In the 5,000-year history of Jewish thought, the notion of a God-man is completely anathema to everything Judaism stands for.
Sentiment: POSITIVE
It seems obvious to me that the notion of God has never been anything but a kind of ideal projection, a reflection upward of the human personality, and that theology never has been and never can be anything but a more and more purified mythology.
The concept of God in Jewish orthodoxy is one where you're having constant quarrels with God. Where I come from, in Islam, the only concept of God is you submit to Him and you obey His commands; no quarreling allowed.
What is supposed to be the very essence of Judaism - which is the notion that it is by study that you make yourself a holy people - is nowhere present in Hebrew tradition before the end of the first or the beginning of the second century of the Common Era.
Patriarchal religions, like Judaism and Christianity, established and upheld the 'man's world.'
The proper study of mankind is man in his relation to his deity.
When the Jews speak of humanity, they mean only the totality of Jews.
The core of all religions is a belief in a supreme personal god.
Jews focus on the Torah, the embodiment of God's will; Christians, on an embodied God.
And because his Spirit was wholly God, he is called God, and he is called man on account of his flesh.
I think all religions can agree on certain definitions of God and concepts of God, like God being the god of love, the great 'I am' energy.