When did Christianity and Judaism Part Ways? (Part 1)

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  • čas přidán 6. 09. 2024
  • If Christianity began as a Jewish sect, then when did Judaism and Christianity become distinct religions? What drove the separation? Does “Judaism”- as we know it today- really predate Christianity? In this intriguing discussion, the Brothers address these questions and more. You won’t want to miss this one!
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Komentáře • 60

  • @simplydanny
    @simplydanny Před 2 lety +14

    First off, FINALLY. Second, really glad you guys did this episode. It really explains a lot of the conversations I’ve been having with my Jewish friends. When I pressed them on the temple and the sacrifices it always seems to go towards a mystical level. The more mystical the tradition the more spiritualized it gets. Seems like it’s almost reactive and I’ve heard some scholars actually say that Rabbinical Judaism is a reactive religion, meaning as Christians try to push Jesus the more creative they have to get to disprove it, while at the same time the more obvious it is that they’re missing an essential part of temple Judaism the more they need to spiritualized it. My argument has always been that Judaism has always had alms giving and prayer and such, but it never negated the need for a temple or priesthood. In other words just because you have the individual tools to reach God, doesn’t mean that a national way of coming to God was unnecessary. This talk really helped me see the underlying reasons for it all.
    There is so much to say about this episode can’t wait for the next one.

    • @TheCatholicBrothers
      @TheCatholicBrothers  Před 2 lety +5

      Great thoughts here, Danny! Thanks for sharing. I think you will find the next episode VERY interesting indeed 😊

  • @pepesellsbutwhosbuying7925
    @pepesellsbutwhosbuying7925 Před 2 lety +10

    Highly edifying, especially using the terms Judeans and Jesus Believers to denote the differences. The Church today really needs to get a clue historically and stop using this misnomer term Judeo-Christianity as if we're somehow part of the same Faith.
    OT, check out the recent chat between EMJ and Bishop Williamson. I found it refreshing and uplifting.

  • @leejennifercorlewayres9193

    Jesus did take over the Roman Empire after the crucifixion. God's ways are not our ways.

  • @michaeloakland4665
    @michaeloakland4665 Před 5 měsíci +1

    This is incredibly helpful information. I'm surprised more people aren't discussing this. Perhaps it requires a level of studiosity that most lack the appetite to pursue.

  • @Isaac_Hess
    @Isaac_Hess Před rokem +2

    You say the early Jewish Christians still "revered the temple cult," but did they continue to participate in temple sacrifice? It seems that Jesus and his followers participated in the temple animal sacrifices before Easter (Mary and Joseph make the offering of two birds, for example). Is there evidence that the early Jewish Christians continued this practice? Did they continue until the temple was destroyed?

    • @TheCatholicBrothers
      @TheCatholicBrothers  Před rokem +2

      Look no further than Acts 21:26. (But also, yes, you can look further 😉).
      You may want to check out the articles in “Jewish Believers in Jesus: The Early Centuries” for a start on the character of the daily piety of the Jerusalem Christians. Of course, much remains mystery and speculation due to the sources we have, but what we do have certainly suggests that much of the mainstream Temple cult remained an aspect of Jerusalemite Christian experience, especially for those who were priests. They didn’t cease being priests when they became Christians.
      Beyond the environs of Jerusalem, it is most likely that the churches located their sacrificial piety exclusively within the context of the Christian, Eucharistic gathering. Progressively, as we move through the decades the Christian awareness of their own iteration of the cult as the fulfillment of the old cult becomes more keen.

  • @paulodasilva7701
    @paulodasilva7701 Před 6 měsíci +1

    Great video guys!
    A must watch for anyone who wants a full understanding of first century Christianity and Judaism.

  • @JV-jr6ex
    @JV-jr6ex Před rokem +1

    @51:45 - notably a major difference between John the Baptist and Elijah is noted in John 10:41 - that unlike Elijah who worked lots of miracles, including raising the widow's son in 1 Kgs 17:17f, and parting the Jordan river in 2 Kgs 2:8f, John the Baptist doesn't seem to do anything in the department of 'working of wonders,' that prophets and especially Elijah were associated with. John the Baptist being obviously the fulfillment of Elijah in Christian understanding, but NOT working miracles (as Elijah powerfully did) seems to be the reason St. John bothers to make note of it in his Gospel.

