Home  |  Links   |  Contact Us   |  Bookmark
   Travel Forum Search :
     News        Travel Topics        Travel Forum       Travel Directories        Dictionary  
Travel Forum    Africa & Middle East
Travel Discussion Forum

 Important questions to Egyptians?
I live in Egypt and I converted to Islam. Some of my Egyptian friends tell me that I need to change my name? So, my question is, do I need to change my name since now I converted to Islam?...


 In Lebanon?
How many children do you think there is in the family?
Additional Details
This is a head count of my children here, had to sneak in the question this way.
so how many am I cooking ...


 Who's a better parent? Mom or Dad?
...


 Israelis and supporters, what is your opinion about Pallywood videos and propagada?
By that I mean all the graphic photos of dead babies surrounded by 6 year old children, IDF standing with a weapon in front of a mother and child as if to shoot them, photos showing a huge tank with ...


 Do Arab Muslims think that American Muslims should participate in American politics?
Here in the US, there are groups of Muslims such as CAIR and others which encourage American Muslims to vote. There are many Muslims, however, who consider voting haram. Yet, there are others who ...


 Lebanon .. Does this mean I'm anorexic ... ? ?
Lately I've been HATING food / the smell of food / and even the sight of food !

When I look in a mirror , all I see is FAT FAT and more FAT .. although I know I'm skinny ,, I ...


 Think you know a lot about ancient Egypt?
If you think you know a lot about ancient Egypt, please answer this question: What is the name of the collection of spells that was buried with the mummy?...


 Do South Africans vote based on race or issues.?
I have fought all my life for a democratic SA.
I always voted against my family and friends.
When I voted ANC in 1994 it was because I believed in majority rule.
I still do and if you ...


 How much truth is really behind this ???
I just want to know how much truth is behind this, because it´s very scary reading it...

Go to the link - http://www.worldnetdaily...


 Have You Ever?
Call someone on the phone which means so much to you and make a complete fool out of yourself?
Additional Details
Correction: made***...


 What is the WORST invention that mankind invented?
...


 I finally met the man of my dreams?
not really, that was just to grab attention, lol.

if you were to describe the perfect man/woman for you



complete with looks, personality, everything


...


 Should they be called philistines?
i would like to call the arabs in gaza what they call themselves. in arabic, it's filistine, right? don't they call themselves philistines in arabic? shouldn't we all start using that ...


 Why is it an insult to Jews when we say "Jews control the media in North America"?
Everybody knows this fact. I live in Canada and most newspapers here are controlled by the Jews. In USA they control the TV.
How is saying that anti-semetic?
How does it hurt the Jews?
...


 Survey - if you walk down memory lane does it make you sad, or glad, or mad?
what do you feel and why
Additional Details
Keep well Commodore and i know you are in all our ...


 Will my uncle and aunt be able to go back to Bethlehem or will they never be able to?
My uncle and his aunt are in Jerusalem now, and they are not allowed to go back to Bethlehem :( Their house had been robbed and taken over by Jewish Settlers they will be filing a case soon..
<...


 When do you feel light?
I feel light after i shower ...


 Do Jews condemn the too many incidences in which Palestinian infants were killed or wounded?
how about sending 700 000 child under the age of 10 to starve?
(this is a respond to "ha" question
Additional Details
oh,sorry ,was it 70 000 infants their age is less ...


 If you have a handsome amount of cash , how would you invest it ?
imagine you have enough cash to start a project .
how would you invest it ?...


 How well do you trust that voice inside your head?
is it usually right?...



jesuschrist

Do Israeli Jews tear Isaiah 53 from their bibles?


    



Show all answers


kismet
We Israeli Jews do not tear our bibles; it is forbidden to do so! But we do know the REAL meaning of Isaiah!!!
Since any portion of Scripture is only understood properly when viewed in the context of God's revelation as a whole, some additional study will be helpful before you "tackle" Isaiah 53.

Look at the setting in which Isaiah 53 occurs. Earlier on in Isaiah, God had predicted exile and calamity for the Jewish people. Chapter 53, however, occurs in the midst of Isaiah's "Messages of Consolation", which tell of the restoration of Israel to a position of prominence and a vindication of their status as God's chosen people. In chapter 52, for example, Israel is described as "oppressed without cause" (v.4) and "taken away" (v.5), yet God promises a brighter future ahead, one in which Israel will again prosper and be redeemed in the sight of all the nations (v.1-3, 8-12).

