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JEWISH
APOLOGETICS:
CHRISTIANITY'S ONGOING AND UNIQUE CHALLENGE
MICHAEL L. BROWN, PH.D.
June
9, 2006, International Society of Christian Apologetics
Charlotte, North Carolina
Several
months ago, a colleague in Arizona introduced me to a very
sharp lawyer and debater who also taught apologetics a local
seminary. We began to talk about some of the debates I had
had with Orthodox Jewish rabbis, at which point he asked,
“But what objections could they possibly raise?”
Having written more than 1,500 pages of answers to Jewish
objections to Jesus, I must admit that his question surprised
me, given his educational and apologetics background. I then
began to explain to him some of the principal Jewish objections
to Jesus, to which he replied, “It looks like you have
your work cut out for you!” I’ve had similar conversations
with pastors and Christian leaders who, initially, could not
understand how Jewish people could possibly object to our
presentation of Messianic prophecies or Christian evidence.
This
reminds me of my experience as a new believer in Jesus in the
early 1970s. The Lord graciously reached out to me when I was
a heroin-shooting, LSD-using, marijuana-smoking, diesel gas-huffing,
long-haired, rebellious, sixteen year-old, Jewish rock drummer
with no interest in God and, of course, no faith in Jesus. In
a period of several months, my life was radically transformed,
and by the time I had known the Lord for one year, I was spending
at least six hours alone with Him every day: three hours in
prayer, two hours reading the Scriptures, and one-hour memorizing
the Scriptures (memorizing 20 verses a day). Although I was
certainly lacking in wisdom and sensitivity, no one in my high
school could withstand my knowledge of the Scriptures, and I
was even able to lead a neighborhood woman out of the Jehovah’s
Witnesses. Some time later, at the age of eighteen, I was introduced
to some ultra-Orthodox rabbis in Brooklyn, men who had years
of experience in dealing with Jews who believed in Jesus. They
were not overwhelmed by my knowledge of the Word! In fact, it
was very humbling to sit there with my King James Bible, which
they politely critiqued as another one of those faulty English
translations, while they sat there with their Hebrew Bibles
open, Bibles they had been reading in the original since they
were young children. For the first time, I was the one being
challenged, both by their knowledge and by their lifestyle.
As a result
of my time with these rabbis I began to look into contemporary,
Jewish Christian responses to these objections, but almost
everything I found at that time tended to be very superficial,
primarily popular in scope and tone (not to mention often
marred by embarrassing errors). Thankfully, as I continued
to search, I found that there were much more substantial,
academic Christian responses to these objections, but in many
ways, these learned Gentile responses failed to grasp the
weight of the objections, being so sure of the rightness of
their own position that they could not grasp the depth of
the objection, also appearing to be virtually oblivious to
the terribly destructive impact of anti-Semitism throughout
the course of “Church” history. Simply stated,
it has been my observation for many years that Christians
somehow think that by simply stating their position, they
have thereby successfully responded to the particular Jewish
objection being raised. After all, the Jews are stiffnecked,
blind, and hardened, so there can be little or no substance
to their objections. They’re just stubbornly refusing
to see the truth! Not surprisingly, Christian understanding
of Jewish objections to Jesus has often been marked by superficiality,
insensitivity, and triumphalism.
To give
one typical example, while participating in a major biblical
conference in Chicago in 1988, I entered into a discussion
with some of the world’s top New Testament scholars.
One of them had even written a book on Jewish views of Jesus,
so I asked him, “In light of Jewish fidelity to the
Torah, how would you explain the gloss in Mark 7:19 which,
according to many interpreters, indicates that Jesus abolished
the dietary laws?” He responded, “That’s
where we have to understand His authority as the Messiah.
He changed the law by His Messianic authority.” Of course,
that is an argument that needs to be considered, but I relate
this story for a very different reason. This erudite scholar
failed to realize that, according to the Orthodox Jewish understanding
of the eternal immutability of the Torah, an understanding
reinforced by the Lord Himself in Matt 5:17-20 and elsewhere,
if Yeshua did change the law, He would thereby have disqualified
himself from being the Messiah! Moreover, according to the
clear reading of Deut 13:1-11, no amount of miracles or apparent
divine confirmation – including, by implication, even
rising from the dead – could be marshaled as sufficient
cause to follow other gods, gods which were not known to the
past generations, which, in the traditional Jewish view, would
include the worship of Jesus. It is my goal, therefore, in
this paper to illustrate the unique and challenging nature
of Jewish objections to Jesus, pointing to the best way to
respond to these objections.
