Perspective of a 2nd Temple Jew dropped into current Christianity or Judaism

1,764 Views | 12 Replies | Last: 1 yr ago by codker92
ramblin_ag02
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AG
Branched off from the "God's Word is clear" thread as it really didn't fit over there anymore.

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neither Christians or Jews practice Temple Judaism
I disagree. I think, properly, that Christianity is a faithful continuance of one Second Temple Judaism, which was itself a faithful continuance of the faith of ancient Israel and the Patriarchs. At any rate, that is an implicit claim of the Scriptures.

I think you're looking at the wrong things to determine nomos, or way of living. While language and dress are absolutely a part of it, because nomos broadly speaking can be used as a synonym for culture, they don't have to be the identifier of a people. This is really important, fundamental to the idea of a Christian nomos. I'll get to that at the end - and I'm sorry for this being long.

Language and dress are certainly part of the nomos of a Judaean, but Aramaic was spoken, note Hebrew... and we know from history and the scriptures that Greek was as well. But these didn't make one a Judaean.

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Christians don't have any religious clothing other than "fancy".
..? liturgical vestments are a thing. And no modern Jew wears anything like liturgical vestments of the second temple period. And, again, I don't think the outer clothing define the nomos of a Christian although I there is garb prescribed by the scripture to Israelites which are part of their nomos. Do modern Jews wear them? Very few, right?


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Day of worship: 2nd Temple Jews worship on the Sabbath. Modern Jews worship on the Sabbath. Modern's Christians do not worship on the Sabbath, but on the Lords Day.
Worship qua worship isn't done at all by Jews any more - because worship in the scriptures is always fundamentally linked to sacrifice. Christians offer sacrifice on the Lord's day, and on every other day of the week. Even further, per the Torah the Sabbath was a day of rest, not a day of explicit worship. Sacrifices were offered on every day, including the Sabbath, but worship and sacrifice was a priestly function. Only priests could even enter the tabernacle.

What you call worship I don't think would match the idea of a first century Judaean, but some synagogue practices would be instantly familiar of course. That being said, the first half of the Orthodox Divine Liturgy - the Liturgy of the Word - is very similar to an Orthodox synagogue service... no doubt because they both came from a common form of synagogue practice. I would think modern Jew or Christian services would be completely foreign.

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Holidays
None of the festivals as prescribed in the Torah can be observed today by Jews. Not a single one.

However, all of the appointed feats are celebrated and kept in the Orthodox Church calendar.


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Music
Antiphonal chanting of psalms as practiced today in the Orthodox Church and in some Jewish services is a direct continuation of the practice of the first century. But I don't think either of this is essential to the nomos of a people.


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Decorations: from what little I've read, 2nd Temple synagogues were bare with only benches and an elevated area for someone to read the Scriptures aloud.
Again, decorations are not what makes a person part of one people group or another. But, we know from archaeological evidence that there were mosaics and depictions in synagogues, and from the scriptures themselves we know the first temple was decorated including iconography.


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I'm probably missing a lot here, and feel free to add things I missed. I just don't in any way see how an ancient Jew would step into any current Christian church of any flavor and be more familiar than they would in any current synagogue. I'm not trying to make a value judgement. I just don't understand if you think otherwise.
I don't think this is the right question - but I do think that you're glossing over some important things. First, as I said, the form of the Divine Liturgy and Orthodox synagogue practice is fundamentally linked to earlier common synagogue practices, so I do think we can sift between recognizable and not there between more modern / less faithful practices in both Jewish and Christian variants. But the reading of the scriptures, processing with the scriptures (Torah or Gospel), antiphonal chanting of psalms, all very much recognizable. I also think that, barring language barriers, a faithful Judaean would recognize a good chunk of what is said in the Divine Liturgy, as it's mostly psalms. A Christ-follower I think would be delighted at the application of those psalms. I think any first century person, pagan or Judaean, would understand the general form of anamnesis or liturgical reenactment combined with the offering of a sacrifice...and I believe that a Christ-follower Judaean would recognize the breaking of the bread. Certainly St Justin Martyr would, and that is within living memory of the Apostles.

