Why dont Jews....

  • Thread starter Thread starter Karin
  • Start date Start date
Status
Not open for further replies.
Let’s not kid ourselves. Like Ivory soap 99 44/99% of Jews don’t believe Jesus was the Messiah. Messainic Jews who claim to be Jewish and believe otherwise, are for the most part, Christians. (i.e., they weren’t born from Jewish mothers and they didn’t go through the conversion process).

I think this question was answered on another thread. But…

there’s a threshold question that needs to be asked before that question can be answered. And that is, what is the Messiah to Jews and what is teh Messiah to Christians. They are two very different people. It isn’t simply a matter of “we’re waiting for him to show up for the first time and you’re waiting for him to return.”

The Jewish Messiah is not going to be divine. There’s nothing in our belief system that says the Messiah will be God in the flesh or that he will have any other extraordinary divine powers.

He will be a man, with a biological link to the House of David (through the mother).

He will usher in an era of world peace

He will rebuild the Temple (or oversee the rebuilding of the Temple or the Temple will be rebuilt during his time).

He will preside over the return of all the jews to Israel.

All the world will worship the One True God. All nations will recognize God.
Valke,

Here’s a link you might be interested in reading. It’s a dialogue that occurred on an internet bulletin board about 5 years ago between Catholic apologist Dave Armstrong and an Orthodox Jew who posted under the name “Ari G” about Isaiah 53:

web.archive.org/web/20030806105803/http://ic.net/~erasmus/RAZ186.HTM

Pax Tecum,
Jay
 
.
As my Grandmother once said, a Jewish Christian is one Jew worshipping another Jew 🙂
 
it’s the stain or as you put it, the inclination to sin–the imperfection of the human condition due to the fall of Adam and Eve, that we inherit.
Jews believe the evil inclination has it uses. That it can be used to drive one to create, be successful in business, etc. It is what we do with it that is important. The inclination itself does not, I think, make us imperfect.
What I meant is that unless we are fundamentally changed from the inside out, not merely shown how to live peacefully (isn’t that what Moses and the prophets all tried to do?), we will once again make a mess of the world.
. Ok, but Jews don’t believe (generally) that the Messiah will transform us from the inside out. That’s our job. This is why I originally posted that the Messiah in Judaism is very different than the Messiah in Christianity.
 
Regarding transformation, we may not be too far apart. By following God’s commandments and walking in His way, we transform both how the world ocurrs to us and the world itself. For us, it is the worshipping of Hashem through the structure of Judaism that transforms us from the inside. For you, it is the worshipping of God through the Christian structure that transforms you. Through Jesus.

Different paths, same destination.
 
With due respect, I think this presumes a greater degree of unity and cohesion with Second Temple Judaism than most scholars would admit. As I’ve pointed out before, the Talmud (at least in the sense of the Gemara) wasn’t compiled till centuries later, and even the Mishnaic core is dated to about 100 C.E., if I’m not mistaken. In other words, the key documents of “rabbinic Judaism” are post-Christian, not pre-Christian.

Edwin
And as I’ve pointed out before, the Mishna was very much a part of 1st century Judaism. That it wasn’t written down at the time doesn’t mean it was not an integral part of our religion. If you look at the laws Jesus “changed”, they are almost all exclusively those that would have been set forth in the Mishna. While the key “rabbinic” documents may be post Christian, the key rabbinc teachings were not. Your allegation that the Mishnaic core is dated 100 CE is pure specualtion and goes against all Jewish tradition.
 
I understand why Jews confuse “Jews for Jesus” and Messianic Jews, but these are for the most part two different groups. “Jews for Jesus” if I’m not mistaken are basically garden-variety evangelicals who want to convert Jews to Christianity. Messianic Jews often claim not to be Christians at all, and contrary to what Jews (understandably) think, this is not some kind of Christian sales gimmick. They are genuinely hostile to the historic tradition of [Gentile] Christianity, and are essentially trying to recover the lost tradition of Jewish Christianity from the earliest centuries of the common era.

Just a note. I really appreciate your fair-mindedness on what I know is a very sensitive issue for Jews.

Edwin
But the reality is that majority of “Messianic Jews” believe Jesus was/is God and they are largely not jewish to begin with. And even if were born Jewish, they adopt a belief system that is not compatiable with Judaism.

Technically, if a Messanic Jew believed that Jesus was the Messiah, in a Jewish sense, their beliefs would still be within the tradtion of Judaism. One of our greatest sages mistakenly believed Bar Koba (a contemporary of Jesus) was the messiah. To believe someone is the Messiah, even if you are wrong, doesn’t mean you are not practicing Judaism. But I’ve never had a messanic Jew, (and I have spoken with dozens of them online) ever talk about Jesus for more than a few minutes before they admit they believe he was the Son of God. And that belief is opposed to a central belief in Judaism.
 
OK here is another ignorant question…
why is this topic so sensitive to jews?
well, there’s only 15 million of us, give or take. And Judaism is a communal religion. So abandoning Judiasm is seen as harmful to the community. Especially if done so in a public way which may lead other jews to stray.
 
Valke,

Here’s a link you might be interested in reading. It’s a dialogue that occurred on an internet bulletin board about 5 years ago between Catholic apologist Dave Armstrong and an Orthodox Jew who posted under the name “Ari G” about Isaiah 53:

web.archive.org/web/20030806105803/http://ic.net/~erasmus/RAZ186.HTM

Pax Tecum,
Jay
Thanks. I’ll take a look at it. I’ve had a lot of debates over Isaiah 53, as it is a favorite of evangelicals on the warpath. I can probably write out the debate between the two and come pretty close to what they said :). I’ll say this much for Isaiah 53. I’ve seen a lot of people arguing over it. But I’ve never seen one person convince the other that they were right :).
 
