Depends on who you ask. The Apostle Paul certainly wasn't a fan of the Jewish law, or at least of anyone who proclaims that Christians need to keep it. But I didn't mean 'hate', nor of the pre-Christian religion, just that from the moment that Christianity appears, the only valid religion is Christianity.
That makes sense. Why would you otherwise try to convert Jews to Christianity - like the earliest Christians?
If you view it from the most charitable light, Christians want everyone to convert because they want everyone to be saved and meet God.
Paul is probably the most vocal in the Bible about rejecting Jewish traditions. A lot of folks believe he wrote Hebrews, which is pretty much an instruction manual for converting Jews to Christians.
If you view it from the most charitable light, Christians want everyone to convert because they want everyone to be saved and meet God.
Well yeah, of course. They wouldn't want Jews to convert unless they loved the Jews. I'm not one of those atheists who takes offense at Christians being... Christian.
Depends on who you ask. The Apostle Paul certainly wasn't a fan of the Jewish law, or at least of anyone who proclaims that Christians need to keep it. But I didn't mean 'hate', nor of the pre-Christian religion, just that from the moment that Christianity appears, the only valid religion is Christianity.
That makes sense. Why would you otherwise try to convert Jews to Christianity - like the earliest Christians?
If you view it from the most charitable light, Christians want everyone to convert because they want everyone to be saved and meet God.
Paul is probably the most vocal in the Bible about rejecting Jewish traditions. A lot of folks believe he wrote Hebrews, which is pretty much an instruction manual for converting Jews to Christians.
Well yeah, of course. They wouldn't want Jews to convert unless they loved the Jews. I'm not one of those atheists who takes offense at Christians being... Christian.