But - the important thing I think is not whether they'd be completely baffled by various aspects of modern life we probably wouldn't even notice, but looking at what makes a person part of a people group. And that's what I was getting at.

The scriptures are quite clear on what makes a person an Israelite... you must be circumcised and follow the Law of Moses, including the Passover, and all that entails as far as how you live, dress, work, and worship. That, and only that, is what makes a person a Jew according to the scriptures. (Or as St Paul puts it, For not all who are of Israel are Israel, nor because they are the seed of Abraham are they all Abraham's children). What that means is, if you do not follow the Law out of disobedience, if you sin with your hand held high, you are cutting yourself off from the people and are to be cut off. This is why St Paul had Timothy circumcised - he was being unfaithful.

However, those things are not what marks a person as a Christian. To be a Christian you must be baptized and participate in the life of the Church, including the Eucharist. And while this also has ramifications as to how you live, dress, work, and worship, it is also NOT explicitly tied to a single culture.

So - dress and language. Yes, to be a Judaean there was a certain aspect of the nomos not fundamental to being an Israelite that was part of Judaean identity over and above the elements that were fundamental. But, St Paul's whole point is that the gentiles coming to Christ had to conform to NEITHER. They did NOT have to become Judaeans, they did NOT have to be circumcised and follow the Torah as Sons of Israel. There is absolutely a kind of undesirable tribalism in the Judaizer crowd St Paul opposed.

They DID have to follow the Torah as non-Israelites (which is what the council of Jerusalem says) and they DID have to give up the parts of their gentile nomos which were incompatible with Christ. Therefore a pagan Greek who came to Christ did not become a Judaean but instead a Christian Greek, which was a new category of being altogether. Elements were jettisoned, such as pagan worship -- which is itself an entire way of life -- but elements were retained, such as language and other cultural aspects.

When you say, Christians have no religious garb other than "fancy" this is what you're missing. The liturgical vestments worn in the Orthodox Church are the religious garb of Roman Christians. We should expect this to be different than Judaeans, just as music or language or what food they eat.

In short - I think the nomos of modern faithful Christians would be recognizable to first century Christians, even though the accidents of modern life wouldn't be. What makes a person part of the people that Christianity is (that is to say, All Israel, the People of God) hasn't changed. I am an American Christian (which is itself something that is still being worked out, much as a Greek Christian or a Roman Christian or English Christian or Russian Christian was worked out in the past) but I what makes me a Christian is exactly the same as what made St Paul's first gentile converts Christians, and St Peter's first faithful Judaeans Christians.

And, by comparison, I think the nomos of most modern Jews is completely foreign to that of first century Judaeans, because nearly all of what made them who they were has been completely lost. In the case of cultural identity that is obvious and unavoidable, but it is equally apparent in religion, theology, and practice.

Regarding the first point, I'm being much more literal about this than you are. Christians don't practice Temple Judaism. We don't have a Temple and offer animal and grain sacrifices there. We don't gather at the Temple 3 times per year. I think both Christiantiy and Judaism are spiritual successors to Temple Judaism in different ways, and as Christian I think we are the ones that are the true successors. To piggyback, I disagree with your point regarding an ancient Jew recognizing and condoning the sacrifice done at Mass. During Temple times, all the sacrificies were done at the Temple. You could probably eventually convince an ancient Jew that the the Temple is gone, the Messiah's body is the new temple, the Eucharist is the body of the Messiah, and therefore it's okay. But on first impression, no way. If they recognized the Eucharist as a sacrifice they would instantly consider it a breach of Torah for being outside the Temple.

