Difference between revisions of "121:7 Jews and Gentiles"

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121:7.1 By the [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/1st_century times of Jesus] the [[Jews]] had arrived at a settled [[concept]] of their [[origin]], [[history]], and [[destiny]]. They had built up a rigid wall of [[separation]] between themselves and the [[gentile]] world; they looked upon all gentile ways with utter [[contempt]]. They [[worshiped]] the [[letter]] of the [[law]] and indulged a form of [[self-righteousness]] based upon the false [[pride]] of [[descent]]. They had formed preconceived notions regarding the [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jewish messianism promised Messiah], and most of these [[expectations]] envisaged a [[Messiah]] who would come as a part of their [[national]] and [[Race|racial]] history. To the [[Hebrews]] of those days Jewish theology was irrevocably settled, forever fixed.
 
121:7.1 By the [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/1st_century times of Jesus] the [[Jews]] had arrived at a settled [[concept]] of their [[origin]], [[history]], and [[destiny]]. They had built up a rigid wall of [[separation]] between themselves and the [[gentile]] world; they looked upon all gentile ways with utter [[contempt]]. They [[worshiped]] the [[letter]] of the [[law]] and indulged a form of [[self-righteousness]] based upon the false [[pride]] of [[descent]]. They had formed preconceived notions regarding the [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jewish messianism promised Messiah], and most of these [[expectations]] envisaged a [[Messiah]] who would come as a part of their [[national]] and [[Race|racial]] history. To the [[Hebrews]] of those days Jewish theology was irrevocably settled, forever fixed.
  
121:7.2 The teachings and [[practices]] of [[Jesus]] regarding [[tolerance]] and kindness ran counter to the long-standing [[attitude]] of the Jews toward other peoples whom they considered [[heathen]]. For [[generations]] the [[Jews]] had nourished an [[attitude]] toward the outside world which made it impossible for them to accept [[the Master]]'s teachings about the spiritual [http://nordan.daynal.org/wiki/index.php?title=Paper_12#12:7._THE_PART_AND_THE_WHOLE brotherhood of man]. They were unwilling to share [[Yahweh]] on [[equal]] terms with the [[gentiles]] and were likewise unwilling to accept as the Son of God one who taught such new and strange [[doctrines]].
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121:7.2 The teachings and [[practices]] of [[Jesus]] regarding [[tolerance]] and kindness ran counter to the long-standing [[attitude]] of the Jews toward other peoples whom they considered [[heathen]]. For [[generations]] the [[Jews]] had nourished an [[attitude]] toward the outside world which made it impossible for them to accept [[the Master]]'s teachings about the spiritual [https://nordan.daynal.org/wiki/index.php?title=Paper_12#12:7._THE_PART_AND_THE_WHOLE brotherhood of man]. They were unwilling to share [[Yahweh]] on [[equal]] terms with the [[gentiles]] and were likewise unwilling to accept as the Son of God one who taught such new and strange [[doctrines]].
  
 
121:7.3 The [[scribes]], the [[Pharisees]], and the [[priesthood]] held the [[Jews]] in a terrible bondage of [[ritualism]] and [[legalism]], a bondage far more real than that of the [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Roman_empire#Government Roman political rule]. The [[Jews]] of Jesus' time were not only held in subjugation to the [[law]] but were equally bound by the slavish demands of the [[traditions]], which involved and invaded every domain of [[personal]] and [[social]] life. These minute regulations of conduct pursued and dominated every loyal [[Jew]], and it is not strange that they promptly rejected one of their number who presumed to ignore their [[sacred]] [[traditions]], and who dared to flout their long-honored regulations of [[social]] [[conduct]]. They could hardly regard with [[favor]] the teachings of one who did not hestitate to clash with [[dogmas]] which they regarded as having been [[ordained]] by Father [[Abraham]] himself. [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Moses Moses] had given them their [[law]] and they would not [[compromise]].
 
121:7.3 The [[scribes]], the [[Pharisees]], and the [[priesthood]] held the [[Jews]] in a terrible bondage of [[ritualism]] and [[legalism]], a bondage far more real than that of the [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Roman_empire#Government Roman political rule]. The [[Jews]] of Jesus' time were not only held in subjugation to the [[law]] but were equally bound by the slavish demands of the [[traditions]], which involved and invaded every domain of [[personal]] and [[social]] life. These minute regulations of conduct pursued and dominated every loyal [[Jew]], and it is not strange that they promptly rejected one of their number who presumed to ignore their [[sacred]] [[traditions]], and who dared to flout their long-honored regulations of [[social]] [[conduct]]. They could hardly regard with [[favor]] the teachings of one who did not hestitate to clash with [[dogmas]] which they regarded as having been [[ordained]] by Father [[Abraham]] himself. [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Moses Moses] had given them their [[law]] and they would not [[compromise]].
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121:7.4 By the time of the [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/1st_century first century] after Christ the spoken [[interpretation]] of the [[law]] by the recognized [[teachers]], the [[scribes]], had become a higher [[authority]] than the written [[law]] itself. [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Rabbinic Judaism] And all this made it easier for certain religious [[leaders]] of the Jews to array the people against the [[acceptance]] of a new [[gospel]].
 
