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Great academies of the rabbis were established, Pharisees ruled Judaism. The Babylonian Talmud codified oral traditions, endorsed killing indirectly, and promoted adultery and child sex. Gentiles were deemed inferior, with no legal rights. The Talmud belittled Jesus, encouraging persecution. Jewish culture values knowledge and questioning. Israel's fight is supported. Anti-Semitic remarks were made. Circumcision practices were criticized. Supporting Israel was discouraged. Jewish hatred towards Jesus was highlighted.

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The speaker clarifies that the Talmud is not the most important book in Judaism. The Torah holds the highest position, followed by the Tanakh (Torah, Writings, and Prophets). The Talmud is next in importance. There are two versions of the Talmud: the Babylonian and the Jerusalem Talmud. The speaker characterizes the Talmud as containing debates and disagreements between rabbis. The speaker suggests the verses to be read may contain content about Christ. The speaker states the Talmud is not necessarily considered canonical or authoritative.

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You can't be a Christian and anti-Jewish, as Jesus was Jewish. However, being pro-Israel implies being pro-Zionist. The belief that the Jewish people are still God's chosen people is incorrect. The New Testament indicates that the church is now God's people. The parable of the vineyard illustrates that Israel's leaders rejected God's son, leading to the kingdom being taken away from them. Therefore, the idea that the Israelites remain God's chosen people contradicts Jesus' message about their rejection.

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The Talmud contains hateful references about Jesus, calling him the product of adultery and a fool. There are implications that the Jews may have killed Jesus, with some believing he deserved it. The Talmud even gloats about Jesus dying young, comparing him to Balaam. Peter Schaeffer's book, "Jesus in the Talmud," confirms the Talmud's narrative refers to Jesus, stating he deserved death as a blasphemer and idolater. The Jewish community takes pride in Jesus' execution, claiming he got what he deserved.

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Different religions have different paths to reach God, but the goal is the same. Understanding each other is key to understanding God. Hell is not a literal place in Judaism, but a metaphorical concept. The idea of hell comes from the valley of Hinnom, where pagans used to offer sacrifices. The belief is that doing what is right saves oneself at every moment, rather than relying on a specific path to salvation.

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The Bible is often referred to as the greatest story ever told, not merely a collection of facts. Understanding its symbols and narratives is essential. Many religions before Christianity shared similar teachings. The Jewish rejection of Jesus as the Messiah is not rooted in hatred but in their understanding of the story. While the Bible contains valuable spirituality, it has been manipulated by political powers to maintain ignorance. Relying on a divine return for help is misguided; true salvation lies in education, personal spirituality, and critical investigation of the story. The church, particularly in Western civilization, serves as a tool of government, with both institutions working together to shape public thought.

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Since 70 AD, Jews have desired to rebuild their temple and altar for sacrifices, which has fueled ongoing conflicts with the Arab world and Palestinians. The central issue is the temple itself, which is seen as a precursor to great tribulation for the Jews. When rebuilt, sacrifices will resume, echoing Old Testament practices, which some view as a profound blasphemy against God. This act, perceived as a rejection of Christ's sacrifice, is believed to provoke God's anger, leading to tribulation. Ultimately, it is suggested that this suffering will lead the Jews to recognize Jesus Christ as their savior, acknowledging their past wrongs and seeking His mercy.

