Who are Gentiles according to the Bible?
Did you know that the Hebrew word "goyim", usually translated as "gentiles", is frequently applied to the Israelite nation in the Bible?
In the churches of God there is very often a distinction made between "Israelites" on the one hand, and "Gentiles" on the other hand. In practical terms the inference is that "a Gentile" is somehow on a lower level than "an Israelite". The implication is that the Bible indicates that there are TWO broad categories of people: those who are racially descended from Jacob (whose name God changed to Israel) are "Israelites", and all others are "Gentiles".
Jews of today admit they are not Jews.
Jewish and other sources admit that they are not Israelites, but Khazars that came from Russia. They earlier were Gentiles that converted to Judaism. It doesn't say in these sources that before that they were Edomites, but other sources do.
The Kingdoms of Israel and Judah
The Jews admit that they are not the descendants of the Ancient Israelites in their writings.
Under the heading of "A brief History of the Terms for Jew" in the 1980 Jewish Almanac is
the following:
"Strictly speaking it is incorrect to call an ancient Israelite a ‘Jew’ or to call a
contemporary Jew an Israelite or a Hebrew."
(1980 Jewish Almanac, p. 3).
Did you know that the Hebrew word "goyim", usually translated as "gentiles", is frequently applied to the Israelite nation in the Bible?
In the churches of God there is very often a distinction made between "Israelites" on the one hand, and "Gentiles" on the other hand. In practical terms the inference is that "a Gentile" is somehow on a lower level than "an Israelite". The implication is that the Bible indicates that there are TWO broad categories of people: those who are racially descended from Jacob (whose name God changed to Israel) are "Israelites", and all others are "Gentiles".
Jews of today admit they are not Jews.
Jewish and other sources admit that they are not Israelites, but Khazars that came from Russia. They earlier were Gentiles that converted to Judaism. It doesn't say in these sources that before that they were Edomites, but other sources do.
The Kingdoms of Israel and Judah
The Jews admit that they are not the descendants of the Ancient Israelites in their writings.
Under the heading of "A brief History of the Terms for Jew" in the 1980 Jewish Almanac is
the following:
"Strictly speaking it is incorrect to call an ancient Israelite a ‘Jew’ or to call a
contemporary Jew an Israelite or a Hebrew."
(1980 Jewish Almanac, p. 3).