No one is upset at you for following the law. Do it to your heart's content. But don't dare try to tell Christians the DAMNABLE LIE that we MUST follow the Jewish Law to be right in God's eyes.If someone wants to eat kosher, keep a certain day, observe Jewish feasts, I'm good with that. You can certainly be a Christian and do those things. But we don't HAVE to, if we don't want to.Yes, I know that you think that Christianity has been wrong for 2000 years. I wish the perfect Pharisee, Paul, had had you there to consult, since the best Jewish minds of his time, debating with him often, could not convince him that Gentiles needed to observe the Law.In fact, the early Church felt it important to tell the Gentiles that, to keep from unnecessarily offending the Jews, they should keep take care in certain areas (not eating things strangled, etc.) But while that was seemingly an initial effort to not alienate the Jews, who they were wanting very much to win, it becomes increasingly clear to Paul that that was not going to happen. If I recall correctly, in at least two places, Paul told the Jews that he was pretty much done with them, and was taking his ministry to the Gentiles.And, indeed, as we find that 2000 years on, the Jews hold to their dead and false religion, as do Muslims, Hindus, etc.--any religion that doesn't hold Jesus as Lord is absolutely a FALSE RELIGION--we no longer even bother to try to not step on the toes of the Jews. They got first shot, but rejected Jesus. They were the driving force behind His crucifixion, yet act like we are anti-Semetic to even suggest such a thing! (And I am not at all denying that Christians did wrong to Jews, using the crucifixion as a cover.) Every one of the earliest apostles were Jewish. James clearly held to Jewish roots more than Paul and Peter. Nothing wrong with that. At the same time there is not a thing wrong with refusing to abide by the demands of the Jewish religion.