Scott wrote:So is my prior statement incorrect?
Jews view a Jew who becomes a Christian as a Christian.
Christians view a Jew who becomes a Christian as a Jewish Christian?
In today's world.
Anyway I am impressed with your knowledge.
You were in the COC?
Jews view a Jew who becomes a Christian as a Christian. Yes, and this has been validated by the Supreme Court of Israel. The Israeli Law of Return grants immediate citizenship to any immigrant who can show that at least one grandparent was Jewish. Period.
However, a committed Christian, even if BOTH parents were Jews, does not receive that benefit under the Law of Return. They are treated as an ordinary and common gentile, and have to go through the whole residency period etc. This was a huge controversy recently, when a Catholic priest who was born and raised Jewish, attempted to emigrate to Israel and requested citizenship under the Law of Return. He was refused.
Christians view a Jew who becomes a Christian as a Jewish Christian? Yes - in fact, try and find any congregation which has a member who converted from Judaism, and ask them about the membership. I guarantee that at some point, the wonderful and important fact that so and so is/was Jewish will come up. That other member such and so who converted from, say, Methodism, rarely gets attention. You have Jewish Christians, but as far as I can tell, you don't have any other dual-named Christians. Look around your own congregation and if there are any who joined as adults, ask yourself if they are identified with any kind of adjective about their previous affiliation or even ethnicity.
You were in the COC? Born and raised. Daddy was a deacon. Uncle J. was a preacher. Mainstream, growing (50's through 80's) suburban congregation in Nashville. I was supposed to go to Lipscomb but I negotiated my way out and into a good private university instead. My brother and sister both ended up at Harding.
History is the fiction we invent to persuade ourselves that events are knowable and that life has order and direction. That's why events are always reinterpreted when values change. We need new versions of history to allow for our current prejudices.