Chapter 54 further elaborates upon the redemption which awaits the nation of Israel. Following immediately after chapter 53's promise of a reward for God's servant in return for all of its suffering (53:10-12), chapter 54 describes an unequivocally joyous fate for the Jewish people. Speaking clearly of the Jewish people and their exalted status (even according to all Christian commentaries), chapter 54 ends as follows: "`This is the heritage of the servants of the L-rd and their vindication is from Me,' declares the L-rd."

In the original Hebrew texts, there are no chapter divisions, and Jew and Christian alike agree that chapter 53 is actually a continuation of the prophecy which begins at 52:13. Accordingly, our analysis must begin at that verse.

52:13 "Behold, My servant will prosper." Israel in the singular is called God's servant throughout Isaiah, both explicitly (Isa. 41:8-9; 44:1-2; 45:4; 48:20; 49:3) and implicitly (Isa. 42:19-20; 43:10) - the Messiah is not. Other references to Israel as God's servant include Jer. 30:10 (note that in Jer. 30:17, the servant Israel is regarded by the nations as an outcast, forsaken by God, as in Isa. 53:4); Jer. 46:27-28; Ps. 136:22; Lk. 1:54. ALSO: Given the Christian view that Jesus is God, is God His own servant?

52:15 - 53:1 "So shall he (the servant) startle many nations, the kings will stand speechless; For that which had not been told them they shall see and that which they had not heard shall they ponder. Who would believe what we have heard?" Quite clearly, the nations and their kings will be amazed at what happens to the "servant of the L-rd," and they will say "who would believe what we have heard?". 52:15 tells us explicitly that it is the nations of the world, the gentiles, who are doing the talking in Isaiah 53. See, also, Micah 7:12-17, which speaks of the nations' astonishment when the Jewish people again blossom in the Messianic age.

53:1 "And to whom has the arm of the L-rd been revealed?" In Isaiah, and throughout our Scriptures, God's "arm" refers to the physical redemption of the Jewish people from the oppression of other nations (see, e.g., Isa. 52:8-12; Isa. 63:12; Deut. 4:34; Deut. 7:19; Ps. 44:3).

53:3 "Despised and rejected of men." While this is clearly applicable to Israel (see Isa. 60:15; Ps. 44:13-14), it cannot be reconciled with the New Testament account of Jesus, a man who was supposedly "praised by all" (Lk. 4:14-15) and followed by multitudes (Matt. 4:25), who would later acclaim him as a prophet upon his triumphal entry into Jerusalem (Matt. 21:9-11). Even as he was taken to be crucified, a multitude bemoaned his fate (Lk. 23:27). Jesus had to be taken by stealth, as the rulers feared "a riot of the people" (Mk. 14:1-2).

53:3 "A man of pains and acquainted with disease." Israel's adversities are frequently likened to sickness - see, e.g., Isa. 1:5-6; Jer. 10:19; Jer 30:12.

53:4 "Surely our diseases he carried and our pains he bore." In Matt. 8:17, this is correctly translated, and said to be literally (not spiritually) fulfilled in Jesus' healing of the sick, a reading inconsistent with the Christian mistranslation of 53:4 itself.

53:4 "Yet we ourselves esteemed him stricken, smitten of G- D and afflicted." See Jer. 30:17 - of God's servant Israel (30:10), it is said by the nations, "It is Zion; no one cares for her."

53:5 "But he was wounded from (NOTE: not for) our transgressions, he was crushed from (AGAIN: not for) our iniquities." Whereas the nations had thought the Servant (Israel) was undergoing Divine retribution for its sins (53:4), they now realize that the Servant's sufferings stemmed from their actions and sinfulness. This theme is further developed throughout our Jewish Scriptures - see, e.g., Jer. 50:7; Jer. 10:25. ALSO: Note that the Messiah "shall not fail nor be crushed till he has set the right in the earth" (Isa. 42:4).

53:7 "He was oppressed and he was afflicted, yet he did not open his mouth. Like a lamb that is led to slaughter, and like a sheep that is silent before its shearers, so he did not open his mouth." Note that in the prior chapter (Isa. 52), Israel is said to have been oppressed and taken away without cause (52:4-5). A similar theme is developed in Psalm 44, wherein King David speaks of Israel's faithfulness even in the face of gentile oppression (44:17- 18) and describes Israel as "sheep to be slaughtered" in the midst of the unfaithful gentile nations (44:22,11).