Second, you clearly have in your head a Nazarene around 50 AD when we discuss a random 2nd Temple Jew. What pops into my head is a layperson living around 50 BC. I think that makes a big difference in regards to familiarity and comfort in different settings.

Third, you spend a lot of time explaining very well that the essense, or nomos, of Jews and Christians is different. I agree with that, but I feel it undermines your positions that Rabbinic Jews are not successors of ancient Jews and that an ancient Jew would feel more comfortable in a church than a synagogue. Maybe if we are talking about a 50 AD Nazarene. But if we are talking about a 50 BC Pharisee then I disagree. Modern Jews have at least tried to hold together the essense, or nomos, of the Torah. It's literally been their identity for thousands of years and the reason a Jew in Russia can move to a Jewish neighborhood in NYC with few issues. There is a common culture that spans the world based on trying to keep a Torah identity. I think a Torah following ancient Jew would find that very different but at least a little familiar. Christians OTOH have adopted an entirely different essense, culture, or nomos. That had already started by 50 AD, so judging by that standard you are probably more correct. But judging by a 50 BC Pharisee? So much would be new and foreign and so little would be directly familiar
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AGC
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If I may ask, what kind of person are you picturing going to the temple? Most Judeans were too poor to do so more than once a year, nor did many own their own animals to transport (one of the reasons Christ overturned the money changing tables - taking advantage of people buying animals at the temple).

So in this context are they really as culturally consistent as you're asserting? I don't want to put on a Chosen lens but as day laborers who move with work, even the cultural dress we're assuming for modern day would seem a bit far for the average person.
BonfireNerd04
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Even people who did own animals didn't always have a practical way to travel with them, so chose instead to buy *new* animals in Jerusalem for the sacrifices. Hence, the high demand for animals there.

Also, for people too poor to afford animals (not even pigeons), burnt offerings of flour were accepted (Lev. 5:11-13).
ramblin_ag02
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I must admit ignorance to the daily economics of the Holy Land during the Second Temple. I know the general principle of families owning land and working property over generations, and I know that agriculture was the dominant profession. But those things are true pretty much everywhere and time between hunter gatherers and the industrial revolution.

If we're talking about a 50 BC Pharisee, then you're probably talking about someone with an education. Meaning they have some wealth either by land or trade. In which case they probably did go to Jerusalem three times per year for the High Holy Days and probably interacted with their local Levites pretty often. And I only picked a 50 BC Pharisee, because the Pharisees all either became Christians or Rabbanic Jews. So it was a neutral starting point
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AGC
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ramblin_ag02 said:

I must admit ignorance to the daily economics of the Holy Land during the Second Temple. I know the general principle of families owning land and working property over generations, and I know that agriculture was the dominant profession. But those things are true pretty much everywhere and time between hunter gatherers and the industrial revolution.

If we're talking about a 50 BC Pharisee, then you're probably talking about someone with an education. Meaning they have some wealth either by land or trade. In which case they probably did go to Jerusalem three times per year for the High Holy Days and probably interacted with their local Levites pretty often. And I only picked a 50 BC Pharisee, because the Pharisees all either became Christians or Rabbanic Jews. So it was a neutral starting point


I thought the Sadducees owned most of the land at the time, having aggregated it and never returning it as prescribed.

My starting point may have been wrong then - I was assuming an average Judean rather than Pharisee or any other sect.
ramblin_ag02
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No, it's a fair point. I clearly know very little about the daily lives of 2nd Temple Judeans. I know a little about the religious practices just because I find it interesting
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AGC
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ramblin_ag02 said:

No, it's a fair point. I clearly know very little about the daily lives of 2nd Temple Judeans. I know a little about the religious practices just because I find it interesting


TBF I am waiting for someone to hop in and correct me because my information comes from years of podcasts and sermons and what's stuck from them, not actual historical study.

