Jesus was 100% Jewish circa year zero. Observed Torah, went to and taught at synagogues, celebrated Hannukkah, ate a kosher diet, etc. But Christians don’t follow Jesus’s own religious practices.

      • Frezik@lemmy.blahaj.zone
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        16 hours ago

        The separation is generally considered to be when the first century church said circumcision was unnecessary. That was a clean break with Jewish tradition.

      • hperrin@lemmy.ca
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        19 hours ago

        If being a Christian means following Jesus’ teachings, I’m pretty sure that makes Jesus the first Christian.

            • YappyMonotheist@lemmy.world
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              6 hours ago
              • Jesus (in the Bible!) = “God is one, the Father, and I pray to Him for guidance and strength, and to forgive my sins. I preach righteousness, selflessness and peace amongst us brothers and sisters.”

              • Jesus for Paulians, Roman Catholics and derivatives = “God is three, one of them is Jesus, and if you believe these two things you’re automatically saved, nvm morals, selflessness and righteousness, that’s optional.”

          • hperrin@lemmy.ca
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            17 hours ago

            If your definition is “follower of Christ”, sure, you can argue that Christ can’t follow himself. My definition is “follower of Christ’s teachings”, and he could definitely follow his own teachings.

            So, speaking extra pedantically, Christ taught that he is the lord, and to believe in him and accept him as lord is to be a Christian. He believed he was lord, and he believed in himself and accepted himself as lord, therefore I think Christ would also agree that he was a Christian.

    • I mean, the only real difference is that one believes Jesus was the Messiah and the other doesn’t. I am pretty sure Jesus straight up told people he was the Messiah so it would be weird if he didn’t believe in himself.