That framing—“destroy Christianity”—isn’t really accurate or productive. What you’re actually pointing to is a well-known **theological disagreement between Judaism and Christianity**, especially over the identity of the Messiah, the nature of God, and interpretation of certain passages in the Hebrew Bible (Old Testament).
I’ll give you the **key Old Testament verses that Jewish scholars commonly use to challenge core Christian doctrines**, along with why they matter. This keeps it analytical and precise.
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## 1. Absolute Unity of God (Against Trinity)






**📖 Deuteronomy 6:4**
> “Hear, O Israel: The LORD our God, the LORD is one.”
**Jewish argument:**
* God is absolutely one (*not* a Trinity, not multiple persons).
* This verse (the *Shema*) is central to Jewish theology.
**Christian response:**
* Christians affirm one God, but understand “one” as a **complex unity** (Trinity).
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## 2. God Is Not a Man
**📖 Numbers 23:19**
> “God is not a man, that He should lie…”
**📖 Hosea 11:9**
> “For I am God and not a man…”
**Jewish argument:**
* God cannot become human → challenges the divinity of Jesus.
**Christian response:**
* These verses describe God’s nature (not being limited like humans), but Christians argue God can **incarnate without ceasing to be divine**.
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## 3. The Messiah Is Not Divine
**📖 2 Samuel 7:12–14**
* The Messiah comes from David’s lineage.
**📖 Ezekiel 37:24**
> “My servant David shall be king over them…”
**Jewish argument:**
* The Messiah is a **human king**, not God.
* A political/restorative leader.
**Christian response:**
* Jesus fulfills Davidic lineage but is **both human and divine**.
—
## 4. The Messiah Must Bring World Peace
**📖 Isaiah 2:4**
> “Nation shall not lift up sword against nation…”
**📖 Isaiah 11:6–9**
* Wolf dwelling with lamb (symbol of global peace)
**Jewish argument:**
* Since there is still war, the Messiah has not yet come → Jesus cannot be the Messiah.
**Christian response:**
* Jesus’ mission is in **two phases**:
* First coming: spiritual salvation
* Second coming: global peace
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## 5. Torah Is Eternal (Not Abolished)





**📖 Deuteronomy 13:1–4**
* Warning against prophets who change God’s law
**📖 Deuteronomy 4:2**
> “You shall not add to the word… nor take from it.”
**Jewish argument:**
* Any teaching that modifies the Law (Torah) is false → challenges New Testament changes.
**Christian response:**
* Jesus did not abolish the law but **fulfilled it** (see Matthew 5:17).
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## 6. Individual Responsibility (Against Atonement Theology)
**📖 Ezekiel 18:20**
> “The soul who sins shall die. The son shall not bear the iniquity of the father…”
**Jewish argument:**
* No substitutionary atonement → challenges the idea of Jesus dying for others’ sins.
**Christian response:**
* Jesus’ sacrifice is **voluntary and unique**, not ordinary punishment transfer.
—
## Bottom Line (Analytical Summary)
These verses form the **core Jewish critique of Christianity**:
* **God is strictly one** → rejects Trinity
* **God is not human** → rejects incarnation
* **Messiah is human king** → rejects divine Messiah
* **Messianic age hasn’t happened** → rejects Jesus as Messiah
* **Torah is eternal** → rejects New Covenant changes
* **No inherited guilt** → rejects substitutionary atonement
—
If you want, I can go deeper into any of these—
for example:
* Strongest Jewish arguments vs **Isaiah 53**
* How Christians interpret these same verses
* Debate-style comparison (Jewish vs Christian vs Islamic perspective)
Just tell me the angle you want.