Dear Forum,
My name is Amit and I am new here. I am highly interested in Judaism, Christianity and Islam.
My question to you is, what is the place of the old testament in christianity.
The old testament is often quoted in matters like messiah, homosexuals and modesty, but how can you rely on it and deny other parts of it by eating shrimps and shaving? What makes one old testament rule binding and other rule irrelevant?
Accordingly, what is the religious basis to "free" the jews from the old testament?
The Torah according to itself is binding only to those who were born jewish (while other nations must only follow the 7 rules of the sons of Noah). If someone who is born jewish accepts christ and the new testament, how does this expemt him from following the laws of the Torah according to christianity?
Thank you,
Amit
Amit,
As a Jew, who believes that Yeshua (Jesus) fulfills messianic prophesy, I would like to share my perspective.
I grew up in a Conservative Jewish congregation, learned Hebrew and prepared for Bar Mitzvah. In High School, I read the New Testament to discover what my Christian friends believed; and saw in it a very plausible fulfillment of Messianic prophesy. I shelved it at that time only because I saw no evidence that my 'Christian' friends believed it. At that time the omly evidence I saw of Christianity was inquisition, crusades, progroms, and antisemitism. My reading did raise questions though.
I wondered who else Psa 22, Isa 53, and Zec 12:10 could be speaking of, if not Yeshua. Shortly before my 30th birthday I met some Christians whose actions and attitudes reflected what the New Testament indicated one should find in a believer.
In the course of walking with Yeshua for more than 45 years, I have come to these understandings:
The intent of the Law was to demonstrate that mankind cannot please a Holy God through His own effort.
The substitutionary atonement of animal sacrifice demonstrates this principle.
In Gen 22 when Yetschak assked:
Ge 22:7-8
7 And Isaac spake unto Abraham his father, and said, My father: and he said, Here am I, my son. And he said, Behold the fire and the wood: but where is the lamb for a burnt offering?
8 And Abraham said, My son,
God will provide himself a lamb for a burnt offering: so they went both of them together.
KJV
God will provide himself a lamb the double take is the same in the Hebrew as in the English. God will provide (of / by) Himself a Lamb (Yeshua).
The fact that sacrifice of animals as a substiutionary atonement ended shortly after Yeshua's substitutionary sacrifice of Himself confirms the principle.
I believe that the intent of the dietary laws and of not shaving was to make a distinction between Israel and surrounding nations. There is absolutely no reason that a Jewish believer can't continue to observe these things if he/she doesn't impose them on others, and doesn't rely on them for salvation..