Yes–I made that very clear that it was only ONE individual’s interpretation. I never said or implied it was a universal view. I did it to illustrate that it’s NOT an issue of “self-identification,” as you say you understand, by showing a
contrasting view with the USCCB official view.
You did compare them, right? (Tell me you just didn’t read one and not the other.) That was the point. To see how different Catholicism is from what an individual Messianic Jew can believe about Catholicism.
And it is not about “self-identification” because I don’t
qualify as a Messianic Jew. That’s the name of a group, a denomination, a religion as separate as Baptists are from Methodists–both made up of people who believe in Jesus, but still not the same groups.
While I am sure you got it by now, I just want to make this very clear:
- Some Jews believe that Rabbi Menachem Mendel Schneerson was the Messiah. They are not “Messianic Jews,” because the “Messianic Jews” are a Christian denomination. A person has to accept Jesus of Nazareth as the Messiah to be a “Messianic Jew.” So if you’re a Jew, but have a different concept of the Messiah (or practice a different form of Christianity that differs from the Messianic Jewish movement) you aren’t automatically a “Messianic Jew.” Believers in Rabbi Schneerson may be messianic and Jewish, but they are not “Messianic Jews.” Get it?
- I cannot call myself a Messianic Jew because I recognize the leadership of the Bishop of Rome, the Pope, and the Magisterium. In contrast, Messianic Jews believe in Sola Scriptura and the Bible as the ultimate authority. The two theologies are incompatible.
- I have to adopt the type of Christianity of Messianic Jews to be a “Messianic Jew.” And that would entail me leaving the Church and rejecting my convictions in the Roman Catholic faith. My family has been in the Church for 2000 years, through thick and thin. I am not about to leave the Church of my family and reject its creed to join the Messianic Jewish movement.
The reason for citing the blog was to show that the particular movement of the “Messianic Jews” is okay with its members having such views of Catholicism (even if its a rare view). I’m a Jew who is a Catholic because the Christian group that my family joined in the 1st century became what we know today as the Roman Catholic Church. It’s not about “self-identification,” it’s about not being a member of that particular denominational movement that is known by that name; Messianic Jews.