It is very clear you twisted my words and inserted words in that I did not use like “usurper”. I claimed historically speaking Rabbinic Judaism and eastern Christianity are offsprings of the same original religion. That is in no way near being close to the “Stormfront or Khazar foolishness” you accused me of.
It is very clear you twisted my words and inserted words in that I did not use like "usurper". I claimed historically speaking Rabbinic Judaism and eastern Christianity are offsprings of the same original religion. That is in no way near being close to the "Stormfront or Khazar foolishness" you accused me of.Again, I apologize and publicly ask your forgiveness.
However, chrstianity is simply not in any way the continuation of "Temple Mount Judaism" as Rabbinic Judaism is (for reasons cited).
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I claimed historically speaking Rabbinic Judaism and eastern Christianity are offsprings of the same original religion."
The Essenes were also probably known as the
Therapeutae from Egypt and later as the Ascetics to Roman historians. They were not the traditional Sadducees and were quite different from the original Zadok. The Essenes were the 1st Century root of Christianity, although some of their unique beliefs go back to religion in Babylon.
From
Roman/Catholic history:
Eusebius (born about 260, CE) was one of those who put the Chrstian New Testament together during the time of the Emperor Constantine, and he wrote more comments than the following about the Essenes.
Eusebius wrote, in his Ecclesiastical History (History of the Chrstian Church),
Book II, CHAPTER XVII of
Philo's Account of the Ascetics of Egypt
"But it is highly probable that the works of the ancients, which he says they [the Essenes] had, were the Gospels and the writings of the apostles, and probably some expositions of the ancient prophets, such as are contained in the Epistle to the Hebrews, and in many others of Paul's Epistles."
The Essenes, being strict celibates while following their heretical ways and lacking descendants, died out long before the Roman year 1.