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Showing posts with label messianic. Show all posts
Showing posts with label messianic. Show all posts

Officiating a Messianic wedding

Summary: Officiating a Messianic wedding? Here are the words I used. Thoughts on becoming a minister in the US.  Plus, Messianic wedding music.

I officiated my first wedding the other week. The couple attend my congregation and asked me to officiate the wedding. It was a real honor to do so and join two Messianic believers together in marriage.

Photo from the wedding I officiated

Seeing as how I’ve never officiated a wedding before, I had little idea what to say. I did a bit of research and found some traditional words spoken at Jewish and Christian weddings. Things like Ruth’s vow, the Shehekianu, etc. But I also wanted to add my own words as well. (I’ve been married for 11 years, after all! I have some wisdom to contribute. Smile)

What I put together for the wedding may be useful to you, fine Kineti reader / Google searcher. Smile

Below is my Messianic Wedding Officiating template. Feel free to use it as-is, or tweak for your liking.


Dearly beloved and honored guests, friends, family, and disciples of the Messiah, we are gathered together today to join ___ and ___ in the holy covenant of marriage.

Marriage is a divine institution that God ordained in the beginning. He says in the opening chapters of the Scripture, “It is not good for man to be alone.”

So as ___ and ___ join in marriage today, they are in fact fulfilling a mitzvah, a commandment of God, by joining together as God intended.

Marriage itself is woven throughout the Scriptures. In the Hebrew Bible, God relates to his people using marriage terminology, saying in the prophets, “I am a faithful husband to my people Israel.”

And likewise in the gospels, Yeshua the Messiah is likened to a bridegroom coming for his people: we who are to be the wise, patient and faithful bride of the Lord.

Messiah himself amplified and strengthened marriage: when the religious authorities of the 1st century permitted divorce for almost any reason, Messiah rebuked them and called for husband and wife to remain as one barring only extreme circumstances.

Marriage is not something to be entered into lightly or flippantly. The Scriptures present to us a high calling of marriage, one in which the bride is prepared with purity, clothed in righteous deeds, a lesson of kindness on her tongue, having eyes only to please her groom.

Likewise, the groom comes to the bride willing to sacrifice his own life for her, and forsaking all others in order to love and serve his wife alone.

When husband and wife are in mutual submission to one another, a peaceful and holy environment for raising Godly children is created. And in doing so, the couple fulfill the mitzvah to be fruitful and multiply.

Marriage is accomplished by three unions: a union of the heart, of the mind, and of the flesh.

In the union of the heart, the husband and wife share the same desires and work towards the same life goals for their marriage and their family. Instead of individuals traveling in separate trajectories, the hearts of a husband and wife work together and encourage one another in their unified direction. Together they are stronger than they were as individuals, their goals and desires of their heart now closer and more attainable as each spurs on the other.

In the union of the mind, husband and wife are no longer dueling intellects with disparate and diverging views. Instead, the minds of husband and wife in a God-ordained marriage converge, complementing the other’s understanding and wisdom, each filling in for the other’s weaknesses. The two minds of husband and wife become a unified, complementary intellect, making whole and complete both husband and wife, to the glory of God the Father.

In the union of the flesh, husband and wife are no longer distinct individuals to be addressed alone. When the husband is blessed, so is the wife. When the wife is blessed, so is the husband. When a person speaks to the husband, he is speaking also to the wife. When a person speaks to the wife, he is also speaking to the husband. As a unified front standing together, being bound together by their joining today, ___ and ___ no longer belong to themselves alone, but each to the other.

With this knowledge, as set-apart children of God and adopted son and daughter of Israel, ___ and ___ come now to be wedded as one before the Holy One, blessed be He."

This day, ___ and ___ both take up and commit to the ancient Biblical covenant:

___ and ___ repeat after me:

“Ani l’dodi
V’dodi li”

“I am my beloved’s,
and my beloved is mine.”

Therefore, let no man come between these two, as God has called ___and ___ to join together this day, and to remain as one until the last day of their lives.

Today, ___ (groom) confirms the words of Ruth, as he says to his bride,

“Wherever you go, I will go
Wherever you stay, I will stay.”

Today, also, ___ (bride) confirms these words and says to her groom,

“Your people will be my people
And your God will be my God.”

For this reason, a man shall leave his parents and cling to his wife, and the two shall become one flesh.

___ (groom full name), I pray this blessing from the Scriptures upon you as you join yourself to your bride this day:

“Blessed are you, ___ (groom full name), man who fears the Lord
Blessed are you, ___ (groom full name), who walks in the ways of the Lord
May you eat the fruit of your labor
May you be joyful and prosperous
May your bride be as a fruitful vine in your house
May your children be as olive plants around your table
May the Lord bless you from Zion
May you see the good of Jerusalem all the days of your life
May you live to see the return of Israel’s king
May you live to see your children’s children
And may you live to see God’s shalom upon Yisrael.”

___ (bride full name), I pray this blessing from the Scriptures upon you as you join yourself to your groom this day:

“Blessed are you, ___  (bride full name), woman of valor
Blessed are you, woman who fears the Lord
Your value is beyond pearls
May your husband’s heart trust in you
May you prove to be your husband’s greatest treasure
May you bring good, and not harm, to your husband and your home
May the Lord bless the work of your hands
You will be like a merchant ship, bringing sustenance from afar
You will extend your hands to the needy
And you will open your arms to the poor
You will rise while it is still nighttime and provide food for your house
Strength and dignity will be your clothing
You will neither worry nor fear, but you will laugh at the days to come
You will open your mouth and speak wisdom
You will be known for your kindness and gentle spirit
Charm and beauty are temporary
But you, ___, woman who fears the Lord, will be praised.”

Amein.

Baruch atah Adonai eloheinu melech haolam
Shehekianu v’qimanu v’higianu lazman hazeh

Blessed are you, Lord our God, King of the Universe
Who has kept ___ and ___ in life
Sustaining them both, and preserving them until this special time

Amein.

Do you, ___ (groom full name), take this woman of God, ___ (bride full name), to be your lawfully wedded wife, to live with her in obedience to the Most High and trust in the Messiah?

[Groom says, ‘I do’]

"Do you, ___ (bride full name), take this man of God, ___ (groom full name), to be your lawfully wedded husband, to live with him in obedience to the Most High and trust in the Messiah?"

[Bride says, ‘I do’]

___ and ___ , what further vows and tokens do you bring to seal this union today?

[Exchange of vows and rings]

These solemn vows and rings are given as seals and outward signs of the covenant of marriage and as a public acknowledgment of the holy union between this man and woman.

In accordance with the Torah of Moses and the covenants of Israel, by the power of the Ruach HaKodesh, in the authority of the Master, Yeshua the Messiah, King of Israel, recognizing the authority of the Holy One alone in ordaining marriage, I declare this union sealed in the name of the Messiah, and now pronounce you, ___ and ___ , as husband and wife.

___ , you may now kiss your bride!

[kiss]

Ladies and gentlemen, I give to you Mr. and Mrs. ___


There you have it, folks! These were the words I used in officiating a marriage of two Messianic believers. I hope it is useful to some of you.

Who’s a minister? Everyone! And no one.

As a side note, becoming an official minister in the eyes of the United States government is, shall we say, a low bar?

While I actually am a minister in the real sense of the word – I help run Tabernacle of David Messianic congregation – I didn’t have to prove that I was a minister in any real capacity. The state government didn’t care whether I was actually a minister. It seems almost anyone can be a minister in the eyes of the US government, given a page or two of paperwork and $20 at the county courthouse.

In my opinion, that cheapens marriage and lessens the sanctity of the role for those who do minister and perform weddings.

Even so, I recognize the authority of God alone in ordaining marriage. The local government is a mere formality along the way.

Messianic wedding music for the reception

At the wedding reception, I played some Messianic songs appropriate for a wedding. Live music is always best, IMO. Then you can lift the groom on a chair and parade him around the room to Hava Nagila! (We did this and had a real joyful time.)

But, if you need some background Messianic music fitting for a wedding, see my previous post 14 Messianic Wedding Songs. Some beautiful, some joyful, all fitting for a Messianic wedding.

Oh my God! Ridiculous Messianic theologies about God’s name

image

I am Messianic Music in the above tweets, the twitter account for Chavah Messianic Radio.

Listener Iyke BenGurion asked me to censor music that contains circumlocutions of God’s name (e.g. HaShem, the LORD, Adonai, etc.) , instead suggesting I should play only the music that uses God’s proper Hebrew name, יהוה.

Say “Lord”, and you commit a great sin.

“HaShem, open my lips” and I’m an evil religionist in spiritual bondage.

Nevermind that the Scriptures actually do use titles and circumlocutions for God’s name; to our friend Iyke, saying “Adonai” during worship is preventing people from entering God’s presence.

ಠ_ಠ

Silly? You bet.

That’s not the half of it: a week after Iyke’s religious masturbation, 2 Messianic Jewish listeners asked me to do the inverse: to censor music that uses God’s proper name in worship.

One Messianic listener, who happens to be a rabbi of a leading Messianic Jewish organization, asked me:

B"H, Shalom!

I just wanted to let you know how much I have appreciated Chavah Messianic Radio…Although I do have one concern…Because no one knows for sure what the name is, and because it is such a big area of contention in the Messianic community...my recommendation would be to remove any songs that use any version of what someone considers to be the personal sacred name of God.

This Messianic Jewish rabbi is asking me to censor people who are worshiping God. Why? Because during worship, they use God’s proper name.

Say “Yah”, and you’re committing a great offense.

