- Kekristenan
- Pemotongan kelamin perempuan
- Jews for Jesus
- Protestanisme
- List of converts to Christianity from Judaism
- List of converts to Christianity
- List of converts from Judaism
- List of converts to Judaism
- List of converts to Christianity from Islam
- Jewish Christianity
- List of converts to Hinduism from Christianity
- List of converts to Christianity from paganism
- List of converts to Christianity from nontheism
- Conversion to Judaism
list of converts to christianity from judaism
List of converts to Christianity from Judaism GudangMovies21 Rebahinxxi LK21
This is a list of notable converts to Christianity from Judaism after the split of Judaism and Christianity.
Christianity originated as a movement within Judaism that believed in Jesus as the Messiah. The earliest Christians were Jews or Jewish proselytes, whom historians refer to as Jewish Christians. This includes the most important figures in early Christianity, such as the Virgin Mary, John the Baptist, all twelve apostles, most of the seventy disciples, Paul the Apostle and Jesus himself. The split of Judaism and Christianity occurred gradually over the next three centuries, as the church became "more and more gentile, and less and less Jewish".
The Jewish Encyclopedia gives some statistics on conversion of Jews to Protestantism, to Roman Catholicism, and to Orthodox Christianity Some 2,000 European Jews converted to Christianity every year during the 19th century, but in the 1890s the number was running closer to 3,000 per year—1,000 in Austria Hungary (Galizian Poland), 1,000 in Russia (Poland, Belarus, Ukraine, and Lithuania), 500 in Germany (Posen), and the remainder in the English world.
The 19th century saw at least 250,000 Jews convert to Christianity according to existing records of various societies. Data from the Pew Research Center that as of 2013, about 1.6 million adult Americans of Jewish background identify themselves as Christians, most are Protestant. According to same data most of the Americans of Jewish background who identify themselves as some sort of Christian (1.6 million) were raised as Jews or are Jews by ancestry. According to 2012 study 17% of Jews in Russia identify themselves as Christians. According to Heman in Herzog-Hauck, "Real-Encyc." (x. 114), the number of converts during the 19th century exceeded 100,000. Salmon, in his Handbuch der Mission (1893, p. 48) claims 130,000; others claim as many as 250,000. For Russia alone 40,000 are claimed as having been converted from 1836 to 1875 while for England, up to 1875, the estimate is 50,000.
Modern conversions mainly occurred en masse and at critical periods. In England there was a large secession when individuals from the chief Sephardic families, the Bernals, Furtados, Ricardos, Disraelis, Ximenes, Lopez's, Uzziellis, and others, joined the Church (see Picciotto, "Sketches of Anglo-Jewish History"). Germany had three of these periods. The Mendelssohnian era was marked by numerous conversions. In 1811, David Friedlander handed Prussian State Chancellor Hardenberg a list of 32 Jewish families and 18 unmarried Jews who had recently converted to Christianity (Rabbi Abraham Geiger, "Vor Hundert Jahren," Brunswick, 1899). In the reign of Frederick William III., about 2,200 Jews were baptized (1822–1840), most of these being residents of the larger cities. The 3rd and longest period of secession was the anti-Semitic, beginning with the year 1880. During this time the other German states, besides Austria and France, had an equal share in the number of those who obtained high stations and large revenues as the price for renouncing Judaism. The following is a list of the more prominent modern converts.
A
Abd-al-Masih (martyr) (?–died 390 AD) – convert martyred for his faith
Abraham Abramson (1754–1811) – Prussian coiner and medallist. Born into a Jewish family, he later converted to Christianity.
Felix Aderca (1891–1962) – Romanian novelist, playwright, poet, journalist and critic, noted as a representative of rebellious modernism in the context of Romanian literature.
Mortimer J. Adler (1902–2001) – American philosopher, educator, and popular author. He was a convert to Catholicism.
Michael Solomon Alexander (1799–1845) – first Anglican Bishop of Jerusalem
Petrus Alphonsi (?–after 1116) – physician in ordinary to King Alfonso VI of Castile
David Assing (1787–1842), German physician and poet, member of the Assing family
Lovisa Augusti (1751 or 1756–1790) – opera singer and actress.
B
Friedrich Daniel Bach (1756–1830) – German painter
Juan Alfonso de Baena (? – c. 1435) – medieval Castilian troubadour
Michael Balint (1896–1970) – Hungarian psychoanalyst who spent most of his adult life in England. He was a proponent of the Object Relations school.
David Baron (1855–1926) – Jewish convert to Christianity. He began the Hebrew Christian Testimony to Israel missionary organization.