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Speaker 0 begins by challenging the other person’s belief, saying, “He don’t we don’t believe the Jesus, man.” The line signals a heated disagreement about Jesus and hell. The speaker then asserts that the other side believes “that Jesus is burning and shit and hell,” and he agrees with that characterization by saying, “Oh, yeah. Exactly.” This exchange frames the conversation as a confrontation over the nature of Jesus and his fate after death. The dialogue moves to a reaction to the idea of Jesus suffering in hell. Speaker 0 labels the idea as “terrible,” immediately followed by a probing question about why it should be considered terrible: “Why it's terrible?” He clarifies his stance by presenting a broader theological boundary, insisting, “It's not you it's not your god, and it's not my god. It's not the Muslim god.” In this line, he separates gods across religions and implies that the accusation or belief about Jesus burning in hell does not align with his or the other speaker’s understanding of divinity. The question then becomes a direct inquiry about the nature and identity of Jesus: “So what is Jesus? Tell me. What is Jesus? Jesus Christ Jesus. What is fucking Jesus?” The repetition emphasizes the speaker’s demand for a clear definition or explanation of who Jesus is. Speaker 0 proceeds to provide a definitive, though provocative, description: “Jesus Christ is the lord and savior for Christian people.” This statement asserts a canonical Christian understanding of Jesus’ role, positioning Jesus as central to Christian faith. However, the conversation quickly shifts as Speaker 0 challenges the reverence of Jesus by saying, “You're disrespecting him when you're saying that he's burning in hell and shit.” The rebuke reframes the earlier claim about Jesus’ fate as disrespectful to Jesus’ significance in Christian belief. The exchange culminates in a stark declaration from Speaker 0: “Listen. Jesus Jesus is nothing.” This controversial line is followed by an appeal to biblical literacy: “And if you don't if you really, really believe in the bible, you need to understand you believe Jewish man.” Here, the speaker implies that belief in the biblical narrative recognizes Jesus as a figure rooted in Jewish tradition, or perhaps emphasizes Jesus’ Jewish origins as part of understanding his identity within Christianity. The overall conversation centers on definitions of Jesus, the appropriateness of statements about his afterlife, and the contrast between Christian, Jewish, and other religious conceptions of Jesus.

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Jesus was a Jewish rabbi living in two thousand years ago. He was a rabbi from the Galilee. He came to Jerusalem. He turned the money tables. I think people forget that the world of Jesus was a Jewish world. His name is Jewish. Jesus is standing in synagogue. He's holding the scriptures. But what are the scriptures? He's holding the Old Testament. He's holding the Hebrew scriptures. For God so loved the world that he gave his only begotten son, Jesus, the Jew. Salvation is of the Jews. The patriarchs, Abraham, Isaac, and Jacob, are all Jewish people. Christian, there's a Jewish man living in your heart. The scriptures are Jewish scriptures. Our Messiah is a Jewish Messiah. As Gentiles we are grafted into the root system of Israel. The church has not replaced the Jews.

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Judaism is a centuries-old religion, while Zionism is a newer movement that transformed religion into nationalism and materialism. Non-religious Jews who disliked Judaism created Zionism, initially considering Uganda as a location for a Jewish state. They used Jewish symbols and names to legitimize their existence and silence criticism by labeling it as anti-Semitic. However, this is far from the truth. Muslim countries, like Turkey, have historically been supportive of Jewish people. Zionism goes against the teachings of the Torah, which forbids Jews from having their own state. The creation of Israel in Palestine, a land already inhabited by Palestinians, contradicts the principles of compassion and non-violence. Many Jews, including rabbis, oppose Zionism and its actions.

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Speaker 0 claims that various texts refer to negative depictions of Jesus and non-Jews. Specifically, text "Four seven one three" refers to Jesus as a fornicator, Gittin 56 states Jesus is burning in hell, and Shabbat one zero four b says Mary was a baba nessiah. Additionally, Baba Messiah 24 a allegedly states a Jew doesn't have to return a lost object to a gentile, Yebimath 98 a claims all children of goyim are animals, Tuspoth, Geminiath 84 b equates eating with a goy to eating with a dog, and Baba Messiah one fourteen b asserts gentiles are not humans but beasts. Speaker 1 states that these are legitimate verses in Judaism. Speaker 1 believes that Paul said in the New Testament that we must bless the Jews.

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Bible is crystal clear. Jesus said to the Jews, the kingdom of God shall be taken from you and given to a nation bringing forth the fruits thereof. In the Old Testament, Israel was God's chosen people. God chose Abraham, Isaac, and Jacob, and he used the nation of Israel as a pattern; they were supposed to be a light to Gentiles. They failed in that mission. The Lord Jesus Christ came as the Messiah, and he came unto his own and his own received him not. The Bible squarely places the blame for the death of Jesus on the Jews. In Acts, the Romans protect Christians, while the Jews try to rip them apart and stone them; Romans restore law and order. This is why I reject Zionism and being pro Israel. I read the Bible cover to cover, 20 times, and I didn't see it because you're brainwashed.