Regarding the claim that Jesus "did not open his mouth" when faced with oppression and affliction, see Matt. 27:46, Jn. 18:23, 36-37.

53:8 "From dominion and judgment he was taken away." Note the correct translation of the Hebrew. The Christians are forced to mistranslate, since - by Jesus' own testimony - he never had any rights to rulership or judgment, at least not on the "first coming." See, e.g., Jn. 3:17; Jn. 8:15; Jn. 12:47; Jn. 18:36.

53:8 "He was cut off out of the land of the living." Israel is described as "cut off" in Ez 37:11.

53:8 "From my peoples' sins, there was injury to them."Here the Prophet makes absolutely clear, to anyone familiar with Biblical Hebrew, that the oppressed Servant is a collective Servant, not a single individual. The Hebrew word "lamoh - (lamed-mem-vav) ", when used in our Scriptures, always means "to them" never "to him" and may be found, for example, in Psalm 99:7 - "They kept his testimonies, and the statute that He gave to them."

53:9 "His grave was assigned with wicked men." See Ez. 37:11-14, wherein Israel is described as "cut off" and God promises to open its "graves" and bring Israel back into its own land. Other examples of figurative deaths include Ex. 10:17; 2 Sam. 9:8; 2 Sam. 16:9.

53:9 "And with the rich in his deaths." Perhaps King James should have changed the original Hebrew, which the plural "deaths" makes clear that we are dealing with a collective Servant, i.e., Israel, which will "come to life" when the exile ends (Ez. 37:14).

53:9 "He had done no violence." See Matt. 21:12; Mk. 11:15-16; Lk. 19:45; Lk. 19:27; Matt. 10:34 and Lk. 12:51; then judge for yourself whether this passage is truly consistent with the New Testament account of Jesus.

53:10 "He shall see his seed." The Hebrew word for "seed", used in this verse, always refers to physical descendants in our Jewish Scriptures. See, e.g., Gen. 12:7; Gen. 15:13; Gen. 46:6; Ex. 28:43. A different word, generally translated as "sons", is used to refer to spiritual descendants (see Deut. 14:1, e.g.).

53:10 "He will prolong his days." Not only did Jesus die young, but how could the days be prolonged of someone who is alleged to be God?

53:11 "With his knowledge the righteous one, my Servant, will cause many to be just." Note again the correct translation: the Servant will cause many to be just, he will not "justify the many." The Jewish mission is to serve as a "light to the nations" which will ultimately lead the world to a knowledge of the one true God, this both by example (Deut. 4:5-8; Zech. 8:23) and by instructing the nations in God's Law (Isa. 2:3-4; Micah 4:2-3).

53:12 "Therefore, I will divide a portion to him with the great, and he shall divide the spoil with the mighty." If Jesus is God, does the idea of reward have any meaning? Is it not rather the Jewish people - who righteously bore the sins of the world and yet remained faithful to God (Ps. 44) - who will be rewarded, and this in the manner described more fully in Isaiah chapters 52 and 54?

The fact is that the identity of the servant has already been established by Isaiah in previously stated passages. In Isaiah 41 :8-9; 44:1-2, 21; 45:4; 48:20; 49:3 the prophet identifies Israel as the servant.

Moreover, the history of Israel, down through the ages shows that the servant is, none other than Israel personified. Chapter 53 reiterates this fact by providing an historic overview of the tragedies and triumphs of the servant, Israel, throughout its history. Who would believe that this exiled nation, this humiliated loathsome Jewish people would be fated to survive the vicissitudes of its historical sufferings to once more have a future entailing prominence, hope, and joy.

.


Mark S, JPAA
No, of course not. We simply interpret it properly, **in context** with the rest of Isaiah, so that it's clear--very, very clear--that the "suffering servant" refers to Israel.


Hatikvah JPA
The suffering servant is Israel (the people).

Before engaging in an examination of Isaiah 53 itself, some preliminary issues must be considered. First is the issue of circular reasoning. Even if we interpret the chapter as the Christians do (forgetting for a minute the mistranslations and distortions of context which will be noted below), the most that could be said is this: Isaiah 53 is about someone who dies for the sins of others. People may have seen Jesus die, but did anyone see him die as an atonement for the sins of others? Of course not; this is simply the meaning which the New Testament gives to his death. Only if you already accept the New Testament teaching that his death had a non-visible, spiritual significance can you than go back to Isaiah and say, "see - the Prophet predicted what I already believe." Isaiah 53, then, is in reality no "proof" at all, but rather a contrived confirmation for someone who has already chosen Christianity.