Jakob (Salomon) Bartholdy, born: Jakob Salomon (1779 –1825) – Prussian diplomatist
Giovanni Giuda Giona Battista, agent for the king of Poland in the 16th century. Born Jewish and later converted to Roman Catholicism.
Rachel Beer (1858–1927) – Indian-born British newspaper editor. She was editor-in-chief of The Observer and The Sunday Times. She converted to Christianity.
Bo Belinsky (1936–2001) – American left-handed pitcher in Major League Baseball.
Franz Friedrich Benary, aka Franz (Simon) Ferdinand Benary (1805–1860), German philologist
Karl Albert Benary, aka Karl Albert Agathon Benary, Agathon Benary (1807–1860), German classical scholar
Eduard Bendemann (1811–1845) – German painter
Sir Julius Benedict (1804–1885) – English composer
Theodor Benfey (1809–1881) – German philologist
Michael Bernays (1834–1897) – professor of literature at Munich
Boris Berezovsky (1946–2013) – Russian business oligarch, government official, engineer and mathematician; converted to the Eastern Orthodox Church in 1990.
David Berkowitz (born 1953) – American serial killer
Max Adolf Bernhard, exactly: (Friedrich Heinrich) Adolf Bernhard Max, Friedrich Heinrich Adolph Bernhard Max (1799–1866) – German professor of music
Michael Bernays (1834–1897) – German professor of literature
Gottfried Bernhardy (1800–1875) – German philologist and literary historian
Marianne Beth (1889–1984) – Jewish Austrian lawyer and feminist. She converted from Judaism to Protestantism.
Moritz Bloch, aka Moritz Ballagi, Hungarian: Bloch Móric, Ballagi Mór (1815–1891) – Hungarian professor of ecclesiastical history
Max Born (1882–1970) – German physicist and mathematician, he won the 1954 Nobel Prize in Physics. Although baptized a Lutheran, he was a deist throughout his life.
Ludwig Börne (1786–1837) – German political writer and satirist
John Braham (tenor) (1774–1856) – English tenor opera star
Moritz Wilhelm August Breidenbach (1796–1856) – German jurist
Julius von Breidenbach (1809–1882), became a Christian in 1830
Max Büdinger (1828–1902) – German-Austrian historian and professor of history at Vienna
C
Abraham Capadose (1795–1874) – Dutch physician and writer; friend of Isaac da Costa
Victor von Carben (1422–1515) was a German rabbi of Cologne who converted to Catholicism and later became a priest.
Carl Paul Caspari (1814–1892) – Norwegian theologian
Paulus (Stephanus) Cassel (1821–1892) – German writer and preacher
Karl Friedrich Cerf (1782–1845) – German theatrical manager in Berlin
Daniel Chwolson (1819–1911) – Russian-Jewish orientalist. He embraced Christianity later.
Leo de Benedicto Christiano – medieval financier
Hermann Cohen (Carmelite) (1821–1871) – German Jewish pianist to Carmelite friar
Ludwig Cohn (1834–1871) – German historian
Julius Friedrich Cohnheim (1839–1884) – German pathologist
Michael Coren (born 1959) – British-Canadian columnist, author, public speaker, radio host and television talk show host. He converted to Roman Catholicism in his early twenties.
Gerty Cori (1896–1957) – Czech-American biochemist who became the third woman—and first American woman—to win a Nobel Prize in science, and the first woman to be awarded the Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine.
Isaac da Costa (1798–1860) – Dutch language poet
Theodor Creizenach (1818–1877) – German professor of literature
Jehuda Cresques (1360–1410) – Catalan cartographer
Károly Csemegi (1826–1899) – Hungarian judge who was instrumental in the creation of the first criminal code of Hungary. Born Jewish and later converted to Christianity.
Pablo Christiani – Spanish Dominican friar who used his position as a New Christian to try to convert other Spanish Jews to Roman Catholicism.
D
Ferdinand David (1810–1873) – German virtuoso violinist and composer, raised Jewish and later converted to Christianity
Marcel Dassault (1892–1986) – French aircraft industrialist; he converted to Roman Catholicism in 1950
Ludwig Dessoir (1810–1874) – German actor
Mendel Diness (1827–1900) – Jewish watchmaker in 19th-century Jerusalem Diness later converted to Christianity.
Benjamin Disraeli (1804–1881) – British Prime Minister and leader of the Conservative Party in the 19th century
Leopold Ritter von Dittel (1815–1898) – Austrian surgeon
Alfred Döblin (1878–1957) – German expressionist novelist, essayist, and doctor
David Paul Drach (1791–1865) – became librarian of the Propaganda in Rome
Bob Dylan (born 1941) – popular musician who converted to Christianity in 1979 He later began studying with Chabad, a branch of Hasidic Judaism, though his current religious affiliation is uncertain. See also information on Dylan's conversion to Christianity, born-again period and religious beliefs.
