Recently, more and more
atheists are offering the objection that Christianity stole from ancient
religions like Mithraism. They paint Christianity as plagiarized from other
faiths, but as I've pointed out
here and
here; their similarities are more
imagination than reality.
However, I recently received a question from a
person that took a different tact on Christianity as a borrowed belief. She
explains:
I am having a hard time explaining the difference between Judaism
and Christianity. I have an ongoing argument with an atheist that goes like
this:
He thinks Judaism precedes Christianity and therefore is the
correct religion and way of thinking (he doesn't believe in either). He is
claiming that Christianity came along later and changed the whole story and that
makes Christianity false. "Since Judaism was one of the first religions why am I
not following that way of thinking?" he asks.
I have been a Christian my
whole life but I still have a lot to learn myself and also how to explain my
faith to an atheist. I feel I am always defending my faith and it's very
frustrating at times. I am very thankful for finding this ministry and all that
you do! I am very blessed to be able to reach out. Thank you for everything! Any
advice on how to tackle this argument?
Does the atheist have a point? If
Judaism preceded Christianity by thousands of years, does it make sense that
someone can be OK if they become Jewish instead of Christian? Did Christians
"change the whole story" and is therefore a less reliable belief system than
Judaism? The answer to all of these questions is no, and for a very simple
reason: today's Judaism is not the same as the Judaism outlined in the Bible.
Destruction of the Temple Destroyed Biblical Judaism
Before Judaism was an
established religion, they were an ethnic group. When Moses delivered the Jewish
people from their slavery in Egypt, he also delivered to them a system of
worshiping the God of Abraham, Isaac, and Jacob in a specific way. Even today,
observant Jews recognize Moses' instructions given in the first five books of
the Bible, known as the Torah, as the key texts defining what the Jewish faith
is. Even the highly influential 12th century Rabbi Maimonides when listing his
thirteen principle of faith underlined the central nature of these texts,
declaring the prophecies of Moses are true, the Torah that exists today is the
same Torah that Moses delivered, and the Torah cannot be changed.
1
Yet the Torah poses a problem, even for Maimonides, because it outlines a
sacrificial system of worship that places the Jewish priests and their service
at the Altar of God right at the heart of the faith. The Israelites in the
desert received this law and quickly built the Tabernacle to execute the
commands of God. Later, David and Solomon erected the Temple in Jerusalem as a
more permanent structure for Jewish worship. After the Jewish captivity by the
Babylonians, another Temple was erected then expanded, but the Jewish faithful
always had a temple where they could observe the laws Moses wrote down. That
ceased in 70 A.D. when the Romans destroyed the Temple, just as Jesus had
prophesied (Luke 21:6).
Rabbinic Judaism Cannot Offer Sacrifices
Given
the destruction of the Jewish Temple, the priestly class was lost in the second
dispersion of Jews around the world. In order to maintain their identity and
hold on to some semblance of their faith, the local synagogue, which was a local
house of worship and study, became the new spiritual center for faithful Jews,
and the office of Rabbi (teacher) replaced the priest as the primary authority
on how to live a devout life. As Dr. Rich Robinson writes, "It is best, however,
to use the term 'Judaism' to refer to the religion of the rabbis that developed
from about 200 B.C. onwards and crystallized following the destruction of the
Temple in 70 AD. In this way, Christianity is not described as a daughter
religion to Judaism, but more correctly as a sister: both branched out from Old
Testament Faith."
2
This is a fair assessment, as the
central commands of Moses concerning both the sacrifice and the Temple worship
are not being practiced by any Jewish person today. Even the most orthodox
follower cannot be orthodox in the key elements of their faith. Given this
understanding of Judaism as it is practiced today, it is not older that
Christianity. It formed at the same time as Christianity with both faiths
anchoring their beliefs in the Old Testament.
Christianity as the Fulfillment
of Judaism
However, there is a big difference between the two faiths. Another
principle of Faith that Maimonides wrote was "I believe with perfect faith that
all the words of the prophets are true," referencing not simply the Torah, but
the entire Old Testament of the Bible. Those prophets clearly and repeatedly,
promised a Jewish Messiah that would be born in Bethlehem (Micah 5:2), he would
be "cut off" during the Temple period (Daniel 9:26), he would be rejected by his
own people, (Psalm 22:6), and ultimately be the final sacrifice that takes away
the sins of the people (Isaiah 53:5,8). In other words, Christianity is the
logical outworking of the Jewish worship taught by Moses. While Rabbinic Judaism
reduces the need for sacrifice to a symbolic act of self-denial, Christianity
took the Jewish sacrificial system so seriously, the sacrifice of Jesus becomes
the center of the Christian faith. As the Book of Hebrews, explains, Jesus
fulfills the need for sacrifices and only this fulfillment explains why God
would no longer require a temple whereby atonement for sin may be made.
Where to Go from Here?
For the atheist, he may or may not find any reason to
rethink his objection to Christianity. However, the way the objection is phrased
is problematic in itself. One doesn't discern the truth value of a belief by its
age. To prove this, all you have to do is point out that a lot of what we
believe about the world has been known only relatively recently. Science is
learning new things all the time. Even atheism as we see it today is a very new
point of view, only coming about in the past couple of centuries. It isn't the
age of a proposition that makes it true, it's whether it fits the facts we do
know. Christianity fits the prophecies and the need for sacrifice that are
clear in the Old Testament. It fits the facts of why there is
something rather
than nothing, it fits the facts that
good and evil are real things, and it fits
the
historical evidence we have for what happened after Jesus's death. "What
fits the facts" is a better question to answer than "how old is it." Perhaps you
can begin there.
References