Did Jesus really ever intend for Christianity to emerge as a religion or did he

Irish313

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intend for a reformed Judaism? Not reformed in the sense of Reform, as in modern day Judaism http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Reform_Judaism In a way should Christians really be Jews? Don't worry I'm not on drugs, a long day and I'm tired, lol. And I'm atheist so regardless I'm burning in the Lake of Fire!!! But seriously does anyone see the point I'm trying to make?
"The answer is within Scripture itself, Jesus taught Scripture not according to the Jewish Talmud but according to Himself. He disagreed with all of the Jewish sects when He lived amongst them"

But if that's so then why was Jesus born a Jew? Why would God have his son raised a Jew if Judaism was "incorrect"?
Btw, I'm not thumbing anyone down.
 
Jesus was not sent by God to establish a new religion but the problem He ran into is that the Jewish establishment refused to accept His modifications to Judaism so His followers broke away from the Jewish faith community.
 
you are right he intended an extension of judaism, in fact if you don't believe that the jews are god's chosen people and that he spoke to them and guided them there is no basis for jesus or his teachings or christianity, in fact paul abandoned most of jesus's teachings in order to get recruits( he was clearly more interested in power and influence than truth) and it is the watered down pauline "christianity" that exists today even though there is no evidence that ANY of those people existed
 
The change was far too radical to ever qualify as "reformed Judaism"

The apostles of Jesus were taught by Him in detail... they understood
what you have apparently missed. Jesus called it the "Way".. and also
a narrow way that few will find. ("the wide path leads to destruction")

It's a new and "better" covenant between God and man, in which there
is "neither Jew nor Greek". People of any race with His Spirit in us.
 
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