121:7.4 By the time of the [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/1st_century first century] after Christ the spoken [[interpretation]] of the [[law]] by the recognized [[teachers]], the [[scribes]], had become a higher [[authority]] than the written [[law]] itself. [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Rabbinic Judaism] And all this made it easier for certain religious [[leaders]] of the Jews to array the people against the [[acceptance]] of a new [[gospel]].
  
121:7.5 These [[circumstances]] rendered it impossible for the [[Jews]] to fulfill their [[divine]] [[destiny]] as [[messengers]] of the new [[gospel]] of religious [[freedom]] and [[spiritual]] [[liberty]]. They could not break the fetters of [[tradition]]. [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jeremiah Jeremiah] had told of the "law to be written in men's hearts,"[http://nordan.daynal.org/wiki/index.php?title=Book_of_Jeremiah#Chapter_.31] [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ezekiel Ezekiel] had spoken of a "new spirit to live in man's soul,"[http://nordan.daynal.org/wiki/index.php?title=Book_of_Ezekiel#Chapter_36] and the Psalmist had prayed that God would "create a clean heart within and renew a right spirit."[http://nordan.daynal.org/wiki/index.php?title=Book_of_Psalms#Psalm_51] But when the Jewish religion of good works and [[slavery]] to [[law]] fell victim to the stagnation of traditionalistic [[inertia]], the [[motion]] of religious [[evolution]] passed westward to the [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Europe European] peoples.
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121:7.5 These [[circumstances]] rendered it impossible for the [[Jews]] to fulfill their [[divine]] [[destiny]] as [[messengers]] of the new [[gospel]] of religious [[freedom]] and [[spiritual]] [[liberty]]. They could not break the fetters of [[tradition]]. [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jeremiah Jeremiah] had told of the "law to be written in men's hearts,"[https://nordan.daynal.org/wiki/index.php?title=Book_of_Jeremiah#Chapter_.31] [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ezekiel Ezekiel] had spoken of a "new spirit to live in man's soul,"[https://nordan.daynal.org/wiki/index.php?title=Book_of_Ezekiel#Chapter_36] and the Psalmist had prayed that God would "create a clean heart within and renew a right spirit."[https://nordan.daynal.org/wiki/index.php?title=Book_of_Psalms#Psalm_51] But when the Jewish religion of good works and [[slavery]] to [[law]] fell victim to the stagnation of traditionalistic [[inertia]], the [[motion]] of religious [[evolution]] passed westward to the [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Europe European] peoples.
  
 
121:7.6 And so a [[different]] people were called upon to carry an advancing [[theology]] to the world, a [[system]] of teaching embodying the [[philosophy]] of the [[Greeks]], the [[law]] of the [[Romans]], the [[morality]] of the [[Hebrews]], and the [[gospel]] of [[personality]] sanctity and [[spiritual]] [[liberty]] formulated by [[Paul, the Apostle|Paul]] and based on the teachings of [[Jesus]].
 
121:7.6 And so a [[different]] people were called upon to carry an advancing [[theology]] to the world, a [[system]] of teaching embodying the [[philosophy]] of the [[Greeks]], the [[law]] of the [[Romans]], the [[morality]] of the [[Hebrews]], and the [[gospel]] of [[personality]] sanctity and [[spiritual]] [[liberty]] formulated by [[Paul, the Apostle|Paul]] and based on the teachings of [[Jesus]].
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121:7.9 The [[Mediterranean]] [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Roman_Empire Roman Empire], the [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Parthian_Empire Parthian kingdom], and the adjacent peoples of [[Jesus]]' time all held crude and [[primitive]] [[ideas]] regarding the [[geography]] of the world, [[astronomy]], [[health]], and [[disease]]; and naturally they were amazed by the new and startling pronouncements of the carpenter of [[Nazareth]]. The [[ideas]] of spirit [[Possessed|possession]], good and bad, applied not merely to [[human being]]s, but every rock and tree was viewed by many as being spirit possessed. This was an [[enchanted]] age, and everybody believed in [[miracles]] as commonplace occurrences.
 
121:7.9 The [[Mediterranean]] [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Roman_Empire Roman Empire], the [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Parthian_Empire Parthian kingdom], and the adjacent peoples of [[Jesus]]' time all held crude and [[primitive]] [[ideas]] regarding the [[geography]] of the world, [[astronomy]], [[health]], and [[disease]]; and naturally they were amazed by the new and startling pronouncements of the carpenter of [[Nazareth]]. The [[ideas]] of spirit [[Possessed|possession]], good and bad, applied not merely to [[human being]]s, but every rock and tree was viewed by many as being spirit possessed. This was an [[enchanted]] age, and everybody believed in [[miracles]] as commonplace occurrences.
  