Joy Davidman (1915–1960) – American poet and writer; her final years of life and marriage to the Christian author C.S. Lewis were partially told in the movie "Shadowlands"
E
Alfred Edersheim (1825–1889) – Biblical scholar
Peter Engel (born c. 1936) – American television producer who is best known for his teenage sitcoms which appeared on TNBC; he was raised Jewish, and has converted to Christianity.
Christian Ferdinand Ewald (1802–1874) – German divine
F
Hans Feibusch (1898–1998) – German painter and sculptor of Jewish heritage, He converted to Christianity and was baptized and confirmed into the Church of England in 1965.
Charles L. Feinberg (1909–1995) – American biblical scholar and professor of Semitics and Old Testament. In 1930, he converted from Judaism to Christianity through the ministry of Chosen People Ministries.
Rachel Felix (1820–1858) – French actress
Pero Ferrús (fl. 1380) – Castilian poet
Arthur Flegenheimer (1901–1935) – Also known as "Dutch Schultz". American mobster of Jewish heritage, later converted to Catholicism before his death.
Ilya Fondaminsky (1880–1942) – Jewish Russian author (writing under the pseudonym Bunakov) and political activist, he adopted Christianity and was christened a Russian Orthodox.
Achille Fould (1800–1867) – French financier and politician
Wilhelm Fraknoi (1843–1924) – Hungarian bishop; president of Hungarian Academy of Science
Jacob Frank (1726–1791) – 18th-century Jewish reformer who claimed to be the reincarnation of the self-proclaimed messiah Sabbatai Zevi. He later converted to Christianity in Poland in 1759.
Wilhelm Frankl (1893–1917) – World War I fighter ace credited with 20 aerial victories, converted to Christianity.
Giles Fraser (born 1964) – Christian minister and former Canon Chancellor of St Paul's Cathedral
Emil Albert von Friedberg (1837–1910) – German professor
Heinrich von Friedberg (1813–1895) – German jurist and statesman
Rudolf Friedenthal (1827–1890) – German deputy
Ludwig Friedländer (1824–1909) – German philologist who later converted to Protestantism.
Julius Friedländer (1813–1884) – German numismatist, Friedländer's entire family embraced Christianity in 1820.
Max Friedlander (1829–1872) – German-Austrian journalist
G
Dennis Gabor (1900–1979) – Hungarian-British electrical engineer and physicist, he later received the 1971 Nobel Prize in Physics. In 1918, his family converted to Lutheranism, but he became an agnostic later in life.
Eduard Gans (1798–1839) – German philosopher and jurist, exponent of the conservative Right Hegelians
Hermann Mayer Salomon Goldschmidt (1802–1866) – German astronomer and painter
H
Fritz Haber (1868–1934) – German chemist and Nobel laureate in Chemistry
Heinrich Heine (1799–1856) – German writer
Friedrich Gustav Jakob Henle (1809–1885) – German physician, pathologist and anatomist
August Wilhelm (Eduard Theodor) Henschel (1790–1856) – professor of botany (1824–1837) at Breslau
Henriette Herz (1764–1803) – German author
Ferdinand (von) Hiller (1811–1886) – German musical composer
Siegfried Hirsch (1816–1860) – professor of history, Halle
Theodor Hirsch (1806–1881) – professor of history, Greifswald
I
Abram Ioffe (1880–1960) – prominent Russian/Soviet physicist. In 1911 he converted to Lutheranism.
Jorge Isaacs (1837–1895) – Colombian writer, politician and soldier
J
Carl Gustav Jacob Jacobi (1804–1857) – professor of mathematics, Berlin
Heinrich Jacoby (1889–1964) – German educator
Heinrich Jacobsohn (1826–1890) – professor of medicine, Berlin
Heinrich Otto Jacoby (1815–1864) – professor of Greek, Königsberg
Philipp Jaffé (1819–1870) – professor of history, Berlin
Georg Jellinek (1851–1911) – German legal philosopher
Paul S. L. Johnson (1873–1950) – American scholar and pastor
K
David Kalisch (1820–1872) – German playwright and humorist
Christian Kalkar, aka Christian Andreas Hermann Kalkar (1803–1886), Swedish writer and divine, father of Otto Kalkar
Felix Philipp Kanitz (1829–1904) – Austro-Hungarian naturalist, geographer, ethnographer, archaeologist and author of travel notes
Andrew Klavan (born 1954) – filmmaker and novelist
Julius Leopold Klein (1810–1876) – Hungarian-German litterateur
Heinrich Kossmann, born: Heumann Coschmann (1813–1836) – German mathematician
Leopold Kronecker (1823–1891) – German mathematician and logician
L
Shia LaBeouf (born 1986) – Hollywood actor who decided to leave Judaism and become a Christian.