“Bless Yahweh”, and you’ve might as well spit on the altar.

Nevermind that the Scriptures actually do use God’s proper name in worship (e.g. halleluyah): if you use “Yah” in worshiping God, you’re creating an offense and stumbling block.

Let me just step back and say,

Have you lost your collective minds? ARE YOU RELIGIOUS PEOPLE REALLY THAT OBTUSE?

What’s more important, offending personal convictions or worshiping God?

I once had a visitor to my Hebrew Roots congregation leave the service as I was worshiping God with music. His reason? I used the term “Lord” in one of the songs.

It leaves me speechless that religious people can be so stupid and petty. They mean well, and the Messianic Jewish rabbi was particularly eloquent in his position. But – step back: we’re arguing about whether or not to utter a name, and suggesting we censor people who disagree about it.

Messianic Jewish and Hebrew Roots folks: THIS IS RELIGIOUS STUPIDITY.

It’s no more enlightened than Christians arguing whether communion oyster crackers are really Christ’s body or just representative. Or creationists arguing about whether God sang the universe into existence, or just in vocalized tones.

Yes, these are real ridiculous religious positions that God’s people waste their breath on.

I realize you think it’s important. It’s your personal conviction you’ve arrived at after many years of study and serving the Lord. For Messianic Judaism folks, you want to fit in with the greater Jewish world and respect God’s name. For Hebrew Roots folks, you find beauty and meaning in using God’s name in worship.

But step back and realize the microscopic issue that it is. Censoring people that use – or don’t use – the name is controlling, religiously abusive, and borderline cultish. (Take heed, FFOZ blogs.)

And besides, both sides are wrong. Judaism once used God’s name everywhere, and it shows up in the Scriptures (e.g. halleluyah) and in the names of the ancients (e.g. Jeremiah = Yirmiyahu, Isaiah = Yesha'yahu). And the people have been using titles and circumlocutions for God over ages past, calling him King, Lord, Elohim, blessing his name.

Messianic Judaism likes to think it has the upper hand in this issue. It laughs at the lack of scholarship in Sacred Name theology, mocking  crazy made up names like Yahushuahu.

But Messianic Judaism itself makes up names for God, too.

Elokeinu? Adoshem? How about Amonai?

C’mon guys, those aren’t real Hebrew words. You’re making stuff up, just like the other guys. You want to think it’s different, but it’s not. Linguistically, your made-up circumlocutions and the made-up sacred names are on equal (non-existent) footing. On top of that, it’s is not universally accepted in Judaism that God’s name cannot be spoke in prayer or worship. I have a Jewish friend who attended Carlebach shul in New York, and he used Yehova in prayer; the shul didn’t bat an eye.

Fine Messianic believers, followers of Yeshua the Messiah and keepers of God’s commandments in the Torah: stop being idiots and fighting over worthless things. If one believer is convicted to use God’s proper name in worship – even a crazy rendition thereof! – let him worship God with all his heart, and not be tripped up by your overly-strong religious convictions. And if you’re a Hebrew Roots guy, like our friend Iyke, who just can’t worship God using titles – stop your craziness! Worship God with all your heart and don’t worry about Lord this and HaShem that.

Relax. Worship God. And move onto important things.

Please.

A Very Messianic Christmas

Like many small Messianic congregations, the congregation I attend rents space from a larger Protestant church.

A few weeks ago, a member of the church who is organizing the church’s Christmas service contacted me and asked if we Messianics would be willing to partake in the Christmas service.

How would you respond?

Her request was that we play some Hebrew songs, sound the shofar, and maybe do some dancing if that was our thing. Show the Jewish side of Christmas, she said.

I had mixed feelings about this.

Primarily, we, and indeed most Messianics, do not celebrate Christmas. It’s not biblical, its connections to Messiah’s birth are dubious, and the paraphernalia associated with the holiday have less to do with Christ and more to do with old world religious rites.

It’s my conviction that the people of God ought not celebrate this holiday, and our taking part in the service would send the wrong message.

On the other hand, I gotta to step back and look at this from a bigger perspective: an outsider would totally laugh at us little groups squabbling with each other over what days we celebrate, what foods we eat, and all the divisions to the Nth degree that we inflict upon ourselves. In that regard, the evil one has us right where he wants us, I think.

I mean, aren’t there bigger things to worry about? How about personally living a righteous life in private and public? How about peace and unity among Messiah’s disciples? While we’re squabbling about holidays, couldn’t we be busy, oh, I don’t know, feeding the poor, helping widows and orphans? And yet we spend 95% of our time arguing about times and seasons and theologies.

That’s not really the religious life I’m looking to live.

On top of that, the woman who approached us to take part in the Christmas service was humble, sincere, and showed nothing but kindness to us. The last thing I want to do is go in there shouting all Zany Zealot commando-style, “Christmas is pagan! Christmas is pagan!”

So, I, personally, was completely torn about this issue.

The other leaders in our congregation spent a few weeks mulling this over in discussion and prayer. We ended up declining the invitation. Today I sent out the following message to the woman who is organizing the Christmas service, names anonymized:

Hi Rachel,

Our congregation has given much thought and prayer to your invitation to take part in the Christmas service.

The reason we were hesitant to accept is, for Biblical reasons, Messianics do not celebrate Christmas. By all means we honor Messiah's birth, which likely took place during the biblical Feast of Tabernacles. But because December 25th was chosen to overwrite previous pagan winter solstice celebrations, Messianics instead celebrate his birth during Tabernacles, and we do so without the non-Biblical paraphernalia  (trees, holly, wreaths, etc.) associated with Christmas.

It's for these reasons we must respectfully decline your invitation.

Thanks for contacting us, Rachel. All of us -- myself, Bryan, Jesse -- recognized sincerity and humility in you. We honestly thank you for the kindness you've shown us.

Be blessed in Messiah Yeshua.

-Judah Himango

I wanted to be careful in my criticism. I wanted to avoid fixating solely on the negative. I also wanted to make it clear we are not denying the miraculous birth of Messiah, which the gospels record being met with angel-singing and rejoicing. At the same time, I wanted to stand for my convictions. I hope my letter portrayed those things.

What would you do, fine Messianic blog reader, if a church asked you to participate in their Christmas service?

The Surprise Ending of the Frum Gentile Story

Several months ago, prominent bilateral ecclesiology blogger Derek Leman wrote how he had to “draw a boundary” in his congregation by essentially booting 2 Torah-keeping non-Jews from his congregation.

Why the boot?

Derek’s explanation was that 2 men were dressed frum (piously Jewish), thus erasing Jew/gentile boundaries. Derek didn’t like that. And Derek didn’t like that these gentiles considered themselves part of Israel. But mostly that they dressed like Jews.

And thus, our 2 unnamed men were no longer welcomed at Derek’s synagogue. As Derek wrote,

These visitors yesterday would not have earned a boundary-keeping talk from the nervous rabbi (me) if it had not been for their crossing a boundary of identity. The person I talked to crossed two:

(1) He wears tzit-tzit in public with no kippah…

(2) He is a non-Jew who dresses as a frum Jew...

Ah, those 2 deadly sins: wearing fringes but no kippa, and gentiles dressing frum! Heaven forbid!

Now, a frum-dressed person usually indicates kippa, tallit, a tefillin-binding, phylactery-sticking, payot-curlin’ observant Jew with siddur in hand.

Bo Barbie knows frum:

Frum Barbie

So…these 2 men that were essentially booted from Derek’s bilateral ecclesiology synagogue -- I have some news about them.

I met one of them last night.

One of these utterly frum gentlemen visited our Messianic congregation last night…and…I couldn’t believe my eyes!

Imagine a old, observant man walking into a room, chanting blessings reserved for racial descendants of Jacob! Uttering thanks to God he wasn’t created a gentile! Dressed like the chief rabbinate: a big black Orthdox Jewish hat, black overcoat, payot, the whole bit!

Now, erase that from your imagination. It didn’t happen.

The man wore a t-shirt. I think he may have worn fringes to remind himself of God’s commandments. That was all. Seriously, the guy was wearing jeans, a t-shirt, and fringes. (I’m not even sure about the fringes, I don’t distinctly remember them! He certainly was not flaunting them.)

I talked to him about Derek Leman. He has no hard feelings. The man was kind and gracious. Good fruit evident in him just from our short time talking.

He told me with solemn sincerity that he and his friend were not dressed frum, as Derek described, but were wearing tees and jeans, just as he was standing there in front of me. No black hats, no payot, no kippah, no phylacteries, no tefillin.

Not frum.

I’m left with some difficult questions. Did my friend Derek Leman lie outright? Did he exaggerate the situation to better promote his theology by demonizing the opposition? I wouldn’t think so, I would think Derek has higher personal standards than that.

The ongoing attempts to exclude Messianics outside of the bilateral ecclesiology niche makes me wonder. That Derek wants to redefine “Messianic” to exclude folks like this man worries me – maybe in his zeal to exclude the “unwanted” Messianic types, Derek exaggerated the facts? I don’t know how else to explain the discrepancy between this man’s earnest story and Derek’s story-with-a-theology-zinger blog post.

(Ain’t drama in the Messianic blogosphere childish and ridiculous? Yet I felt obligated to set the record straight in this matter.)

We now return you to drama-free posts. Messianic drama queens and Frum Barbies need not apply.

Landing Page for Yeshua?

An agnostic, a Muslim, 2 Hindus, a Jew, and a Christian walk into a bar are about to land on your blog. They’ve never heard of “Yeshua”, and the probably think of the Masons when they hear the term “Messianic”.

