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  1. 4 days ago · Jewish Christians were the followers of a Jewish religious sect that emerged in Judea during the late Second Temple period (first century AD). These Jews believed that Jesus was the prophesied Messiah and they continued their adherence to Jewish law .

  2. 4 days ago · "In Jewish tradition, messianism is realized in two stages," specifies Roberta Collu-Moran, a researcher in anthropology of contemporary Jewish societies at the Institut Catholique of Paris....

  3. Apr 6, 2024 · The Jewish prophets prophesied that the Messiah would speak in parables (see Setting the Table 3, in my book) and the scripture says that Jesus almost always spoke using parables (Mathew 13:33-35; Mark 4:33, 34). I then explain what his last supper parables really mean, from within the first-century Jewish idioms.

  4. Apr 1, 2024 · Yeshiva, any of numerous Jewish academies of Talmudic learning, whose biblical and legal exegesis and application of Scripture have defined and regulated Jewish religious life for centuries. The early history of the yeshiva as an institution is known only through indirect evidence, and the word.

    • The Editors of Encyclopaedia Britannica
  5. 3 days ago · The first Christians were all Jews, who constituted a Second Temple Jewish sect with an apocalyptic eschatology. Among other schools of thought, some Jews regarded Jesus as Lord and resurrected messiah , and the eternally existing Son of God , [7] [94] [note 8] expecting the second coming of Jesus and the start of God's Kingdom .

  6. Apr 11, 2024 · Ḥasidism, (from Hebrew ḥasid, “pious one”), a 12th- and 13th-century Jewish religious movement in Germany that combined austerity with overtones of mysticism. It sought favour with the common people, who had grown dissatisfied with formalistic ritualism and had turned their attention to developing

  7. Apr 2, 2024 · 45–50 ce, Alexandria. Subjects Of Study: Halakhah. Judaism. Therapeutae. logos. mysticism. Philo Judaeus (born 15–10 bce, Alexandria—died 45–50 ce, Alexandria) was a Greek-speaking Jewish philosopher, the most important representative of Hellenistic Judaism. His writings provide the clearest view of this development of Judaism in the Diaspora.

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