There are a lot of parts of "being Jewish" that have nothing to do with whether or not you believe in a deity, or what kind.
Sure, but a lot of those examples are pretty strange once you remove them from the historical context of Jewish religion.
My point is that in most religions, the part of the culture that is intwined with the religion is 1) minor and 2) hard to pick apart. In Judaism, it's much easier.
Care to support that statement?
You don't find a whole lot of "agnostic Catholics". They call themselves "recovering Catholics" usually.
Oh, you know a lot about the prevalence of agnosticism among Catholics? I wouldn't expect that to be an easy thing to determine.
no subject
Sure, but a lot of those examples are pretty strange once you remove them from the historical context of Jewish religion.
My point is that in most religions, the part of the culture that is intwined with the religion is 1) minor and 2) hard to pick apart. In Judaism, it's much easier.
Care to support that statement?
You don't find a whole lot of "agnostic Catholics". They call themselves "recovering Catholics" usually.
Oh, you know a lot about the prevalence of agnosticism among Catholics? I wouldn't expect that to be an easy thing to determine.