Comparison of Christianity and Judaism
Christianity has a close relationship with Judaism, both historically and theologically. Jesus, the twelve disciples, the author of most of the New Testament, and the members of the earliest Christian churches were all Jews. Jesus' family followed Jewish customs and Jesus frequently quoted the Hebrew Bible. Jesus' followers believed him to be the messiah, a Jewish figure predicted in the Jewish Bible.
Despite its Jewish origins, it was not long before Christianity regarded itself as something other than a new Jewish sect. The first Christian council, convened by the apostles, concluded that pagan converts to Christianity did not have to follow Jewish ritual laws. Soon, converts to Christianity were almost exclusively pagans and Christianity moved further away from Judaism.
In the 2,000 years of history since Jesus, the relationship between Christianity and the ancient faith in which it is rooted has often been strained. Christians have criticized Jews for rejecting Jesus as their messiah, and Jews have criticized Christians for corrupting the concept of one God and following a false messiah. The New Testamant reports that Jews were the first to persecute Christians, and after Christians became the more powerful group, they frequently persecuted Jews.
Today, theological disagreements between Christians and Jews remain, but efforts are being made towards greater understanding and respect between the two great faiths. The following chart compares the origins, beliefs and practices of Christianity and Judaism.
History & Stats |
Christianity
|
Judaism
|
date founded |
c. 30 AD
|
c. 1300 BC
|
place founded |
Palestine
|
Palestine
|
founders & early leaders |
Jesus, Peter, Paul
|
Abraham, Moses
|
original languages |
Aramaic and Greek
|
Hebrew
|
major location today |
Europe, North and South America
|
Europe, Israel, North America
|
adherents worldwide today |
2 billion
|
14 million
|
adherents in USA |
159 million
|
5.6 million
|
adherents in Canada |
21 million
|
350,000
|
adherents in UK |
51 million
|
320,000
|
current size rank |
largest
|
12th largest
|
major branches |
Catholic, Orthodox, Protestant
|
Orthodox, Conservative, Reform
|
Religious Authority |
Christianity
|
Judaism
|
sacred text |
Bible = Old Testament (Jewish Bible) + New Testament
|
Tanakh (Jewish Bible)
|
inspiration of sacred text |
views vary: literal word of God, inspired human accounts, or of human origin only
|
views vary: inspired human accounts or of human origin only
|
status of biblical prophets |
true prophets
|
true prophets
|
status of Jewish Bible |
canonical
|
canonical
|
status of Jewish Apocrypha |
canonical (Catholic);
useful but noncanonical (Protestant) |
noncanonical but useful
|
status of New Testament |
canonical
|
noncanonical, not useful
|
other written authority |
church fathers, church councils, ecumenical creeds (all branches);
papal decrees, canon law (Catholic) |
Talmud, halakhah
|
modern human authorities |
pope (Catholic);
each Christian with aid of Holy Spirit (Protestant) |
rabbis
|
summaries of doctrine |
Apostle's Creed, Nicene Creed
|
13 Articles of Faith
|
Beliefs & Doctrine |
Christianity
|
Judaism
|
ultimate reality |
one God, Jehovah, the God of Abraham
|
one God, Jehovah, the God of Abraham
|
nature of God |
Trinity - one substance, three persons
|
unity - one substance, one person
|
other spiritual beings |
angels and demons
|
angels and demons
|
revered humans |
saints, church fathers
|
prophets
|
identity of Jesus |
Son of God, God incarnate, savior of the world
|
false prophet
|
birth of Jesus |
virgin birth
|
normal birth
|
death of Jesus |
death by crucifixion
|
death by crucifixion
|
resurrection of Jesus |
affirmed
|
denied
|
second coming of Jesus |
affirmed
|
denied
|
divine revelation |
through Prophets and Jesus (as God Himself), recorded in Bible
|
through Prophets, recorded in Bible
|
human nature |
"original sin" inherited from Adam - tendency towards evil
|
two equal impulses, one good and one bad
|
means of salvation |
correct belief, faith, good deeds, sacraments (some Protestants emphasize faith alone)
|
belief in God, good deeds
|
God's role in salvation |
predestination, various forms of grace
|
divine revelation and forgiveness
|
good afterlife |
eternal heaven
|
views vary: either heaven or no afterlife
|
bad afterlife |
eternal hell, temporary purgatory (Catholicism)
|
views vary: either eternal Gehenna, reincarnation, or no afterlife
|
view of the other religion |
Judaism is a true religion, but with incomplete revelation.
|
Christianity is a false interpretation of Judaism.
|
Rituals & Practices |
Christianity
|
Judaism
|
house of worship |
church, chapel, cathedral, basilica, meeting hall
|
synagogue, temple, schul
|
religious leaders |
priest, bishop, archbishop, patriarch, pope, pastor, minister, preacher, deacon
|
rabbi, rebbe
|
sacred rituals |
sacraments
|
mitzvot (commandments)
|
major sacred rituals |
baptism, communion (Eucharist)
|
observing Sabbath, wearing tallit and tefilin, prayer services
|
head covered during prayer? |
generally no
|
generally yes (especially men)
|
central religious holy days |
Lent, Holy Week, Easter
|
Yom Kippur, Days of Awe, Passover
|
other holidays |
Christmas, saints days
|
Chanukah, Purim
|
major symbols |
cross, crucifix, dove, anchor, fish, alpha and omega, chi rho, halo
|
Star of David, chai, hamsa, tree
|