Really interesting topic actually but most early ‘Christians’ didn’t really think of themselves as converts but rather just Jews who understood Jesus to represent the ‘completion’ of Jewish script and prophecy.
Best example is Paul who most definitely continues to view himself as a Jew.
Anyone interested should check out a book like ‘Did Jesus Exist?’ by Bart Erhman or a Marginal Jew (huge read). There’s a better book by him on the topic but blanking on the title
I’ve been binging Ehrman’s podcast and videos and really appreciate how thoughtful and intellectually honest he is and his skill at explaining things for the layperson.
You can also tell from his choice of words that he is careful to separate fact from his own opinion. When someone asks him a question, I’ve heard him many times start an answer off by saying what other scholars believe, and then he explains why he disagrees, but he always is open to being wrong.
In a YouTube video I listened to just this morning, someone asked him a question (when did they start capitalizing the pronouns He and Him in the Bible translations?) and he just honestly said he didn’t know, then he asked the audience if anybody knew.
He’s very good. Only interacted with his books, but they share a similar vibe with him being very clear about where he deviates from the mainstream and why.
If he believed in his own teachings, he wasn’t Jewish.
Really interesting topic actually but most early ‘Christians’ didn’t really think of themselves as converts but rather just Jews who understood Jesus to represent the ‘completion’ of Jewish script and prophecy.
Best example is Paul who most definitely continues to view himself as a Jew.
Anyone interested should check out a book like ‘Did Jesus Exist?’ by Bart Erhman or a Marginal Jew (huge read). There’s a better book by him on the topic but blanking on the title
I’ve been binging Ehrman’s podcast and videos and really appreciate how thoughtful and intellectually honest he is and his skill at explaining things for the layperson.
You can also tell from his choice of words that he is careful to separate fact from his own opinion. When someone asks him a question, I’ve heard him many times start an answer off by saying what other scholars believe, and then he explains why he disagrees, but he always is open to being wrong.
In a YouTube video I listened to just this morning, someone asked him a question (when did they start capitalizing the pronouns He and Him in the Bible translations?) and he just honestly said he didn’t know, then he asked the audience if anybody knew.
He’s very good. Only interacted with his books, but they share a similar vibe with him being very clear about where he deviates from the mainstream and why.
He was culturally Jewish at the very least.
Removed by mod
The Romans would have disagreed.