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The Schofield Reference Bible, published in 1909 by the Oxford University Press with later editions, is described as one of the most influential study Bibles on dispensationalism. It is not a Bible in itself, but the footnotes annotated by Cyrus Schofield into the King James Bible, synthesizing the Bible’s message into seven distinct dispensations between creation and judgment, during which God deals with humanity in various ways, specifically in matters of salvation and the nation of Israel. Schofield built upon the works of John Nelson Darby, referred to as the father of modern dispensationalism, and Clarence Larkin, who systematizes teachings into charts and published them in a book titled modestly as the greatest book on dispensational truth in the world. It is stated that the Schofield Reference Bible is largely responsible for Christian Zionism within churches, and it has influenced generations of American Christians to adopt the belief that the Jews are still God’s chosen people and that Christians should support the nation of Israel. When Christians asked for biblical justification for that support, they are said to often point to Genesis chapter 12 verse 3—not because it says Israel or the Jews, but because the footnotes state, “there was a promise of blessing on those individuals and nations who bless Abraham’s descendants and a curse laid on those who persecute the Jews.” The commentary is claimed to interpret “curse them to curse at thee” as meaning that a nation that commits the sin of antisemitism brings inevitable judgment, by interpreting cursing Abraham as cursing Israel and interpreting cursing Israel as antisemitic. This stance is asserted to fly in the face of the New Testament, which records Jesus Christ cursing the nation of Israel and Jews on multiple occasions (Matthew 21:19 and 43; Revelation 2:9 and 3:9; and 1 Thessalonians 2:14–16). It is also claimed that Schofield’s commentary on Genesis 12 aligns far more with the Talmud than with the Bible, since Gittim 56 through 57 teaches that the person who curses the Jews will be judged by God in hell, burning in their own excrement. This is presented as one of many reasons why every Christian should throw out their Schofield Reference Bible.

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"If Christianity were about defending a flag, Jesus would have picked up a sword, but he didn't. He picked up a cross." "a movement that's supposed to follow that man, a man that said my kingdom is not of this world, has decided that protecting a modern nation state called Israel is the center of Christian duty." "Christianity does not require allegiance to the state of Israel." "The new Israel, the church, is defined not by soil but by spirit, not by war but by witness, and it is made up of anyone, anyone from anywhere who walks in faith." "The gospel doesn't ask you to bless a nation. It does ask you to bless the peacemakers, to comfort the mourners, to defend the innocent, and reject violence stressed as virtue."

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Most Christians believe that modern Judaism is similar to the Judaism of the Old Testament, but the Jewish Encyclopedia states that they are actually quite different. After the Jews were taken to Babylon by Nebuchadnezzar in the 6th century BC, they faced new challenges to their faith. Lay priests called scribes or soferim emerged to interpret the law in this foreign environment. These scribes eventually became the scribes and Pharisees mentioned in the New Testament. The Pharisees believed in both the written law of Moses and an oral tradition received by 70 elders. Jesus strongly criticized this tradition, considering it a counterfeit. Despite the destruction of Jerusalem in 70 AD, the Pharisees gained even more power over the Jewish people. They shaped the character of Judaism and remained its rulers for centuries. In Babylon, they codified their oral traditions into the Babylonian Talmud, which Jesus rebuked. The Talmud reveals Israel's apostasy and provides insight into Christ's negative descriptions of the Pharisees. It endorses adultery and even child sex, with some rabbis upholding the privilege to marry 3-year-old girls. Christ also portrayed the Pharisees as racial bigots in the story of the Good Samaritan.