Not to plug Lord of Spirits again but I think they do a very good job of emphasizing our inability to be ourselves outside of our time and place (and physical bodies). I imagine it'd be quite unsettling to anyone from that period to venture to the present and make a judgment. How long has it taken all of us to worship in our respective traditions and not only grasp the surface, but dig into where it comes from? How long would that dialogue take for anyone to manifest in the present and be certain? Of course it might not be as long since they don't have our modern assumptions and expectation of access to information with the idea that we judge truth for ourselves, rather than submit to the local authority with similar practice.
Zobel
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AG

Ok, I understand what you're saying. But I think we need to pause a bit to say that... there were faithful Judaeans.. or really, Israelites.. who immediately recognized Christ as the Messiah and obeyed Him. The person I have in my head is not a Nazarene of 50 AD in general but St Paul in particular. Or any of the Apostles. They didn't change their beliefs, and the Christian faith explicitly says that they believe the same as the prophets and the patriarchs. That's what Hebrews says, we see and receive what the fathers and prophets hoped for. So deviation from that is not a spiritual succession or a different type, it is a departure.

And the people who recognized Christ were from all walks of life. The poor, the teachers, even people not from the Judaeans. I'm not sure that matters.


So I don't agree that someone would be upset about the Eucharist, because St Paul and the other Apostles wouldn't agree....and St Paul was a Pharisee. The reason they would be able to understand is because the very thing is prophesied in the scripture (Isaiah and Malachi among others). Nevermind that the Patriarchs offered sacrifice away from Jerusalem. St Paul didn't convert or change religions, he just changed his understanding of where he was on the Messianic timeline. He never thought of his faith as changing in any way, and he testifies to that multiple times. If St Paul correctly recognized it (once hit over the head metaphorically) and other Pharisees did - and they did - then there's no reason any 50 BC Pharisee would not be able to.

I don't think modern Jews have tried to hold the nomos of the Torah. I think they've tried to hold the essence of being a Judaean (where Jew comes from, vs Israelite), and those are not the same thing. It's the exact mistake of the party of the Judaizers. Being a Judaean is not the same as being an Israelite, and it had a whole host of other baggage that in some cases was actually antithetical to being a faithful Israelite.

The example of a Russian Jew being comfortable in NYC just means they both hold to the same identities today... it doesn't give us any example at all as to whether that is the same identity as a thousand years ago. I think the identity held to today by Jews is something that formed post-AD 70, with an extreme disjunction. I do think, though, that the identity has been relatively stable for centuries. That disjunction touches every aspect of religious identity, every point that we moderns consider part of religion (practice, worship mode, authority structure, scriptures, and fundamental beliefs about God).

Based on that, then, I have to say that Christianity is the only faithful and continuous expression of second temple Judaism, because within Christianity you do not have that disjunction. We confess that we practice the faith of the fathers, the prophets, and the patriarchs.

Christianity includes by necessity the faith of sons of Israel according to the flesh, but it also includes completely new and different identities in Christian gentiles. It is a given that those new identities would be foreign to someone prior to AD 33, because they literally didn't exist. But, by the same token, the identity of an Israelite would be completely foreign to Abraham, because it also literally didn't exist yet. God creates from nothing, which He repeatedly says is how we may know He Is.
ramblin_ag02
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I'm Christian, so I'm not trying to argue against the idea of Christians being the true inheritors of Abraham's promise and the ancient Scriptures. I very much believe that is true.

I also completely agree that, in general, the Jewish religion cares more about being Jewish than being Israelites. Aside from the whole Messiah thing, it's my biggest unsolicited criticism of rabbinic Judaism. There are literally parts of the Talmud where the rabbis advise following the decisions of the rabbis over the voice of God Himself, because the rabbis define what is Jewish and God determines what is right, and being Jewish is more important than being right.

