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Judaism and Christianity

Judaism and Christianity are two monotheistic, ethical religions which share a part of
their scriptures in common; the Bible or Tanakh of the Jews is the Old Testament of the
Christians. These religions share many common beliefs: (1) there is one God, (2) mighty
and (3) good, (4) the Creator, (5) who reveals His Word to man, and (6) answers prayers.
Both Judaism and Christianity make (7) a positive affirmation of the world as the arena
of God's activity, (8) as the place where people have an obligation to act ethically, and (9)
which should be redeemed from injustice. Both believe in (10) a future life, as well as a
doctrine of resurrection. Finally, both look to (11) a final consummation of history and
(12) the realization of God's complete sovereignty on earth, through the coming of a
Messiah or, in the case of modern forms of Judaism, a Messianic age. Besides these
similarities of doctrine, Christianity is bound to pay special attention to Judaism because
Jesus and his disciples were Jews. They lived as Jews; the Jewish Bible was their Bible,
and they criticized Jewish beliefs and practices as reformers from within. Jesus' life and
teachings are largely incomprehensible without an understanding of Judaism of his time.
Although Judaism and Christianity share many common elements in their beliefs, there
are also deep differences. First, for Judaism God is one and unique; for Christianity God
is one in His nature but there are three persons constituting the Holy Trinity: Father, Son,
and Holy Spirit. Christians believe in Jesus, called Christ, the Messiah, who is the
Incarnation of the second person of the Trinity: therefore adoration is not given to man
but to God who became man. Salvation for mankind is entirely the gift of God, through
the sacrifice of the second person of the Trinity, who became man and suffered and died
in his humanity and became alive again. Christians believe in Christ and in his passion,
death, and resurrection; they follow his teachings and example; and after death they
expect to share in his glorious resurrection. Judaism, for its part, is no less conscious of
God's grace, but it offers sanctification through membership in the Jewish people and by
regarding the scriptures as teaching and enjoining a life of holiness. For Jews the Messiah
has not yet come, and they still anticipate the coming of the Messiah or Messianic age.
Their future hope is an earthly vision of a world of peace and justice. The Christian future
hope is expressed by the doctrine of the Second Coming of Christ, when evil will finally
come to an end and the spiritual blessings already accomplished in Jesus Christ will be
manifested substantially in the Kingdom of Heaven.
Both Judaism and Christianity no longer practice the scriptural laws of animal sacrifices.
But while for Judaism the mitzvot, the ethical and ritual commandments of the Bible,
remain normative, and are elaborated in the Talmud as the halakah or requirements of
life, Christianity has regard only for the Bible's ethical teachings--i.e., the Ten
Commandments. Christianity emphasizes faith in Jesus Christ, who gives grace,
empowerment, and guidance for living the moral life.[2] Judaism teaches a life of
holiness through performing mitzvot and emphasizes the importance of adhering to the
Bible's standards of social justice as laid down by the Prophets. The two religions have
also diverged on the meaning of the Fall of Man; Christianity affirms a doctrine of
Original Sin which is not emphasized in Judaism.
These deep differences extend to the way Judaism and Christianity regard their sacred
writings. Judaism regards its sacred books as the complete source for all the teachings
which God requires of his people for their welfare. For Christianity, the sacred books of
Judaism, called the Old Testament, are taken as a preparation for the final revelation that
God would make through Christ--a revelation that is written in the books of the New
Testament.
Judaism's Bible or Tanakh is made up of the Law (Torah), the Prophets (Nebi'im), and
the Writings (Ketuvim); its books were written over a period of more than thirteen
hundred years of Jewish history, from the time of Moses until several centuries before the
common era. The center of this scripture is the Torah, the Five Books of Moses. The
book of Genesis contains stories of creation, the Fall of Man, and the lives of the
patriarchs Noah, Abraham, Isaac, Jacob, and Joseph. Exodus, Leviticus, Numbers, and
Deuteronomy recount the Jews' liberation from slavery in Egypt and the revealing of the
Law to Moses on Mount Sinai. The Prophets include the books of Joshua, Judges,
