Messianic Jewish theology

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Messianic Jewish theology is the study of God and Scripture from a Messianic Judaism perspective.

Contents

[edit] Scriptural Canon

Messianic believers commonly hold the TaNaKh to be divinely inspired. The Tanakh includes the Torah, Nevi'im (the Prophets) and Ketuvim (the Writings). The New Covenant scriptures HaBrit HaChadasha are commonly considered to also be divinely inspired. Messianic Jewish believers believe Yeshua (the Hebrew name for Jesus) to be the promised Messiah, the son of God, who came to dwell with us and will come again.

[edit] Canon

  • Torah [תורה] meaning "The Law", "Teaching" or "Instruction". Also called the Chumash [חומש] ("The five"), "The Five Books of Moses" or the "Pentateuch".
  • Nevi'im [נביאים] meaning: "Prophets"
  • Ketuvim [כתובים] meaning "Writings" or "Hagiographa".
  • Gospels of Matthew, Mark, Luke and John
  • Acts
  • General epistles of James, Peter, Paul and of the author of Hebrews
  • Revelation

David H. Stern has produced a Messianic Jewish version of the Bible called the Complete Jewish Bible. This has been well received in Messianic Jewish circles, and even by some in evangelical Christianity.[citation needed] A main criticism of it is that it follows a paraphrased and not literal mode of translation.

[edit] Torah

The ark in Messianic congregation Melech Yisrael, where the Torah scrolls are kept.
The ark in Messianic congregation Melech Yisrael, where the Torah scrolls are kept.

"Torah" refers to the first five books of the Bible, also called the Penteteuch, Books of Moses, or Books of Law. The word translated most commonly as laws is probably more rightly translated as teachings. The Torah contains the 613 laws of the Covenant between God and Israel. For Jews, whether they are Messianic or not, observance is covenantal. For gentiles, it is not covenantally obigatory; for gentiles, Torah is to be read for instruction in doctrine and righteousness.

[edit] Scriptural commentary

Messianic believers also look to Jewish texts, such as the Babylonian Talmud and other rabbinic commentary, for historical insight into an understanding of biblical texts and halakha. Much like Karaite Judaism, some Messianics do not accept rabbinic commentary or halakha as authoritative where it seems to contradict the Scriptures of the Messianic canon listed above. This, however, is debated and varies from congregation to congregation, or ministry to ministry--and perhaps even issue-to-issue.

Although there is much debate with regard to acceptance of the Babylonian Talmud, there does exist a small minority who adhere to the teachings of the Sages and oral teachings held in the Talmud and consider them authoritative. The main difference between them and mainstream Judaism remains the same with regard to the belief of Yeshua as the Messiah. These groups consider Yeshua's command of, "The Scribes and the Pharisees sit in the seat of Moses, all of which they command you to do, do, but do not do as they do." (Matt 23:2-3) to be a proclamation of Torah authority to the Pharisaic Jewish community. One of the great differences between them and most Messianics is their belief of non-separation from the Jewish community and the authority of the Rabbis. Although they hold the Apostolic teachings as authoritative, as do the Messianics, there remain many details in Jewish Law which violate oral tradition, as well as the written Torah. Because of this, there remains for them another line of division between them and mainstream Judaism.

Many Messianic congregations use traditional Jewish rabbinic commentaries to gain historical insight into biblical teachings and passages and to better comprehend the environment that the first-century New Testament writers would have been familiar with. These traditional Jewish oral teachings are called the Mishnah and Gemara.

Messianic commentaries on various books of the Bible, with the exception of a handful of commentaries written on the Torah and New Testament texts, such as Matthew, Acts, Romans, Galatians, and Hebrews, can be few and far between. David H. Stern has released a one-volume Jewish New Testament Commentary, but it overlooks many of the issues of composition, history, date and setting, and only provides select explanatory notes from a Messianic Jewish point of view. Other noted New Testament commentary authors include Joseph Shulam, who has written commentaries on Acts, Romans, and Galatians, Tim Hegg of TorahResource, who has written commentary on Romans, Galatians, Hebrews, and is presently examining Matthew, Daniel Thomas Lancaster, who has written extensively for the First Fruits of Zion Torah Club series, Stuart Sacks, author of Hebrews Through a Hebrews' Eyes and J.K. McKee of TNN Online who has written several volumes under the byline "for the Practical Messianic" (James, Hebrews, Philippians, Galatians, and both a Tanach and Apostolic Scriptures Survey).