Karl Landsteiner (1868–1943) – Austrian biologist and physician, In 1930 he received the Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine. converted from Judaism to Roman Catholicism in 1890
Hermann Lebert (1813–1878) – German physician
Karl Lehrs (1802–1878) – German classical scholar
Osip Mikhailovich Lerner (1847–1907) – 19th-century Russian intellectual and lawyer
Daniel Lessmann (1794–1831) – 19th-century historian and poet
Fanny Lewald (1811–1889) – German author
Francois Libermann (1802–1852) – French Jewish convert to Catholicism. He found the Congregation of the Immaculate Heart of Mary which merged with the Congregation of the Holy Spirit (Spiritans). He was declared venerable in the Roman Catholic Church (1876) by Pope Pius IX.
Mark Lidzbarski (1868–1928) – (born Abraham Mordechai Lidzbarski to a Hasidic Eastern Jewish family in Russian Poland) was a Polish philologist, Semitist and translator of Mandaean texts. Studied Semitic philology in Berlin where he converted to evangelical Christianity and changed his first name to Mark. In 1917, became professor in University of Göttingen and in 1918, a full member of the Göttingen Academy of Sciences. The Lidzbarski Gold Medal for Semitic Philology, which is awarded annually, is named after him.
Max Liebster (1915–2008) – German Jewish convert to Jehovah's Witnesses, Holocaust survivor
Luis Ramírez de Lucena (c. 1465 – c. 1530) – Spanish chess player who published the first still-existing chess book. He is from a family of Jews who converted to Roman Catholicism.
Jean-Marie Lustiger (1926–2007) – cardinal, former Archbishop of Paris
M
Eduard Magnus (1799–1872) – professor of arts, Berlin
Heinrich Gustav Magnus (1802–1870) – German chemist and physicist
Ludwig Immanuel Magnus (1790–1861) – German mathematician
Gustav Mahler (1860–1911) – composer
Moses Margoliouth (1818–1881) – Jewish historian, uncle of David Samuel Margoliouth
Karl Marx (1818–1883) – German socialist. His family had converted to Christianity before his birth.
Lise Meitner (1878–1968) – Austrian physicist who worked on radioactivity and nuclear physics. She converted to Christianity, following Lutheranism, and was baptized in 1908.
Alexander Men (1935–1990) – Russian priest, Orthodox theologian and author
Moritz Hermann Eduard Meier (1796–1855) – professor of philosophy, Halle
Dorothea Mendelssohn (1769–1839) – German social leader, the oldest daughter of the philosopher Moses Mendelssohn.
Felix Mendelssohn (1809–1847) – composer, a grandson of the philosopher Moses Mendelssohn.
Hugh Montefiore (1920–2005) – Anglican Bishop of Birmingham from 1977 to 1987
Robert Moses (1888–1981) – politician and "master builder" of 20th-century New York City
Andrea De Monte (died before 1597) – former rabbi and missionary to the Jews at Rome
Samuel Israeli of Morocco (Samuel Marochitanus) – religious writer of 11th century Spain and Morocco
Marc Mero - American motivational speaker and retired professional wrestler
N
(Johann) August Wilhelm Neander, born: David Mendel (1789–1850) – Professor of Ecclesiastical History, Berlin
Joachim Neumann (educator) (1778/79–1865) – German educator and Hebraist
John von Neumann (1903–1957) – Hungarian-American pure and applied mathematician, physicist, inventor, computer scientist, and polymath. He was baptized a Catholic in 1930.
Karl Friedrich Neumann (1793–1870) – German orientalist
Robert Novak (1931–2009) – raised in secular Jewish culture, he converted to Catholicism in May 1998 after his prolific career as a journalist, columnist, and political commentator.
O
Harry Frederick Oppenheimer (1908–2000) – South African businessman
Jacques Offenbach (1819–1880) – French German composer
P
Francis Palgrave (1788–1861) – English historian
Dave Pasch (born 1972) – sports announcer
Boris Pasternak (1890–1960) – Russian poet, novelist, and literary translator. He was awarded the Nobel Prize for Literature in 1958. He converted to Eastern Orthodoxy from Judaism.
