shawn
Well-Known Member
Here is a piece I wrote a few yrs ago on another forum.
Sorry it is long.
1. A conversion means a "change," from one thing into something different.
A Christian may surely convert to another religion because
the essential component in such a conversion is what a person
"believes," and beliefs are readily changeable.
It is impossible however for a JEW to convert to another religion,
because belief is irrelevant to Judaism.
Judaism is a covenant, a contract directly with God, and it doesn't matter what a person believes.
All that matters are the terms of the covenant, the contract clauses.
A Jew may violate Jewish law and BECOME an adherent to another
religion, but CANNOT CONVERT to it. The person is now a JEWISH
practitioner of those religions beliefs...but he is still a Jew. ]
The Christian convert to another religion however is NOT a Christian
Practitioner of that religions beliefs, nor even a Christian anymore.
As part of God's Noachide covenant however, one is in the same
position concerning conversion as a Jew.
A Noachide may BECOME an adherent to another religion, but CANNOT CONVERT to it,
as their Bnei Noach covenant with God has no escape clause for getting out of the contract.
Every non-Jew is contracted into God's Noachide covenant.
So really, it doesn't matter what a person is called. A ex this or
non that or any other name, they follow HaShem/El Shaddai or they don't.
We are either following the Jewish or Noach Covenant and turning to
HaShem or going down some strange path and turning away from him.
All religions rest on what you believe, not just Christianity.
That is the definition of a person's religion: His belief.
If I believe that Jesus was a fraud, not god, not moshiach, not a
prophet, and incredibly harmful to people, then I'm not a Christian.
If I wanted to be a Christian, I would have to change my beliefs.
A covenant on the other hand, is immune to belief.
A covenant is a contract.
For example: The bank doesn't care what you believe. If you pay the
bill you can keep the car, if you don't, they will take the car.
Whatever you believe about the ownership of the car is
worthless...only what is written in the contract counts.
A religion is one thing, a covenant is something else.
Christianity is a religion.
Judaism is a covenant.
Islam and Hinduism are religions.
Noachism is a covenant.
GOD DEALS WITH US IN COVENANTS, NOT RELIGIONS.
You have your covenant and I have mine.
All 6+ billion of us.
We are signed on, and God will judge us by the terms of His contract with us.
If we use our personal choice of religion to interfere with our direct
Covenant with God, that is a personal choice, and what we do with out personal
choices is what judgment is all about.
Christianity is not a covenant like Judaism:
Judaism is not based specifically on belief as is a religion:
You can convert to Judaism from being a Gentile, but you don't get there just on what you believe:
You would have to study Torah, convince a bet din that you were
determined to live as a Jew (perform mitzvahs), and then go to a
mikvah and say brochas (prayers) in the hearing of the rabbis.
YOU WILL NOT be 'grafted into' Bnai Israel via worshipping Jesus as
God no matter what you believe.
Why?
A good question is, why God arranged for a covenant where the
members are such even apart from what they believe?
Does not God prefer that Jews believe in their own covenant?
Sure.
The thing is (among other things), that God gave human beings minds,
and minds that are capable of questioning, analyzing, and yes, doubting.
If where one stands with God is limited to what one believes, the mind is also limited:
People tend to believe things against the verdict of their rational
minds; and what's more, embrace wholeheartedly things under God
against the full functioning of their minds. This is true, in varying
degrees, of all of the world's religions: An adherent of one of these
religions accept it's tenets in their hearts, but all too often against the logic of their minds.
Is believing in the things you do, as a Christian, rational?
In truth, you are not a Christian by the verdict of your mind, but
because it appeals to your heart. The onstart of Christianity imposed
the 'dark ages' on humanity, which was characterized by the stagnation
of intellectual life throughout much of the world.
This is because a defining limit of a relationship with God BASED ON BELIEF- works against intellectual growth.
Judaism, by contrast, in not limited or defined by belief.
In most cases, it is based on a birthright, which delineates one as Jewish
regardless of where their beliefs might lead them in life.
