I SAW BEHIND ME THOSE WHO HAD GONE, & BEFORE ME THOSE WHO ARE TO COME. I LOOKED BACK AND SAW MY FATHER, HIS FATHER, ALL OUR FATHERS AND IN FRONT TO SEE MY SON.
Jul 14 • 6 tweets • 2 min read
Christians in ancient Rome accepted Jews who converted to Christianity. Historical evidence from early Christian texts and Roman records supports this claim.
The New Testament, particularly the Acts of the Apostles Acts 2:10-11, 6:5, describes Jews in Rome and elsewhere converting to Christianity and being welcomed into early Christian communities.
Jul 13 • 37 tweets • 5 min read
@ArminiusAnton
, really loves his jews. Christians and jews go hand in hand. Why do you think Christians adopted their religion?
Christianity is deeply rooted in Judaism, emerging as a sect within it in the 1st century CE. Jesus, the central figure of Christianity, was a jew, as were his earliest followers.
Jun 11 • 33 tweets • 6 min read
@MaximusAccount @VladTepes189952 @WSoapmaker @NatSocUnite @ADogesonIV @88Deathhead @EshayDoge @Germanic_Mythos @MaximusOrthoBro @PRAETORIAN49BC @thirdreichpast @VMaliceofficial Jesus did not reject judaism, he positioned himself as a reformer within it, emphasizing a fulfillment of jewish law and prophecy. His teachings and actions, as recorded in the New Testament, show a deep engagement with jewish traditions, scriptures, and practices.
@MaximusAccount @VladTepes189952 @WSoapmaker @NatSocUnite @ADogesonIV @88Deathhead @EshayDoge @Germanic_Mythos @MaximusOrthoBro @PRAETORIAN49BC @thirdreichpast @VMaliceofficial Jesus affirmed the jewish law
Jesus explicitly stated that he came to fulfill, not abolish, the jewish law (torah). In the gospel of Matthew, he says
“Do not think that I have come to abolish the Law or the Prophets, I have not come to abolish them but to fulfill them.