meltzerboy
New member
I was reading about Nazarene Judaism the other day and found that such Jews believe that Jesus was the Messiah ben Joseph but not the Messiah ben David. This is in keeping with some in the Jewish community who believe there will be two Messiahs, the first (Messiah ben Joseph) a political or military leader, who dies while atoning for sins, and the second (Messiah ben David), who ushers in the Messianic era by fulfilling the prophecies. However, neither Messiah is believed to be of divine origin, but rather more of a Tzadik or holy person. (There is some debate as well, according to Torah Judaism, whether the two Messiahs must be two different people and also whether they must succeed each other in this particular order.) I suppose Christianity developed the concept of the Second Coming of Jesus from this Jewish idea.
One of the problems with the belief of Nazarene Jews is that Jesus was not really a political or military leader. Apart from this, however, Nazarene Jews concur with Torah Judaism that the Messiah is not meant to be G-d and they do not believe in the Trinitarian G-d either. What I find particularly fascinating about their belief is that Jesus was a veritable Torah scholar, true to His word in saying He came not to abolish the Torah Law, neither detract from it nor add to it. They point out that Jesus’ criticism of the false Pharisees (which did not include them all), and even more so the heretic Sadducees, was not based on their adherence to the Law in a strict, literal interpretation, but rather their non-adherence to the Law. IOW, they did not go far enough in maintaining the commandments of both the Written Torah and the Oral Torah (which was later transcribed into the Talmud), mainly because they were ignorant of what the Law was really telling them to do. Jesus’ teaching was in fact based on the true Pharasaic school of Rabbi Hillel the Elder, who not only understood the essence of the Torah (Love G-d, Love thy neighbor, even Love thine enemy) but had a better understanding than most regarding the details of the Law. For example, when Jesus said to the false Pharisees that it was all right to carry belongings on the Sabbath, He was not breaking the Law, because there were already provisions in the Oral Torah for doing so provided the community was fenced off. Likewise, Jesus understood that the Torah placed human life above the prohibition to work on the Sabbath despite the false Pharisees’ accusation that he was defiling the Sabbath.
I would be very interested in your reactions to and further information on this Jewish movement, Nazarene Judaism, realizing it does not fit into Christianity’s belief regarding the divinity of Jesus, nor His death and resurrection, nor the Trinity. And also, what are Jews’ reactions to accepting Jesus as the non-divine Messiah, but not the final Redeemer of Israel, based on the two-Messiah theory? All are welcome to participate in the discussion.
One of the problems with the belief of Nazarene Jews is that Jesus was not really a political or military leader. Apart from this, however, Nazarene Jews concur with Torah Judaism that the Messiah is not meant to be G-d and they do not believe in the Trinitarian G-d either. What I find particularly fascinating about their belief is that Jesus was a veritable Torah scholar, true to His word in saying He came not to abolish the Torah Law, neither detract from it nor add to it. They point out that Jesus’ criticism of the false Pharisees (which did not include them all), and even more so the heretic Sadducees, was not based on their adherence to the Law in a strict, literal interpretation, but rather their non-adherence to the Law. IOW, they did not go far enough in maintaining the commandments of both the Written Torah and the Oral Torah (which was later transcribed into the Talmud), mainly because they were ignorant of what the Law was really telling them to do. Jesus’ teaching was in fact based on the true Pharasaic school of Rabbi Hillel the Elder, who not only understood the essence of the Torah (Love G-d, Love thy neighbor, even Love thine enemy) but had a better understanding than most regarding the details of the Law. For example, when Jesus said to the false Pharisees that it was all right to carry belongings on the Sabbath, He was not breaking the Law, because there were already provisions in the Oral Torah for doing so provided the community was fenced off. Likewise, Jesus understood that the Torah placed human life above the prohibition to work on the Sabbath despite the false Pharisees’ accusation that he was defiling the Sabbath.
I would be very interested in your reactions to and further information on this Jewish movement, Nazarene Judaism, realizing it does not fit into Christianity’s belief regarding the divinity of Jesus, nor His death and resurrection, nor the Trinity. And also, what are Jews’ reactions to accepting Jesus as the non-divine Messiah, but not the final Redeemer of Israel, based on the two-Messiah theory? All are welcome to participate in the discussion.