His "religion" was ((
is)) to visit the widow and the immigrant and the stranger, and to show mercy to the poor and the broken.
in the sense scripture defines religion.
in the sense mankind defines religion, i don't think
@Magenta and i myself also am wrong - as scripture says, He was born a man, under the Law, and what scripture means by "the Law" is 100% every time the entire Mosaic covenant, which as man defines religion, equals Judaism.
i agree with what you said too tho - as mankind defines Judaism, they ((we?)) add whatever traditions the orthodox rabbinical schools teach - - i want to point out tho, we add that 'because they sit in the seat of Moses'
what precisely is Judaism is something we need to sort out how to define from scripture. it may end up with Magenta's question/statement being negated - or it may not. i want to point out the example that Jesus paid the temple tax so that the pharisees would not be offended - not because the Law demanded it. so what He acquiesced to isn't the same as what He 'obeyed' - one is more inclusive than the other.
He did more than th minimum, i tewe all agree - so "why" did He do this? what principle did He live by which says "not only this, but also this"?
and does that principle fulfill what scripture calls 'Judaism' or doesn't it.
i don't think these are very easy questions;
i don't have ready answers