Mental wrote:Lox had it right. And what he said about Christianity applies to Islam's view of both Christianity and Judaism as well. You do know that Islam regards Abraham, Moses, Jacob, and Jesus (the names are transliterated to Arabic, but the people are the same) all as prophets preceding Mohammed, right?
Yeah, I know that. Muslims believe that Mohammed was their savior, Christians believe Jesus was their savior, and Jews don't believe their savior has come yet. I'm not saying that the preceeding religions didn't acknowledge the former ones, but ultimately, they believe in a different ideal than their cousins. Otherwise, they wouldn't seperate themselves as a whole 'nother religion.
Lox wrote:Actually a lot of the teachings from the OT are found in Jesus' teachings. He quoted the OT quite often during his ministry. And there's a little more to it than Jesus thinking that the people shouldn't be following the Jewish faith anymore. He saw that the people were following their OT rituals, yet they had no relationship with God. It was like they were going through the motions without feeling behind it. So he institued the new covenant (hence the name New Testament). That's leaving out a lot of details, but that's the gist.
And part of that clean up with getting rid of the harsh do-this-or-I-kill-you relationship with God. Yet, there it is, passages of that behavior still in the Bible, and still misinterpreted by many as what Christian's current God is favoring today. Jesus wanted people to love God, not fear Him. He condemned the teachings in the OT that was almost Hammurabic in nature. The rituals were too hardcoded and defined, as if they were laws of the land, instead of beliefs to be followed. Ironically, Catholism seems to be putting the strict ritual back into the religion by making up their own rules. (You won't find the phrase "Hail Mary" or "Pope" anywhere in the bible. And man, talk about taking 1 Corinthians 10:16 so seriously. If I knew any better, I'd think that they were trying to shape Christianity to appeal to the pagans.)
But, I will give them credit for presenting a spokesperson available to try to mold the religion as a whole somewhat towards present day. I'd just wish they would write a new bible to make it clearer for everybody else. King James was a tyrannt who was trying to make the bible his way, and it's a damn shame that everybody follows the worst translation of the bible, on top of the confusing context of the OT that has been overruled by the context within the NT.