Second (and consistent with all Jewish teaching at the time), Jesus' own disciples didn't view Isaiah 53 as a messianic prophecy. For example, after Peter identifies Jesus as the Messiah (Matt. 16:16), he is informed that Jesus will be killed (Matt. 16:21). His response: "God forbid it, lord! This shall never happen to you" (Matt. 16:22). See, also, Mk. 9:31-32; Mk. 16:10-11; Jn. 20:9. Even Jesus didn't see Isaiah 53 as crucial to his messianic claims - why else did he call the Jews children of the devil for not believing in him before the alleged resurrection (Jn. 8:39-47)? And why did he later request that God "remove this cup from me" (Mk. 14:36) - didn't he know that a "removal of the cup" would violate the gentile understanding of Isaiah 53?

And third, even if we accept the gentile Christian interpretation of Isaiah 53, where is it indicated (either in Isaiah 53 or anywhere else in our Jewish Scriptures) that you must believe in this "Messiah" to get the benefits?

Look at the setting in which Isaiah 53 occurs. Earlier on in Isaiah, God had predicted exile and calamity for the Jewish people. Chapter 53, however, occurs in the midst of Isaiah's "Messages of Consolation", which tell of the restoration of Israel to a position of prominence and a vindication of their status as God's chosen people. In chapter 52, for example, Israel is described as "oppressed without cause" (v.4) and "taken away" (v.5), yet God promises a brighter future ahead, one in which Israel will again prosper and be redeemed in the sight of all the nations (v.1-3, 8-12).

Chapter 54 further elaborates upon the redemption which awaits the nation of Israel. Following immediately after chapter 53's promise of a reward for God's servant in return for all of its suffering (53:10-12), chapter 54 describes an unequivocally joyous fate for the Jewish people. Speaking clearly of the Jewish people and their exalted status (even according to all Christian commentaries), chapter 54 ends as follows: "`This is the heritage of the servants of the L-rd and their vindication is from Me,' declares the L-rd."

In the original Hebrew texts, there are no chapter divisions, and Jew and Christian alike agree that chapter 53 is actually a continuation of the prophecy which begins at 52:13. Accordingly, our analysis must begin at that verse.

52:13 "Behold, My servant will prosper." Israel in the singular is called God's servant throughout Isaiah, both explicitly (Isa. 41:8-9; 44:1-2; 45:4; 48:20; 49:3) and implicitly (Isa. 42:19-20; 43:10) - the Messiah is not. Other references to Israel as God's servant include Jer. 30:10 (note that in Jer. 30:17, the servant Israel is regarded by the nations as an outcast, forsaken by God, as in Isa. 53:4); Jer. 46:27-28; Ps. 136:22; Lk. 1:54. ALSO: Given the Christian view that Jesus is God, is God His own servant?

52:15 - 53:1 "So shall he (the servant) startle many nations, the kings will stand speechless; For that which had not been told them they shall see and that which they had not heard shall they ponder. Who would believe what we have heard?" Quite clearly, the nations and their kings will be amazed at what happens to the "servant of the L-rd," and they will say "who would believe what we have heard?". 52:15 tells us explicitly that it is the nations of the world, the gentiles, who are doing the talking in Isaiah 53. See, also, Micah 7:12-17, which speaks of the nations' astonishment when the Jewish people again blossom in the Messianic age.

53:1 "And to whom has the arm of the L-rd been revealed?" In Isaiah, and throughout our Scriptures, God's "arm" refers to the physical redemption of the Jewish people from the oppression of other nations (see, e.g., Isa. 52:8-12; Isa. 63:12; Deut. 4:34; Deut. 7:19; Ps. 44:3).

53:3 "Despised and rejected of men." While this is clearly applicable to Israel (see Isa. 60:15; Ps. 44:13-14), it cannot be reconciled with the New Testament account of Jesus, a man who was supposedly "praised by all" (Lk. 4:14-15) and followed by multitudes (Matt. 4:25), who would later acclaim him as a prophet upon his triumphal entry into Jerusalem (Matt. 21:9-11). Even as he was taken to be crucified, a multitude bemoaned his fate (Lk. 23:27). Jesus had to be taken by stealth, as the rulers feared "a riot of the people" (Mk. 14:1-2).

53:3 "A man of pains and acquainted with disease." Israel's adversities are frequently likened to sickness - see, e.g., Isa. 1:5-6; Jer. 10:19; Jer 30:12.