If you were to provide them with a link explaining who Yeshua is, and what this Messianic thing is about, where would you point them? Is there a good landing page for Yeshua the Jewish Messiah?

Here’s why I ask: Chavah, the best darn Messianic radio on the web, is about to get a wave of traffic. I’m writing an article about the Chavah software to be published on a popular software developer website. Once published, I expect Chavah will get several hundred to a few thousand hits from a diverse audience, mostly folks who’ve never heard of Yeshua, and whose exposure to religion consists primarily of napoleon trolls on internet forums.

With that in mind, the first thing that comes up when running Chavah is the Chavah logo:

ChavahLogo

I’d like something in there, perhaps the word “Yeshua”, to link to an explanation of who Yeshua is, and what the Messianic thing is.

I’m not fishing for sneaky conversion tactics – the point of the article is a description of how the software was built, it is not an evangelism effort. Instead, I’m looking for a page that explains for the curious who Yeshua is and who we are, and it’s gotta be in language that makes sense to normal, non-religious people. (Light on the Bible-ese, please!)

Any suggestions?

Some things we agree on

We’ve all seen the disagreements Messianics have on various issues – Torah, gentiles, Israel, you name it.

The theology battle has been played out and rehashed a thousand times over, as we regularly say nasty things about each other through blogs, comments, and forum posts. (Hooray for the anonymity granted by the internet! It transforms otherwise decent people into vicious peanut galleries.)

Disagreements aside, there are some things we can agree on. There are some fundamentals we don’t actually fight about on the internet. (Surprising, yeah?)

Whether an unaffiliated Messianic Jew like Gene Shlomovich, a Bilateral Ecclesiologist like Derek Leman, a One Law guy like Dan Benzvi, a Jewish Christian like Joe Weissman, a Two House guy like John McKee, or maybe a Jew for Jesus, a Messianic gentile, or just plain independent Messianic without formal association, there are some things we crazy Messianics do find common ground on – oh yes! –  praise God.

We agree that…

  • Yeshua is Israel’s Messiah.

  • The Torah is a basic moral guide for all of God’s people, and lays the foundation for all of Scripture.

  • The Torah has different rules for different people. Women, farmers, Levites, foreigners, for example, all have different commandments applying to them.

  • The Torah was given to Israel.

  • When Messiah comes, gentiles will take on more Torah, including commandments traditionally reserved for Jews. Keeping the Feasts, shabbat, and even serving as Levites in the Temple, for example.

  • The Jewish people have an irrevocable calling and purpose in God’s great plan, and that purpose is distinct from that of the nations.

  • Gentiles in Messiah are part of the commonwealth of Israel.

  • Gentiles do not need to become Jews to be saved or accepted in God’s sight.

  • Jews do not need to become gentiles to be saved or accepted in God’s sight.

  • A person is not saved through keeping the Torah alone.

  • The Messianic movement is one in which God is restoring the people of Israel.

  • The Tenakh and the Brit Chadasha (“New Testament”) are writings by men inspired by God’s spirit. They are basic, trustworthy guides to living a Godly life.

Those are pretty important issues, folks, and correct me if I’m wrong, but the various factions within the broad Messianic movement actually find common ground on these cruces.

Do we Messianics actually agree on these things, fine and diverse Kineti blog readers?

Internet fights – why do we do it?

Back in the earlier days of the web, I was involved with a now-defunct site called Christdot. (It’s now under changed ownership, with a new name, Theophiles.) It was a website geared towards technologically-inclined Christians.

One problem, of course, was with the newly-granted anonymity by the internet, religious people were free to whack each other over the head.

And whack we did.

Imagine posts with many hundreds (thousands?) of comments, ugly theological battles played out between the veterans, the newcomers, the trolls, all that. A bunch of angry nerds, religious ones, furiously pecking away at their keyboards as they wipe droplets of sweat from their nerdly brows, trying to convince others of the rightness of our causes via insults and passive-aggressive insinuations.

The end result? One of the owners of the site, encouraged by all the fighting, abandoned his faith. Went the agnostic/atheist route, IIRC.

The site shut down, transferred ownership, and we were left wondering – did we cause a person to abandon his faith by our stupid internet fights?

That’s a sobering thought.

And what, exactly, did we accomplish with all that fighting? The veterans dug their trenches deeper, the outside world saw how vitriolic we could be. Real good fruit.

Causes

To be sure, it’s not limited to Christian or Messianic talk. This same kind of problem exists on Jewish forums, secular forums, and political forums, I’ll attest. So it’s not a Messianic thing.

In my Veteran Intarweb Experience, there are 2 main causes of internet fights:

  1. Anonymity granted by the internet.
  2. Ambiguous intent due to lack of facial expressions & body language.

The second one’s an old problem, older than the internet. Only now it’s ubiquitous: everyone and their grandma is on the internet. And even your senile aunt Fannie is blogging.

It’s made worse by imprecise writing; the ease at which a person can take a single sentence and pick it apart ad nauseum. What did you really mean, “faulty logic”? Hey, you’re no better than the Nazis!

(Brevity prevents lazy, stupid, mean readers from taking this too far.)

But the first one, anonymity, is kind of unique to the internet. There aren’t many outlets where you’re given an ongoing voice, but remain anonymous and accountability-free.

But meet one of those angry, vitriolic posters in real life…and guess what? Harmless as a baby unicorn. Suddenly all those hard line stances are softer. Suddenly, the humanity of the other side sinks in, and we’re singing kumbaya and downing Guinness.

Analyzing some debates

This very moment, fine blog readers, I’m engaged in 3 exciting internet debates:

  • Yahnatan is contends Yeshua was not a heretic of Judaism, since heretic implies a religious orthodoxy installed.
  • Monique contends my statement that Reform Judaism “threw off the stringent observance of the Orthodox” is unengaged, lacking, and misleading.
  • Gene and Derek are totally tearing me a new one for posting J.K. McKee’s video on Jew/gentile equality in the Messianic movement and amplifying it as theological clarity.

Now, those first two arguments are resulting from a low-quality, short post musing on a comment from another blog. I was imprecise, off-the-cuff, gunslinger poster, and now I’m reaping what I sowed.

(But I already told you I’d be doing more short, cheap posts like this in 2010, so take that, you mean blog readers.)

The second debate with Gene and Derek, well, I knew people would be upset about that one.

None of these arguments build off previous arguments. Rehashed stuff, I think.

None of these arguments are likely to win others.

One of the debates has already caused discouragement among one of Messiah’s followers, she says she was “discouraged and frustrated” by one of the comment threads on this very blog. Youch.

What if I don’t partake in the arguments? Well, then the other side wins. (Ohhhh noooesss!) But more importantly, folks like me are isolated and pushed out. I don’t want that for me or people like me. More importantly, I want to shape the Messianic movement positively, and leaving harmful ideas unchallenged doesn’t jive with this goal.

An unanswered accusation suggests the accusation is true. Let those things slide, and you’ll be convinced I’m the synagogue of Satan and a cult leader. Oh, and an evil demon clown with a penis lacking in length & girth. (By the way, anybody have some spare eXtenze?)

Building atop previous arguments? Or rehashing same old stuff?

In this week’s weekly bracha, one highlight was Daniel from ChristianForMoses who was fed up with Messianic blog discussion. Why?

For the most part, interaction on the blogs I visit tends to be quite poor. There’s much circular debate and it’s hard to find a quality dialogue that builds on what is discussed before.

I recognize this too. It stems from an unwillingness of Side A to acknowledge arguments from the Side B. Also, sometimes it’s just easy to miss a response in the sea of comments. And other times you’re just infuriated and insulted by that one nasty statement he made, and you just can’t focus on anything else at the moment but telling him how damn wrong he is.

Why do it?

I’ve tried avoiding all conflict. Tried it for several months last year. The result was the “other” side declares victory and isolates you further, almost expects you to get in their soup line. If you don’t stand up for your beliefs, prepare to be steamrolled.

Keeping silent isn’t the answer.

What is the answer? Beats me.

Since I don’t know the answer to this internet fighting problem, I’ve focused more on contributions to the Messianic world: Greatest Commandments project, weekly bracha, Messianic music guitar chords, Chavah, Epistles of Paul, and others. Focus less on internet arguments. Feels better contributing something tangible. At the very least, it’s not subtracting from the Messianic good, nor damaging/frustrating/alienating people in the process.

What do you, fine blog reader, think of all the internet arguments on these blogs? Should we just shaddup? Close comments? Not get so personal? Yes, you may interpret this as a cry for help.

Our survival depends on religious approval?

Eyebrow-raising [paraphrase] quote over at Derek Leman’s blog today. Derek is live blogging from the Hashivenu forum in Los Angeles, a Messianic forum held by the Messianic Jewish Theological Institute (MJTI). He paraphrases MJTI leader Mark Kinzer:

Kinzer’s paper wraps up with a description of Messianic Jewish theology as a protest against the boundary drawn by mainstream Judaism against the deity of Yeshua. There are other boundary breakers too, such as the Lubavitch who believe their deceased rebbe is divine.

Kinzer says that MJ will only survive if we succeed in our protest against the boundaries. If MJ is never credited as a Judaism, but is always regarded as avodah zara [idolatry], then we will likely fade away in time. [Emphasis mine]

Holy cow. Did you fine blog readers catch that? Kinzer is saying if Messianic Judaism is never credited as an authentic Judaism by the mainstream Jewish world, the Messianic movement will perish.

To put it another way, our survival depends on approval of Jewish religious leadership.