  • @ultimateoriginalgod
    @ultimateoriginalgod Před 2 měsíci

    18:10 This reminded me of the famous section of the book of wisdom that goes like this:
    ‭Wisdom of Solomon 2:13-21
    [13] He professes to have knowledge of God, and calls himself a child of the Lord. [14] He became to us a reproof of our thoughts; [15] the very sight of him is a burden to us, because his manner of life is unlike that of others, and his ways are strange. [16] We are considered by him as something base, and he avoids our ways as unclean; he calls the last end of the righteous happy, and boasts that God is his father. [17] Let us see if his words are true, and let us test what will happen at the end of his life; [18] for if the righteous man is God's son, he will help him, and will deliver him from the hand of his adversaries. [19] Let us test him with insult and torture, that we may find out how gentle he is, and make trial of his forbearance. [20] Let us condemn him to a shameful death, for, according to what he says, he will be protected.” [21] Thus they reasoned, but they were led astray, for their wickedness blinded them.

  • @ConnieRossini
    @ConnieRossini Před rokem +2

    Loved it! Learned a lot, as always. Looking forward to watching Part 2.

  • @SusansRoadLessTraveled
    @SusansRoadLessTraveled Před 5 měsíci

    Thank you for this extremely interesting and informative video! Look forward to the next.

  • @carsonianthegreat4672
    @carsonianthegreat4672 Před 3 měsíci +1

    Do you guys have a recommended translation/edition of Origen’s “On First Principles” (in English)? Thanks!
    I know the original full text is lost, but what is the best of what we have available?

  • @clarekuehn4372
    @clarekuehn4372 Před rokem +2

    Please put part 2 link into the description below the video. Thanks.

  • @carsonianthegreat4672
    @carsonianthegreat4672 Před 3 měsíci +1

    Also, do you two have a recommended publication of the Testament of the Twelve Patriarchs for someone wanting to read it physically? Thanks!

  • @josephjude1290
    @josephjude1290 Před 2 lety +3

    Been waiting for this; thanks for posting.

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      @chucksmith4624 Před 2 lety

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  • @ulsterbenny495
    @ulsterbenny495 Před 2 lety +1

    Really exited for this episode. I've come into contact with a number of Catholics who have expressed an odd desire (in my mind) to unite their faith practice to incorporate more of older Jewish traditions and culture into their Catholic faith. More often, however, I hear an emphasis over how incredibly similar our traditions are rumoured to be. I think the Rabbinic Period (around 200 AD, if I'm not mistaken) certainly helped split the current faiths such that I view it as distinct enough to be worthy of criticism in a way that Temple Judaism is not. For example, we criticise Protestants, Muslims, etc for not having the fullness of truth, and rightfully so. Much of the time, in my experience, people refer to Judaism as if it were free from error, but not the fullness of truth. I think you could only make that argument for ancient Temple Judaism. Judaism didn't remain stagnant after Christ's death and resurrection. It reformed, intensified, and doubled down. An easy example that comes to mind is circumcision. Jesus' circumcision, while no doubt obnoxiously painful, was not nearly as invasive, intense, or as mutilating as the modern Bris Millah, that draws its roots from the Rabbinic period. The former was just to draw blood to create a scar as a sign of the Old Covenant, whereas the former was designed and praised for stifling sexual pleasure, and creating a far more permanent identification on the male body part for a dispersing population.

    • @TheCatholicBrothers
      @TheCatholicBrothers  Před 2 lety +1

      Hope you enjoy the episode. Its one of two parts on this subject. The second part, which should be released in the next week or so, will deal with the rabbinical vs emergent Christian concept of God and how the two sister faiths developed their doctrine in contradistinction to the other, eventually cementing the “parting of the ways.” We agree that rabbinical Judaism is a religion that post-dates Jesus, at least as much as Christianity does, if not more. This romanticization of Judaism, as if it has remained a monolith stretching back into the Old Testament, is completely untenable. The Temple religion of the second Temple era is the root, with Christianity and rabbinical Judaism being unique perpetuations of certain strands of that religious tradition after the Temple’s destruction.
      On the score of circumcision, you mentioned the various methods during the Temple era circumcisions vs that of the post-Temple rabbinical era. If you have any source material on that, I would be very interested to look. I’ve never stopped to consider the development of the method over time.

  • @francisgruber3638
    @francisgruber3638 Před 5 měsíci

    The Mass as the distinct essential prayer and sacrifice of Christians can only emerge when all the prior supplemental sacrifices ceased, with the Temple's destruction in AD 70. The Temple's hierarchy of high priest, priest and Levite emerges in the tripartite orders of the church: bishop, priest, deacon. As the Christians of the Holy City prayed daily in the Temple before its destruction, so the eucharist in the Upper Room borrowed liberally from the Temple liturgical yearly cycle, providing bases for Masses from East to Western Christianity.

  • @stephanelarochelle2484
    @stephanelarochelle2484 Před 2 lety +2

    awesome information in this video, learned alot! Thank you!

