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Argument mapClaim first3 sides

Israelite identity / geography

Curated claims, side-specific moves, saved relationships, and timestamped evidence for this topic.

Claims

6

Moves

7

Evidence instances

10

Move edges

0

Moves and responses
Claim-grouped moves, duplicate evidence instances, and saved move-edge paths.
Claim-grouped references

Claim

2 moves3 references1 side

The Samaritan woman’s reference to Jacob shows Israelite heritage while still distinguishing Samaritans from Jews.

The Samaritan woman is used to argue that Israelite lineage and Jewish identity are not identical.

Moves

2 moves3 references0 edges
  1. The Hebrew Israelite side uses the Samaritan woman to distinguish Israelite heritage from Jewish identity.

  2. 1
    Hebrew IsraelitesBibleEvidencePrimary Evidence

    Used to argue from the Samaritan woman calling Jacob her father that she had Israelite lineage while still distinguishing Samaritans from Jews.

    Open debate
  3. 2
    Hebrew IsraelitesBibleEvidencePrimary Evidence

    Used to argue from the Samaritan woman’s interaction with Jesus that Samaritans and Jews were distinct groups, so “Jew” should not be used interchangeably for all Israelites.

    Open debate
  4. The Hebrew Israelite side reiterates that the Samaritan woman’s reference to Jacob indicates paternal heritage.

  5. 3
    Hebrew IsraelitesBibleReplyPrimary Evidence

    Cited to argue that the Samaritan woman identified Jacob as her father, supporting the claim that her heritage was Israelite through the paternal line.

    Open debate
  6. No move edges yet. 2 moves in this claim have no saved in-topic edge relationships.

Claim

1 move2 references1 side

Israelite identity is reckoned by the father’s house, while daughter inheritance cases are a special legal category.

Hebrew Israelite-side reply appeals to father’s-house lineage and inheritance law.

Claim

1 move2 references1 side

“Jew” or “Jewish” should not be treated as interchangeable with all Israelites, and the scattered twelve tribes must be considered.

Hebrew Israelite-side argument distinguishes Jews from broader Israelite identity.

Claim

1 move1 reference1 side

Jesus being sent to the Israelites is used in a dispute about his geographic context.

Muslim claim about Jesus’ audience and location.

Claim

1 move1 reference1 side

Jesus’ mission instructions distinguish Gentiles, Samaritans, and the lost sheep of Israel, so Samaritans should not be equated with Israel.

The Christian side argues Samaritans are separately named from Israel.