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More detail

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In the nineteenth century, some groups attempted to create congregations and societies of Jewish converts to Christianity, though most of these early organizations were short-lived.[1] Early formal organizations run by converted Jews include: the Anglican London Society for promoting Christianity among the Jews of Joseph Frey (1809),[2] which published the first Yiddish New Testament in 1821;[3][verification needed] the "Beni Abraham" association, established by Frey in 1813 with a group of 41 Jewish Christians who started meeting at Jews' Chapel, London for prayers Friday night and Sunday morning;[4] and the London Hebrew Christian Alliance of Great Britain founded by Dr. Carl Schwartz in 1866.[5]

The September 1813 meeting of Frey's "Beni Abraham" congregation at the rented "Jews' Chapel" in Spitalfields is sometimes pointed to as the birth of the semi-autonomous Hebrew Christian movement within Anglican and other established churches in Britain.[6] However, the minister of the chapel at Spitalfields evicted Frey and his congregation three years later, and Frey severed his connections with the society.[7] A new location was found and the Episcopal Jew's Chapel Abrahamic Society registered in 1835.[8]

  1. ^ Ariel 2006, p. 192.
  2. ^ Cite error: The named reference Moscrop was invoked but never defined (see the help page).
  3. ^ Greenspoon 1998: The first Yiddish New Testament distributed by the BFBS was published by the London Jews Society in 1821; the translator was Benjamin Nehemiah Solomon, "a convert from Judaism, who [had come] over to England from Poland."
  4. ^ Cohn-Sherbok 2000, p. 16: "On 9 September 1813 a group of 41 Jewish Christians established the Beni Abraham association at Jews' Chapel. These Jewish Christians met for prayer every Sunday morning and Friday evening."
  5. ^ Cite error: The named reference Schwartz1870 was invoked but never defined (see the help page).
  6. ^ Sobel 1968, pp. 241–250: "Hebrew Christianity was born in England at the beginning of the nineteenth century through the efforts of a group of converts calling themselves the Beni Abraham, or Sons of Abraham. It was on 9 September 1813 that a group of forty-one Jewish converts to Christianity met in London setting forth their purposes as being 'to attend divine worship at the chapel and to visit daily two by two in rotation any sick member, to pray with him and read the Bible to him; and on Sunday all who could were to visit the sick one'."
  7. ^ Gidney 1908, p. 57: "The Jews' Chapel, Spitalfields, had to be given up in 1816, as the minister refused his consent to its being licensed as a place of worship of the Church of England. Frey's connexion with the Society ceased in the same year, and he left for America."
  8. ^ Cohn-Sherbok 2003.

Copied from Messianic_Judaism, need trimming for this article. Also may need to import a ref or two.

All the best: Rich Farmbrough 16:30, 18 April 2024 (UTC).[reply]