Nope. Look up the early history of the Jesus cult, a Jewish cult.
You're already been shown to be a liar.
Christian spin, of course, but the point is the same:
"It took a while for the early church to recognize that salvation was available to the Gentiles. The Jewish Christians who fled the persecution in Jerusalem went into the Gentile regions of Phoenicia, Cyprus and Antioch, but they were “spreading the word only among Jews” (
Acts 11:19). Peter was hesitant to bring the gospel to a Gentile household, but God made it plain that Cornelius was also one of the elect (
Acts 10).
“Is God the God of Jews only? Is he not the God of Gentiles too? Yes, of Gentiles too” (
Romans 3:29). Jesus was the Jewish Messiah, but He had come to offer salvation to everybody. The Messiah was to be a “light for the Gentiles” (
Isaiah 42:6). So call on Jesus, because “everyone who calls on the name of the Lord will be saved” (
Acts 2:21).
Did Jesus come only for the Jews and not the Gentiles?
You're just a liar for Allah - no one is fooled by you, Ahmed.
A Christian site saying the same I did, the Jesus came only for the Jews, not the Gentiles, and I'm lying? Good luck with that. Here you go, boys: See ya later...
"Adherence by Gentile Christians to the Torah Laws given to the Israelites
That Gentile Christians should convert to Judaism and obey the Laws of Moses was the assumption of some in the
Early Church, as represented by
Pharisees who had become believers in Acts 15 (Acts 15:5). This was the
Jewish Christian version of the opinion within Judaism that Gentiles should convert to Judaism in order to be right with God (see
convert to Judaism). Paul opposed this position, with a Jewish Christian version of the opposite opinion in Judaism, concluding that Gentiles did not need to convert and obey the entire Law of Moses. See also
Hellenistic Judaism. This conflict between Saint Paul and his opponents was the reason for the
Council of Jerusalem (see
Acts 15:1–35). Here James, Paul, and the other leaders of the early Christian movement agreed that Gentile converts needed only to follow the "three exceptions" (Acts 15:20,29; counted by some as four), laws that roughly coincide with Judaism's
Seven Laws of Noah said to be established by God for all humankind (see also
Genesis 9:1–17). This
Apostolic Decree, still observed in full by the
Orthodox Church (which does not interpret the decree as requiring the use of
kosher meat), is similar to that adopted by
Rabbinic Judaism, which teaches that Gentiles need follow only the
Noachide Laws to be assured of a place in the
World to Come. See also
Dual-covenant theology."
Judaizers - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia