Our Jewish people cannot conceive the thought of Yeshua (Jesus) - TopicsExpress



          

Our Jewish people cannot conceive the thought of Yeshua (Jesus) being the messiah because they are plagued with centuries of history that outline the brutal persecution towards Jews in the name of “Jesus Christ”. The primitive Catholic/Christian churches, deeply rooted in anti-Semitism, brought forth traditions and religious practices that are contrary to the ordinances & instructions given to Israel. There are tales of Holocaust survivors who say that they could hear the Nazi soldiers in their worship, praising “Jesus Christ”. Then, immediately after, they would return to burning, torturing, & murdering Jews. That is why we cannot reach the Jewish people with “Jesus Christ”. We must embrace Yeshua’s true Jewish identity, teach Yeshua’s obedience to the Torah (keeping kosher, apart from idols, practicing YHWH’s holy feasts, Sabbath, etc), & practice Yeshua’s commandments on love towards HaShem & our neighbors. Please take a look at the list below that illustrates the extensive persecution endured by the Jews for centuries & remember, Messianic Judaism is not just another “religion”; on the contrary, we are part of something bigger than ourselves that surpasses any attainable glory from a set of man-made traditions. 70 AD Roman Army destroyed Jerusalem. Over 1 million Jews killed and 97,000 taken into slavery and captivity, many others scattered. 132 The Bar Kochba Rebellion (Bar Kochba was a false Messiah), caused the deaths of 500,000 Jews; thousands were sold into slavery or taken into captivity. Judaism no longer recognized as a legal religion. Israel as a nation was totally destroyed. This was seen as a sign by many Christians that Israel had been rejected by her God, and that the Church was now “the New Israel.” 135 Serious Roman persecution of the Jews began. Jews were forbidden from practicing circumcision, reading the Torah, eating unleavened bread at Passover, etc. 315 Constantine the Great published the Edict of Milan, which extended religious tolerance to Christians. Jews lost many rights with this edict. 325 The Council of Nicea – the first edict in favor of the “Venerable Day of the Sun” (Sunday) was made at the Council. Sabbath worship and other Jewish observances became heretical to the Christian faith. Also, Christianity was now the official religion, and Jews could no longer have Roman citizenship. 379 Theodosius the Great permitted the destruction of synagogues if they served any type of religious purpose. 391 The Edict of Theodosius declared that Christianity was to be the only legal religion in the Roman Empire. 589 The Third Council of Toledo (in Spain) ordered that children born of marriage between Jews and Christians be baptized by force. A policy of forced conversion of all Jews was initiated. Thousands of Jews fled. Thousands of other Jews converted. 613 Very serious persecution began in Spain. Jews were given the options of either leaving Spain or converting to Christianity. Jewish children over seven years of age were taken from their parents and given a Christian education. 722 In Constantinople, Jews were forced to convert to Christianity. 855 Jews exiled from Italy. 1096 The First Crusade was launched. Although the prime goal of the Crusades was to liberate Jerusalem from the Muslims, Jews were a second target. In Germany, in the cities along the Rhine River alone, 12,000 Jews were killed. This persecution and slaughter continued for eight additional Crusades until the year 1272. 1121 Jews driven out of Flanders (now part of Belgium). They were neither to return nor to be tolerated until they repented of the guilt of killing Jesus Christ. 1130 The Jews of London had to pay compensation of one million marks for allegedly killing a sick man. 1146 Renewed persecution of the Jews in Germany at the beginning of the Second Crusade. The French monk Rudolf called for the destruction of the Jews as an introduction to the Second Crusade. 1181 French King Philip banished the Jews from his domain. They were permitted to sell all movable possessions, but the permanent possessions, such as land and houses, reverted to the king. 1189 Jews were persecuted in England. The Crown claimed all Jewish possessions. Many homes belonging to Jewish families were burned. 1215 At the IV Lateran Church Council, canon laws were passed requiring that “Jews and Muslims shall wear a special dress.” Later, it was decreed that they also had to wear an oval badge. This was to enable them to be easily distinguished from Christians. This practice later spread to other countries. 1229 The Spanish Inquisition begins. Later, in 1252, Pope Innocent IV authorizes the use of torture by the Inquisitors against Jews and other apostates. 1290 Edward I banishes the Jews from England. 16,000 Jews were forced to leave the country. 1298 Persecution of the Jews in Franconia, Bavaria, and Austria. 140 Jewish communities were destroyed, and more than 100,000 Jews were killed over a six-month period. 