A more explicit version is, our survival depends on men’s opinions of us.

Can you imagine any of the apostles making such a statement?

And Peter said, "Brothers, you know well that the Sanhedrin routinely persecutes those who love our Master and Lord, Yeshua. But we must gain their approval by defying the boundaries they have instituted. Only then will we survive."

-Imaginary Peter

But this shouldn’t come as a surprise. We’ve witnessed hints of this in the past years.

Inferiority Complex Rearing Its Ugly Head

Months ago, I argued Messianic Judaism has an inferiority complex. We’re so damn insecure about ourselves: ooh noes, we’re not Jewish enough, not enough liturgy, not enough rote prayer, too much Evangelicalism, too many Yeshua flags and dancing, not enough siddurs. Ooh noes, we’ve got too many undesirables (read: gentiles) in our midst.

We’re looking for approval from the in-crowd. And it’s about as Scriptural as bilateral ecclesiology. (…we’ll save that for another discussion.)

When I wrote that inferiority complex post months ago, one of you fine blog readers protested,

Can you show me who and where says that getting "accepted" by our non-Yeshua Jewish brothers is the goal of Messianic Jewish movement? Hogwash!

Hogwash, eh? I’ll take bazinga for $400, Alex.

Of course, this single paraphrased statement from Kinzer is just one in a continuing show of hands, a growing sect of the Messianic movement that sees Jewish acceptance as critical for our faith.

Oddly, the 2 most vocal voices on the web for this idea are also gentiles who are trying to formally convert to Messianic Judaism through MJTI.

Come to think of it, every person I’ve talked to who has taken MJTI classes comes out talking this talk.

MJTI aren’t the only ones. I sense this same inferiority complex among members of some UMJC-affiliated groups, and even some independent groups to a lesser extent.

Honest Questions

For those that think our survival depends on our acceptance within the larger Jewish world, I ask, where's the leading of the Spirit? What's the role of God's lead in the Messianic movement?

Seriously.

If our movement is really from God himself, Spirit-led for these prophecy-fulfilling times, with the goal of the restoration of all Israel, don’t you think that God, that great shepherd of the sheep, will care for us, no matter what other people think of us?

Remember what happened 2000 years ago? God’s spirit was leading Messiah’s disciples, and in retrospect, they were spot-on in what they said:

Peter and the apostles answered the religious court,

"We must obey God rather than men. The God of our fathers raised Jesus whom you killed by hanging Him on a tree. God exalted Him at His right hand as Leader and Savior, to give repentance to Israel and forgiveness of sins. And we are witnesses to these things, and so is the Holy Spirit whom God has given to those who obey Him."

When they heard this they were enraged and wanted to kill them.

But a Pharisee in the council named Gamaliel, a teacher of the law, held in honor by all the people, stood up and ordered the men to be put outside for a while. And he said to them,

"Men of Israel, take care what you do with these men. … in the present case I tell you, keep away from these men and let them alone; for if this plan or this undertaking is of men, it will fail; but if it is of God, you will not be able to overthrow them. You might even be found opposing God!"

Is Messianic Judaism an undertaking of men? If so, it will fail. If it’s of God, we’ll not be overthrown nor subverted. Even if the greater Jewish world despises us for our trusting in Messiah, and our exalting him as King of Israel, worshipping him as the Son of God.

I believe it’s from God. That big spark in the Jesus Movement of the 1970s, where Jews and gentiles came en masse to the realization the Yeshua is the Messiah of Israel, wow. That was something. That was God-at-work. It created Messianic Jews, and Torah observant gentiles. And people were wondering what happened, trying to make sense of it all.

Now we’re trying to formalize, settle down, make a religion out of it. At some point, the Jewish sect decided it didn’t really care for gentiles, and encouraged gentiles to go back to the church. Theologies were created and espoused that let them do this.

Now here we are, 40 odd years later, with a lot of strife between Jewish Messianic Judaism and the wider independent Messianic movement. And a potential for Yeshua-denial coming in the future.

The Bait

It should be said plainly: short of a miracle from God, Messianic Judaism won’t be accepted by mainstream Judaism, nor by the larger Jewish world.

At least, not as long as Yeshua is Lord.

Erase Yeshua as divine Lord, King of Yisrael, the glorified Son of God who sits at God’s right hand, who is Israel’s savior, offering forgiveness of sins, the one who gives repentance to Israel… deny him, and then, and only then, will the Jewish world accept Messianic Judaism. It has to deny Yeshua.

And that bait will be ever-so-tempting should more of Judaism’s leaders, like the modern Sanhedrin’s emissary to the Noahides, allow for Yeshua’s disciples to be accepted into the Israelite nation provided they deny Yeshua’s divinity.

The MJTI and Hashivenu have done marvelous work for the Lord, it’s true, great work for Messiah and his kingdom. More than I’ve ever done. God bless them for it. MJTI and Hashivenu are from God.

But my fear and prediction for the MJTI is, in the years to come, a split will take place, as some will take a leap backwards and rehash a theology, leading many astray, that Yeshua is something less than what the gospels make him out to be, something less than God. They’ll trade paradise for men’s approval.

It won’t be a “oh, we’re rejecting Yeshua” clear-cut thing.

It will be a gradual, easy-on-the-ears, “We have this theology, you see, where Yeshua is Messiah, but all this other stuff about him being divine, that’s misguided nonsense. Here are some proof texts from the New Testament. Now go on your way.”

It will be palatable to a lot of people. It will sound good to those looking for approval. It will be utterly divisive and lead many astray.

Fine blog readers, am I off my rocker? Are my fears unfounded?

Are We Beyond the Trough of Disillusionment?

In the software world, technological fads come and go. Vendors promise the world, people get excited, the technology invariably fails to live up to the hype, and disillusionment sets in, and people move on. But the few who hold on through the tough times begin to reap practical benefits, and over time, the technology is recognized as stable and trustworthy, at least among a particular niche.

This pattern is recognized as the Gartner Hype Cycle:

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It can be summed up in the follow steps:

  1. "Trigger" — The first phase of a hype cycle is the "trigger" or breakthrough, product launch or other event that generates significant press and interest.

  2. "Peak of Inflated Expectations" — In the next phase, a frenzy of publicity typically generates over-enthusiasm and unrealistic expectations. There may be some successful applications of a technology, but there are typically more failures.

  3. "Trough of Disillusionment" — Technologies enter the "trough of disillusionment" because they fail to meet expectations and quickly become unfashionable. Consequently, the press usually abandons the topic and the technology.

  4. "Slope of Enlightenment" — Although the press may have stopped covering the technology, some businesses continue through the "slope of enlightenment" and experiment to understand the benefits and practical application of the technology.

  5. "Plateau of Productivity" — A technology reaches the "plateau of productivity" as the benefits of it become widely demonstrated and accepted. The technology becomes increasingly stable and evolves in second and third generations. The final height of the plateau varies according to whether the technology is broadly applicable or benefits only a niche market.

Our Messianic faith – centered on Messiah and Torah – can be likened to this hype cycle.

Theologies and doctrines come and go and finally return in tweaked incarnations. They crop up quickly, reach the peak of inflated expectations. But then as they fail to materialize to hyped expectation, they fall into the trough of disillusionment and quickly become unfashionable. Eventually, they make their way back with, perhaps, some moderating, cleaned up, some of the faulty parts reworked or removed altogether.

I think Messianic Judaism has been, in many respects, in this “trough of disillusionment” for the last few years:

There was the initial “spark” of renewal among Jews and gentiles in the Jesus Movement of the 1970s. And yet more gentiles returned to God’s commandments and identity as part of the commonwealth of Israel in the ‘80s and ‘90s, particularly through the Torah restoration movement.

Despite these sparks, we’ve been in the cellar lately:

Sensationalist teachings on one side, marginalization of gentiles on the other. Fundamentalism and closed-mindedness. Sectarianism. Confusion. Massive infighting. Closing off self to everyone who doesn’t follow our particular brand of MJism, and labeling them as pagans (side A) or heretics who should go back to the church (side B).

Cellar, cellar, cellar. It’s no wonder we’ve lost many God-seeking people to the synagogue and the church during this long plunge from the heights of inflated expectations to the depths of the trough of disillusionment. And it’s not limited to just the so-called “fringe” sects of Messianic Judaism.

It’s time to get out of the cellar.

After talking a bit with Messianic apologist John McKee this past week about achieving new wisdom and stability in the Messianic movement in the 2010s, it occurred to me that all we really have to do is wait it out.

The trough of disillusionment, as painful as it is, tends to build stability: sensationalism and fundamentalism can’t be milked forever, especially when it has become unfashionable. Likewise, folks that don’t really have a relationship with the Lord – for example, people that are defined almost exclusively by hatred of the church or synagogue, despite legitimate criticisms – soon disappear. Those people will either reform themselves, as I have, or move elsewhere. What I am saying is, if your whole faith is defined by hatred for the church, and there’s no substance to your spiritual life, you’re not going to last very long. That’s not something you build your house on.

By contrast, the people that are in this for the long haul, who have developed a real love for the Lord, actually serve Messiah, and have derived practical, pragmatic values from this Messiah + Torah faith, these people who are contributing to the Kingdom of God – these will be the ones standing when the smoke clears.

Folks like Boaz Michael, John McKee, Derek Leman, Stuart Dauermann, Russ Resnik – these people, from my perspective anyways, are really trying to build the kingdom. They are trying to move past many of the problems that have plagued the Messianic movement during the Years of the Trough. And more importantly, they really do serve the Lord, and have persevered through thick and thin, looking ahead towards the victorious end, and the reward for all those that love Messiah.

