Let's not forget God Himself denunciated the Jews for their religion which He tells them is not that of the Old Testament. In John 5:46 Yahweh in the flesh told them, "Had ye believed in Moses, ye would have believed Me: for he wrote of Me." In Luke 16:31 Yahweh in the flesh said, "If they hear not Moses and the prophets, neither will they be persuaded through one rose from the dead."
That dosent apply to every Jew Not all Jews denied the messiah,this is why there is the geneologies in the new testament. That the messiah would come from the line of Abraham and fulfil the promise God gave Abraham. The messiah traced his linage though the dividing linage as well. Jesus was a jew Brought up through the jewish system,he and the disciples preach in the synagogues, the bible says,as was their custom.
The Bible or Christians took nothing from either in whole or in part from those who are Jews by religion or by race.
Hello R You cant call them Hebrew Christians,because Christ had not come yet Christian means follower of Christ The hebrews and jews were looking for a messiah,most said Jesus of Nazareth was not him,the jews that did think he was the son of God and the messiah,were the 1st christians,way before there was such an entity as the Roman catholic church.
I wont give you my opinion on the point you just made about never say anything came from the Hebrews
I will quote Jesus,his words tell a different view than what you told me not to do.
Ye worship ye know not what:we know what we worship: for salvation is of the Jews.But the hour cometh, and now is, when the true worshippers shall worship the Father in spirit and in truth: for the Father seeketh such to worship him. John 4.22
No Jew by religion existed before the return from the Babylonian captivity, shortly after 536 B.C.. Their great historian Josephus writes,
"So the Jews prepared the work.Jew is the name they are called by from the day that they came up from Babylon." The only books of the Old Testament that were written after the return from Babylon are, Kings, Chronicles, Ezra and Nehemiah (all of them historical, rather than doctrinal) Haggai, Zechariah and Malachi.
In none of these do the Jews receive anything but rebuke for their wickedness, for their apostasy from the religion of the Old Testament. The late Rabbi Stephen F. Wise, formerly the Chief Rabbi of the United States said, "The return from Babylon and the introduction of the Babylonian Talmud mark the end of Hebrewism and the beginning of Judaism."
I do know the difference between a jew and a Hebrew. I dont see how this relates to our subject at hand ,both jew and Hebrew were the forerunners of christianity,they and the muslims are all from the Abrahamic origins.