[edit] Further Scriptural commentary

"Many Messianic Jewish believers consider rabbinic commentaries such as the Mishnah and the Talmud dangerous," says Joshua Isaac Walters "When we begin to study and observe Torah to become like Messiah, there are pitfalls we must avoid. One such pitfall is the study of Mishnah and Talmud - Rabbinic traditional Law. There are many people and congregations that place a great emphasis on rabbinic legal works, such as the Mishnah and the Talmud in search of their Hebrew roots. People are looking to the rabbis for answers on how to keep God’s commands, but if one looks into the Mishnah and does what it says, he or she is not a follower of the Messiah. Or, if one looks into the Talmud and does what it says, he or she is not a follower of the Messiah – he or she is a follower of the rabbis because Rabbi Yeshua, the Messiah, is not quoted there. Rabbinic Judaism is not Messianic Judaism. Rabbinic Judaism is not founded in Messiah. Rabbinic Judaism, for the most part, is founded in the yeast – the teachings of the Pharisees. Yeshua’s teachings and the discipleship that He brought His students through was not Rabbinic Judaism. There is a real danger in Rabbinics. There is a real danger in Mishnah and Talmud. No one involved in Rabbinics has ever come out on the other side more righteous than when he or she entered. He or she may look “holier than thou” – but they do not have the life changing experience clearly represented in the lives of the believers of the Messianic communities of the first century."

[edit] Halakhic commentary

While some in the Messianic movement, especially those who have come out of Protestant churches, have a sola scriptura approach to Torah, Tenakh, and the B'rit Chadashah (Scriptures), it is incorrect to assume that all Messianics share this rejection of oral Torah. There are those who look to the Talmud and rabbinical interpretations of Israel for guidance in a fuller expression of obedience to Torah. If Messianic Judaism is indeed a Judaism, it stands to reason that it shares community with all Jews in its acceptance of standards and interpretations. Messianics who honor halakhah point out that Deuteronomy 17 instructs not only obedience to Torah, but also to the Judges we go to for Torah interpretation, to "do everything they direct you to do. Act according to the law they teach you and the decisions they give you. Do not turn aside from what they tell you, to the right or to the left." Yeshua backs up the Torah teachers among the Pharisees in this authority in Matthew 23, "The teachers of the law and the Pharisees sit in Moses' seat. So you must obey them and do everything they tell you." [1]

In light of this, both the Jerusalem Council (a global Messianic halakhic body of volunteers), and the Messianic Jewish Rabbinical Council (affiliated with the Union of Messianic Jewish Congregations) have begun publishing halakha --a tremendous forward movement for Messianic Judaism.[2][3]

[edit] Core Doctrines

This section lists some of the main beliefs and doctrines present in Messianic Judaism

  • God - Messianics believe in the God of the Bible, and that he is all-powerful, omni-present, eternal, exists outside of creation, and infinitely significant and benevolent. Some Messianics are more open to trinitarian views of God[4] while others demand strict monotheism.[5]
  • Yeshua the Messiah - Yeshua of Nazareth, is considered the Jewish Messiah in Messianic Judaism. The mainstream movement accepts Yeshua as Yahweh in the flesh, and as the Torah made flesh as based on the Good News according to the emissaries (apostles). This view, is Messianic Halakah, that is doctrine, although some small offshoots exist outside the fringe of the movement which deny Yeshua's divinity. These however, are rejected by mainstream Messianic Jews in the same way Christians are in relation to smaller sects such as Jehovah's Witnesses.
  • Written Torah - Messianics, with few exceptions, consider the written Torah (Pentateuch), the five books of Moses, to remain fully in force and a holy covenant, to be observed both morally and ritually, by those profess faith in God. They believe that Yeshua taught and re-affirmed the Torah, rather than did away with it.
  • Israel - It is believed that the Children of Israel were, remain, and will continue to be the chosen people of the God of Jacob, and are central to his plans for existence. Virtually all Messianics (whether Jewish nor non-Jewish) can be said to oppose Replacement theology.
  • The Bible - The Tanakh and New Testament (sometimes called the B’rit Chadasha) are usually considered the established and divinely inspired Biblical scripture by Messianic Judaism. Messianics are much more open to criticism of the established canon of the New Testament, since there was not considered to be a standard canon until the Gentile Church established one in the 4th century, when many Jewish sects devoted to the teachings and Messiahship of Jesus were on the decline.
  • Eschatology - Most Messianics hold all of the following eschatological beliefs: the End of Days, the Second Coming of Jesus as the conquering Messiah, the re-gathering of Israel, a rebuilt Third Temple, a Resurrection of the Dead (and that Jesus was resurrected after his death), and the Millennial Sabbath.
  • Oral Law - Messianic Jewish opinions concerning the “Oral Torah”, encoded in the Talmud, are varied and sometimes conflicting between individual congregations. Some congregations are very selective in their applications of Talmudic law, or do so for the sake of continuity with tradition, while others encourage a serious observance of the Jewish Halakha. Virtually all Messianic congregations and synagogues can be said to believe that the oral traditions are subservient to the written Torah.