Where are we headed?

I predict that even though we’ll mature and stabilize in the years to come, the divide between the 2 divisions of the Messianic movement will grow: the division that sees Messianic Judaism as a safe place for Jews to practice faith in Messiah, and the other side that sees Messianic Judaism as a completion of the Reformation, a renewal among all God’s people, Jews and gentiles.

I’ve made it no secret I side with the latter view.

Why the schism? Because there are “in-it-for-the-long-haul” folks on both sides, and there is goodness in what both sides are doing, yet tragically, the differences between these views are irreconcilable, in my opinion. The end result is a schism that will grow in the coming decade.

Where do you think we’re headed, fine blog readers? Are we moving beyond the Trough of Disillusionment in 2010?

Roman & Alaina – Sounds of Prayer

romanandalaina Roman La’Voy and his wife Alaina Wood debut their new Messianic music album, Sounds of Prayer

I’m a bit of a Messianic music aficionado. Over the years I’ve amassed a wide variety of Messianic tunes – from pioneers like Lamb and Israel’s Hope, to modern psalms by Marty Goetz and Steve McConnell, to contemporary worship by Sharon Wilbur – Messianic music has blessed me, lifted me up, encouraged me. I love worshiping to Messianic music, playing these songs on the guitar, singing on shabbat. Music is the lubricant that lets the heart speak freely to God, and I think Messianic music has left a great legacy in that regard.

Needless to say, when I heard Roman La’Voy had put out a new Messianic music album, I was thrilled. Roman and his wife Alaina Wood have worked together to release their first album, entitled Sounds of Prayer.

Roman & Alaina - Sounds of Prayer

 

Some of you may remember Roman from the group Meha Shamayim, which had a number of beautiful songs for Messiah. I’m happy to say, this new album does not disappoint: in my opinion, the quality exceeds Meha Shamayim’s previous work. After listening to this album for the past two weeks, I had to write a review here to spread the word – I think you fine blog readers are going to love it.

One of my favorites from this album is a tune entitled Bless G-d, posted with permission:

Roman & Alaina – Bless G-d:

That song is really indicative of the whole album: acoustic, folksy, intimate, God-honoring, rooted in Jewish expression.

The only thing missing from the above song would be Alaina’s sweet voice, which graces most of the songs on the album.

Here’s a quick run down of each song:

  1. Hashem Open My Lips

    A simple and short song comprised only of the phrase from Psalm 51:

    “Hashem, open my lips, and my mouth will declare your praise.”
    Light and fanciful with prominent acoustic guitar, it’s a good opening tune – nothing fancy, just a simple praise song to start the praises flowing.

  2. I Believe

    Interesting song that, I think, is based off Maimonides’ 13 Principles of Jewish Faith. In particular, principles #12 and #13:

    I believe with perfect faith in the coming of the Messiah. How long it takes, I will await His coming every day.

    I believe with perfect faith that the dead will be brought back to life when G-d wills it to happen.
    These form the basis for this song that looks forward to the coming of Messiah.

    I like how this songs pronounces blessing on Yeshua: “blessed be his name, and exalted be his remembrance, forever and forever and ever”.

  3. Oseh Shalom

    A beautiful guitar intro was reminiscent of older Meha Shamayim songs. Here, Roman and Alaina sing the melody of the old familiar Jewish prayer, putting it to a new tune.

  4. Deeper

    Roman took a risk with this song – and it pays off. I think this is the most unorthodox (no pun intended) Messianic song I’ve ever heard: between chorus melodies sung by Alaina, Roman takes the fore and spins some verses in faster tempo, in an almost hip-hop like fashion.

    It’s hard to describe; if you’ve ever heard artists like Matt Kearney where he stops singing and kind of sings to the beat, but not necessarily the tune, that’s what Roman does here. I’d almost describe it as a cross between chanting, singing, and scatting.

    The only instrument accompanying the singing and Kearney-like spinning is an acoustic guitar. I think that is the only weakness in this song; when Roman’s spinning the verses in faster tempo, it’s hard to mentally follow the beat with only an acoustic guitar leading.

    Overall, this is a song of particular interest. I applaud Roman for taking a chance with this one and doing something unorthodox. I hope he continues to do songs like this in the future.

  5. Alice and the Last Hour

    There are very few story-telling songs in Messianic music genre. I think it’s foreign to a lot of religious people, we’re so accustomed to psalms or Scripture or prayer as songs, anything else seems foreign. Undeterred, Roman tells the story of the fictitious Alice, “the righteous secretary for the school who journeyed up the mountains to feed the hungry few”, mixing in what I believe are quotes from 1st John in the New Testament. 

    Upbeat, unmistakably folksy. Roman’s signature harmonica playing shines through between verses. It works out well, and is one of my favorites from the album.

  6. Teach Me To Overcome

    Perhaps the best song on the album. In this catchy folk song, reminiscent of older spiritual hymns and American folk music, the singer invites God to “teach me to overcome” after each problem raised: anger issues, past holding you down, future looking bleak, despair, wandering through life – after each of life’s problems, the singer pleads, “teach me to overcome”.

    The chorus repeats between verses,

    Oh Lord teach me, teach me,
    May it be your divine decree
    That I overcome, oh Lord if you’re willing,
    Teach me to overcome

    Great song, and my personal favorite.

  7. Ma Gadlu

    A sweet and soft rendition of the liturgical prayer sung primarily by Alaina. All Hebrew, followed by soothing melodies sung by both Roman and Alaina.

  8. Mashiach Intervene

    Uplifting song that asks God to raise our souls, “that we may observe all your mitzvot in the zeal and the spirit of our king”.

    Alaina sings most of the song, with Roman chiming in when the two pray, “Oh mashiach, mashiach, intervene! Oh mashiach, mashiach, return!”

    Excellent song. May work in a congregational setting to boot.

  9. Modeh Ani

    Another that reminded me of Meha Shamayim: peaceful, blessing God, with a touch of a jazz sound, this song features Roman and Alaina singing, with Roman ending in a reading from what I believe is a traditional prayer based on Proverbs.

  10. Birth of the King

    This song is where the album gets its title. Telling of the birth of Yeshua, this song is quiet and contemplative, intimate. My only complaint is it is too short, with no real chorus/verse arrangement.

     
  11. Enter Into Shabbat

    Beautiful, peaceful song! One of the best on the album. The song paints the scene of a family on shabbat night, sharing a sabbath meal with friends, chanting prayers and singing shabbat songs.

    Alaina’s sweet voice shines through in this song. These kind of peaceful, blissful songs are tailored-made for her. Sweet and calming as Alaina invites “Enter in, enter into shabbat”.

    It’s accompanied by Roman’s background vocals, acoustic guitar and mandolin, and if I’m not mistaken, Leonardo Bella from Meha Shamayim also makes an appearance through background vocals, which adds a nice finishing touch to this gem.

  12. Bless G-d

    The album ends gracefully with an encouragement from Roman in this acoustic hymn to “Bless G-d”: before opening your eyes in the morning, bless Him for health, for lifting your hands. Bless His name, bless God in prayer, bless Him with every breath, bless Him through binding tefillin, bless Him when praying the Sh’ma.

    The lyrics are beautiful and sung with full meaning and earnestness. It adds layer upon layer of blessing, proclaiming God as the master of all, the one who chose us from every people and tongue, deeming God the trustworthy rock of Israel.

    Hidden in all these blessings is a gem where Roman likens Yeshua to the Torah: In the first few verses, the singer blesses God for “the Torah he gave, the truth, the life, the way”, and at the end of the song, Roman looks ahead to future glory when “God will be one, and so will his name”, and completes the blessing with “Bless G-d for Yeshua he gave, long live the truth, the life, the way, bless G-d”.

    Fittingly, Roman returns us to the beginning when he asks of the Lord, amidst all the blessings, “Open my lips, that my mouth may declare your praise”.

Final Thoughts

Excellent album. Roman and Alaina have put together something magnificent for our King.

It’s unmistakably folksy; while that may not fill every cup of tea, I encourage you fine blog readers to try it: as a Messianic music aficionado, it’s one of the best Messianic music albums I’ve heard in some time. It will bless you, lift you up, encourage you. Personally, I get a sense of peace listening to this album.

If I could nitpick, my only complaint would be that the album was too short. A few of the songs were less than 2 minutes, so it’s a short listen.

Roman & Alaina have set a great example for future Messianic artists: rather than boxing into a preconceived idea of what Messianic music should sound like, Roman and Alaina made their own unique sound according to their background, exalted God in every song, and honored Jewish faith. I think this stands as a great example for Messianic Judaism.

I hope Roman and Alaina will continue making music to bless Messianics for years to come. And I hope you fine blog readers will return the favor and bless and support them by purchasing Sounds of Prayer. (It’s only a measly $10 – that’s less than you spend on coffee and fast food every week. Go buy it now for yourself, or as a Hanukkah gift.)

Thanks to Roman and Alaina for making this album, and to you fine blog readers for reading through this overly-long review. ;-)

Is the New Testament reliable?

As Messianics, we sit perched between the religions of Judaism and Christianity.

We love Judaism because we know it to be the religion of Israel, God’s people, which produced the patriarchs, the Torah, the prophets, the apostles, and Messiah himself. Israel has been used by God to bring light to the world. In a sentence, Israel = God’s vehicle for all things righteous. If it weren’t for Israel, the gentile world’s religion would be little more than foolhardy men bowing to sexually-exaggerated figurines. I love Judaism, even with the painful acts of a few who shame it.

