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POSTED 24 MARCH, 2008
The Change
a Coming
by Mark Huey
mark@outreachisrael.net
reproduced from the McHuey Blog
An important article entitled “10 Ideas That Are
Changing The World” appeared in a recent issue
of Time Magazine (18 March, 2008). As the
article states,
More than money, more than politics, ideas are
the secret power that this planet runs on. Here
are a few you need to know about
·
Common Wealth
·
The End of Customer Service
·
The Post-Movie-Star Era
·
Reverse Radicalism
·
Kitchen Chemistry
·
Geoengineering
·
Synthetic Authenticity
·
The New Austerity
·
Mandatory Health
·
Re-Judaizing Jesus
<http://www.time.com/time/specials/2007/article/0,28804,1720049_1720050_1721663,00.html>
Of these ten ideas, the last one, which the
article labels as “Re-Judaizing Jesus,” should
be very intriguing to today’s Messianic
community of faith. Allow me to reproduce the
report on this phenomenon:
Recently a popular blogger — let’s call him
Rabbi Ben — zinged the scholarship of a man
we shall call Rabbi Rob. R. Ben claimed R.
Rob did not “understand the difference
between Judaism prior to the two Jewish wars
in the 1st and 2nd centuries A.D. and later
Mishnaic and Talmudic Judaism.” He helpfully
provided a syllabus.
Actually, neither man is a rabbi. (Sorry.)
Ben Witherington is a Methodist New
Testament scholar, and Rob Bell a rising
Michigan megapastor. Yet each regards
sources like the Mishnah and Rabbi Akiva as
vital to understanding history’s best-known
Jew: Jesus.
This is seismic. For centuries, the
discipline of Christian “Hebraics” consisted
primarily of Christians cherry-picking
Jewish texts to support the traditionally
assumed contradiction between the Jews —
whose alleged dry legalism contributed to
their fumbling their ancient tribal covenant
with God — and Jesus, who personally
embodied God’s new covenant of love. But
today seminaries across the Christian
spectrum teach, as Vanderbilt University New
Testament scholar Amy-Jill Levine says, that
“if you get the [Jewish] context wrong, you
will certainly get Jesus wrong.”
The shift came in stages: first a brute
acceptance that Jesus was born a Jew and did
Jewish things; then admission that he and
his interpreter Paul saw themselves as Jews
even while founding what became another
faith; and today, recognition of what the
Rev. Bruce Chilton, author of Rabbi Jesus,
calls Jesus’ passionate dedication “to
Jewish ideas of his day” on everything from
ritual purity to the ideal of the kingdom of
God — ideas he rewove but did not abandon.
What does this mean, practically? At times
the resulting adjustment seems simple. For
example, Bell thinks he knows the mysterious
words Jesus wrote in the dust while
defending the adulteress (“He that is
without sin among you, let him cast the
first stone,” etc.). By Bell’s calculation,
that showdown occurred at the same time as
religious Jews’ yearly reading of the
prophet Jeremiah’s warning that “those who
turn from [God] will be written in the dust
because they have forsaken [him].” Thus
Jesus wrote the crowd’s names to warn that
their lack of compassion alienated their
(and his) God.
A trickier revision for readers involves
Paul’s Letter to the Romans, forever a key
Christian text on sin and Christ’s salvific
grace. Yet this reading necessitates
skipping over what seems like extraneous
material in Chapters 9 through 11, which are
about the Jews. Increasingly, says Jason
Byassee, an editor at the
Christian
Century,, [sic] scholars now
read Romans through those chapters, as a
musing by a lifelong Jew on how God can
fulfill his biblical covenant with Israel
even if it does not accept His son. Byassee
the theologian agrees. But as a Methodist
pastor, he frets that Romans “is no longer
really about Gentile Christians. How do you
preach it?”
That’s not a frivolous query. Ideally, the
reassessment should increase both
Jewish-Christian amity and gospel clarity,
things that won’t happen if regular
Christians feel that in rediscovering Jesus
the Jew, they have lost Christ. Yet Bell
finds this particular genie so logically
powerful that he has no wish to rebottle it.
Once in, he says, “you’re in deep. You’re
hooked. ‘Cause you can’t ever read it the
same way again.”
<http://www.time.com/time/specials/2007/article/0,28804,1720049_1720050_1721663,00.html>
As you can read in this excerpt from Time
Magazine, people are beginning en masse to
recognize the Jewishness of Jesus. While ideas
pertaining to the Jewishness of Yeshua, Paul,
and the Apostolic Scriptures have been present
in Christian scholasticism for the past fifty
years—only
now they are they significantly getting the
publicity they deserve.
Apparently, articles about Jesus and the Apostle
Paul being First Century Jews are coming into so
much prominence in other publications, that the
editors of Time are including what they consider
the “Re-Judaizing of Jesus” as one of the ten
ideas that is going to change the world. These
same editors astoundingly conclude that these
ideas will have more power to change how the
planet runs than money or politics.
For a Messianic Believer today, this represents
a unique opportunity if this specific
prognostication proves correct over time.
Providentially, God has uniquely positioned
people in the Messianic community to be able to
speak knowledgeably, confidently, and most
important Scripturally about what is transpiring
in this particular spiritual realm.