[edit] Additional doctrines

  • Sin and atonement - Messianics define sin as transgression of the Torah (Law/Instruction) of God (1 John 3: 4-5). Some adherents atone for their sins through prayer and repentance—that is, acknowledgment of the wrongdoing and seeking forgiveness for their sins (esp. on Yom Kippur, the Day of Atonement). Other Messianics disagree with these practices, believing that all sin (whether committed yet or not) is already atoned for because of Jesus's death and resurrection.
  • Faith and works - Messianics draw on Jewish rather than Protestant tradition. In Hebrew there is but one word for both faith and faithfulness: Emunah. Most adherents to Messianic Judaism believe in a showing of their faith through righteous works (Jacob 2: 17-26; James 2: 1-26), defined by the Torah. Few Messianics believe that faith and works are mutually exclusive or polarized; most believe that faith in God and righteous works are entirely complimentary of one another, and that one naturally leads to the other.

[edit] The People of God

Messianic Judaism has as a core teaching that Israel remains Israel and the Nations remain the Nations, Jews remain Jews and gentiles remain gentiles. Jews are those who are born of a Jewish mother or have undergone halakhic conversion to Judaism. An exception is also made for those born of Jewish fathers if and only if the individual claims Jewish identity, similar to the Reform position.[6]

The Jerusalem Council, a Messianic halakhic body, maintains that Israel is defined as a people group of members of the covenant God made with Abraham, Isaac, and Jacob; chosen by God from the nations, and includes their descendants."[7]

The "People of God" is a larger set which includes Israel, but also includes gentiles in the Christian Churches as well as Messianic gentiles. Thus, a rabbinical Jew is part of "Israel", a Baptist is part of Ekklesia and a Messianic Jew is both "Israel" and Ekklesia. Further, rabbinical Jew, Baptist, and Messianic Jew, aka both Israel and Ekklesia, are "People of God." Messianic Judaism sees itself as the "link," the point of the graft between Israel and Ekklesia.

The issue of the relationship of Israel to Ekklesia, especially in terms of Covenant, is highly important to Messianics. While Jews, whether they are Messianic or not, are considered within an irrevocable Covenant given at Mt. Sinai, gentiles are not. A Messianic Jew must keep Covenant. A Methodist need not. Those gentiles who have joined Messianic congregations take up Torah observance, some more than others, but do so voluntarily, either out of love for God or simply as part of being in the community. Jews and gentiles are seen as completely equal before God; they are seen as "one new man" in their belief in Yeshua. But this union is not a homogenization, but more analogous to the union of husband and wife in marriage, where differentiation is preserved even within unity.

Thus, Messianic Judaism does not require gentile conversion to Judaism, and in fact discourages it. However, the UMJC makes exceptions for those rare individuals who identify in a stronger way than simply to be "grafted on." The reasoning for this variance is as follows: While Titus may have been the norm in the epistles, a gentile not converted to Judaism, Paul nevertheless made an exception for Timothy, whom he circumcised and brought under the Covenant. (The statement of the Messianic Jewish Rabbinical Council regarding Conversion [5]) These converts to Judaism do not in any way have a higher status within Messianic Judaism than the gentiles attached to the communities.