At the same time, we love Christianity. Yes, even with all its warts. It embraced Messiah when the leadership of Judaism has largely rejected him. That counts for something. Even with its ugly parts, its misrepresentation of Messiah, its past persecution of Jews, and all the violence and wars it has produced in the name of Christ, the Church has nonetheless produced men of God that led otherwise-lost gentiles to Messiah and the God of Israel. People that love God and love Israel and live righteous lives. That doesn’t get talked about much in anti-Christian circles.

Sitting between Christianity and Judaism produces for us much anguish. We are constantly pulled in either direction to be authentic: either real Jews, whom we are told cannot hold Yeshua as Messiah, or real Christians, throwing off that Jewish nonsense, after all, we are not under the law, and are free in Christ Jesus.

Christian draw

I was sitting around a table playing cards with some Christian friends awhile back. I was asked, “You don’t really believe in that Jewish stuff, right? Messy-uhnic you call it?”

I’ve been told “you’re preaching another Jesus!” and “Jesus fulfilled the law. Jesus freed us from that. Why are you living under it?” Or my favorite, “You believe in Jesus and you still follow those traditions?” (cue sad trombone)

The allure of Christianity is strong. Even more so around the holidays of Christmas and Easter. Can’t we be part of the larger Church? Can’t we fit in for once? With a family of mixed Christians and Messianics, Jews and gentiles, this draw is even stronger still.

Judaism’s draw

The flip side is the draw towards Judaism.

The pull is strong: I can be more authentic, more real, as a Jew if I follow standard Judaism. Maybe I’ll just keep my hope in Messiah to myself, and I’ll fit in better with greater Judaism.

It doesn’t help that some Messianic groups have an inferiority complex, one that doesn’t see this Messianic movement as legitimate until the greater Jewish world gives us the A-OK. (Hint: barring extraordinary supernatural events, it’ll never happen.)

And when one inundates himself in the rabbis of Judaism, in the Talmud, the siddur, in the Zohar, in the people and Scriptures of Israel, and he lives a righteous life as Judaism would see it, he might sympathize with the arguments of Judaism against Christianity. After all, Christianity has historically misrepresented Messiah.

And with the arguments against Christianity comes arguments against Christ, whom we know in more authentic view as Yeshua the Messiah of Israel.

A critical view of the New Testament

One such argument against Messiah-faith is that the New Testament is not reliable, and is merely the result of hundreds of redactions built atop the exaggerated imaginations of Jesus’ followers centuries later.

It’s hard to believe, but some Messianics sympathize with this view, or at least part of it.

For example, a few years ago, a prominent Messianic teacher claimed the New Testament book of Hebrews contained factual errors regarding the Tabernacle, and thus was not inspired by God, and ought not be considered part of the canon.

And before that, there was talk among several Messianic leaders regarding Paul’s letters to the gentiles, which comprise a significant slice of the New Testament. Maybe they’re not Scripture, they said, since they seemingly contain rants against God’s Law. Maybe they’re not inspired by God. Maybe they’re just the ramblings of an ex-Jew who hated his former religion. Maybe they shouldn’t be in the canon, some argued.

I’ve even heard some question the gospels and Acts, as they contain different retellings of the stories of Messiah:

  • In Acts, Yehuda of Kerioth (“Judas Iscariot”) is killed by falling headlong in a field, but in Matthew, Judas hangs himself.

  • In another instance, Paul describes himself as escaping the commander of the army of Aretas in Damascus, but Acts records Paul escaping a mob of angry Jews.

  • And more famously, the genealogy of Messiah as recorded in in Matthew 1 is different than the genealogy of Messiah as recorded in Luke 3.

These points, and others, are regularly raised by counter-missionaries in an effort to discredit the New Testament and disprove the messiahship of Yeshua.

Some Jewish followers of Messiah sympathize: maybe the original Hebrew texts of the New Testament don’t contain these corruptions. Maybe some of the early Church Fathers, many of whom were anti-Semitic, edited the New Testament to be damning to the Jews, they say. Maybe the New Testament should be viewed more as we view the Talmud: extra-biblical writings that contain some truth, but are not Scripture like the Tenakh (that is, what Christians call the Old Testament).

Setting the record straight

It should first be noted that many difficulties in the New Testament can be harmonized with explanation.

For example, it is possible to be hanged from a cliff and still fall headlong into a field through botched hanging. And the commander in Damascus may have tried to capture Paul because the angry mob demanded it. And some of the inconsistencies between genealogies can be explained through telescoping, a practice that the Tenakh itself uses.

However, rather than harmonizing through speculative explanation, I want to highlight empirical faults in the arguments against the New Testament, and from that, you can draw your own conclusions.

Interpretation double standards

When counter-missionaries bring up inconsistencies in the New Testament, invariably they are confounded when I show them that the same textual difficulties exist in the Tenakh. For example,

  • In one book of the prophets, a genealogy of priests is given which differs from genealogies given earlier in the Tenakh, paralleling the Luke/Matthew genealogical difference.

  • In another instance, Samuel records Satan tempting David, while Chronicles records it was God who tempted David.

  • And in another humorous instance, one of apparent scribal exaggeration, the Masoretic text (MT), upon which modern Jewish bibles are based, records the Philistine warrior Goliath at about 6 cubits (9 feet) tall – a giant by any measure! But the Septuagint puts Goliath at 5 cubits, about 7.5 feet tall. Yet more surprisingly, the Dead Sea Scrolls, which predate the MT by several centuries, put Goliath at a mere 4 cubits – a mere 6.5 feet tall – not such a giant after all! And even the first century Jewish historian Josephus attests to Goliath not being much of a (ahem) goliath.

  • The stories of Noah and Job are suspiciously similar to ancient Mesopotamian tales that predate the Torah.

These are just a few from a sea of many inconsistencies and difficulties in the Tenakh. For every difficulty in the New Testament, I can give 10 in the Tenakh.

One may argue, “But Judah, these inconsistencies can be explained…” and I will respond, “Yes, and the same for the New Testament!”

Church father double standards

Some Messianics raise concerns that anti-Jewish Church fathers edited and compiled the canon, inserting their own theologies into the text.

However, these same people will often quote early Church Fathers to support their critical view of the New Testament. For example, they might say, “The early Church Father Eusebius records that the early Nazarenes used only the Tenakh and the original Hebrew text of Matthew as their Scripture.”

Notice the double-standard: “I believe the Church Fathers when they say X. And I have a critical view of the New Testament because the Church Fathers likely edited it.”

Quick to believe Church Fathers when it proves my point, quick to dismiss the Church Fathers when it disproves my point. That’s a double standard.

Yes, it is likely the Nazarenes had a canon different than other believers in Messiah, but this argument fails in two areas: it doesn’t account for the varying beliefs in the Nazarene, Ebionite, and other early “Christian” movements; these groups disagreed with other groups and even within themselves as to what was considered canon. And secondly, it most certainly does not mean that Nazarenes rejected Acts, Luke, Paul’s epistles, or other apostolic writings. It is possible, even probable, they were unaware of some of these writings.

After all, information did not flow freely then as it does now, this was in the very early days of God picking for himself a people from the nations.

Self-defeating arguments

Counter-missionaries, and indeed some of Messiah’s followers who sympathize with them, use arguments like this one:

“The New Testament records Jesus doing X. And yet Christians don’t do this today – big problem! Now I’ll go on to discredit the New Testament...”

2 concrete examples that come to mind are:

  • “Jesus told his disciples to keep the Law and the Prophets, which is what Jews are doing. But you Christians have turned him into a god, and invented your own anti-Jewish bible.”

  • “Jesus said that, to be saved, you have to keep the commandments. That’s what Jews are already doing. But you Christians have this nonsense about believing in Jesus to be saved, coming from your Greek-translated, highly-redacted New Testament!”

Notice the self-defeating arguments here: “Jesus said X [as recorded in the New Testament], and Christians aren’t doing this because they have a corrupted/inauthentic/redacted New Testament.”

To all of Messiah’s followers, I will say this: if the New Testament is not a basic, reliable text of Messiah’s words and deeds, then how is it that you belong to Messiah? You found Messiah through these texts, and now you seek to discredit this text? How soon before you forget about those missing original Hebrew texts, and just discard the New Testament altogether?

This is the road to abandoning hope in Messiah. Counter-missionaries know this, and is why they are repeating this lie that the New Testament is an inauthentic and unreliable document.

Dispelling Myths

Here are some faulty assertions made by those with a critical view of the New Testament:

  • It was composed centuries after the actual events.
  • No one who witnessed the events actually wrote a New Testament book.
  • It was highly redacted by Church Fathers.
  • Paul was an agent of Rome, and corrupter of the original teachings of the rabbi Jesus.
  • The New Testament was originally written in Hebrew, and all we have today is corrupted Greek and Syriac manuscripts.

I will to address these concerns below.

Composition

While what became the modern canon formed later on, many of the books of the New Testament were actually written in the first century, immediately following the Messianic events that transpired.

For example, some Biblical scholars put the gospel of Luke at around 40 AD, only 4-8 years after Messiah’s death. One bit of evidence in support of this view is how Luke’s gospel is addressed to “Most Excellent Theophilus”:

Many have undertaken to draw up an account of the things that have been fulfilled among us, just as they were handed down to us by those who from the first were eyewitnesses and servants of the word. Therefore, since I myself have carefully investigated everything from the beginning, it seemed good also to me to write an orderly account for you, most excellent Theophilus, so that you may know the certainty of the things you have been taught.