Because the Jews are not limited thusly, the Jewish people have often
served as purveyors of an intellectual vanguard in the societies where
they have been allowed to flourish.
God foresaw the need for this amongst His creation of us right from
the start of civilization, and thus foresaw the Jewish covenant.
If you obey the Lord, and He blesses you; do I believe that (you ask)?
My answer: It depends. Whether God blesses you, or someone else, or both of you, is up to God.
How is that based on what I believe?
What happens then is that people, not God, end up deciding in His
name, who is blessed and who is not blessed.
For you, being a Christian is only real based on true belief.
By contrast, a true Jew may ask how much of God's existence and
function in our world is based on belief in Him, and still remain, truly Jewish.
One approaches God by putting the heart of it first.
The other approaches God by putting the mind first.
This doesn't mean that Jews shouldn't embrace their covenant by heart and soul, too.
It's just that God decreed a different set of priorities to the Jews via their covenant.
Most religions put the heart before the mind; Judaism, by contrast,
takes the counterpoint, is a crucial juxtaposition, to all the
religions; starting with it being centered most oftenly on a birthright rather then a profession of belief.
It really doesn't concern bias. Actually, bias would only really play
a part if Judaism were also based primarily on what one believes.
Why should what God gives us be limited by what we believe?
Judaism is a birthright passed from mother to child. One also may
become a part of Judaism by conversion, guided by a Torah Observant Rabbi of course.
However, belief is also a crucial part of Judaism.
Maimonides Thirteen Foundations list the core beliefs.
The first Foundation ofJudaism, as I'm sure you already know, is the belief in One Almighty Creator.
The Unity of this Creator is one that is Infinite and beyond any physical boundaries to define.
This is a fundamental difference between Judaism and christianty.
Christianty has wrongly interpreted this Infinite Unity into a 'split infinity'.
One possible reason for this is that the 'founders' tried to 'bring it
down' to a level they thought people could understand. It would have
been better to have raised up the level of knowledge and understanding
of the people they were trying to reach.
Had they done this, and actually base all the teachings on the
Tanach, most likely there would never have been a
'trinity' type religion.
Sorry it is long.
1. A conversion means a "change," from one thing into something different.
A Christian may surely convert to another religion because
the essential component in such a conversion is what a person
"believes," and beliefs are readily changeable.
It is impossible however for a JEW to convert to another religion,
because belief is irrelevant to Judaism.
Judaism is a covenant, a contract directly with God, and it doesn't matter what a person believes.
All that matters are the terms of the covenant, the contract clauses.
A Jew may violate Jewish law and BECOME an adherent to another
religion, but CANNOT CONVERT to it. The person is now a JEWISH
practitioner of those religions beliefs...but he is still a Jew. ]
The Christian convert to another religion however is NOT a Christian
Practitioner of that religions beliefs, nor even a Christian anymore.
As part of God's Noachide covenant however, one is in the same
position concerning conversion as a Jew.
A Noachide may BECOME an adherent to another religion, but CANNOT CONVERT to it,
as their Bnei Noach covenant with God has no escape clause for getting out of the contract.
Every non-Jew is contracted into God's Noachide covenant.
So really, it doesn't matter what a person is called. A ex this or
non that or any other name, they follow HaShem/El Shaddai or they don't.
We are either following the Jewish or Noach Covenant and turning to
HaShem or going down some strange path and turning away from him.
All religions rest on what you believe, not just Christianity.
That is the definition of a person's religion: His belief.
If I believe that Jesus was a fraud, not god, not moshiach, not a
prophet, and incredibly harmful to people, then I'm not a Christian.
If I wanted to be a Christian, I would have to change my beliefs.
A covenant on the other hand, is immune to belief.
A covenant is a contract.
For example: The bank doesn't care what you believe. If you pay the
bill you can keep the car, if you don't, they will take the car.
Whatever you believe about the ownership of the car is
worthless...only what is written in the contract counts.
A religion is one thing, a covenant is something else.
Christianity is a religion.
Judaism is a covenant.
Islam and Hinduism are religions.
Noachism is a covenant.
