Christian festivals have no religious significance in Judaism and are not celebrated, but some secular Jews in the West treat Christmas as a secular holiday.
Most Christians consider the Mosaic Law to have been a necessary intermediate stage, but that once the crucifixion of Jesus occurred, adherence to civil and ceremonial Law was superseded by the New Covenant.
Christians embracing aspects of Judaism are sometimes criticized as Biblical Judaizers by Christians when they pressure gentile Christians to observe Mosaic teachings rejected by most modern Christians.
Funny how your link actually proves what I'm saying to be correct...
But let's analyze deeper and see which things Judaism and Christianity have in common:
Monotheism. This is common throughout many religions, not exclusive to Judaism.
The belief in a Messiah. This is also not exclusive to Judaism. Christians believe that Jesus is the Messiah, Jews believe Jesus is a liar and a false prophet.
Prayer and reading a holy book. Also not exclusive to Judaism.
And... that's it. Those are the only common elements between Christianity and Judaism. And all of those elements are present in many religions, not just Judaism.
The second link you posted is simply full of lies, which I have already debunked in my earlier posts. The author is clearly very confused and ignorant about Christianity.
Jews observe their religion on Saturday, whereas Christians observe their religion on Sunday. So that's another difference.
And yet, the concept, the idea, and the system is similar. The only difference is the day of the week. Take out your sunday.
And the names of the week come from Germanic mythology:
I didn't know english was the only language in the world! Fascinating! Tell me more, stormcuck! If other languages existed they would surely take it from Jewish words, like "Sabbath" and "Sabado". Right? Thankfully, other languages do not exist, so your point is all true!!
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Christianity_and_Judaism#Common_Jewish_views_of_Christianity
Then take out everything that is Jewish from Christianity.
Starting with God, the old testament, the holidays, and many other things. No more sunday for you.
https://medium.com/interfaith-now/christianity-and-judaism-similarities-and-differences-in-belief-and-practice-ac026db19424
In that link you posted...
Funny how your link actually proves what I'm saying to be correct...
But let's analyze deeper and see which things Judaism and Christianity have in common:
Monotheism. This is common throughout many religions, not exclusive to Judaism.
The belief in a Messiah. This is also not exclusive to Judaism. Christians believe that Jesus is the Messiah, Jews believe Jesus is a liar and a false prophet.
Prayer and reading a holy book. Also not exclusive to Judaism.
And... that's it. Those are the only common elements between Christianity and Judaism. And all of those elements are present in many religions, not just Judaism.
The second link you posted is simply full of lies, which I have already debunked in my earlier posts. The author is clearly very confused and ignorant about Christianity.
And congrats in cherry picking some of the small differences.
Now read the rest that is similar, and when done, take them out of christianity. For instance, weekends, go and start working on a sunday.
No you didn't.
Nowhere in that article does it mention weekends. In fact, the concept of a 7 day week was invented by the Assyrian-Babylonians:
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Week#History
Jews stole the 7 day week from the Assyrians, so you need to stop appropriating their culture.
Jews observe their religion on Saturday, whereas Christians observe their religion on Sunday. So that's another difference.
And the names of the week come from Germanic mythology:
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Names_of_the_days_of_the_week#Germanic_tradition
Sun day, Moon day, Tiw's day, Woden's day, Thor's day, Frige's day, Saturn day.
And yet, the concept, the idea, and the system is similar. The only difference is the day of the week. Take out your sunday.
I didn't know english was the only language in the world! Fascinating! Tell me more, stormcuck! If other languages existed they would surely take it from Jewish words, like "Sabbath" and "Sabado". Right? Thankfully, other languages do not exist, so your point is all true!!