dybmh
דניאל יוסף בן מאיר הירש
This needs a lot more explanation. I think you're being brief, but skipping some important details. Based solely on this ^^ as long as Jewish people don't serve "Christ the man" or claim "Christ the man" as king then the problem you're describing is prevented. See what I mean? So I think this needs more to be understandable.I accept that Torah Jews recite the Shema and claim to worship one God, and serve him alone. But if God has sent his own Son, and Jews reject that Son, then effectively they become idolatrous. Why? Because they now turn the salvation of God into a man. It is no longer Christ the Saviour, but Christ the man. How can you serve Christ the man, and claim him as your king?
Thus your statement encourages rejection of Christ the man, but that doesn't show how a different rejection of "God's son" is idol worship.
This one is pretty easy. Where is the word 'throne' in the psalm? Without that there is no problem.When you read Psalm 110:1, who is it that sits at the right hand of God?
If you say to me, lt's Abraham, then l'll say to you, You're committing idolatry! You're making a man to sit upon the throne of God.
If you say, Ok, it's the Messiah; then l'll say to you, The Messiah is, therefore, both human and divine, because you cannot have a mediator 'of one'. A mediator must represent both God and man.
David, who wrote the Psalm, knew that he had a 'Lord', Christ, and a 'LORD', God in heaven (the Father).
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