-Luke 1

Some scholars suggest the “most excellent Theophilus” mentioned here may refer to Theophilus ben Ananus, the High Priest of Israel between 37 and 41 AD. Even among scholars who hold a later dating of Luke put his gospel well within the 1st century.

The other gospels are also 1st century material: Matthew around the destruction of the Temple in 70 AD, Mark between 70-90 AD, and John between 90-100 AD. Mark has the unique trait of being found among the Dead Sea Scrolls, with a fragment of Mark 6 having been found at the Qumran caves.

As for Paul’s writings in the New Testament, scholars believe he lived between 5-67 AD, making him a contemporary of and witness to Yeshua as Messiah and all the events recorded in Acts and the gospels.

Edits?

Are there redactions to the New Testament? Yes, certainly.

For example, the famous Lord’s Prayer reads differently in earlier manuscripts, with the additional stanza,

“…for thine is the kingdom and the glory and the power, forever and ever, amein.”

… not appearing in Luke’s gospel, nor does it appear in earlier manuscripts of Matthew. (There is a way to harmonize this, such as it being included as doxology for congregational worship, but we digress…)

But while the New Testament certainly contains redactions, one must also concede that there are redactions in the Tenakh as well.

For example, while many religious Jews favor the conservative view that Moses wrote the entire Torah, this has virtually zero academic support. Even the most conservative Biblical scholars believe only in basic Mosaic authorship, allowing for later edits by Joshua, Ezra, and others. After all, do we really believe Moses would have written the self-contradicting statement, “Moses was the most humble man on earth”? And he certainly didn’t write about his own death and the events that transpired afterwards!

It should be noted that many scholars favor a very liberal, secular view of the Torah, the JEDPR (Jahwist, Elohist, Deteronomist, Priestly, Redactor/Harmonizer) view, which suggests the Torah is little more than a collection of independent fables of ancient Israel, with centuries of redactions and harmonizing edits years later, before the Torah reached its final form 400CE. (I do not hold this view! But Jews and Christians should be aware of it, lest it catch you surprised on the History Channel. ;-))

But the Torah is only the tip of the iceberg. The modern Jewish bible contains edits, concatenations, and truncations in Daniel, Esther, several of the prophets, and even the historical books. And those are just the ones we know about.

Paul – corrupter of Christianity?

One founding father of the United States, Thomas Jefferson, once wrote,

Paul was the great Coryphaeus, and first corrupter of the doctrines of Jesus.

-Thomas Jefferson

Despite this theory falling out of fashion in modern times, still many Jews today look at Paul as a corrupter of Jesus’ real teachings. Paul, they say, started a new anti-law, anti-Judaism religion, whereas Jesus was interested in being a good rabbi of Judaism and nothing more, and certainly not the messiah.

Some Messianics sympathize with this, but for different reasons. They see ugly statements about the “works of the law” coming from Paul’s letters, and some then suggest, maybe Paul wasn’t really inspired, and shouldn’t be included in the canon.

Our response to this is, where is the proof that Paul is this ugly corrupter of Messiah’s teachings? A handful of statements from Galatians that seem to contradict Messiah can be, and have, sufficiently explained through proper understanding of the gentile culture and era to which it was addressed.

Extraordinary accusations require extraordinary proof – and the only thing offered are self-defeating arguments that use the New Testament to disprove the New Testament.

Waiting for the Hebrew New Testament

Some Messianics have a critical view of the New Testament because, they say, we only have corrupted Greek manuscripts, and that the original Hebrew is lost. They discard our current manuscripts as redacted Greek, holding out hope for the sexy Hebrew/Aramaic originals to make their appearance.

These are extraordinary charges. My question is, where are the Hebrew texts? And where is evidence that there were originally Hebrew texts to begin with?

The best evidence we have is a quote from a Church father that suggests Matthew was originally written in Hebrew.

All other evidence reports are more speculation than evidence.

So while certainly Matthew and perhaps a few other books may have been Hebrew originally, there is zero academic support for the idea that all the New Testament was written in Hebrew. It is quite plausible that Luke, the epistles, and others were written in Greek. A vast majority of scholars agree.

And even for the parts that were originally Hebrew, I ask, what makes you think the Greek manuscripts are so terrible so as to discard them? I suggest that this bias against Greek texts likely stems from the “all things Greek are evil” fundamentalist mindset that some Messianics seem to have, probably borrowed from a Judaic backlash against Hellenism. We must mature out of that.

Conclusions

  • If we are to believe that redactions make a text completely unreliable, then we must not only throw out the New Testament, but also the Torah and numerous books in the Tenakh. 

  • Many biblical difficulties can be explained; they just aren’t black and white simplistic like we want them to be.

  • There are more difficulties in the Tenakh than the New Testament.

  • Counter-missionary arguments against the New Testament are often uneducated and contain a double-standard. If we apply the same critical view to the Tenakh as they apply to the New Testament, we’d all be atheists.

  • You can’t have your cake & eat it too. Having a critical view of the New Testament, then quoting the New Testament to support your critical view, is self-defeating. Ditto for quoting early Church fathers.

  • The New Testament is largely a first-century work by men who knew, or knew of, Yeshua, in his generation and the next.

  • As far as we know, the New Testament was written largely in Greek.

  • Theologically, Paul and Yeshua were buddies. :-)

A final word

Some years ago, I personally struggled with the idea that anti-Jewish Church fathers compiled what became the New Testament. It really shook my faith to the point I actually considered agnosticism: the belief that we cannot really know whether there is a God.

Perhaps to stop me in my tracks, God gave me peace in this area. Through prayer I heard, “What is here today is by My hand.”

At first, I wanted to ask what that means, exactly. “Even the edits, oh Lord?” would have been a near-comical reply, but it’s what I wanted to ask.

But a peace settled in. Through all the redactions, the compilers of the canon, even with some of them having less-than-good intentions, the harmonizers… it doesn’t matter. God totally used them, like tools. And what we have today is here by His hand.

I know that’s not scientific proof. And I know it’s not intellectually stimulating. But it’s enough for me.

A new Messianic blog with great potential

After much goading by yours truly, Jeremiah Michael is blogging: All Things Apostolic

Welcome to my blog, this blog called ‘All things Apostolic’ is about the Apostles, but more than that, it’s a place where I will, God willing, jot down my studies and thoughts on all things Apostolic, Torah, Jewish, and Christian. I hope you enjoy it!

Jeremiah is a fine young mind, studious and well-grounded in Messiah. Having followed many of his postings and musings on Facebook, and having met him in person, I can vouch for Jeremiah’s love for Messiah, Judaism and Christianity. Now that his writings have broken free of the walled garden that is Facebook, I think you all will find his writings to reflect a wisdom beyond his years.

Oh, did I mention his dad runs prominent Messianic organization First Fruits of Zion? That means Jeremiah gets to leech off the great minds and historical books and materials hoarded by that organization, all the more benefit for you fine blog readers.

He’s put out a flurry of posts to begin:

  • Words of Eternal Life – Interesting comparison likening Rabbi Tarphon’s words in Midrash Sifre with Peter’s words to Yeshua in John.

  • Adventures with the Apostles: Thaddeus – I really liked this one. Jeremiah highlights the intriguing story of Thaddeus, as recorded in the Acts of the Holy Apostle Thaddeus:
    Thaddeus went to Abgarus; and having found him in health, he gave him an account of the incarnation of Christ, and baptized him, with his entire house. And having instructed great multitudes, both of Hebrews and Greeks, Syrians, and Armenians, he baptized them in the name of the Father, Son, and Holy Spirit, having anointed them with the holy perfume; and he communicated to them of the undefiled mysteries of the sacred body and blood of our Lord Jesus Christ, and delivered to them to keep and observe the law of Moses, and to give close heed to the things spoken by the Apostles in Jerusalem. For year by year they came together to the Passover, and again he imparted to the Holy Spirit.
  • Select Poetry from Denise Levertov – poetry from Denise Levertov, daughter of Hasidic follower of Messiah, early Messianic Jewish pioneer P.P. Levertov:
    As a devout Christian my father took delight
    And pride in being (like Christ and the Apostles) a Jew.
    It was Hasidic lore, his heritage,
    He drew on to know
    The Holy Spirit as Shekinah.
  • Yeshua is not a messiah – While some suggest there is a messiah type in every generation, Jeremiah argues for the ultimate Messiahship of Yeshua.

Great start! Welcome, Jeremiah, to the blogosphere! Go send some traffic his way, fine blog readers.

Justice For Ami Ortiz

Last week we covered the triumphant case of Israeli Messianic Jewish teen Ami Ortiz, documenting that an arrest had been made in his case, and more importantly, a great number of secular, Orthodox, and Ultra Orthodox Jews across Israel came to support the Ortiz family, condemning the shameful actions of whomever carried this out.

Today, the news is exploding all over the web and the Israeli media that Ya'acov Teitel, an Ultra Orthodox Jewish, right-wing settler has confessed to the attempted murder of the Ortiz family, as well as a long list of bombings and shootings carried out over the past several years. Details have emerged indicating he tried to murder the Ortiz family for their belief that Yeshua is the Messiah.

In one article, the Jerusalem Post documents:

He [Teitel] confessed to planting a bomb on March 20, 2008 at the entrance to the Ortiz family home in Ariel, who he believed were messianic Jews and were trying to convert Jews to Christianity.

Was Teitel an anti-missionary, as many suspected?

Israeli newspaper Ha’aretz cites a note left by Teitel at one his crime scenes that confirms his anti-missionary stance, where he accuses the state of Israel of “supporting Christian missionaries whose sole aim is to make us convert from our religion”.

