rosends
Well-Known Member
See, here's your problem: you decide that something you disagree with is an appeal to tradition, but if you follow what someone tells you, it isn't. Then you make a false claim about Judaism and support it with a non-Jewish website which makes erroneous statements about Judaism. That is a different kind of fallacy -- blind belief and confirmation bias.This is an example of appeal to tradition. The New and Old Testament teaches the second coming of the Messiah. Judaism teaches that either there will be two Messiahs, or the Messiah will fulfill all the prophecies in one coming. That sounds more like the beliefs of tradition than the one belief of the Bible. Did Jesus Fulfill the Messianic Prophecies in the Old Testament? | Jewish Voice
When you are ready to stick to one statement, deal with the consequence of being proven wrong, and then try to learn and patch up your staggering lack of actual knowledge, I'll be around to help you out. But as it stands, you spray out falsehoods and mistakes, you mislabel things and ignore how what you say applies to your own position, and then you run away to a new topic every time you are challenged. It just doesn't seem fruitful.