  • @susand3668
    @susand3668 Před 6 měsíci

    Thank you so much for giving me better words to use and concepts to refer to in my conversations with my Jewish friends.

  • @Jay-bp1yx
    @Jay-bp1yx Před 2 lety +2

    IM SO EXCITED, MISS YOU GUYS

  • @martincorneille7998
    @martincorneille7998 Před 2 lety +1

    Outstanding, thanks, so much in just over an hour! I am surprised though that you didn't mention that Romans might have been key in forging a separation: as early as the early IInd, Trajan defines the policy that Christians do not get the same toleration of their religion as Jews because it is "novel", whereas Judaism is considered ancient enough and traditional, though monotheistic. To me that explanation had stuck in my mind, and I am wondering whether you have also heard about it and whether you consider this Roman policy as the cause or the result of the Christian-Rabbinic split.

  • @christinacanto3740
    @christinacanto3740 Před rokem +1

    Perhaps you’ve addressed this elsewhere. But I am curious how Peter and our concept of the pope plays into this history. It would seem that if Peter was the leader of a new church established by Christ, that it would have been incompatible with temple Judaism from the get-go, no?

  • @seanflanagan5674
    @seanflanagan5674 Před 2 lety +2

    Audio level is lower. Hope that was accidental and not a trend.

  • @chadbailey3623
    @chadbailey3623 Před 2 lety

    Another stellar episode guys! I would love to understand how the split affected the developing ecclesiology of the ante-Nicene church. And whether the Testaments of the Twelve were considered heretical by Christians in other parts of the Christian world - and when!

  • @JV-jr6ex
    @JV-jr6ex Před rokem +1

    @56:48 - Trent, Session IV not withstanding? Though, I think some theologians suggest that the Canonical list Trent declared gave a list of books which 'have to be in the Canon,' but there could be more? Given Trent's verbiage - there does seem to be room to argue that more books could be added.

    • @carsonianthegreat4672
      @carsonianthegreat4672 Před 3 měsíci +1

      Yeah, it seems Trent doesn’t close the canon, but just defines the minimum of the canon

  • @tafazzi-on-discord
    @tafazzi-on-discord Před rokem +1

    Even after some thought, I can't guess what would be problematic about Ezekiel 1

    • @GeneralSeptem
      @GeneralSeptem Před rokem

      Yeah same. I'm wondering if they meant a different book...

    • @christinacanto3740
      @christinacanto3740 Před rokem +2

      “Ezekiel sees a throne above the firmament. This is a symbol of the heavenly throne of God and God’s sovereignty.
      However, Ezekiel saw a man on the throne. How can this be -a man on God’s throne?
      This man is the Word of God who became flesh and dwelt on earth in Judah (John 1:1,14). Both God and Man, He is the exalted King and God of Israel, in whom Israel has glorious hope.”
      I pulled that from an article online. Ch 2 goes on to talk about the stubbornness of the Israelites and their inability to accept new revelation from God’s prophets.

    • @tafazzi-on-discord
      @tafazzi-on-discord Před rokem +1

      @@christinacanto3740 Thanks for your response, I had actually talked about this topic to some friends and eventually reached a similar conclusion.

  • @dynamic9016
    @dynamic9016 Před měsícem

    Thanks much for this video.

    • @TheCatholicBrothers
      @TheCatholicBrothers  Před měsícem

      @@dynamic9016 are you bingeing the series right now?? 😁

    • @dynamic9016
      @dynamic9016 Před měsícem

      @@TheCatholicBrothers Something like that..Just seeking to better understand Christianity..I'm subscribed to alot of channels teaching about the Catholic Faith..Really find you'll channel inspirational n insightful..I find Christianity to be a very deep Religion n alot of people devoted to it without understanding it at all..I'm convinced Roman Catholicism is the Truth..

  • @chadbailey3623
    @chadbailey3623 Před rokem

    I do have one question about what seems to be a somewhat variant strain in the early Church: the Gospel of Mark. First, it distances Jesus from his mother and brothers (Mk 3). It features the interpretation of Jesus’ response to Pharisaic challenge that “thus he made all foods clean” (contrasting the Acts story of Peter’s vision and cleaning of all foods). Lastly, the tearing of the Temple veil seems to abolish the Temple cult altogether. It seems like Mark may have been an aberration in the consolidation of the Church around its new cultic practice.

  • @pivisota
    @pivisota Před 8 měsíci

    This is great stuff. It's rare to encounter modern scholarship utilised through an orthodox Catholic lense!
    One question: if christianity wasn't seen as separate in the 1st century, how come Nero singles out Christians and not Jews for persecution?