A statement on circumcision is provided by the Jerusalem Council: "...although circumcision is not a requirement for positional right standing with HaShem, it is a requirement for those who are Abraham's seed, and who desire to "walk blameless."[8]

[edit] By Jewish law

The more mainstream Messianic congregations adhere to a strongly halakhic definition for God's people. In these groups, Gentiles are colleagues and are strongly encouraged, but not required, to keep the Torah.

[edit] Competing Similar Theologies

Within the Messianic world, new theologies have arisen, and old theologies have come to claim the title of "Messianic," theologies which are not always compatible with the main beliefs held by the original and larger groups. Leadership from MJAA and UMJC have joined together to fight against the claims of these competing theologies.

[edit] One Law Theology

One Law theology acknowledges the distinction between Ekklesia and Israel in principle, but in practicality the lines are blurred because gentile believers are considered to come under the Mosaic covenant, making observance obligatory. This theology actually has a long line of various sects that have popped in and out of history. One Law groups have many things in common with Messianic Judaism because of their belief in the ongoing validity of the Mosaic Covenant. Leaders of the Messianic community such as Dan Juster of MJAA and Rus Resnick of UMJC have joined together to argue against One Law theology's insistence on gentile observance. [9] Tim Hegg responded to their article defending what he believes to be the biblical teaching on the subject.[10]

[edit] Two House Theology

The Two House theology comes from the idea that the "House of Judah" in scripture refers to Jews, and the "House of Israel" refers to the Ten Lost Tribes of Israel or Ephraim. Where scripture says the House of Israel and Judah will again be "one branch", they believe it is referring to the idea that in the last days of the world, right before Yeshua returns, that all those descended from Israel will come back to Israel. This theology postulates that the reason why so many so called "Gentiles" are coming into Messianic Judaism is that the vast majority of them are really Hebrew and just don't know it yet. They believe that the vast majority of people who considered themselves as "Gentiles" coming into Messianic Judaism are those of the Lost Ten Tribes of Israel. Like One Law groups, the Two House appears at first glance to have much in common with Messianic Judaism because of their belief in the ongoing validity of the Mosaic Covenant. However, the idea of gentiles claiming to be Israel who are not halakhically Jewish is deeply offensive to many Messianic Jews. Mainstream organizations such as MJAA and UMJC have forbidden Two House teaching.[11]

[edit] Eschatology

Issues of creation and eschatology are not central to Messianic Judaism with the following exception: the idea that one age is ending, as the fullness of the gentiles has been reached, and the next age beginning, where we shall see the fullness of Israel. The wording is a reference to Romans 11,

"Again I ask: Did [the Jews] stumble so as to fall beyond recovery? Not at all! Rather, because of their transgression, salvation has come to the Gentiles to make Israel envious. But if their transgression means riches for the world, and their loss means riches for the Gentiles, how much greater riches will their fullness bring! ... For if their rejection is the reconciliation of the world, what will their acceptance be but life from the dead? ... I do not want you to be ignorant of this mystery, brothers, so that you may not be conceited: Israel has experienced a hardening in part until the full number of the Gentiles has come in. And so all Israel will be saved."

The "fullness of the gentiles" might be said to refer to the Great Commission, which is complete. The rebirth of the nation of Israel, the re-establishment of Jerusalem as its capital, the return if Jews from Russia, "the nation to the north," and the return of Jews worldwide to greater observance are all seen as signs of the beginning of the age of Israel. Messianics believe that when the fullness of Israel is reached, the Messiah will return and the world will see the resurrection of the dead.[12]

The majority of Messianics believe in a literal 7,000 year period for the human history of the world, from Adam to the Judgment, and believe that we are the final generation that will experience the Biblical apocalypse.[citation needed] A small, yet steadily growing sector of Messianics, have adopted forms of Old Earth Creationism which while denying the theory of evolution does discount a 6,000-7,000 year old earth, or in Theistic Evolution, the belief that God created using evolution, or similarly, that evolution occurred but that natural selection is an insufficient explanation for all of it, the hand of the Creator being evident.