Teitel is also responsible for carrying out violent attacks against and attempted murder of Arabs, homosexuals, and a college professor over the last several years.

Rightfully, Ami’s parents, David and Leah Ortiz, are calling for justice. But are they angry at the Orthodox Jewish community that produced this man who nearly killed their son? A Jerusalem Post article explains,

The Ortiz family said that they do not hold the Orthodox community to blame for the bombing, and that they understand it is only a very small minority in the community who would carry out such an attack.

When the family found out that the alleged attacker was a Jew, "it really hurt," Ami said, "because it's like your own brother has done something like this to you."

Praise God they are not holding bitterness towards the Orthodox community over this. I think that stands as a great witness for Messiah. Please pray for Ami as he has undergone great pain, both physically and mentally.

Last week, we showed how God has taken this terrible event – the attempted murder and critical injury of a young Messianic Jewish boy – and turned it into something great, something used for God’s glory, as religious and secular Jews across Israel acknowledge the evil carried out, and sympathized with and showed support for the Messianic family. As Leah Ortiz stated,

We can testify that the nation as a whole condemns this man's actions. We have received telephone calls and communications from Israelis throughout this past year and a half, from every town, city, and village in Israel. They have been secular, orthodox and ultra orthodox Jews, and the message has been the same - shock, grief and anger over the incident, and the need to let us know that they condemn this vicious act.

And now, things are only becoming more visible; even the Israeli Prime Minister, Benjamin Netanyahu, has issued a statement condemning the act,

They do not represent the majority of the nation. They are a small and marginal group, but we have already seen the strength and damage of one murderer. We must continue to condemn the use of violence and to use all legal power against any attempt at violence.

Indeed, these vigilante anti-missionaries are a small and marginal group that do not represent Jews, Judaism, or Israel. Praise God! And may God continue to turn their violence into instruments of his glory. And may he continue to turn their hearts of stone into hearts of flesh, just as God is softening the hearts of many Israelis, many now who no longer look down on Israel’s Messianic Jews as cult members, but rather as fellow Jews and Israeli citizens.

With the murder suspect arrested and his confession signed, what comes next for the Ortiz family? What is the final word?

Ami said he is not sure if he will be able to serve in the IDF, because the battery of operations he has undergone may render his physical profile too low. If given the choice, the youth said he would volunteer for combat service, just like his father did.

Ami had difficulty thinking of what he would say to his attacker if he faced him, saying it's too hard to say. However, his mother, Leah, said, "I would tell him, you didn't get what you wanted, we won, in the end we won."

Amein!

Hat tip to the Rosh Pina blog for their excellent coverage in documenting and exposing anti-missionary abuses.

The Triumphant Case of Ami Ortiz

Hat tip to Rosh Pina for the heads up on the Ortiz case.

I’m a few days late to the chase, but – praise God – there is new good news in the case of Ami Ortiz, the 15 year old Messianic Israeli who was nearly killed in a bomb sent to his family’s house.

AmiBefore AmiAfter
15 year old Israeli Messianic before and after the bombing.

The good news in the case: A suspect has been arrested, and the police may have a confession from the suspect. I’ll let Ami’s mother Leah tell the story:

We have incredible news and answer to prayer. A suspect has been arrested in our case! Actually he was arrested about 2 weeks ago, but there has been a continuing gag order placed on the story. Therefore we cannot tell you all the details because we don't have them yet. To be noted that we didn't hear the news from the police, but from our lawyer and media sources, and today the American Embassy called us to tell us that there was an arrest! We are dual American and Israeli citizens, and I thanked them for having the consideration to inform us.


Concerning the suspect, we only know that he is an Orthodox Jew, originally from the U.S. He was living in a settlement in our area, is married, the father of four children, and is now being held by the secret services because the case is wider than we expected. We know that weapons and explosive material were found in his home, and that there is a lot of hard evidence against him. We also know that there are those in Ariel who are under intense investigation as well, but we're not sure if any other arrests have been made. We also know that his lawyer went before the judge to ask for the suspect to be released on bail, and he was refused because of the amount of evidence against him in his file. We expect that the gag order will be lifted maybe on Wednesday or Thursday, and then we will know more details and the press will be all over the story for a few days.


GREAT RELIEF

Our family has experienced great relief. We are happy that we don't have to look over our shoulder, we don't have to check our car before we get into it, and we can open our front door with more confidence. Before this we knew there was a murderer roaming free, perhaps standing in line with us in the post office, or continuing to keep surveillance on our house. We also feel sorrow for the suspect who has so ruined his life, the lives of his family, and has brought a bad name on the people of Israel. We can testify that the nation as a whole condemns this man's actions. We have received telephone calls and communications from Israelis throughout this past year and a half, from every town, city, and village in Israel. They have been secular, orthodox and ultra orthodox Jews, and the message has been the same - shock, grief and anger over the incident, and the need to let us know that they condemn this vicious act. They all blessed Ami with wishes for a full recovery, and hopes that he would succeed in life and fulfil his dreams.


PRAY FOR WISDOM


Please pray for us as the media interviews begin, both domestic and international, for wisdom and for the name of Yeshua to be lifted up. Please pray for Ami, as he goes back to the moment and shares it publically. He took the news very coolly. I don't think he wants to let his heart get involved in any way, which I understand. Right now he is with all the 11th graders in his school in the northern Negev, in a pre-army type of experience called in Hebrew the "gadna" which means "youth battalions". It's kind of a light basic training simulation with many lectures from the army about what they can expect, and what their possibilities are.
Psalm 27:1-6 sums it all up-


The LORD is my light and my salvation-
whom shall I fear?

The LORD is the stronghold of my life-
of whom shall I be afraid?

When evil men advance against me
to devour my flesh,

when my enemies and my foes attack me,
they will stumble and fall.

Though an army besiege me,
my heart will not fear;

though war break out against me,
even then will I be confident.

One thing I ask of the LORD,
this is what I seek:

that I may dwell in the house of the LORD
all the days of my life,

to gaze upon the beauty of the LORD
and to seek him in his temple.

For in the day of trouble
he will keep me safe in his dwelling;

he will hide me in the shelter of his tabernacle
and set me high upon a rock.

Then my head will be exalted
above the enemies who surround me;

at his tabernacle will I sacrifice with shouts of joy;
I will sing and make music to the LORD.

Thank you for standing with us as you have helped us to pray this through, and for continuing to be with us in prayer.

In the Messiah,
Leah

This is huge news.

First, it confirms the suspicion of anti-missionary vigilante violence carried out by ultra-Orthodox Shamer groups like Yad L’achim.

Second, vindication! The police were initially sitting on their hands, dismissing this as a accidental firecracker accident (!), and the media chimed in with agreement, excusing the violence by claiming Messianic Jews are part of a cult. For example, here’s an original article from the left-leaning, secular Haaretz newspaper that all but excused the bombing:

Police are investigating the possibility that the explosion occurred while the boy was opening a Purim gift basket. Police reportedly believe the blast was caused by some sort of firecracker used during Purim celebrations.

The Parents of the victim are members of the Messianic Jews movement, which the police classify as a cult. The boy's father is considered to be one of the movement's leaders.

After previous attempts to harm the family, a security camera was installed at the family's home. The police were checking the footage to see whether the explosion was documented by the cameras. The police emphasized that there was no proof to support the theory that the explosion was deliberate and malicious.

Fine blog readers, notice the non-sequitur arguments used here: “This cult family has been targeted by attacks before. Therefore, it’s probably a firecracker accident.” (What kind of journalism and police detective work is this?!)

And the article failed to mention that the family’s security cameras caught a man in Orthodox Jewish garb dropping off the bomb at the family home. Yet the police, and apparently the author of this Haaretz article, cite no proof of malicious intent.

This highlights the extreme anti-Messianic bias witnessed in the Israeli media: Messianics are portrayed as a cult, violence against us is denied or excused, and finally dismissed. No one wants to be on the side of the ugly Messianics.

A great goodness has come out of this!

Things are changing. With the Jerusalem Institute of Justice standing up in court on behalf of persecuted Messianics, and the Israeli courts cracking down on evil vigilante anti-missionary Shamer groups, we’ve seen a turn in the Israeli media, with a few lone voices speaking up for the plight of Messianic Jews, praise God.

Additionally, many Jews in the Israeli Orthodox community are distancing themselves from these shameful anti-missionary groups. The Ami Ortiz family reports that when Ami was hospitalized after the bombing, many from the surrounding Orthodox Jewish communities came to visit Ami, and denounced and apologized for whomever carried out this bombing.

In word, the Orthodox communities were denouncing vigilante anti-missionary groups, whether knowingly or not. Praise God!

As Leah Ortiz put it,

We can testify that the nation as a whole condemns this man's actions. We have received telephone calls and communications from Israelis throughout this past year and a half, from every town, city, and village in Israel. They have been secular, orthodox and ultra orthodox Jews, and the message has been the same - shock, grief and anger over the incident, and the need to let us know that they condemn this vicious act.

Praise God that secular, Orthodox, and Ultra Orthodox Jews have all condemned this shameful act! I believe God has his hand on this situation: a terrible tragedy – the attempted murder of a family because of their belief in Messiah – has been turned into a great witness, changing the hearts of many. Praise God!

Look out, anti-missionaries, God is at work. When Messiah comes, I hope he finds you loving his flock, instead of persecuting it. And even should you continue persecuting us in your stubbornness, God is going to use it for his glory, just as he has in the triumphant case of Ami Ortiz.

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