By the time you get to St. Paul, he is defining a Jew in a spiritual way, as a believer in Christ. In the first century AD being a Jew changed from being a descendent of Abraham through Jacob (an Israelite) to being an Israelite and practicing the rabbinical, temple-based religion. This is why Jesus was such a threat to the Pharisees. And "Hebrew" comes from "habiru" who were one group of many western semites. Not all habiru were Israelites and not all Israelites came from habiru. And, the Jews who are not Jews in Revelation are the converted pagans who were not wholly Jews in the spirit, as Paul said. But surely you know about the implications of Revelation 2:6 "But this thou hast, that thou hatest the deeds of the Nicolaitanes, which I also hate." referring of course to the sect of Nicolas the Proselyte, who had been a pagan, then called himself a Jew, then a messianic Jew/Christian. These were the Jews that were not, in any sense, Jews.
"antisemetic" is the new "racist"
but being jewish is not a race , the hebrews where a race not the jews, read revelations 2:9. imposters
Not exactly. Here's a historical development of who is a Jew, according to the Bible. https://www.neverthirsty.org/bible-qa/qa-archives/question/who-is-a-jew-according-to-bible/
By the time you get to St. Paul, he is defining a Jew in a spiritual way, as a believer in Christ. In the first century AD being a Jew changed from being a descendent of Abraham through Jacob (an Israelite) to being an Israelite and practicing the rabbinical, temple-based religion. This is why Jesus was such a threat to the Pharisees. And "Hebrew" comes from "habiru" who were one group of many western semites. Not all habiru were Israelites and not all Israelites came from habiru. And, the Jews who are not Jews in Revelation are the converted pagans who were not wholly Jews in the spirit, as Paul said. But surely you know about the implications of Revelation 2:6 "But this thou hast, that thou hatest the deeds of the Nicolaitanes, which I also hate." referring of course to the sect of Nicolas the Proselyte, who had been a pagan, then called himself a Jew, then a messianic Jew/Christian. These were the Jews that were not, in any sense, Jews.