Most Messianics[citation needed] believe that the Messianic Kingdom, or Millennial Sabbath, will literally be for a period of a thousand years, after the collective resurrection of the dead, with Jesus the Messiah ruling from Jerusalem. Many believe that we are living in the final days, or “End Times”, before the physical return of Jesus to Jerusalem.

Messianics also contend that no serious study of the End Times should ever leave out the significance of God's appointed times--the major Jewish Festivals in the Torah--and their fulfillment as prophetic events as it relates to the person of Jesus and to Israel. Many Messianics believe that just as the Spring Festivals (Passover, First Fruits, Shavuot) were literally fulfilled to the day at Jesus's first coming, the Fall Festivals (Yom Teruah, Yom Kippur, Sukkot) will be literally fulfilled to the day at Jesus's second coming, and that all of the moedim, indeed the entire Torah, intrinsically hint at the Messiah.

[edit] Overview of the Issues

Traditional Christianity affirms that the Torah is the word of God, though some Christians deny that all of the laws of the Pentateuch apply directly to themselves as Christians. The New Testament suggests that Yeshua established a new covenant relationship between God and his people (Heb 8; Jer 31:31–34) and this new covenant speaks of the Torah being written upon the heart. Various passages such as Matthew 5:17-19, Matthew 28:19-20, 1 John 3:4 and Romans 3:3, as well as various examples of Torah observance in the New Testament, are cited by Messianics in suggesting that the Torah was not and could not have been abolished.

Many Messianics believe that it is absurd to assume that any of the 613 Mitzvot would be abolished simply because certain commandments are or are not repeated or reaffirmed individually in the New Testament, proclaiming the belief that such was never the job of the Apostles in the first place, and that the Torah has always been immutable. Messianics sometimes challenge Christians by arguing that if they believe Jesus is the Messiah, then according to the Torah itself Yeshua could not have changed the Torah.

As with Orthodox Judaism, capital punishment and animal sacrifice are not practiced because there are strict Biblical conditions on how these are to be practiced, requiring a functioning Temple in Jerusalem with its Levite priesthood. When the power of capital punishment is available, often its exercise is only after exhausting loopholes in Torah which are used to set a suspect free. According to the Talmud, capital punishment in Jewish law always had to lean on merciful alternatives to execution and make every effort not to give the strictest punishment within the confines of the Torah: "A Sanhedrin which kills once in seven years is considered murderous. Rabbi Elazar ben Azariah said: once in seventy years. Rabbi Akiva and Rabbi Tarfon said: if we had been in the Sanhedrin, no one would have ever been killed." (Mishnah Makot 1:10).

Most Messianics believe that observance of the Torah brings about sanctification, not salvation, which was to be produced only by the Messiah.[13]

Like so many other elements of Messianic Judaism, the issue of Torah observance varies widely across the movement. The following subsections attempt to explain the differing opinions about Torah observance within Messianic Judaism as a whole.

