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Jewish or White? - Ben Shaprio its a religion

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Bossplaya369:
Jewish

Is it a nationality or confession?

Sccit:

--- Quote from: abusive on September 09, 2025, 10:17:03 AM ---Nah, I have a life.
Moses was born and raised in Eygpt. We've already gone over this. Therefore he was an African and according to you he was black. That proves that the issue with his wife wasn't due to her being African because they both were.
Christians didn't force their beliefs on the masses.
It doesn't say to kill them or to force them. You are just to keep it pushing.
You can't find me one new testament scripture that even remotely says anything like you have alleged. You are speaking out of ignorance. Matter of fact, so me some scriptures that do.

--- End quote ---


naah don't play that "i have a life" game

because u were replying to other stuff for days after my last post .. u were just at a loss for words in real time


egypt was a multi cultural/multi racial nation.. this is not a secret and has been proven with archeological evidence


Christianity has been involved in forced conversions at various times throughout history. While the core teachings of Christianity emphasize free will and voluntary faith, in practice, some Christian leaders, empires, and institutions have used coercion, violence, or political pressure to convert people. Here are some notable examples:
🏰 Medieval Europe & Charlemagne (8th–9th centuries)
Charlemagne, the King of the Franks, led campaigns to convert the Saxons in present-day Germany. Those who resisted were sometimes killed, exiled, or forcibly baptized.
The Capitulatio de partibus Saxoniae (a legal code) included death penalties for refusing baptism or practicing pagan rituals.
🇪🇸 Spanish Inquisition & Colonialism (15th–17th centuries)
In Spain, Jews and Muslims were pressured to convert or face expulsion or execution.
During colonization of the Americas, the Spanish and Portuguese empires forced indigenous populations to convert, often alongside the destruction of native religions and cultures.
Missionaries sometimes genuinely believed they were saving souls, but the methods often involved coercion, suppression of native languages, and cultural erasure.
🌍 Africa and Asia (Colonial Period)
In many colonized regions, European Christian missionaries accompanied imperial powers.
While many conversions were voluntary or semi-voluntary, the imbalance of power, economic dependency, or pressure from colonial administrators often played a role.
⛪ Eastern Europe & Russia
In some cases, Orthodox Christianity was used to pressure conversions in territories conquered by the Russian Empire.
Similarly, in Poland-Lithuania, religious policies shifted over time, and at some points, non-Catholics were pressured to convert.
🧭 Crusades (1095–1291)
The primary goal was to reclaim Christian control over the Holy Land, but in some cases, non-Christians were given the choice of conversion or death, particularly during massacres of Jews and Muslims.

abusive:

--- Quote from: Sccit on September 09, 2025, 12:04:16 PM ---
naah don't play that "i have a life" game

because u were replying to other stuff for days after my last post .. u were just at a loss for words in real time


egypt was a multi cultural/multi racial nation.. this is not a secret and has been proven with archeological evidence


Christianity has been involved in forced conversions at various times throughout history. While the core teachings of Christianity emphasize free will and voluntary faith, in practice, some Christian leaders, empires, and institutions have used coercion, violence, or political pressure to convert people. Here are some notable examples:
🏰 Medieval Europe & Charlemagne (8th–9th centuries)
Charlemagne, the King of the Franks, led campaigns to convert the Saxons in present-day Germany. Those who resisted were sometimes killed, exiled, or forcibly baptized.
The Capitulatio de partibus Saxoniae (a legal code) included death penalties for refusing baptism or practicing pagan rituals.
🇪🇸 Spanish Inquisition & Colonialism (15th–17th centuries)
In Spain, Jews and Muslims were pressured to convert or face expulsion or execution.
During colonization of the Americas, the Spanish and Portuguese empires forced indigenous populations to convert, often alongside the destruction of native religions and cultures.
Missionaries sometimes genuinely believed they were saving souls, but the methods often involved coercion, suppression of native languages, and cultural erasure.
🌍 Africa and Asia (Colonial Period)
In many colonized regions, European Christian missionaries accompanied imperial powers.
While many conversions were voluntary or semi-voluntary, the imbalance of power, economic dependency, or pressure from colonial administrators often played a role.
⛪ Eastern Europe & Russia
In some cases, Orthodox Christianity was used to pressure conversions in territories conquered by the Russian Empire.
Similarly, in Poland-Lithuania, religious policies shifted over time, and at some points, non-Catholics were pressured to convert.
🧭 Crusades (1095–1291)
The primary goal was to reclaim Christian control over the Holy Land, but in some cases, non-Christians were given the choice of conversion or death, particularly during massacres of Jews and Muslims.

--- End quote ---
Egypt is still in Africa. I'm going by what you said. You equate Africa with black people. The Israelites were in Egypt for four hundred years as well.

But again, if Jews come in different races and Egypt was multi racial, how come Moses couldn't be Black?

The majority if not all of what you posted for evidence of Christian force is Roman Catholic. I'm pretty sure all of it is.

Sccit:

--- Quote from: abusive on September 10, 2025, 03:50:35 PM ---Egypt is still in Africa. I'm going by what you said. You equate Africa with black people. The Israelites were in Egypt for four hundred years as well.

But again, if Jews come in different races and Egypt was multi racial, how come Moses couldn't be Black?

The majority if not all of what you posted for evidence of Christian force is Roman Catholic. I'm pretty sure all of it is.

--- End quote ---

moses couldn't be black because him marrying a black woman was made into a story in the bible .. the story would make zero sense if he himself was black

catholicism is a form of christianity

abusive:

--- Quote from: Sccit on September 10, 2025, 04:40:40 PM ---moses couldn't be black because him marrying a black woman was made into a story in the bible .. the story would make zero sense if he himself was black

catholicism is a form of christianity

--- End quote ---
The biblical story didn't mention either one of them being black. You assume that Moses was white and his wife was black and that was the issue with them marrying. The issue wasn't mentioned. I suspect it was because Moses himself wasn't Ethiopian. It's common throughout the scriptures for people to want their family to marry those of the same country or land and in some cases their own family. There is zero context for people choosing or rejecting someone based off of their skin color. Especially in this situation.

Roman Catholicism and Christianity are two different religions. That's like me saying the the Hebrew Israelites and Judaism are the same religion. Only someone ignorant of history would say that they're the same.

The information in the videos still stands though. Nothing and I mean nothing you've said has refuted them.

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