However, I can't go so far as to say that modern Judaism has no connection. After all, there was hundreds of years noted between the First and Second Temples where Jews could not practice their religion faithfully, and they were still Jews. This time period is probably of the origin of the Pharisees, as they are thought to have been heavily influenced by Babylonian culture. So it's hard for me to look at the Jews of the First Diaspora and the Jews of the Second Diaspora and see an essential difference. In support, Christianity is prophesied as a New Covenant. So to say that nothing changed from 50 BC to 50 AD in the eyes of an average 2nd Temple Judaean just can't be true, much less after adding a few thousand years on top of that.

I was also looking at the issue very superficially. Like if I woke up in a thousand years after the end times and looked around, what would I find familiar? So I was focused on language, activity, dress, music, ornamentation. Basically the immediate 5 senses. More likely our 2nd Temple Judaean would see electric lighting, air conditioning, and cell phones, and that would blow his mind to the point that he didn't notice anything else
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Zobel
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Yeah… plagiarising a meme I saw it would be like

Me: "…. So yeah, man. That basically brings us up to 2023. So, what do you think? Are we faithfully maintaining the traditions?"

St Paul: "you went to the moon?"

Me: "yep, it was pretty awesome. But the traditions…?"

St Paul: "a HUMAN walked on the f-in MOON?"
Sapper Redux
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There are literally parts of the Talmud where the rabbis advise following the decisions of the rabbis over the voice of God Himself, because the rabbis define what is Jewish and God determines what is right, and being Jewish is more important than being right.


That's not what the story of the Oven of Akhnai is saying. There's an important aspect of it emphasizing the importance of community and respect, especially for those who are in the minority, but the broader point is that the Torah has been given to man with the law for interpretation and guidance. They are not relying on divine intervention or placing trust in those who claim miracles to understand Torah, but rather a process of discernment and study. It has nothing to do with "being Jewish is more important than being right." It's saying being right is determined by the tools provided by God.
ramblin_ag02
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Sapper Redux said:

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There are literally parts of the Talmud where the rabbis advise following the decisions of the rabbis over the voice of God Himself, because the rabbis define what is Jewish and God determines what is right, and being Jewish is more important than being right.


That's not what the story of the Oven of Akhnai is saying. There's an important aspect of it emphasizing the importance of community and respect, especially for those who are in the minority, but the broader point is that the Torah has been given to man with the law for interpretation and guidance. They are not relying on divine intervention or placing trust in those who claim miracles to understand Torah, but rather a process of discernment and study. It has nothing to do with "being Jewish is more important than being right." It's saying being right is determined by the tools provided by God.
You're free to interpret it how you wish, and I'm free to do the same. To me, the voice of God from heaven telling a bunch of rabbis that the minority view is correct, followed by the majority telling God to butt out, seems a pretty clear statement that consensus is more important than righteousness. Unless you want to say that rabbinical consensus is more valid than heavenly decree, which seems even worse in my view.

https://sites.hofstra.edu/daniel-greenwood/the-oven-of-akhnai/

Link in case anyone doesn't already know the story


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codker92
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ramblin_ag02 said:

Branched off from the "God's Word is clear" thread as it really didn't fit over there anymore.

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neither Christians or Jews practice Temple Judaism
I disagree. I think, properly, that Christianity is a faithful continuance of one Second Temple Judaism, which was itself a faithful continuance of the faith of ancient Israel and the Patriarchs. At any rate, that is an implicit claim of the Scriptures.

I think you're looking at the wrong things to determine nomos, or way of living. While language and dress are absolutely a part of it, because nomos broadly speaking can be used as a synonym for culture, they don't have to be the identifier of a people. This is really important, fundamental to the idea of a Christian nomos. I'll get to that at the end - and I'm sorry for this being long.

Language and dress are certainly part of the nomos of a Judaean, but Aramaic was spoken, note Hebrew... and we know from history and the scriptures that Greek was as well. But these didn't make one a Judaean.

