Christian Apologetics: Difference between revisions

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''See'' — [[Culture#E._Michael_Jones|E. Michael Jones]]
''See'' — [[Culture#E._Michael_Jones|E. Michael Jones]]


[https://archive.org/details/jewishrevolution0000jone ''The Jewish Revolutionary Spirit''] : ''And Its Impact on World History'' | Archive.org, [https://ia601709.us.archive.org/0/items/the-jewish-revolutionary-spirit-and-its-impact-on-world-history-e.-michael-jones/The%20Jewish%20Revolutionary%20Spirit%20and%20its%20Impact%20on%20World%20History%20-%20E.%20Michael%20Jones.pdf Download] pp.33-35<br>
[https://archive.org/details/jewishrevolution0000jone ''The Jewish Revolutionary Spirit''] : ''And Its Impact on World History'' | Archive.org, [https://ia601709.us.archive.org/0/items/the-jewish-revolutionary-spirit-and-its-impact-on-world-history-e.-michael-jones/The%20Jewish%20Revolutionary%20Spirit%20and%20its%20Impact%20on%20World%20History%20-%20E.%20Michael%20Jones.pdf Download] pp.33-35, 90<br>
— To hold onto their “<mark>identity</mark>,” the “Jews” had to reject Christ. The “Jews” (as opposed to the entire ethnic group, some of which accepted Christ as the Messiah) created a new <mark>identity</mark> for themselves, one that is essentially negative [in relation to Jesus Christ, his disciples, apostles and later followers, i.e Christians].<br>
— To hold onto their “<mark>identity</mark>,” the “Jews” had to reject Christ. The “Jews” (as opposed to the entire ethnic group, some of which accepted Christ as the Messiah) created a new <mark>identity</mark> for themselves, one that is essentially negative [in relation to Jesus Christ, his disciples, apostles and later followers, i.e Christians].<br>
St. John brings readers to this understanding gradually as the Jews <mark>define themselves</mark> in encounters with Christ in his gospel. Jew, in the context of the Gospel of St. John, cannot mean all Jews in an ethnic or racial sense, since Jesus himself was a Jew, as were his disciples....<br>
St. John brings readers to this understanding gradually as the Jews <mark>define themselves</mark> in encounters with Christ in his gospel. Jew, in the context of the Gospel of St. John, cannot mean all Jews in an ethnic or racial sense, since Jesus himself was a Jew, as were his disciples....<br>