Oops, the first post got all jumbled. Here it is again, with more separation. Still comes up funky in preview though. Not acting as it normally does.:
You mean “conventional Jewish fables” written within the past 2,000 years about events that happened in the deepest antiquity, and which imagine silly fables like the one mentioned in your article:
“The Midrash tells us that he was so perfect and so spiritually advanced that he was born circumcised.2”
I do enjoy reading the Targum though with Jonathon Ben Uzziel, written some 30 years before the birth of Christ, since he supports the Christian reading of important Messianic prophecies in Isaiah, such as Isaiah 53: “Behold my servant the MESSIAH” in his paraphrase.
Your article also misapplies Psalm 110 to Abraham and his seed, when the topic is clearly that of the Messiah: Psa 110:1 A Psalm of David. The LORD said unto my Lord, Sit thou at my right hand, until I make thine enemies thy footstool. Unless the Jewish people is the ‘lord” of David.
Wow! I confess I thought this was accepted Christian teaching as well. I understand the fear and denial of Jewish theology, but did not realize it extended to actual Jewish history.
Psalm 83:4 They have said, Come, and let us cut them off from being a nation; that the name of Israel may be no more in remembrance.