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Speaker 0 presents the view that great academies of the rabbis were established, thousands of new laws formulated, and that the Pharisees who killed Jesus Christ remained the rulers of Judaism. He asserts that in Babylon the Pharisees codified oral traditions into the Babylonian Talmud, which he claims reveals Israel’s apostasy and supports Christ’s descriptions of the Pharisees as hypocritical and malignant. He cites a Talmud passage in Treatise Sanhedrin claiming a Pharisee may kill indirectly, giving an example where binding a neighbor leads to starvation and liability is avoided. He contends the Pharisees manipulated Romans to kill Christ, arguing Romans were the direct cause of Christ’s death but the Pharisees claimed Romans as the guilty party. He states Christ called Pharisees adulterers and that the Talmud provides “loopholes” for adultery, providing examples such as exceptions for sex with a minor or a heathen’s wife, and endorses seduction of unwed adolescent girls described as designated bond maids. He emphasizes death penalties differ for natural versus perverse sexual acts, alleging that rape in a perverted form falls outside legal jurisdiction, and claims sexual perversion was a long-standing practice in Babylon. Speaker 1 continues by noting three major Talmudic treatises contain passages endorsing the seduction and marriage of three-year-old girls, with Simeon Ben Yohai among prominent rabbis upholding this privilege. He states that in Israel today, many venerate Simeon Ben Yohai. He quotes Simeon Ben Yohai and the great Raba approving intercourse with a little girl under three years and a day, comparing virginity to tears returning to a little girl, and asserts the same section covers sexual activity with small boys. He adds that the Good Samaritan story portrays Pharisees as racial bigots, unwilling to respond to a non-Jew’s suffering. He notes that God’s command to the Canaanites was harsh and that by New Testament times, separation and the sword had become obsolete, with God no longer making racial distinctions. Speaker 1 and Speaker 0 discuss Gentile status in the Talmud and Jewish encyclopedias, claiming the Talmud’s critical attitudes toward Gentiles, including that Gentiles are not men but barbarians, lack legal rights, and that a Gentile’s suit in Jewish courts favors the defendant if the plaintiff is Jewish. They claim Christians are curses within the Talmudic framework, that Jesus is portrayed as a bastard, and that Gentiles face death for Sabbath observance or for providing testimony in a Jewish court. They assert that the Talmud equips Jews with an ethic fostering bigotry, isolation, and persecution, leading to the expulsion of Jews from Babylon to the West by the eleventh century. Speaker 2 reframes as a positive counterpoint: the tradition of Talmudic questioning, continuous inquiry, and a culture of learning that never ends, which exploded when the walls of the ghetto fell, and remains part of contemporary Jewish culture. Speaker 3 declares solidarity with Israel, insisting “Israel’s fight is our fight,” vowing unity and resistance to anti-Semitism, and asserting they will not be discouraged, defeated, or silent. Speaker 4 interjects with a hostile confrontation, expressing willingness to “kill Christ again,” accusing Jews of killing Jesus, and making violent threats toward a pastor and others; a rabbi’s circumcision practice is described graphically as supportive of Talmudic Judaism, followed by a denunciation aimed at Christian Zionists.

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The Talmud, written down centuries after Christ, contains critical and antagonistic views towards Jesus. It defames him, claiming he was born illegitimately, practiced magic, and died shamefully. The Talmud even states that Jesus is in hell, being punished. According to the Jewish Encyclopedia, Jesus advises us to bless and promote the well-being of Jews, as harming them is like touching the apple of his eye. The Talmud also expresses hatred towards Christian Jews, considering them dangerous heretics. The rabbis believed that the New Testament gospels posed a greater threat to the unity of Judaism than other writings.

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I want to address who pro-Zionists are and clarify some common misconceptions. Being pro-Israel isn't about being anti-Jewish, as Jesus himself was Jewish. However, the New Testament indicates that the nation of Israel is no longer God's chosen people; that title now belongs to the church. True Jews are those who follow the Lord's laws and ethics in their hearts, not just outwardly. In fact, those who reject Jesus are like the sons of Hagar, not of Sarah. There's neither Jew nor Gentile, but Christ, and Christ's kingdom doesn't favor any human government, and we shouldn't prioritize any nation over Christ. When we see children being killed, whether Israeli or Palestinian, it breaks Jesus' heart. We should be pro-Jesus and his kingdom and remember our brothers and sisters in Christ, even Palestinian Christians.

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The Talmud contains strong antagonism towards Jesus, portraying him negatively, including claims about his mother, Mary. It asserts that Jesus was born illegitimately and faced a shameful death, being subjected to multiple forms of execution and now suffering in hell. The Jewish encyclopedia states that Jesus advised blessing Jews and ensuring their well-being. Christians, seen as followers of a false prophet, also face condemnation, especially those observing the Sabbath. The Talmud regarded Christian writings as a significant threat to Judaism, leading to prohibitions against sharing food with Christians and rejecting their testimonies in court. Overall, the Talmud reflects a deep-seated animosity towards both Jesus and Christianity.