[edit] See also

[edit] References

  1. ^ Mission, Vision, & Purpose of the Jerusalem Council. JerusalemCouncil.org. JerusalemCouncil.org (2007). Retrieved on 2007-08-23. “Our vision also includes the hope of re-appointing a beit din for Messianic believers worldwide, to be called the Jerusalem Council, or Beit HaDin HaYerushalmi, modeled after the original, and submitted to the new Jewish Sanhedrin in issues that do not contradict obedient faith to Messiah Yeshua or his teachings; to provide guidance in issues that may conflict with the Sanhedrin, or in issues that contradict the primacy of the written Word of God, or in issues which may divide the Body of Messiah; to promote the unity of the Body of Messiah worldwide by Spirit-led direction through means of accountability, open dialogue, reasoned doctrine, and sound leadership; and to provide corporate and individual edification by providing apologetic, midrashic, and halakhic guidance for the Body of Messiah.”
  2. ^ The Jerusalem Council - Who Are We?. JerusalemCouncil.org. The Jerusalem Council (2008). Retrieved on 2008-04-02. “We are rabbis, pastors, teachers, students, lay people, and believers in Messiah Yeshua who desire to see the development of a central location with which to discuss Messianic halakha, and take on the challenges that divide our various communities.”
  3. ^ Messianic Jewish Rabbinical Council Standards of Observance. ourrabbis.og. Messianic Jewish Rabbinical Council (2007). Retrieved on 2007-08-23. “At that time a set of Messianic Jewish leaders from New England invited some of their colleagues from outside the region to join them in working on a common set of halakhic standards for themselves and their congregations. While other areas of Messianic Jewish life are of profound importance, such as worship, ethics, education, and social concern, we believed that halakhic standards had received far less attention than their place in Messianic Jewish life warranted.”
  4. ^ Pro-trinitarian Messianic statement of faith.
  5. ^ Article denouncing trinitarian views.
  6. ^ The statement of the Messianic Jewish Rabbinical Council on Jewish identity may be found HERE: [1]
  7. ^ Halakha Shel HaDerech - Messianic Halakha 2.0 Conversion - 2.1 Identity - 2.1.1 Am Israel. JerusalemCouncil.org. JerusalemCouncil.org (2008). Retrieved on 2008-4-2. “The people of Israel are members of the covenant HaShem made with Avraham, Yitzhak, and Ya'akov. Covenant membership is extended to converts to Judaism from the nations, as well as to the descendants of covenant members. Israel is a nation of nations and their descendants, or more specifically a people group called out from other people groups to be a people separated unto HaShem for his purposes. HaShem's promise of covenantal blessings and curses as described in the Torah are unique to Am Yisrael (People of Israel), and to no other nation or people group. The bible describes an Israelite as one descended from Ya'akov ben Yitzhak ben Avraham, or one who has been converted or adopted into that group by either human or spiritual means (Ex 1:1-7, Ex 12:38, Ex 12:48).
  8. ^ Halakha Shel HaDerech - Messianic Halakha 2.0 Conversion - 2.2 Milah - 2.2.2 Definition of Necessity for Behavioral Righteousness. JerusalemCouncil.org. JerusalemCouncil.org (2008). Retrieved on 2008-4-2. “Not addressed by the first Jerusalem Council, is the necessity of believers from the nations to fulfill the scriptural commandment of circumcision from a behavioral righteousness standpoint. The commandment is clear: "This is my covenant with you and your descendants after you, the covenant you are to keep: Every male among you shall be circumcised." (Gen 17:10). Believers are reckoned as Abraham's seed: "If you belong to Christ, then you are Abraham's seed, and heirs according to the promise." (Gal 3:29). So then, although circumcision is not a requirement for positional right standing with HaShem, it is a requirement for those who are Abraham's seed, and who desire to "walk blameless." (Gen 17:1).
  9. ^ (One Law Movements; a Challenge to the Messianic Jewish Community[2] January 28, 2005)
  10. ^ One Law Movements A Response to Russ Resnik & Daniel Juster
  11. ^ (MJAA position paper: The Ephraimite Error[3])
  12. ^ (Rabbenu -- A New Paradigm For Messianic Jewish Outreach: Catching Up With the Future [4] May 28, 2006)
  13. ^ Lancaster and Berkowitz (see below)
  • Ariel, Yaakov, Evangelizing the Chosen People: Mission to the Jews in America, 1880-2000. Chapel Hill: Univ. of North Carolina Press, 2000.
  • Cohn-Sherbok, Dan (ed.), Voices of Messianic Judaism: Confronting Critical Issues Facing a Maturing Movement, Baltimore, MO: Lederer Books, 2001.
  • Cohn-Sherbok, Dan. Messianic Judaism. London: Cassell, 2000.
  • Harvey, Richard, Mapping Messianic Jewish Theology. Lulu.com.
  • Juster, Dan, Jewish Roots: A Foundation of Biblical Theology for Messianic Judaism, Rockville, MD: Davar Publishing, 1986, 1992.
  • Kinzer, Mark, Postmissionary Messianic Judaism: Redefining Christian Engagement with the Jewish People (Grand Rapids: Brazos, 2005)

Publications, 1991.

  • Robinson, Richard, The Messianic Movement: A Fieldguide for Evangelical Christians, San Francisco, Purple Pomegranate Productions: 2006.
  • Stern, David H. Messianic Jewish Manifesto. Clarksville Maryland: Jewish New Testament