<center>[http://nordan.daynal.org/wiki/index.php?title=Paper_121 Go to Paper 121]</center>
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<center>[https://nordan.daynal.org/wiki/index.php?title=Paper_121 Go to Paper 121]</center>
<center>[http://nordan.daynal.org/wiki/index.php?title=The_Urantia_Text_-_Contents Go to Table of Contents]</center>
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<center>[https://nordan.daynal.org/wiki/index.php?title=The_Urantia_Text_-_Contents Go to Table of Contents]</center>
  
 
[[Category:Paper 121 - The Times of Michael's Bestowal]]
 
[[Category:Paper 121 - The Times of Michael's Bestowal]]
 
[[Category: History/TeaM]]
 
[[Category: History/TeaM]]

Revision as of 21:25, 12 December 2020

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121:7.1 By the times of Jesus the Jews had arrived at a settled concept of their origin, history, and destiny. They had built up a rigid wall of separation between themselves and the gentile world; they looked upon all gentile ways with utter contempt. They worshiped the letter of the law and indulged a form of self-righteousness based upon the false pride of descent. They had formed preconceived notions regarding the messianism promised Messiah, and most of these expectations envisaged a Messiah who would come as a part of their national and racial history. To the Hebrews of those days Jewish theology was irrevocably settled, forever fixed.

121:7.2 The teachings and practices of Jesus regarding tolerance and kindness ran counter to the long-standing attitude of the Jews toward other peoples whom they considered heathen. For generations the Jews had nourished an attitude toward the outside world which made it impossible for them to accept the Master's teachings about the spiritual brotherhood of man. They were unwilling to share Yahweh on equal terms with the gentiles and were likewise unwilling to accept as the Son of God one who taught such new and strange doctrines.

121:7.3 The scribes, the Pharisees, and the priesthood held the Jews in a terrible bondage of ritualism and legalism, a bondage far more real than that of the Roman political rule. The Jews of Jesus' time were not only held in subjugation to the law but were equally bound by the slavish demands of the traditions, which involved and invaded every domain of personal and social life. These minute regulations of conduct pursued and dominated every loyal Jew, and it is not strange that they promptly rejected one of their number who presumed to ignore their sacred traditions, and who dared to flout their long-honored regulations of social conduct. They could hardly regard with favor the teachings of one who did not hestitate to clash with dogmas which they regarded as having been ordained by Father Abraham himself. Moses had given them their law and they would not compromise.

121:7.4 By the time of the first century after Christ the spoken interpretation of the law by the recognized teachers, the scribes, had become a higher authority than the written law itself. Judaism And all this made it easier for certain religious leaders of the Jews to array the people against the acceptance of a new gospel.

121:7.5 These circumstances rendered it impossible for the Jews to fulfill their divine destiny as messengers of the new gospel of religious freedom and spiritual liberty. They could not break the fetters of tradition. Jeremiah had told of the "law to be written in men's hearts,"[1] Ezekiel had spoken of a "new spirit to live in man's soul,"[2] and the Psalmist had prayed that God would "create a clean heart within and renew a right spirit."[3] But when the Jewish religion of good works and slavery to law fell victim to the stagnation of traditionalistic inertia, the motion of religious evolution passed westward to the European peoples.

121:7.6 And so a different people were called upon to carry an advancing theology to the world, a system of teaching embodying the philosophy of the Greeks, the law of the Romans, the morality of the Hebrews, and the gospel of personality sanctity and spiritual liberty formulated by Paul and based on the teachings of Jesus.

121:7.7 Paul's cult of Christianity exhibited its morality as a Jewish birthmark. The Jews viewed history as the providence of GodYahweh at work. The Greeks brought to the new teaching clearer concepts of the eternal life. Paul's doctrines were influenced in theology and philosophy not only by Jesus' teachings but also by Plato and Philo. In ethics he was inspired not only by Christ but also by the Stoics.

121:7.8 The gospel of Jesus, as it was embodied in Paul's cult of Antioch Christianity, became blended with the following teachings:

121:7.9 The Mediterranean Roman Empire, the Parthian kingdom, and the adjacent peoples of Jesus' time all held crude and primitive ideas regarding the geography of the world, astronomy, health, and disease; and naturally they were amazed by the new and startling pronouncements of the carpenter of Nazareth. The ideas of spirit possession, good and bad, applied not merely to human beings, but every rock and tree was viewed by many as being spirit possessed. This was an enchanted age, and everybody believed in miracles as commonplace occurrences.

Go to Paper 121
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