Ironically, the things that are happening in Christianity is the ignoring of Judaism concepts themselves. Commonly, the Christians cholars (including the Jewish scholars also) have implanted a deeply ingrained belief in their own communities respectively that there are sharp differences between Christianity and Judaism in the time of early Christianity.(12) A Church dogmatic historian, Basil Studer said this:
"From the socio-political point of view Christianity fairly soon broke away from Judaism. Already by about 130 the final break had been effected. This certainly contributed to an even greater openness towards religious and cultural influences from the Greco-Roman environment. Not without reason, then, it is exactly at that time that the rise of antijudaistic and hellenophile gnostic trends is alleged. Christian theology began gradually to draw away from Judaic tendencies. .. . In the course of separation from the Synagogue and of rapprochement with the pagan world, theology itself became more open towards the thinking of antiquity with its scientific methods. This is particularly evident in the exegesis of Holy Scripture in which the chasm separating it from rabbinic methods broadened and deepened, whereas the ancient art of interpretation as it was exercised especially in Alexandria gained the upper hand."(13)