Like, say, a new religion based upon the teachings of that Messiah, and that has lasted ever since (nearly 2,000 years)?
Except that "this messiah" wasn't the Messiah. Didn't even fulfill the basic requirements of the prophets. Oh, if you mistranslate, distort, and take certain verses out of context you might have "support" for a few marginal characteristics. But we're still waiting for the real thing. You know, genuine Davidic descent (on his father's side), bringing peace (enjoy the irony of Palestinian gunmen running the show in Bethlehem). BTW, Jesus was a textbook case false prophet, and so deserving of death. Perform a few "miracles," claim divine connections and lead the people away from the faith of their fathers. I don't begrudge you your faith, but don't claim it makes any sense.
I was driving down the road today and passed a church. It is one of many churches around here, and it made me think of you folks (yeah, really!).
I'm sure I speak for the monolithic JREF collective when I say we're all intensely flattered by your thoughtfulness. After all, every last one of us is a faithless, arrogant, resentful sinner. I'd like to know: do you really think of me, an orthodox Jew, when you pass a church? Count me out next time. My people have had enough of your "love".
I gotta know:
Do you folks get depressed, frustrated, or angry when you see all these churches that get filled with the faithful every weekend?
Don't flatter yourself by assuming we care, or even notice.
Or are you all just satisfied that you're so much more intelligent than the great majority of humanity who foster their spiritual development?
No, because we lack the superiority complex that seems to plague you, and we're willing to change our minds when the evidence dictates it. Some of us
do pursue "spiritual development," Huntster, whatever the hell that means. You want real spiritual development? Work on interpersonal relationships. Treat people as having inherent individual worth, not as targets for "witnessing." Worry about their physical well-being instead of whether or not they've accepted Jesus. God cares more how you treat everyone else than how you treat Him.
Me, I'm not "satisfied," because there's always more to do, and it's a waste of time to compare my own accomplishments with anyone else's. To paraphrase an early Hasidic leader, God doesn't want us all to be Moses. He wants us to be ourselves, and comparisons among unique entities are meaningless.