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Christians don't have any religious clothing other than "fancy".
..? liturgical vestments are a thing. And no modern Jew wears anything like liturgical vestments of the second temple period. And, again, I don't think the outer clothing define the nomos of a Christian although I there is garb prescribed by the scripture to Israelites which are part of their nomos. Do modern Jews wear them? Very few, right?


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Day of worship: 2nd Temple Jews worship on the Sabbath. Modern Jews worship on the Sabbath. Modern's Christians do not worship on the Sabbath, but on the Lords Day.
Worship qua worship isn't done at all by Jews any more - because worship in the scriptures is always fundamentally linked to sacrifice. Christians offer sacrifice on the Lord's day, and on every other day of the week. Even further, per the Torah the Sabbath was a day of rest, not a day of explicit worship. Sacrifices were offered on every day, including the Sabbath, but worship and sacrifice was a priestly function. Only priests could even enter the tabernacle.

What you call worship I don't think would match the idea of a first century Judaean, but some synagogue practices would be instantly familiar of course. That being said, the first half of the Orthodox Divine Liturgy - the Liturgy of the Word - is very similar to an Orthodox synagogue service... no doubt because they both came from a common form of synagogue practice. I would think modern Jew or Christian services would be completely foreign.

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Holidays
None of the festivals as prescribed in the Torah can be observed today by Jews. Not a single one.

However, all of the appointed feats are celebrated and kept in the Orthodox Church calendar.


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Music
Antiphonal chanting of psalms as practiced today in the Orthodox Church and in some Jewish services is a direct continuation of the practice of the first century. But I don't think either of this is essential to the nomos of a people.


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Decorations: from what little I've read, 2nd Temple synagogues were bare with only benches and an elevated area for someone to read the Scriptures aloud.
Again, decorations are not what makes a person part of one people group or another. But, we know from archaeological evidence that there were mosaics and depictions in synagogues, and from the scriptures themselves we know the first temple was decorated including iconography.


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I'm probably missing a lot here, and feel free to add things I missed. I just don't in any way see how an ancient Jew would step into any current Christian church of any flavor and be more familiar than they would in any current synagogue. I'm not trying to make a value judgement. I just don't understand if you think otherwise.
I don't think this is the right question - but I do think that you're glossing over some important things. First, as I said, the form of the Divine Liturgy and Orthodox synagogue practice is fundamentally linked to earlier common synagogue practices, so I do think we can sift between recognizable and not there between more modern / less faithful practices in both Jewish and Christian variants. But the reading of the scriptures, processing with the scriptures (Torah or Gospel), antiphonal chanting of psalms, all very much recognizable. I also think that, barring language barriers, a faithful Judaean would recognize a good chunk of what is said in the Divine Liturgy, as it's mostly psalms. A Christ-follower I think would be delighted at the application of those psalms. I think any first century person, pagan or Judaean, would understand the general form of anamnesis or liturgical reenactment combined with the offering of a sacrifice...and I believe that a Christ-follower Judaean would recognize the breaking of the bread. Certainly St Justin Martyr would, and that is within living memory of the Apostles.

But - the important thing I think is not whether they'd be completely baffled by various aspects of modern life we probably wouldn't even notice, but looking at what makes a person part of a people group. And that's what I was getting at.

The scriptures are quite clear on what makes a person an Israelite... you must be circumcised and follow the Law of Moses, including the Passover, and all that entails as far as how you live, dress, work, and worship. That, and only that, is what makes a person a Jew according to the scriptures. (Or as St Paul puts it, For not all who are of Israel are Israel, nor because they are the seed of Abraham are they all Abraham's children). What that means is, if you do not follow the Law out of disobedience, if you sin with your hand held high, you are cutting yourself off from the people and are to be cut off. This is why St Paul had Timothy circumcised - he was being unfaithful.

However, those things are not what marks a person as a Christian. To be a Christian you must be baptized and participate in the life of the Church, including the Eucharist. And while this also has ramifications as to how you live, dress, work, and worship, it is also NOT explicitly tied to a single culture.

