25 days ago5 points(+0/-0/+5Score on mirror)3 children
honestly, after some studies, i think the situation is as following:
there's a buncha tribes all called "israelites", and they are indeed God's people, one way or another.
at some point, judeans split off from the "israelite" label, but still sorta count. judeans are immediately wicked as hell and disappoint God a lot.
at the same time, israelites themselves disappoint God a lot. israelites are scattered around, possibly mixing with other middle easterners or europeans. they're scattered really good, we have no idea where they went or if they're us. there's no "israelites" today.
judeans remain a little longer, then are invaded by Rome and get scattered too. they turn to matrilineality to remember who they are as they mix with a ton of different people. somehow, they stay cohesive enough to work their way up to a conspiracy where they get to own a country called "israel" in the modern day.
now, from where we're standing, it is disingenuous to even mention them and God in the same sentence unless it's to explain how much He probably hates them. but, objectively speaking, it seems the Old Testament was partially about them. i suppose you could say they are God's chosen, in the sense that they were chosen to become wicked beyond belief so as to test the rest of the world later.
That's a pure fantasy that is deboonked by thinking of a simple fact: Yahweh demanded that the Israelites chopped their dick off. Only the Jews did that.
Israelites are the Jews and Christcucks are just doing the WE WUZ KANGS because they want to claim the Jews' god for themselves in hope for eternal life.
Jesus whupped the Parisees, rhetorically and literally, in "His Father's house". He recognized them as the priests and learned men of his people but saw that they were corrupt and prideful. If he didn't think they had some sort of legitimate authority over the people of Israel, why did he waste any time on them?
I think it's more a matter of God's chosen people (who continually sinned against him throughout the Bible, if you'll recall, frequently requiring punishment) finally tried his patience to the point that he gave them an ultimatum: follow my Son with any other people who chose to do so, or go to Hell.
The Jews of today are the (mixed) descendants of the ones who sided against Christ. Every other Isrealite converted to Christianity.
there's a buncha tribes all called "israelites", and they are indeed God's people, one way or another.
at some point, judeans split off from the "israelite" label, but still sorta count. judeans are immediately wicked as hell and disappoint God a lot.
at the same time, israelites themselves disappoint God a lot. israelites are scattered around, possibly mixing with other middle easterners or europeans. they're scattered really good, we have no idea where they went or if they're us. there's no "israelites" today.
judeans remain a little longer, then are invaded by Rome and get scattered too. they turn to matrilineality to remember who they are as they mix with a ton of different people. somehow, they stay cohesive enough to work their way up to a conspiracy where they get to own a country called "israel" in the modern day.
now, from where we're standing, it is disingenuous to even mention them and God in the same sentence unless it's to explain how much He probably hates them. but, objectively speaking, it seems the Old Testament was partially about them. i suppose you could say they are God's chosen, in the sense that they were chosen to become wicked beyond belief so as to test the rest of the world later.
Israelites are the Jews and Christcucks are just doing the WE WUZ KANGS because they want to claim the Jews' god for themselves in hope for eternal life.
Jesus whupped the Parisees, rhetorically and literally, in "His Father's house". He recognized them as the priests and learned men of his people but saw that they were corrupt and prideful. If he didn't think they had some sort of legitimate authority over the people of Israel, why did he waste any time on them?
I think it's more a matter of God's chosen people (who continually sinned against him throughout the Bible, if you'll recall, frequently requiring punishment) finally tried his patience to the point that he gave them an ultimatum: follow my Son with any other people who chose to do so, or go to Hell.
The Jews of today are the (mixed) descendants of the ones who sided against Christ. Every other Isrealite converted to Christianity.