Sentences with phrase «jewish people»

Yet in spite of the fact that the Jewish people have struggled endlessly against their election, with the most disastrous consequences for themselves and for the rest of humankind, the divine election remains unaffected because it is an unconditional one, based solely on God's love.
Ultimately, however, the question of whether Israel can see in the church a sign that is fundamentally congruent with God's plan of salvation for the world depends upon the church's attitude toward the Jewish people.
Another one would be what if a nation wanted to get rid of all the Jewish people (for the sake of argument).
The infamous Kristallnacht attack in Germany occurred when Nazi - supported mobs attacked Jewish people and destroyed their property on November 9 and 10, 1938.
The Jewish people first encountered Yahweh «in the wilderness» and the prophets spoke of going into the wilderness where God will speak «heart to heart».
Threats directed at Jewish people and Jewish community centers are increasing at alarming rates.
There are bad Christians, bad Jewish people, bad Americans, bad Australians.
He does what is righteous and just, but not only are his actions overlooked and forgotten, instead, his enemy Haman sets out to destroy him, and not only him, but all of Mordecai's race, the Jewish people.
... and his statement was about what he thought the Jewish people in this country were doing to the media..
there are black jewish people, white, Asian and etc...
I must tell these people, for the last 150 years there has been a Jewish majority in Jerusalem... Thank God, under Israeli sovereignty we continue to build Jerusalem the eternal capital of the Jewish People
When God chose to incarnate himself in human form and Jesus accepted his God - given mission, this incarnation occurred within the stream of a particular history, the history of the Jewish people.
If you know an establishments serves pork on Saturday and it clearly states so, why go there on Saturday and ask them to change the menu because of you.Same thing happen in Washington DC, even though there is absentee ballot, Jewish people want the District of Columbia to change voting day because it fall on Saturday.Trust me, contrary to your belief, you are not special.
If the Amalekites are to be given the benefit of a doubt, then all the more so should the same benefit of a doubt be given to other enemies of the Jewish people who no longer seem, as the Talmud puts it, to be «still holding on to their ancestral practice.»
- There was no interest by early Christian's in the Tomb of Jesus, even though the Jewish people venerated the tombs of the prophets with great care.
Before Jesus came (and in fact, even today) when Jewish people read their Hebrew Scriptures and saw a violent God doing violent things, they projected this onto their expectations for what the Messiah would be and do when He finally came.
One wonders, then, why the objects of «virtuous hatred» Mr. Soloveichik lists are almost all also enemies of the Jewish people.
This sounds very noble and extremely spiritual, but Paul isn't saying he wants to go to hell for the sake of the Jewish people.
He applies the warning to «anyone» and not just to the Jewish people who were alive in His day.
The Jewish people were persecuted for centuries for this assertion; yet they refused to relent.
It is one of the songs that the Jewish people sang when they traveled to Jerusalem to worship God in the temple.
This sounds very noble and extremely spiritual, but Paul is saying he wants to go to hell for the sake of the Jewish people.
@truth unknown: so you're saying catholics, protestants and jewish people didn't vote?
Luke emphasizes the spread of the gospel into the gentile world (especially in the Book of Acts), and so the ancestry of Jesus is traced back not simply to Abraham the father of the Jewish people, but to Adam, the father of Jew and gentile alike.
Jesus also says that anyone who speaks against the Son of Man will be forgiven, but this view about Israel's rejection of Jesus seems to say the opposite, that Jewish people who rejected Jesus by speaking against Him would not be forgiven.
First, I want to apologise for our (the Germans) crimes against the Jewish people.
Every year, the Jewish people were required to travel to Jerusalem to worship God in the temple.
Those who hold this view believe that while Jesus came primarily to the Messiah for the Jewish people, after they rejected Him, He refocused His mission toward being the Savior of the world.
All they had to do was refrain from things that Jewish people found incredibly offensive, such as sexual immorality and from eating food sacrificed to idols.
Paul states his desire to be accursed if this would allow his brethren, the Jewish people, to recognize Jesus as the Messiah.
In other words, the Jewish people are called to hate the evil their enemies might do but not the enemy himself.
First of all, a certain people group in Persia now outnumbered the Persians, namely, the Jewish people.
There were no Jewish people at that time.
Jewish people great believers in God because that» s all they had to go on... Gentiles meaning the rest of the world... Jesus shows up on the scene...
According to this view, the unforgivable sin was a particular sin which only Jewish people could commit who were alive during the ministry of Jesus and who saw the signs He was performing and should have recognized Him as their Messiah, but rejected Him instead.
Then the British gave it to the Jewish people.
Haman's plan to destroy the Jewish people, which we will encounter later, may have been acting more out of fear for his position and fear for what would become of Persia as much as anything else.
Muslims hate Christians and Jewish people... The Christians just forgive and think that because they are following Jesus that they shouldn't do anything back and your Muslims are killing, raping and torturing women and children in Iraq, Turkey and Egypt!!!
And when he stood silent in Yad Vashem» whose plain and stark memorialization of the horrors that befell the Jewish people at the hands of the Nazis positively begs for silence» he left a drop of the kind of healing balm on the hearts of Jews that the Church had never before found the means (assuming the desire) to do.
In Lonely Man and similar essays the singularity of the religious encounter, be it the individual's or the Jewish people's, is often linked with an essential incommunicable loneliness.
The Jewish people never crucified ANYBODY, not Jesus, not anyone else.
kermit4jc The you seemed to be implying that only the Jewish people had a «context» where they actually took their god seriously, as though the Romans, Egyptians, Hindus, Persians and everyone else with gods back then were just pretending to believe.
The whole point of Jesus was to show the Jewish people that what the Pharisees were teaching about hating your enemy (the Romans and Samaritans at that time) was scripturally unsound.
Though they did not think of these things as being fully God the way we think of Jesus Christ, the Jewish people did view The Temple, the Torah, and the Land as being the meeting place between God and man, the nexus where heaven and earth became one.
This cycle, the four blood moons will all take place on religiously significant dates for the Jewish people.
In Conservative Judaism, the traditions, norms, and mores created and developed by the Jewish people became the final authority of Jewish life and practice.
Kaplan, however, was neither the first nor the only voice arguing that at the core of Jewish identity was the idea of an organic Jewish people.
When Eastern Orthodox leaders throughout the world defended village priests who at Christmas and Easter routinely anathematized the Jewish people for «rejecting their King,» Jakovos's openness to Jews and Judaism earned him awards from the Anti-Defamation League of B'nai B'rith and the American Jewish Committee.
Is the prophesies of the Jewish people over with?
He recognized, as we have seen above, that the laws about tithing were for Jewish people living in a covenant relationship with the God of Israel, and with the Temple and the priestly Levitical system as one of the central symbols of that covenant.
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