i went Googling because i almost never heard of it before.
actually, the only time i DID heard of it before was when it was presented to me by a very good Christians friends of mined in Minnesota. they did took the time to explain how it played into their lifestyle.
Excuse me for taking their word of it over your or LEO word, you have no chance.
HOW the Lord's Prayer is used in someone's life or their lifestyle is irrelevant to my statement. In order to make the case that the Lord's Prayer espouses Christianity, you MUST go outside of the prayer itself and use other sources to do so. There is not one word or one phrase in that prayer that says anything about Christianity. And there's certainly nothing in there that is contrary to Jewish principles.
not knowing enough about other religious, i can only express that your{& LEO} views as explained in this tread, do not apply to Jewish religions.
I nor Leo said that it did.
Go-d do not rest in Heaven.
God (or G-d for you Jewish types) rests wherever he darn well well pleases. God is omnipresent.
hallow, dose NOT translate well enough to describe the act of warship on any of the languish's used by Jews.
I never said it did.
the Kingdom is NOT Go-d's kingdom. but an acceptance of Go-d's kingdom & the preparations for, by the praying person.
How can you have an acceptance of God's kingdom if it's not God's kingdom?
In any case, "Our Father in Heaven," was the opening line of many Hebrew prayers, and still is for a lot of them. I know that and I'm not even Jewish.
[quote...& so on.
sorry, but the 'Lord's Prayer' cannot, & will never be a part of Jewish tradition.[/quote]I never said it was part of the Jewish tradition. I said Judaism has similar prayers to that of the Lord's Prayer.
If you are familiar with the the first portion of the Kaddish, a synagogue prayer, you'll remember that it says, “Magnified and sanctified be his great name throughout the world which he has created according to his will, and may he establish his Kingdom in your lifetime…”
That's awfully similar to
"
Your kingdom come,
thy will be done,
on earth, as it is in heaven."
It's not exactly the same, but it's similar, which is what I said in the first place.
Jesus of course spoke Aramaic, and formal Jewish prayers are in Hebrew, so the actual literal words are obviously going to be different in any translation. But the Shemoneh Esrei and Kaddish are both similar in structure and though of the Lord's Prayer, and predates it by a long shot.
they have more then enough pryers of their own, they do not need Christianity to invent new-ones for them.
Even the Lord's Prayer is a Jewish prayer. After Jesus’ teaching about the Torah in Matthew 5, he continues the sermon on the mount by talking about acts of righteousness (tzedakah). He tells them to do them in secret, just as they are to pray in secret, not with many words before men. And he goes on to not only tell them, but to show them, where he then says, “You, therefore, pray like this:" and the recites the Lord's Prayer. It's a prayer that illustrates HOW to pray, rather than a prayer to be memorized and parroted. He didn't say PRAY THIS, he said pray LIKE THIS. He was continuing to interpret Torah, to teach them how to approach God in prayer. And his prayer was influenced by the elements of the Judaism of his day. It's ironic that almost everything that Christians think of being Christian, including artifacts, comes from Judaism.
Jews do not call G-ods 'Lord'.
You should go to the Old Testament, which was written by Hebrews, and explain that to 1 Chronicles 29:11
Thine, O Lord is the greatness, and the power, and the glory, and the victory, and the majesty: for all that is in the heaven and in the earth is thine; thine is the kingdom, O Lord, and thou art exalted as head above all.
money is the worst inventions of mankind, and G-od is the best invention of mankind.
God'll get you for that.
how can someone have ANY opinion on Muslim, without visiting a mosque ???, it's not like they are hard to find.
I completely agree. Go there, participate, see what it's all about.
I wouldn't make the same suggestion about everything, however. Like, you know, homosexuality.