Comments by "Phoenix O\x27Brien" (@phoenixobrien163) on "The Occult #325: It is Amusing When Christians Spurn the term "Judeochristian"" video.
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Ultra-Orthodox and anti-Zionist
Groups like Neturei Karta and the Satmar Hasidim bitterly oppose the modern State of Israel. Their rationale is that it's the handiwork of humans,
iolating the Jewish people’s oath of political quietism.
In the words of the Midrash (as expounded by Rashi), the people were adjured not to return collectively to the Land of Israel by the exertion of physical force, nor to “rebel against the nations of the world,” nor to “hasten the End.” In short, they were required to wait for the heavenly, complete, miraculous, supernatural, and meta-historical redemption that is totally distinct from the realm of human endeavor. This waiting over two millennia manifests the very essence and singularity of the Jewish people, expressing their faith in divine providence, in the assurance of the prophets, and in messianic destiny.
And what that, we see where Christianity gets its whole "waiting for the messiah" thing.
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Clarence Spangle -
Well, some Jew in Israel, who had a website that I was following, really had me confused. He had me convinced of the possibility that all the peoples of the Earth, were descendants of the ancient Jews -- most especially ALL the Christians (which includes Catholics) -- the "sands of the earth" Bible quote. He backed everything up with research too.
There are, of course, videos/websites (some, maybe all, Christian Identity). In the end, I decided all this has to be made up propaganda, but stories persist.
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@stover14 --
You'll have to explain to me how rabbinic Judaism today is not the same as Old Testament Judaism. Religions do evolve , yet Jews today still claim their 5,000 year old existence surviving extant. Even those Hasidic sects, that are against Israel being a Jewish State, identify themselves as Jews, and all still practice, some more, some less, the old traditions, going back to when they were called the Hebrews For Passover, some are able to set up outside tents, as a reminder they lived in tents in the ancient past (were tent dwellers), and the participants bring bitter tasting food as a reminder of the bitterness of Egyptian slavery. Though many scholars and Jewish intellectuals say the Hebrews were never slaves in ancient Egypt. Another fantasy.
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