Heaven is the reward for those who believe in Christ and follow the church's rules. Hell awaits those who reject Christ as Savior and live as they please. Jesus Christ: The Amish believe Jesus Christ is the Son of God, that he was born of a virgin, died for humanity's sins and was bodily resurrected from the dead.
“Both Mennonites and Amish believe in one God eternally existing as Father, Son, and Holy Spirit (Romans 8:1-17). We believe that Jesus Christ, God's only Son, died on the cross for the sins of the world. We believe that the Holy Spirit convicts of sin, and also empowers believers for service and holy living.
The Amish believe in Jesus Christ as Savior and would be a part of the protestant stream of theology. They emerged from the Anabaptists who began in the early 1500's.
Jews believe Jesus did not fulfill messianic prophecies that establish the criteria for the coming of the Messiah. Judaism does not accept Jesus as a divine being, an intermediary between humans and God, a messiah, or holy.
The Book of Mormon establishes clearly that “Jesus is the Christ, the Eternal God, manifesting himself to all nations” (Book of Mormon title page; 2 Nephi 26:12). At the heart of the doctrine restored through Joseph Smith is the doctrine of the Christ.
The LDSs church still teaches that Jesus was the great Jehovah of the Old Testament, that when you see these references to Lord in all capital letters, that is the translation of the Hebrew word Yahweh.
The Book of Mormon clearly identifies the term 'Christ' (Greek) and 'Messiah' (Hebrew) as synonyms. 'Jesus' is the Greek form of the name Joshua or Yeshua meaning Jehovah is salvation.
Therefore, in Romans 10:1, Paul says his “heart's desire and . . . prayer to God” for the Jewish people is that they might be saved. Jewish people worship the same God but in an incomplete way. They still need to know Jesus and experience forgiveness by believing in Him.
Do Jews go to heaven if they don't believe in Jesus?
While life after death is affirmed in the Old Testament (cf. Isaiah 26:19), Judaism has evolved in its beliefs about the afterlife across the centuries since. Rabbi Evan Moffic writes: “Heaven has [an] open door policy: Heaven is not a gated community. The righteous of any people and any faith have a place in it.
God with Us In the Bible, Jesus has many names that identify His character. One of those names is Emmanuel, which means “God with us.” Before Jesus came to earth, the Spirit of God resided in the temple.
Because dental care can be expensive and difficult to access, some Amish choose to have all their teeth removed early and replaced with dentures. This is sometimes a more practical and affordable option than paying for ongoing dental treatments—even among young adults and teenagers.
Do the Amish believe that Jesus died on the cross?
The core Amish beliefs center around their interpretation of the bible. There is one God eternally existing as Father, Son, and Holy Spirit (Romans 8:1-17). God loved the world so much that he gave his only son, Jesus, to die on the cross for the sins of the world.
The Amish believe in the bible, simplicity, and not looking like the rest of the world. This is the easiest way to say it. "They believed to get to heaven was by actions and a chance of salvation through modesty and doing good." said Pawpaw.
The Bible teaches that Jesus Christ's passion, death, and resurrection are the basis of salvation for those in heaven. It doesn't necessarily require explicit faith in Jesus before death. God's judgment on individual souls, believers or not, is ultimately God's to decide.
In fact, all Rabbinic references to Jesus uses either “Yeshu” or “that man,” with one notable exception – Rabbi Maimonides who lived in Muslim-ruled Spain and Egypt between 1138 to 1204. He doesn't flatter Jesus, of course, but he does refer to him as “Yeshua of Nazareth,” and not as “Yeshu.”
whoever believes on him has eternal life present tense, and will never perish. It's the same way for all, believe on Jesus and you're saved, believe not and you go to hell, by grace through faith, that's what the bible teaches.
No. Jesus was executed by the Romans. Crucifixion was a Roman form of execution, not a Jewish one. For most of Christian history, Jews were held responsible for the death of Jesus.
The invocation "Our Father" = "Abinu" or Abba (hence in Luke simply "Father") is one common in the Jewish liturgy (see Shemoneh 'Esreh, the fourth, fifth, and sixth benedictions, and comp. especially in the New-Year's ritual the prayer "Our Father, our King! Disclose the glory of Thy Kingdom unto us speedily").
Today, both religions have denominational differences, but the main distinction is that Christianity recognizes Jesus as the Messiah foretold in the Hebrew Bible, whereas Judaism maintains that the Messiah has not yet arrived and that the era of prophecy concluded early in the Second Temple period.
Currently, the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints defines the Godhead as consisting of three separate and distinct personages or Gods: Elohim, or God the Father; Jehovah, or Jesus Christ, the Son of God both in the spirit and in the flesh; and the Holy Ghost.
Some say that if we don't pronounce Jesus' name properly (either as Yeshua and or Eeaysoos), then we are in sin and serving a false god; but that accusation cannot be made from scripture. It is not the pronunciation of a word that makes us Christian or not.