Do you not see it? Anyone can be a Jew. Even the woman that Jesus said I am only come to the sheep of the house of Israel. She was that sheep even though she was a canaanite. She was of the house of Israel because of her faith in Jesus.
No, I don't see it. Lemme rephrase it for you: not all jews will enter heaven, but only "true jews" ("jews" on the inside). What jesus said already has a meaning that is aimed at jews. It can also be rephrased as
it is not enough to merely be of jewish descent, but you need to be a good person to go to heaven.
This meaning can not be extended to include "it doesn't matter if you're not a jew, you only need to be good to go to heaven". He didn't mean that. He was talking to jews - children of abraham so that wouldn't make much sense, he was obviously stressing that their descent doesn't assure them with God. Think about it. What would really happen if Jesus started preaching to jews that non-jews are also Jahves people? Would they react the same or would it cause more confrontation as it goes against the root of jewish beleifs at the time, would it risk Jesus' position as the messiah from jewish prophecies? You're interpreting far more than what you should.
Also, take into account that at that time all religions were born out of a people/nation and belong to a people/nation. All religions were "national". There were no shared religions, each people had their own gods, romans had theirs, greeks had theirs, egyptians had theirs, jews had their. At those times in history nations didn't really force their religions on other nations they defeated in combat. Jesus is no exception to that rule. Only later in history it became popular to enforce christianity or islam and they did it by sword.
With that in mind it is understandable that Jesus couldn't have even conceived of a "global religion" but simply continued the trend of such "national religions".
It is also understandable why the old testament doesn't really deny other gods, but rather forbids jews to worship them. This comes from "an understanding" that each nation has their own religion. Which is why jewish religion is for jews only and romans or greeks are allowed to have their own gods. Jahve doesn't claim or care about non-jews.
I'm sure jesus would not reject a non-jew from his grace in his travels(whatever that means), but jesus aimed his efforts towards the jewish nation and didn't really think of spreading "the faith" beyond that.
He came to fulfill a jewish prophecy made by a jewish god jahve who declares himself as the most powerful god, but also a god of jews only. This made Jesus very incompatible with any non-jewish nation at the time that cared nothing for jahve or abraham or king david or anything along the lines of that.
If jesus really aimed his efforts at all humanity and not just jews, I think it would have been a lot more obvious and you wouldn't need to misinterpret and stretch his bible quotes to make that case. Jesus would have to avoid references to the old testament and jewish history and icons such as king david or abraham to make an attempt at a global religion, and he did not avoid those things but rather referenced them in agreement with existing jewish culture/religion.
Regarding mentioned jewish icons such as king david - people that have authority, especially people that desire it much and then get authority tend to create "persona cults" and dictatorships. Such people often are able to rewrite history, especially few thousand years ago when there were little literate people and even fewer historians. King david, whom jesus shows respect to as part of the jewish legacy is not really some holy person but simply created a legacy which portrayed him as such. At that time in history, there were no or few people that recorded history. Most recorded events were recorded by the "rulers" building statues and temples to praise themselves, writing their own history on stones and such. If we trust the jewish legend about king david, why wouldn't we trust for example egyptian legends of pharaohs written all over their temples being man-gods with special powers?
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/David" Israel Finkelstein and Neil Asher Silberman have identified as the oldest and most reliable section of Samuel those chapters which describe David as the charismatic leader of a band of outlaws who captures Jerusalem and makes it his capital.[35] Steven McKenzie, Associate Professor of the Hebrew Bible at Rhodes College and author of King David: A Biography, states the belief that David actually came from a wealthy family, was "ambitious and ruthless" and a tyrant who murdered his opponents, including his own sons"
Today, you can still see such behavior in northern korea, where a dictator is trying to establish himself as something uberhuman.
Take everything in the bible with grain of salt... It is not a divine book, but a human book. You need common sense if you want to understand it, not faith.
This silliness about Jesus' potential racism is a side issue, our immorality was the main issue before we got side-tracked, which you are eagerly overlooking in favor of doing pointless Bible study with us.
I wouldn't really call it racism. Maybe from todays perspective, if we really want to see Jesus as the Gods son we might find it a bit strange and so also racistic that jews are the "chosen people". A divine being would understand racism and avoid it even before humans were able to perceive racism as such. A true "son of god" would not set an example for people by favoring one nation over others.
But if we simply look at the bible for what it is, if we consider the way of life at the time and Jesus as a mere human with no relation to a supreme being, we can understand that it wasn't really racism, it was just how things were at the time, Jesus didn't know better, noone did and it also wouldnt work, jews would not be impressed by a completely new religion invented by jesus, so jesus had continue the jewish legacy in other to gain any ground with his target audience.
Christianity later spread across roman slaves which were of different nationalities but were united under their plight (and also stripped of their own culture - so ready to receive the new faith) and so christianity spread beyond its target population across not one, but many different nations. Roman empire (an empire of many nations) declaring it an official religion 300 years or so later sealed the deal and made christianity the first "pan-national" religion, even though it was conceived as all the others - as a national religion.
Edited by addx, 23 July 2015 - 09:00 AM.