53:4 "Surely our diseases he carried and our pains he bore." In Matt. 8:17, this is correctly translated, and said to be literally (not spiritually) fulfilled in Jesus' healing of the sick, a reading inconsistent with the Christian mistranslation of 53:4 itself.

53:4 "Yet we ourselves esteemed him stricken, smitten of G- D and afflicted." See Jer. 30:17 - of God's servant Israel (30:10), it is said by the nations, "It is Zion; no one cares for her."

53:5 "But he was wounded from (NOTE: not for) our transgressions, he was crushed from (AGAIN: not for) our iniquities." Whereas the nations had thought the Servant (Israel) was undergoing Divine retribution for its sins (53:4), they now realize that the Servant's sufferings stemmed from their actions and sinfulness. This theme is further developed throughout our Jewish Scriptures - see, e.g., Jer. 50:7; Jer. 10:25. ALSO: Note that the Messiah "shall not fail nor be crushed till he has set the right in the earth" (Isa. 42:4).

53:7 "He was oppressed and he was afflicted, yet he did not open his mouth. Like a lamb that is led to slaughter, and like a sheep that is silent before its shearers, so he did not open his mouth." Note that in the prior chapter (Isa. 52), Israel is said to have been oppressed and taken away without cause (52:4-5). A similar theme is developed in Psalm 44, wherein King David speaks of Israel's faithfulness even in the face of gentile oppression (44:17- 18) and describes Israel as "sheep to be slaughtered" in the midst of the unfaithful gentile nations (44:22,11).

Regarding the claim that Jesus "did not open his mouth" when faced with oppression and affliction, see Matt. 27:46, Jn. 18:23, 36-37.

53:8 "From dominion and judgment he was taken away." Note the correct translation of the Hebrew. The Christians are forced to mistranslate, since - by Jesus' own testimony - he never had any rights to rulership or judgment, at least not on the "first coming." See, e.g., Jn. 3:17; Jn. 8:15; Jn. 12:47; Jn. 18:36.

53:8 "He was cut off out of the land of the living." Israel is described as "cut off" in Ez 37:11.

53:8 "From my peoples' sins, there was injury to them."Here the Prophet makes absolutely clear, to anyone familiar with Biblical Hebrew, that the oppressed Servant is a collective Servant, not a single individual. The Hebrew word "lamoh - (lamed-mem-vav) ", when used in our Scriptures, always means "to them" never "to him" and may be found, for example, in Psalm 99:7 - "They kept his testimonies, and the statute that He gave to them."

53:9 "His grave was assigned with wicked men." See Ez. 37:11-14, wherein Israel is described as "cut off" and God promises to open its "graves" and bring Israel back into its own land. Other examples of figurative deaths include Ex. 10:17; 2 Sam. 9:8; 2 Sam. 16:9.

53:9 "And with the rich in his deaths." Perhaps King James should have changed the original Hebrew, which the plural "deaths" makes clear that we are dealing with a collective Servant, i.e., Israel, which will "come to life" when the exile ends (Ez. 37:14).

53:9 "He had done no violence." See Matt. 21:12; Mk. 11:15-16; Lk. 19:45; Lk. 19:27; Matt. 10:34 and Lk. 12:51; then judge for yourself whether this passage is truly consistent with the New Testament account of Jesus.

53:10 "He shall see his seed." The Hebrew word for "seed", used in this verse, always refers to physical descendants in our Jewish Scriptures. See, e.g., Gen. 12:7; Gen. 15:13; Gen. 46:6; Ex. 28:43. A different word, generally translated as "sons", is used to refer to spiritual descendants (see Deut. 14:1, e.g.).

53:10 "He will prolong his days." Not only did Jesus die young, but how could the days be prolonged of someone who is alleged to be God?

53:11 "With his knowledge the righteous one, my Servant, will cause many to be just." Note again the correct translation: the Servant will cause many to be just, h


mama_pajama_1
Rating
I am wondering WHY you need to bring up Isaiah chapter 53 yet again after two other questions whereby you were shown exhaustively the contextual meaning of the servant story of Isaiah. I even detailed the fourteen times Isaiah referred to Israel as the servant prior to Chapter 53 in this answer YOU awarded as “Best Answer”.