GOD DEALS WITH US IN COVENANTS, NOT RELIGIONS.
You have your covenant and I have mine.
All 6+ billion of us.
We are signed on, and God will judge us by the terms of His contract with us.
If we use our personal choice of religion to interfere with our direct
Covenant with God, that is a personal choice, and what we do with out personal
choices is what judgment is all about.
Christianity is not a covenant like Judaism:
Judaism is not based specifically on belief as is a religion:
You can convert to Judaism from being a Gentile, but you don't get there just on what you believe:
You would have to study Torah, convince a bet din that you were
determined to live as a Jew (perform mitzvahs), and then go to a
mikvah and say brochas (prayers) in the hearing of the rabbis.
YOU WILL NOT be 'grafted into' Bnai Israel via worshipping Jesus as
God no matter what you believe.
Why?
A good question is, why God arranged for a covenant where the
members are such even apart from what they believe?
Does not God prefer that Jews believe in their own covenant?
Sure.
The thing is (among other things), that God gave human beings minds,
and minds that are capable of questioning, analyzing, and yes, doubting.
If where one stands with God is limited to what one believes, the mind is also limited:
People tend to believe things against the verdict of their rational
minds; and what's more, embrace wholeheartedly things under God
against the full functioning of their minds. This is true, in varying
degrees, of all of the world's religions: An adherent of one of these
religions accept it's tenets in their hearts, but all too often against the logic of their minds.
Is believing in the things you do, as a Christian, rational?
In truth, you are not a Christian by the verdict of your mind, but
because it appeals to your heart. The onstart of Christianity imposed
the 'dark ages' on humanity, which was characterized by the stagnation
of intellectual life throughout much of the world.
This is because a defining limit of a relationship with God BASED ON BELIEF- works against intellectual growth.
Judaism, by contrast, in not limited or defined by belief.
In most cases, it is based on a birthright, which delineates one as Jewish
regardless of where their beliefs might lead them in life.
Because the Jews are not limited thusly, the Jewish people have often
served as purveyors of an intellectual vanguard in the societies where
they have been allowed to flourish.
God foresaw the need for this amongst His creation of us right from
the start of civilization, and thus foresaw the Jewish covenant.
If you obey the Lord, and He blesses you; do I believe that (you ask)?
My answer: It depends. Whether God blesses you, or someone else, or both of you, is up to God.
How is that based on what I believe?
What happens then is that people, not God, end up deciding in His
name, who is blessed and who is not blessed.
For you, being a Christian is only real based on true belief.
By contrast, a true Jew may ask how much of God's existence and
function in our world is based on belief in Him, and still remain, truly Jewish.
One approaches God by putting the heart of it first.
The other approaches God by putting the mind first.
This doesn't mean that Jews shouldn't embrace their covenant by heart and soul, too.
It's just that God decreed a different set of priorities to the Jews via their covenant.
Most religions put the heart before the mind; Judaism, by contrast,
takes the counterpoint, is a crucial juxtaposition, to all the
religions; starting with it being centered most oftenly on a birthright rather then a profession of belief.
It really doesn't concern bias. Actually, bias would only really play
a part if Judaism were also based primarily on what one believes.
Why should what God gives us be limited by what we believe?
Judaism is a birthright passed from mother to child. One also may
become a part of Judaism by conversion, guided by a Torah Observant Rabbi of course.
However, belief is also a crucial part of Judaism.
Maimonides Thirteen Foundations list the core beliefs.
The first Foundation ofJudaism, as I'm sure you already know, is the belief in One Almighty Creator.
The Unity of this Creator is one that is Infinite and beyond any physical boundaries to define.
This is a fundamental difference between Judaism and christianty.
Christianty has wrongly interpreted this Infinite Unity into a 'split infinity'.
One possible reason for this is that the 'founders' tried to 'bring it
down' to a level they thought people could understand. It would have
been better to have raised up the level of knowledge and understanding
of the people they were trying to reach.
Had they done this, and actually base all the teachings on the
Tanach, most likely there would never have been a
'trinity' type religion.