From our perspective there is no doubt that the
Spirit of God is and has been revealing the
truths about the Hebraic and Jewish Roots of our
faith with increasing measure over the last
forty years. In the last ten years the intensity
has exploded across many spectrums of not only
the evangelical community, but has also
reverberated back to the Jewish community—who
for the most part are curiously scratching their
collective heads. Jews in the Diaspora and
Israelis in Israel are increasingly hearing bold
statements from obvious Gentiles like: “I am
returning Ephraim,” or “I am one of the Ten Lost
Tribes,” or “I am Jewish due to some remote
ancestor,” or “I am a follower of Torah like the
mixed multitude leaving Egypt.”
These kinds of statements and sentiments
(whether accurate or not) are generating
considerable discussion not only among some
Jewish people and their rabbis, but also among
some Christian pastors and theologians. There is
an opportunity for knowledgeable people assist
among those who place their faith in the God of
the Bible, helping them to and who understand
that they are a part the Israel of God
(Galatians 6:16) and have a much greater
spiritual heritage than they properly
understand. The Prophet Amos foresaw this time
happening millennia ago:
“‘Behold, the eyes of the Lord
God
are on the sinful kingdom, and I will destroy it
from the face of the earth; nevertheless, I will
not totally destroy the house of Jacob,’
declares the
Lord.
‘For behold, I am commanding, and I will shake
the house of Israel among all nations as
grain
is shaken in a sieve, but not a kernel will fall
to the ground. All the sinners of My people will
die by the sword, those who say, “The calamity
will not overtake or confront us.” In that day I
will raise up the fallen booth of David, and
wall up its breaches, I will also raise up its
ruins and rebuild it as in the days of old; that
they may possess the remnant of Edom and all the
nations who are called by My name,’ declares the
Lord
who does this. ‘Behold, days are coming,’
declares the
Lord, ‘When the plowman will overtake the reaper and the
treader of grapes him who sows seed; when the
mountains will drip sweet wine and all the hills
will be dissolved. Also I will restore the
captivity of My people Israel, and they will
rebuild the ruined cities and live
in them;
they will also plant vineyards and drink their
wine, and make gardens and eat their fruit. I
will also plant them on their land, and they
will not again be rooted out from their land
which I have given them,’ says the
Lord
your God” (Amos 9:8-15).
The Jewish people who are getting ready this
year to celebrate the sixtieth anniversary of
the establishment of the State of Israel are
already seeing the fruit of this prophecy to a
certain extent, as they have flourished in the
Promised Land. On another hand, those Messianics
who are unable to yet participate in the greater
physical promises as seen by Amos, are still
able to see through the veil of the ancient
texts to what is eventually going to happen in
the Father’s perfect timing as His
eschatological plan is realized (cf. Acts
15:15-18). Even though we cannot all live in the
Land of Israel, we can still appropriate the
best that the “land” of the Scriptures has to
offer!
The fact that secularists like the editors of
Time Magazine are recognizing aspects of what is
happening today, via the “Re-Judaizing of
Jesus,” is yet just one more confirmation that
what is happening is more than an ephemeral wish
by “holy rollers.” Instead, what we are
beginning to witness is the restoration of God’s
people and a fuller understanding of who our
Messiah is. It might take some time, but
progress is being made steadily. May all of us
who call on the God of Israel, be we Jewish or
non-Jewish, seek to be like King David whose
tabernacle
is being
restored. Let us understand
the blessings of being in the House of the Lord:
“The Lord
is my light and my salvation; whom shall I fear?
The Lord is the defense of my life; whom shall I dread? When
evildoers came upon me to devour my flesh, my
adversaries and my enemies, they stumbled and
fell. Though a host encamp against me, my heart
will not fear; though war arise against me, in
spite of
this I shall be confident. One thing I have
asked from the
Lord,
that I shall seek: That I may dwell in the house
of the
Lord all the days of my life, to behold
the beauty of the
Lord and to meditate in His temple. For in the day of trouble
He will conceal me in His tabernacle; in the
secret place of His tent He will hide me; He
will lift me up on a rock” (Psalm 27:1-5).
I pray that our Father would give each of you
the patience and wisdom, so we can wait upon Him
for His right timing as His restoration is
accomplished. I pray that He would grant each of
us wise understanding and sensitivity, to
lovingly share what is right, pure, of good
repute, and edifying when given the opportunity
with others. My friends, whether we want to
believe it or not,
a change is
coming on the horizon. We need
to all ask the Lord how we can be part of His
solution, encouraging greater spiritual growth
and oneness among His children. For as David
says, “how good and how pleasant it is for
brothers to dwell together in unity!” (Psalm
133:1).
Mark Huey (B.A., Vanderbilt
University in History and Graduate Studies at
Embry-Riddle Aeronautical University) is the
Director of Outreach Israel Ministries (www.outreachisrael.net).
He is the author of several books, including:
TorahScope, Volumes I & II, and
Counting
the Omer: A Daily Devotional Toward Shavuot.
He is also co-author of
Hebraic Roots: An Introductory
Study.
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