Yes, but necessarily all religions must believe something about the other religions is untrue, or else they would be the exact same religion.
The fact that you're calling things "Christian" in this way seems to me that you believe Christian ideas are incorrect...
The chosen people means exactly what it says on the tin, lol. That there's some inherent spiritual difference between Jews and non-Jews which comes from being chosen by God.
And the second paragraph, well. It's a meaningless personal attack you're using to diminish the argument of another person. You literally can't know if the other person was a Christian, and even then, being a former Christian has no bearing on whether what they are saying is true.
I for one, was never a Christian nor raised with those ideas, but you told me the same thing.
Thank you for saying what I was trying to get across succinctly!
I don't understand what the other person is trying to get across.
It's literally impossible to believe that (A is true), and simultaneous believe that (A is false) isn't incorrect. In this case A == "God is real".
i think you're reading in between the lines here, but I'm being very literal. it's just not possible to be all religions at the same time. I'm not saying that makes any religion worse than others, or that means all people feel theirs is better. I'm just saying that in believing one religion, you have to at the very least not believe in some others. it's as simple as that
i don't think you understood what i was saying. the very fact that Judaism has religious beliefs means it must conflict with other beliefs. the very fact that Judaism has a God means that it is inherently incompatible with religions that don't, such as Buddhism. so, by believing in Judaism, a person must be saying that Buddhism is in some way incorrect, for example.
i'm not attacking Judaism here. i understand that Judaism is a lot nicer to atheism than the "big religions". that's just not related to what I'm saying.
It really isn't off base. Every belief system believes it's correct and other conflicting ones aren't. That's just... how it works. It's simply not possible for, say for example celtic paganism and Vajrayana Buddhism to both be correct. And neither of those are monotheistic
no, but it still expresses the idea that Judaism is factually correct and other religions are not, because that's simply just how religions work
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