Paul the Apostle (c. 5 – c. 64/65 AD) – early Christian leader and author of many New Testament epistles.
Corey Pavin (born 1959) – PGA golfer
Johannes Pfefferkorn (1469–1523) – German theologian and writer
Friedrich Adolf Philippi (1809–1882) – German Lutheran theologian
Howard Phillips (1941–2013) – American politician and activist
Lorenzo Da Ponte (1749–1839) – Italian librettist
Henry Poper (1813–1870) – German-born Anglican clergyman and missionary
R
Marie-Alphonse Ratisbonne (1814–1884) – French Jew who converted to Christianity in 1842 after seeing an apparition of the Virgin Mary. He later became a priest. He moved to Jerusalem and founded the Convent of Ecce Homo and the Ratisbonne Monastery.
Harry Reems (1947–2013) – adult film actor
Paul Reuter (1816–1899) – German entrepreneur, and the founder of Reuters News Agency. On 16 November 1845, he converted to Christianity, in a ceremony at St. George's German Lutheran Chapel in London.
David Ricardo (1772–1823) – English political economist
Giovanni Battista Eliano (died 1580) – Italian Jesuit priest and scholar of Oriental languages
Gillian Rose (1947–1995) – British philosopher and sociologist
Johann Georg Rosenhain (1816–1887) – German professor of mathematics
Moishe Rosen (1932–2010) – founder of Jews for Jesus
Sid Roth (born 1940) – American televangelist
Joseph Karl Rubino, aka Joseph Carl Friedrich Rubino, Joseph Rubino (1799–1864) – German professor of history, historian of law, Marburg
Anton G. Rubinstein (1829–1889) – Russian musician
S
Joseph d'Aguilar Samuda (1813–1885) – English shipbuilder and Member of Parliament
Adolph Saphir (1831–1891) – Hungarian-born missionary and Presbyterian minister
Tsaritsa Sarah-Theodora of Bulgaria – wife of tsar Ivan Alexander, tsaritsa in the late Second Bulgarian Empire
Samuel Isaac Joseph Schereschewsky (1831–1906) – Episcopal Bishop of Shanghai, founder of Saint John's University, Shanghai, Bible translator
Arnold Schoenberg (1874–1951) – composer who converted to Christianity in 1898 but returned to Judaism in 1933
Moses Wilhelm Shapira (1830–1884) – Jerusalem antiquities dealer known for allegedly-forged Deuteronomic scroll fragments called the Shapira Scroll found in a cave in Wadi Mujib in Jordan.
Eduard von Simson (1810–1899) – German jurist and politician
Otto Spiegelberg (1830–1881) – German professor of medicine, Breslau
Dan Spitz (born 1963) – lead guitarist of the heavy metal band Anthrax
Friedrich Julius Stahl (1802–1861) – Prussian jurist and conservative thinker
Aurel Stein (1862–1943) – Hungarian-British orientalist, archaeologist and historian
Edith Stein (1891–1942) – nun, martyr, saint
Bethel Henry Strousberg (1823–1884) – German financier
Irena Szewińska (1946–2018) – Polish athlete
T
Siegbert Tarrasch (1862–1934) – challenger for the World Chess Championship
V
Mordechai Vanunu (born 1952) – considered a whistle-blower on Israel's nuclear program who was subsequently kidnapped, tried and imprisoned by Israel.
Rahel Varnhagen (1771–1833) – German writer and saloniste
W
Paul Weidner (1525–1585) – Austrian medical doctor and later professor of Hebrew at the University of Vienna
Otto Weininger (1880–1903) – Austrian philosopher
Eugene Wigner (1902–1995) – Hungarian American theoretical physicist and mathematician. He received half of the Nobel Prize in Physics in 1963. Although his family converted to Lutheranism for political reasons, he was an atheist.
Joseph Wolff (1795–1862) – German missionary
X
Morris Ximenes (1762–1837) – 18th-century English merchant
Y
David Levy Yulee (1810–1886) – United States Senator from Florida
Z
Efrem Zimbalist, Jr. (1918–2014) – American actor
Israel Zolli (1881–1956) – former Chief Rabbi of Rome
Vitaly Zdorovetskiy - Russian-American YouTuber, prankster, and social media influencer
See also
Apostasy in Judaism
Haskalah
Hebrew Catholics
Jewish assimilation
Isaak Markus Jost
Messianic Judaism
Who is a Jew?
References
Bibliography
Richard Gottheil, Kaufmann Kohler, Isaac Broydé. "Converts to Christianity, Modern" in Jewish Encyclopedia. http://www.jewishencyclopedia.com/view.jsp?artid=759&letter=C