Samuel, and Kings recounting the history of Israel in the days when it was guided by its
prophets, and Isaiah, Jeremiah, Ezekiel, Amos, Hosea, Micah, Habakkuk, Jonah, Haggai,
Zechariah, Malachi, etc., which record the words of individual prophets. Among the
Writings are the book of Psalms containing prayers and hymns; Proverbs, Ecclesiastes,
and Job containing wise sayings, discourses on wisdom, and meditations on the human
condition; Lamentations mourning the destruction of the Temple; Song of Songs, where
love poetry has long been interpreted as describing the mystical relationship between God
and Israel or God and man; and Daniel with its stories of faith in the midst of persecution.
In addition to the Tanakh, a tradition of Oral Torah, passed down to the rabbis of the first
several centuries of the common era and codified in the Talmud, which is constituted by
the Mishnah and the Gemara, is authoritative for the observant Jew. One may regard the
role of Talmud and Midrash--early rabbinic interpretation of scripture--as providing the
interpretative perspective for a proper understanding of the Bible. While much of the
Talmud and Midrash is devoted to discussions and codifications of law, they also contain
passages of universal spiritual and ethical wisdom. The best known collection of the latter
is a small tractate of the Mishnah called the Abot or Sayings of the Fathers.[3] Beyond
the Talmud and Midrash, Jewish tradition also hallows the books of statutory prayers.
The mystical treatise called the Zohar and several other works together constitute the
Kabbalah or mystical tradition which has canonical status for many Jews. A number of
theological works, notably The Guide for the Perplexed by Moses Maimonides (1135-
1204) and Shulhan Arukh by Joseph Caro (16th century) are also held in the highest
regard.
The Christian Bible includes the Old and New Testaments. The Old Testament was the
scripture of Jesus and his followers who were themselves Jews. It is identical to the
Jewish Bible but with its books in a different order. Christians emphasize the prophetic
books above all other parts of the Old Testament, for they are seen to announce the
advent of Jesus Christ.
Roman Catholic and Orthodox Bibles include a number of additional books, called
deutero-canonical books, in the Old Testament. Notable among them are the wisdom
books Sirach and the Wisdom of Solomon, the stories of Tobit and Judith, and the history
of the Maccabean revolt with its stories glorifying martyrdom in I-IV Maccabees. These
books circulated among Jews during the last two centuries before Christ and were
included in the Septuagint, the Greek translation of the scriptures. The New Testament is
written in Greek; the early Christians largely spoke Greek; and they used the Septuagint
as their Old Testament. But these books were not included in the canon of Hebrew
scriptures as fixed by the rabbis at Jamnia in 90 a.d. At the time of the Protestant
Reformation, when the Reformers returned to the Hebrew rabbinic text as their standard,
they omitted these books from their vernacular translations of the Bible--e.g., Luther's
Bible and the English King James Version. They are known to Protestants as the
Apocrypha. The Roman Catholic Church reaffirmed their status as holy scripture at the
Council of Trent (1545-1603), and they remain part of the Orthodox scriptures as well.
Most modern translations of the Bible now include them.
The New Testament contains the four Gospels: Matthew, Mark, Luke, and John. The first
three "synoptic gospels" have much in common, recording the life and sayings of Jesus,
his death, and resurrection. The Gospel of John provides a life of Christ who is portrayed
as the mystical source of salvation. The epistles by the apostles Paul, Peter, James, John,
and others discuss matters of theology, doctrine, faith, and morals for the early Church of
the first century. Paul was the foremost of the apostles, and his writings include the
epistle to the Romans, 1 and 2 Corinthians, Galatians, Philippians, 1 Thessalonians, and
Philemon. Other letters attributed to Paul, and which certainly are indebted to his
influence, include Ephesians, Colossians, 1 and 2 Timothy, Titus, and Hebrews. Acts of
the Apostles is a history of the church from the first Pentecost to the evangelical tours of
Peter and Paul. The Book of Revelation gives a vision of the end of the world and the
Second Coming of Christ. All the books of the New Testament were written within one
hundred years of Jesus' death, although the final decision about which books would be
included or excluded from the New Testament canon did not come until the fourth
century.

Dr. Andrew Wilson, Editor


International Religious Foundation, 1991

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