So - dress and language. Yes, to be a Judaean there was a certain aspect of the nomos not fundamental to being an Israelite that was part of Judaean identity over and above the elements that were fundamental. But, St Paul's whole point is that the gentiles coming to Christ had to conform to NEITHER. They did NOT have to become Judaeans, they did NOT have to be circumcised and follow the Torah as Sons of Israel. There is absolutely a kind of undesirable tribalism in the Judaizer crowd St Paul opposed.

They DID have to follow the Torah as non-Israelites (which is what the council of Jerusalem says) and they DID have to give up the parts of their gentile nomos which were incompatible with Christ. Therefore a pagan Greek who came to Christ did not become a Judaean but instead a Christian Greek, which was a new category of being altogether. Elements were jettisoned, such as pagan worship -- which is itself an entire way of life -- but elements were retained, such as language and other cultural aspects.

When you say, Christians have no religious garb other than "fancy" this is what you're missing. The liturgical vestments worn in the Orthodox Church are the religious garb of Roman Christians. We should expect this to be different than Judaeans, just as music or language or what food they eat.

In short - I think the nomos of modern faithful Christians would be recognizable to first century Christians, even though the accidents of modern life wouldn't be. What makes a person part of the people that Christianity is (that is to say, All Israel, the People of God) hasn't changed. I am an American Christian (which is itself something that is still being worked out, much as a Greek Christian or a Roman Christian or English Christian or Russian Christian was worked out in the past) but I what makes me a Christian is exactly the same as what made St Paul's first gentile converts Christians, and St Peter's first faithful Judaeans Christians.

And, by comparison, I think the nomos of most modern Jews is completely foreign to that of first century Judaeans, because nearly all of what made them who they were has been completely lost. In the case of cultural identity that is obvious and unavoidable, but it is equally apparent in religion, theology, and practice.

Regarding the first point, I'm being much more literal about this than you are. Christians don't practice Temple Judaism. We don't have a Temple and offer animal and grain sacrifices there. We don't gather at the Temple 3 times per year. I think both Christiantiy and Judaism are spiritual successors to Temple Judaism in different ways, and as Christian I think we are the ones that are the true successors. To piggyback, I disagree with your point regarding an ancient Jew recognizing and condoning the sacrifice done at Mass. During Temple times, all the sacrificies were done at the Temple. You could probably eventually convince an ancient Jew that the the Temple is gone, the Messiah's body is the new temple, the Eucharist is the body of the Messiah, and therefore it's okay. But on first impression, no way. If they recognized the Eucharist as a sacrifice they would instantly consider it a breach of Torah for being outside the Temple.

Second, you clearly have in your head a Nazarene around 50 AD when we discuss a random 2nd Temple Jew. What pops into my head is a layperson living around 50 BC. I think that makes a big difference in regards to familiarity and comfort in different settings.

Third, you spend a lot of time explaining very well that the essense, or nomos, of Jews and Christians is different. I agree with that, but I feel it undermines your positions that Rabbinic Jews are not successors of ancient Jews and that an ancient Jew would feel more comfortable in a church than a synagogue. Maybe if we are talking about a 50 AD Nazarene. But if we are talking about a 50 BC Pharisee then I disagree. Modern Jews have at least tried to hold together the essense, or nomos, of the Torah. It's literally been their identity for thousands of years and the reason a Jew in Russia can move to a Jewish neighborhood in NYC with few issues. There is a common culture that spans the world based on trying to keep a Torah identity. I think a Torah following ancient Jew would find that very different but at least a little familiar. Christians OTOH have adopted an entirely different essense, culture, or nomos. That had already started by 50 AD, so judging by that standard you are probably more correct. But judging by a 50 BC Pharisee? So much would be new and foreign and so little would be directly familiar
I think any second temple Jew who was literate would be very confused about all bibles and why there are so many books missing.
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