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This video explores the history and beliefs surrounding the relationship between Jews and Christians. It begins with the story of Abraham and his descendants, who became a great nation and later faced enslavement in Egypt. Moses led them out and they received the law at Mount Sinai before wandering in the wilderness and eventually entering the Promised Land. The 12 tribes of Israel were ruled by judges and later desired a king, leading to the reigns of Saul, David, and Solomon. After Solomon's death, the kingdom was divided into Israel and Judah, with both eventually facing conquest and captivity. The Jews returned to Judah after 70 years and rebuilt the temple. During the time of Christ, Judea was under Roman rule and Jesus was crucified. The Jews were scattered until the founding of Israel in 1948. The video also discusses the Talmud, which is considered a holy book by many Jews but contains blasphemous statements about Jesus. The belief that Christians should support Israel is a more recent phenomenon influenced by the Scofield Reference Bible and the Zionist movement. The video also touches on the star of David, Freemasonry's connections to Judaism, and the influence of Jewish teachings on its rituals. Another topic explored is the relationship between Jews and Christians in terms of their beliefs about Jesus and the concept of the Messiah. The speakers discuss the idea that Jews are physical descendants of Abraham, but Jesus questioned their connection to Abraham and referred to them as children of the devil. They argue that being Jewish is not just about ethnicity, but also about faith in Jesus Christ. They emphasize that true Israel is made up of believers in Christ, not just those with a Jewish genealogy. The video also delves into the concept of Zion and Jerusalem, stating that the true Zion is a heavenly city, not a physical location. The speakers stress that salvation is based on faith in Jesus, not on good works or religious practices, and that once a person is saved, they are saved forever, regardless of their actions.

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I'm currently studying Catholicism to grasp how a religion with Jewish roots, born from the Torah and a Jewish rabbi, evolved to persecute Jews for not converting. This history includes pogroms, burnings, and accusations, and now, figures like Nick Fuentes and Candace Owens are using Catholicism to attack Jews again. I'm reading Bishop Robert Barron's "Catholicism" to understand this better, but the very first paragraph presents a core Christian claim: that God became human. This is the point we Jews were historically slaughtered for rejecting. The Torah, Catholicism's foundation, strictly forbids idolatry, the worship of any physical form. So, when Catholic extremists attack Jews for not accepting Jesus as God, it's perplexing, as the Torah deems the concept of God becoming human as heresy.

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I was once asked why evangelical Christians are so supportive of Jewish people and Israel. The answer is simple: you can be Jewish and have nothing to do with Christians, but I can't be Christian and not have everything to do with the Jewish people. My faith, scriptures, and everything I believe is built on that foundation. We are people of the book. If you read in Genesis that God blesses those who bless Israel and curses those who curse Israel, it becomes very clear.

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The Pharisees established academies and created new laws. The Babylonian Talmud codified their traditions, showing their apostasy. The Talmud justifies Christ's criticism of the Pharisees. It endorses adultery and child sex, degrades Gentiles, and defames Jesus and Mary. The Talmud promotes bigotry, isolation, and persecution. Despite this, Jewish culture values knowledge, questioning, and unity. The speaker expresses pride in Jewish identity and history. Anti-Semitic remarks are made, advocating violence. These extreme views do not represent all Jewish people.

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"He wasn't a Palestinian teacher. He was a Jewish teacher with a Jewish name, Yeshua." The speakers stress Jesus' Jewish context: the world of Jesus was a Jewish world, and he taught in a synagogue using the Hebrew scriptures, the Old Testament. They argue Christianity rests on the Hebrew Bible and that the New Testament is a Jewish document; the first Jews and first Christians were all Jews, and the New Testament was written by Jews. Key claims include "Salvation is of the Jews" and that everything Christians have was given by the Jewish people. Jesus kept the law of Moses and did not come to destroy it but to fulfill it. The Messiah is Jewish—the King of the Jews. They condemn replacement theology and urge standing with Israel, Zionism, and that the throne of David will be on Mount Zion.

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The speaker explains that the Gospels were considered more dangerous to Judaism than pagan writings. They mention a Talmudic rabbi who believed that Christian writings should be burned because Christianity posed a greater threat than paganism. Another speaker shares their personal experience of being raised in Judaism, stating that modern Judaism has little connection to the patriarchs and prophets of the Old Testament. They explain that the authority of the rabbis, based on the Jewish Talmud, shaped their understanding of God and the world. The speaker also mentions that the rabbis emphasized Jewish superiority over Gentiles in intellect, morality, and race.
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