1306 100,000 Jews are exiled from France. They left the country with only the clothes on their backs and food for one day. 1348 As the “Black Death” raged in Europe, Jews were blamed for causing the Plague by poisoning wells. About 5,000 Jews were burned alive at the stake. In Bavaria alone, 12,000 Jews perished. Near Tours, an immense trench was dug, filled with blazing wood, and in a single day, 160 Jews were burned. 1391 Jewish persecutions begin in Seville and in 70 other Jewish communities throughout Spain. Jews were cruelly massacred and their bodies dismembered. 1394 Jews were exiled, for the second time, from France. 1434 Jewish men in Augsburg had to sew yellow buttons to their clothes. Jews were forced to wear a long undergarment, an overcoat with a yellow patch, bells, and tall pointed yellow hats with a large button. 1453 The Franciscan monk, Capistrano, persuaded the King of Poland to withdraw all rights of citizenship for Jewish People. 1478 Spanish Jews had been heavily persecuted from the 14th Century. Many had converted to Christianity. The Spanish Inquisition was set up by the church in order to detect insincere conversions. 1492 Jews were given the choice of being baptized as Christians or be banished from Spain. 300,000 left Spain penniless. Many migrated to Portugal and Turkey, where they were later tortured, imprisoned, and killed. Others converted to Christianity, but often continued to practice Judaism in secret. In the years that followed, countless numbers of Jewish People were imprisoned, tortured, and murdered simply because they were Jews. All this was done in the name of Christ and Christianity. 1497 Jews were banished from Portugal. 20,000 Jews left the country rather than be baptized as Christians. Many others became slaves. 1516 The Governor of the Republic of Venice decided that Jews would be allowed to live only in one area of the city. The area was called the “Ghetto Novo.” 1540 Jews were exiled from Naples, Italy. 1543 Martin Luther published a pamphlet entitled, On Jews and Their Lies. Europe was especially rife with anti-Jewish sentiment; Luther added fuel to the fire by asking the question, “What shall we do with this rejected and condemned people, the Jews?” He recommended that houses of Jews be “razed and destroyed,” and their religious books burned. This pamphlet and his later anti-Semitic writings, “Annuls of the Jews,” paved the way theologically for Hitler and the Nazis in Germany. 1582 Jews were expelled from Holland. 1794 Restriction of Jews in Russia, Jewish men were forced to serve 25 years in the Russian military. Many hundreds of thousands of Jews left Russia. 1846 All former restrictions against the Jews in the Vatican State were restored by Pope Pius IX. Ca. 1900 The Protocols of the Elders of Zion appeared in print in Russia for the fi rst time. The Protocols argued that a worldwide conspiracy existed among Jewish leaders to set Christian nations against one another and dominate the world. It circulated widely in Russia, Germany, France, and the United States and created widespread anti-Semitism. 1903 Renewed restrictions of Jews in Russia. Frequent pogroms (massacres) occurred against Jewish shtetls (ghettos) throughout Russia and Ukraine from 1903-1906. Jewish women were raped and beaten, thousands were massacred. 1915 600,000 Jews were forcibly moved from the western borders of Russia towards the interior. About 100,000 died of exposure or starvation. 1920 The defeat of Germany in World War I and the continuing economic difficulties were blamed in that country on the “Jewish influence.” 1933 Hitler rises to Chancellor of Germany. The Nazi era begins. Virulent anti-Semitic propaganda and the groundwork for Judenrein, “cleansed lf Jews,” begins. 1934 Various racial laws against the Jews were enacted in Germany to force Jews out of schools and professions. 1935 The Nazis passed the Nuremberg Laws restricting citizenship to those of “German or related blood.” Jews became stateless. 1938 Kristallnacht, “The Night of Broken Glass” – November 9-10. Mobs attacked Jews killing and injuring hundreds. 2,000 synagogues burned; 7,500 Jewish businesses destroyed; 30,000 Jews arrested and sent to concentration camps. Hitler brought back century-old church law, ordering all Jews to wear a yellow Star of David as identification. A few hundred thousand Jews are allowed to leave Germany after they turned over all of their assets to the government. 1939 The Holocaust, the systematic extermination of Jews in Germany and Europe, begins. The process did not end until 1945 with the conclusion of World War II. Some six million Jews, including 1.5 million children, were systematically exterminated simply because they were Jews. 2007 Anti-Semitism is again on the rise. In Europe and Russia, for example, anti-Semitic hate crimes are at an all time high since WWII. Jewish synagogues and cemeteries have been desecrated and Jews have been beaten and even murdered. The persecution is far from over. It is terrible to realize that most of the horrors infl icted on God’s Chosen People have been done in the name of Christianity. Is it any wonder that the Jewish People are at least suspicious when first approached?
Posted on: Tue, 12 Nov 2013 16:52:54 +0000

Trending Topics



Recently Viewed Topics




© 2015