I think that because of the previous questions that you have been adequately answered, you only ask this to incite reaction. It is not a genuine question. You’ve already had this answered more than once. You refer to Isaiah 53 in the additional details in both the following questions where you were also corrected and you chose as best answer both answers that corrected you!
http://answers.yahoo.com/question/index;_ylt=Ar8FlDTMBi9cLGltFWfsbJDty6IX;_ylv=3?qid=20080208071440AAn2c4w&show=7#profile-info-3jp48nKoaa
http://answers.yahoo.com/question/index;_ylt=AinQwNJRRX91RW5Np6aGSKrty6IX;_ylv=3?qid=20080210152102AAqBAbV

You most certainly already knew that Jews do not do such a thing since you had several Jews teaching you about Isaiah chapter 53.

edit: Here is a THIRD question previously asked and answered about Isaiah 53. http://answers.yahoo.com/question/index;_ylt=Agq2TCYLVV7sFxDa_lUBDa7ty6IX;_ylv=3?qid=20080208082740AAr64sr&show=7#profile-info-3jp48nKoaa


rosends
no, jews just understand what it means -- we know that the notion of the "suffering servant" is a christian mistake. why would we tear out stuff meant for us?


MikeInRI
Rating
Why would any Jew - Israeli or other - destroy the Bible? It is not the Bible that is in error - it is those who misinterpret it.

Good Luck!!!


Juggling Frogs
No, they* don't tear out one page or one sentence and interpret it out of context, like (ahem) others tend to do.

When it is read with the rest of the book, it's plain meaning is clear.

Pages ripped from their context lead to misinterpretations and confusion.


J.driven
In the first place the Jews don't read your bible and the prophets are not in the Torah but on separate scrolls.
They interpret them differently and indeed our English translations or very different from the actual Hebrew.
Your one line preachers that tell you now this word in Hebrew can mean? Aren't telling you each word has a line or two on it's own. Each letter can be a message unto itself.
Cling to Jesus He alone is your salvation. Leave the Jew alone He is special to God and is under a different plan than you are.
Questions like this belong more in R&S the land of Trolls.


Mark
No. Their interpretation is well known.


paperback writer
Rating
- I have greatly enjoyed the answers of my fellow Jews. Even though MAMA_PJAMA makes it clear that you are just trying to provoke a reaction, everyone has shown you courtesy. I'm sure you knew already that no Jew would EVER destroy part of the bible.

Nice going, my fellow kosher contacts :)


BMCR
As opposed to American Jews?

The answer is absolutely not.

Why would a Jew tear out a part of his own Bible?

Just a bit of background:

Every week, in the synagogue, a portion of the Torah is read, cycling through the entire 5 books of Moses (aka the Pentateuch) every year. At the end of the Torah portion, the Haftarah is read. This is a small selection from the Prophets (Nevi'im). In total, this amounts to maybe 5% of the Bible at most.
As it turns out, Isaiah 53 is not part of the Haftarah readings thus leading to the myth of either a) The Jews purposely excluded it because it refers to Jesus or b) It was removed entirely from the Jewish Bible.


allonyoav
Nah- we just know how to interpret it correctly.

You do know that the original Isaiah had not chapters in ti, right?

And that Chapter 53 is part of the same prophecy as in the surrounding chapters- where it is talking about the suffering of the Jewish NATION and how we will be rewarded for our faith even in times of suffering in the Messianic era- and that Isaiah 53 is a METAPHOR, using the imagery of an individual of the NATION (since as an unit we are single unit), and the metaphor starts in chapter 52 and only ends in Chapter 54.

So nope, we don't tear bots out of Holy books which were written by US and whoch we understand VERY WELL and in context!


samsoomathemadruba
How does a USA student group evangelize in Ireland?

ARE QUESTIONS LIKE THESE THE BEST YOU CAN DO

You have not been touched by the spirit, you have been kicked in the head by it.


Merlynson S
Don't they follow the Torah?


Primus Pilus
Rating
They only have the old testament and they wouldn't tear it off.


spReez
They don't believe Jesus was the Messiah at all (malheureusement).


jason146558
i would think that they have their own bibles that do not include that part


Lost my everything..
Rating
Bani Israel preachers tear,manipulate holy books their prophets showed.



Rating



 Enter Your Message or Comment


User Name:  
User Email:   
Post a comment:









  
Terms of Service   |   Privacy Policy
© 2011 TravelExpertGuide                 



0.024
CATEGORIES   ARCHIVE   TRAVEL
 HOME Forum Links
 NEWS Forum1 Links1
 FORUM Forum2 Links2
 DICTIONARY  All RSS Feeds