Valke,
Thank you once again for your immensely informative contributions! I love these topics. Learning more of Judaism not only deepens my understanding of Jews, but also my understanding of my Christian faith. You said:
there’s a threshold question that needs to be asked before that question can be answered. And that is, what is the Messiah to Jews and what is teh Messiah to Christians. They are two very different people. It isn’t simply a matter of “we’re waiting for him to show up for the first time and you’re waiting for him to return.”
Since there were no Christians when Jesus walked the earth, the only understanding of Messiah would have been Jewish. So how did the ones who followed get it wrong?
 
Valke,
Thank you once again for your immensely informative contributions! I love these topics. Learning more of Judaism not only deepens my understanding of Jews, but also my understanding of my Christian faith. You said:

Since there were no Christians when Jesus walked the earth, the only understanding of Messiah would have been Jewish. So how did the ones who followed get it wrong?
I don’t think it is a question of getting it wrong. I think it is just that the term means two very different things to the two religions. In the Jewish religion, there was no prophecies (from our perspective) that dealt with the Messiah being Divine. Christians, after experiencing or learning about Jesus, looked at the scriptures from their Christian perspective and found different meanings in the scripture in order to support their new theology. That’s my opinion.
 
Christians, after experiencing or learning about Jesus, looked at the scriptures from their Christian perspective and found different meanings in the scripture in order to support their new theology. That’s my opinion.
Someone like John the Baptist, whose experience of Jesus was very limited, recognized Him as the Messiah immediately. The very first apostles who followed Him before His public mission had really begun were compelled to follow because they suspected He was the one whose coming had been foretold. What do you think these suspicions were based upon if there is nothing in the OT to suggest Jesus could have been the one?
 
Someone like John the Baptist, whose experience of Jesus was very limited, recognized Him as the Messiah immediately. The very first apostles who followed Him before His public mission had really begun were compelled to follow because they suspected He was the one whose coming had been foretold. What do you think these suspicions were based upon if there is nothing in the OT to suggest Jesus could have been the one?
I don’t know a lot about John the Baptist. Does John ever say that Jesus is the Divine, or does he just say he was the Messiah. It certainly would have been easier, from a Jewish point of view, to believe Jesus was the messiah while he was still alive, and could potentially fullfill the conditions of Messiah, than after the crucifixtion. Many Jews followed many false/failed messiahs, especially during times when jews were receiving the short end of the stick. I’m also not disputing that his apostles believed he was a Divine being. But a few individuals believing one thing is not evidence that Jews held a belief that the Messiah would be a Divine being. It’s true that such a belief became more common among Jews a few hundred years later, especially those living in the disapora. But that’s a result of Christian influence, not Jewish teaching.
 
I don’t know a lot about John the Baptist. Does John ever say that Jesus is the Divine, or does he just say he was the Messiah. It certainly would have been easier, from a Jewish point of view, to believe Jesus was the messiah while he was still alive, and could potentially fullfill the conditions of Messiah, than after the crucifixtion. Many Jews followed many false/failed messiahs, especially during times when jews were receiving the short end of the stick. I’m also not disputing that his apostles believed he was a Divine being. But a few individuals believing one thing is not evidence that Jews held a belief that the Messiah would be a Divine being. It’s true that such a belief became more common among Jews a few hundred years later, especially those living in the disapora. But that’s a result of Christian influence, not Jewish teaching.
Couldnt jewish teaching on what the Messiah is be wrong?
Also how do Jews follow false messiahs? Dont they know what they are looking for in the messiah?
 
. I’ve seen a lot of people arguing over it. But I’ve never seen one person convince the other that they were right :).
🙂 Sounds like pretty much any topic doesn’t it? Do you think we’ll ever see the day when two theologians (or any two people debating for that matter) ever reach a point in thier debate where one says to the other, “you are correct, I agree, let’s go home now”.
 
Couldnt jewish teaching on what the Messiah is be wrong?
Also how do Jews follow false messiahs? Dont they know what they are looking for in the messiah?
I don’t know. Couldn’t christian understanding of Jesus be incorrect? :).

They know what they’re looking for in a Messiah. Bar Kokhba, for example, led what at the time looked like a successful rebellion against Rome. One of the things Jews looked for in a Messiah. Some, including Akiba, figured the was the one and put their money on him, much to their eventual grief. It turned out he didn’t do what the Messiah was to do. But at the time, it looked like he would do what the Messiah was supposed to do.
 
🙂 Sounds like pretty much any topic doesn’t it? Do you think we’ll ever see the day when two theologians (or any two people debating for that matter) ever reach a point in thier debate where one says to the other, “you are correct, I agree, let’s go home now”.
I don’t know. But if its the Jewish theologian who concedes, he or she will probalby say “…you’re correct, I agree, let’s eat.” 🙂
 
They know what they’re looking for in a Messiah. Bar Kokhba, for example, led what at the time looked like a successful rebellion against Rome. One of the things Jews looked for in a Messiah. Some, including Akiba, figured the was the one and put their money on him, much to their eventual grief. It turned out he didn’t do what the Messiah was to do. But at the time, it looked like he would do what the Messiah was supposed to do.
Interesting…
 
Status
Not open for further replies.
Back
Top