WelcomeUser Guide
ToSPrivacyCanary
DonateBugsLicense

©2026 Poal.co

351

Sorry guys. I looked through 150 pages of posts, but I can't find them. I want to discuss them with my wife. Thanks!

Sorry guys. I looked through 150 pages of posts, but I can't find them. I want to discuss them with my wife. Thanks!

(post is archived)

[–] 1 pt

Jesus isn't a Jew?

He was born of a Jewish mother, in an almost exclusively Jewish part of the world, Galilee. Galileans were displaced Jews from the Hasmonean dynasty displaced by king Herod. Herod was the client king of Judea.

His mother Mary was visited by niggers and Arabs bearing gifts because they didn't know if they were the father.

All his friends were Jews, his disciples, all of them were Jews. He went on pilgrimage to the Jewish Temple in Jerusalem where he was under the authority of priests. He celebrated the Jewish festivals whilst preaching his mission, Jesus even celebrates Seder Passover in the bible and it's debatable whether this is depicted in the last supper.

Even if you separate the religions entirely through some miracle of geography, history, lineage, themes, chronology, several identical chapters that appear in both religions, and say he was the first Christian. He was still ethnically Jewish.

It's more Jewy than the sitcom friends.

Well, I concede that being born of a Jewish mother makes you Jewish in modern times, and he practiced Jewish traditions. The video I was looking for explored the geographical differentiation. I found it interesting to hear a different approach on the matter.

I thank you for your thorough reply!

[–] 0 pt

I'm not having a dig, I enjoy the discussion but the argument isn't necessarily watertight either for a geographical argument that is relying heavily on etymological summation.

Didn't take it as a dig! Truly enjoyed your response.

His mother Mary was visited by niggers and Arabs bearing gifts because they didn't know if they were the father.

Also, LOL.