I continue here with my thoughts about how Christians came to claim the Jewish Bible for themselves, and to argue that it no longer belonged to Jews.   I’ve already pointed out that the Jewish followers of Jesus (Many? Most? All?)  (I suspect the answer is “Most”), within a short time after his death (months?  a year?) began wonder why other Jews did not accept Jesus as the messiah.  After all, they themselves “knew” he had been raised from the dead.  It was a great miracle.  It proved Jesus was God’s “anointed” one.  Why wouldn’t others accept it?

That was particularly perplexing and frustrating and eventually irritating and aggravating as they started finding indications in the Bible itself that this is what was supposed to happen to the messiah.  It’s all there, in the prophecies of Scripture.  Why don’t our fellow Jews – family members, friends, neighbors, fellow worshipers in the synagogue – why don’t they *see* it?   Are they blind?  Heard headed?  Rebellious against God?

Eventually it came to be thought among many of these followers of Jesus that the non-believing Jews were just that.  They had actually chosen to reject the God who had called them.

As time went on, Christians increasingly …

To see the rest of this post you will need to belong to the blog.  We all have a longing for belonging.  Satisfy your longing.  Join the blog.  You’ll have endless streams of happiness, and you will do the world some good, with all your fees going to help those in need.  What could be better?  Belonging, happiness, and charity.