Black Spirituality Religion : Q. Why Do Jews Reject The Biblical JC?

Fine1952

The Age of Aquarius
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The schism between divinity and humanity is quite broad. Eliminating the gap between the two is best explained thru the "X" "Y" Chromosome factor during this or any other lifetime on Earth.

Since before 1829, when the Jews stumbled upon the title by FW Edwards, an anthropologist---they have rejected the biblical JC as their Messiah as well as the NT as an addendum to their OT (ie. especially the first five books) - yet this spin (ie. listed below) adds a much needed and plausibly scientific explanation as Christians continue to grasp what the so-Called Jews reject while the so-Called Jews grasp what Christians refuse to acknowledge.

Indeed the affinity towards the biblical JC is a religious paradox.
 
A. Christians claim that...

...that in the birth of Jesus there occurred the miracle of the incarnation of God in the form of a human being. To say that God became truly a human being invites a number of Questions. Let us ask the following about the alleged truly man-truly god Jesus. What happened to his foreskin after his circumcision (Luke 2:21)? Did it ascend to heaven, or did it decompose as with any human piece of flesh? During his lifetime what happened to his hair, nails, and blood shed from wounds? Did the cells of his body die as in ordinary human beings? If his body did not function in a truly human way, he could not be truly human as well as truly God. Yet, if his body functioned exactly in a human way, this would nullify any claim to divinity. It would be impossible for any part of God, even if incarnate, to decompose in any way and still be

...continued
 
...con't

considered God. By definition, not mystery, the everlasting, one God, in whole or in part, does not die, disintegrate, or decompose: "For I the Lord do not change" (Malachi 3:6). Did Jesus' flesh dwell in safety after his death? 1 Peter 3:18 states Jesus was "put to death in the flesh, but made alive in the spirit." 1 Corinthians 15:44-45 claims Jesus was "raised a spiritual body," that is, he "became a life-giving spirit." No mention of the survival of the flesh is alluded to. In Acts 2:31, it is claimed Peter stated that following the alleged resurrection Jesus' body did not see decay. Paul is alleged to have also made this claim (Acts 13:34-37). However, unless Jesus' body never underwent "decay" during his lifetime he could not be God, but if it did not undergo "decay" then he was not truly human.
http://www.jewsforjudaism.org/faq-primary-211/trinity-primary-374/146-what-is...
 

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