    • @TheCatholicBrothers
      @TheCatholicBrothers  Před 8 měsíci +2

      Thanks for the comment and question! The religious landscape in the capital city was slightly different than elsewhere in the Empire. Recall that a decade or so before Nero’s persecution, Emperor Claudius expelled all Jews from Rome. It is likely that Christian Jews in the city were included in this expulsion and that those Christians who remained would have been majority gentile. These gentile Christians would then have had to establish their own worshiping communities apart from the synagogues. Thus, when Jews were allowed back into the city around AD 57 the Christian community had become geographically distinct, if not also theologically.

  • @Isaac_Hess
    @Isaac_Hess Před rokem

    Another question: you say that second temple Judaism resembles in some way modern protestantism: decentralized, without a final doctrinal authority, and kind of unbothered by the pluralism - at least, it didn't prevent them from considering others as part of Israel.
    Does this not increase the plausibility of the protestant model? Why wouldn't the fulfilled Israel resemble this pluralism and lack of final doctrinal authority?

  • @catkat740
    @catkat740 Před rokem

    Great video! One thing I’ve wondered about is the first/second century practice of Judaism regarding feast days. When did the believers in Christ cease celebrating those? Also when did the sharing of a meal as seen in Acts occur in conjunction with or later as replacement for gathering in the synagogue? One more 🤓: If believers in Christ were considered just another, semi-accepted sect within Judaism, how would we interpret the Gospel writers’ depiction of Jewish leadership considering Jesus a heretic? Or Jesus’ own use of language, “You have heard it said… but I say” or his use of New Covenant language?

    • @TheCatholicBrothers
      @TheCatholicBrothers  Před rokem

      Thanks for tuning in!
      For some (directional) answers to your other questions, I would highly recommend, of course 😊, checking out our previous videos on the early Christian community of Jerusalem, and especially the two videos: “Why we don’t worship on the sabbath” and “was Judaism ever monotheistic?”
      Those have a lot of insights related to your questions.
      Enjoy!

    • @catkat740
      @catkat740 Před rokem

      @@TheCatholicBrothers Awesome. Thank you!!

  • @francesbernard2445
    @francesbernard2445 Před 2 lety

    I may be wrong when listening to what I have been taught and from what I have read too when believing that it was the Sadducees who had already split away from Judaism when Jesus Christ started in the flesh leading believers not Christianity splitting away from Judaism. Since many of the Sadducees refused to hear, see and believe the great signs which the life of Jesus Christ was showing to the world no matter what he did and didn't do he was not able to make their hearts quicken in the spirit enough to believe in even the possibility of resurrections for anyone. Which is why when Jesus was trying to reach them in his frustration once to their faces he was comparing them to being like only a bunch of vipers on a rock. It wasn't because Jesus Christ was holding any grudge against them it was because he knew what their fate was going to be in their continual hard heartedness.

    • @TheCatholicBrothers
      @TheCatholicBrothers  Před 2 lety +2

      Hey Frances, the difficulty would be the use of the term “Judaism”- not sure how you are using it in this context.
      The Sadducees were as much a school/sect as the Pharisees, Essenes, and Nazarenes were in second Temple, Israelite religion. After the Temple fell in 70AD (and even moreso after the failed revolt in 135 AD), the Sadducean and Pharisaic sects progressively evolved into a single, mainstream, rabbinical tradition in contradistinction to Christianity. During Jesus’ lifetime, however, the Sadducees were just as much of a distinct (and accepted) sect of Israelite faith as the Pharisees were. In fact, the Sadducean influence within the environs of Jerusalem may have even been stronger than that of the Pharisaic due to their centeredness in the cult of the Temple and strict adherence to Torah alone, while the Pharisees centered much of their influence within the synagogue.

  • @Ben_G_Biegler
    @Ben_G_Biegler Před měsícem

    Do Catholics have a closed canon? I thought trent settled this.

  • @FeWolf
    @FeWolf Před rokem

    Bible is 1 book, not OT and NT, I find it interesting they have Bible NT only, 80% of the NT is out of OT. I am pretty sure when God said forever, it is forever.

  • @christopherk222
    @christopherk222 Před 2 lety

    Jewish / Christian: Jean Danielou !

  • @Nazarene_Judaism
    @Nazarene_Judaism Před 2 měsíci

    No. you had rabbinic judaism, nazarene judaism ( jewish believers in yeshua) and christianity (a gentile faith)

    • @TheCatholicBrothers
      @TheCatholicBrothers  Před 2 měsíci

      Smh

    • @Nazarene_Judaism
      @Nazarene_Judaism Před 2 měsíci

      @@TheCatholicBrothers ? it's what the bible says. St Ignatius created the term "christianity." as a new religion in 100AD and Constantine made it a state religion. The biblical faith is NAZARENE JUDAISM acts 24:5!