion and deal with the Roman empire on a different front, and be different enough to not have to contest with other Jewish sects? And so Christianity was able to work its way into the empire and didn't have much to worry about when it came time for its different sects to fight for orthodoxy.
However, when you get right down to it, to call Jesus a Christian today would probably be wrong. Or, at least I think it would be, because I don't think that the majority of Christians have it right, much like how the pharisees of Jesus' day didn't. And he still can't be a Jew because the Jewish faith of that day, as well as the Judaism of today, just aren't what Jesus taught. Like Jesus said (if I remember correctly), the faith lost itself to the tradition of men rather than follow the word of God. Christianity has similarly lost itself to its traditions.
In the end Jesus was simply the Son of God, not a Jew or a Christian, because the Jewish and Christian labels just don't apply to him except when imposed by us for one reason or another. But if I had to call him one or the other, I wouldn't call him a Jew for two interconnected reasons: one, because he didn't follow the mainstream; and two, because he was able to inspire a new religion entirely, rather than just another sect. But if I were to call him a Christian, I wouldn't be thinking of the Christianity of then or of today, but rather when it was pure and untainted by the passage of time and the spoils of man... The Christianity at the very beginning, within Jesus himself. When you think about it, when you have a model, copies of it just won't be the same. Much like with evolution, over time there will be mutations, and things will change. Or like the passage of information, the details can alter between mouth and ear, much like with rumors. If I called myself a Jalopian, and practiced Jalopianism, I would be the only one even if I inspire millions of others to try and practice the same.
I guess I just think too much. <_<;
Hell hath no fury like a woman scorned because only women can give two tits for every tat.
♥