Let
me begin with the concept of a newer and better covenant displacing
the old, inferior covenant. (Remember, of course, that to
a religious Jew, there is no such thing as the “Old
Testament,” nor is there anything inferior or lacking
in their covenant with God as they understand it.) To us,
living in the light and glory of that wonderful new covenant,
a covenant confirmed by the death and resurrection of the
Son of God, it is difficult to see how a religious Jew could
not possibly recognize his spiritually incomplete state. But
what do we say to a Muslim who claims that Muhammad is the
seal of the prophets and that it is we who are spiritually
incomplete? We tell him, among other things, that anyone who
seeks to add to the final revelation of God in Jesus, as spelled
out in the New Testament writings, is a false prophet. We
respond in similar fashion to the claims of those who say
that so-and-so is a contemporary incarnation of the Christ.
We remind them of Jesus’ words that false prophets and
false christs would arise who would deceive many, and we point
out that the Lord clearly forewarned us, instructing us to
wait for His coming in the clouds.
This,
of course, is self-evident to us, yet we often fail to see
the parallel response from Judaism to Christianity: “In
the Torah, God warned us not to follow any prophet or miracle
worker who in any way deviated from the words of this Instruction,
and anyone that contradicts or adds to or takes away from
the once-and-for-all revelation from God at Sinai –
a revelation that He said was for all generations –
must be rejected out of hand. We have been forewarned! And
the last word He spoke to us in the prophets was to remember
the Torah of Moses and to expect the coming of Elijah (Mal
4:4-6). As for your Messianic claims, when our Messiah comes
and establishes peace on the earth and regathers the exiles,
we’ll have no trouble recognizing that he’s the
one. Until then, we reject all other false Messianic claimants.”
Furthermore, while so much Christian practice bears little
resemblance to the commands of the Torah and the calendar
of the Torah, the traditional Jew points to many passages
in the Tanakh (the Hebrew Bible) which call on him to perpetuate
the Torah lifestyle so that, when his children ask him, “Why
do you do this?”, he can explain, “It is because
the Lord brought our fathers out of Egypt . . . ” (see,
e.g., Exod 12:24-28). In this way, as stated in the Psalms
and other related passages, one generation declares to the
next the faithfulness of God (see, e.g., Ps 78:1-7). To a
Jew, this is part of his sacred calling: Preserving the unbroken
chain from Abraham to Sinai to the present. This, he would
argue, is hardly an outmoded covenant!
In response,
we point out that God Himself declared in Jeremiah 31:31-34
that He would make a new covenant, different than the covenant
He had previously made with His people at Sinai. Yet here
too, we fail to recognize two things: First, this new covenant
was to be made with Israel and Judah, not with the Gentile
world; and second, in this new covenant, God would put His
Torah into the hearts and minds of His people. That is to
say, it would not result in an abrogation of Torah but rather
in a whole-hearted obedience to the commands of the law.
Responding
again, we argue that it is now the Church which has taken
the place of Israel and Judah, at which point, we might expect
a Muslim to jump in on our conversation and say, “You’re
close, but not close enough. Islam has replaced both of your
incomplete and faulty religions!” Putting this Islamic
salvo – and my sarcasm – aside, do we realize
that in claiming that another people has displaced the people
to whom the promises came – the very people to whom
God swore that He would never totally destroy or displace
them, no matter what sins they would commit, and all that
in a passage immediately following the new covenant prophecy
in Jeremiah (see Jer 31:35-37) – we thereby impugn the
very integrity of God?
“But,”
you protest, “the religious Jew must surely know that
he is in bondage to the law and under a curse. We can offer
him liberty in Jesus!”
To this
the observant Jew replies, “The Torah is a gift from
God! Keeping His commands is my delight,” and he proceeds
to quote verses such as Deut 32:47 (“[The words of the
Torah] are not just idle words for you--they are your life”),
Ps 1:2 (“But his delight is in the law of the LORD,
and on his law he meditates day and night”), not to
mention whole passages such as Psalm 19 and 119 (to cite just
one example, consider 119:72: “The law from your mouth
is more precious to me than thousands of pieces of silver
and gold”). And he reminds us in that in the Messianic
age, Torah will go forth from Zion! (See Isa 2:1-4.) It seems
that the more we present our case, the more we are presenting
to a traditional Jew an alien religion.
Things
only intensify when, at some point in our dialogue, we unashamedly
declare that “Jesus is God.” (I want to make it
perfectly clear that I am not here to deny that statement.
I would ask, however, when we say that Jesus is God, do we
mean that He is the Father, Son, and Spirit, or that He is
identical to the Father, or do we mean something more nuanced,
such as is found in John 1:1-18? That is to say, there is
more ambiguity in our “Jesus is God” statement
than we might realize.)
In any
case, do you realize what a religious Jew hears when we proclaim
that “Jesus is God,” especially when we remember
that the great majority of traditional Jews associate historic
Christianity with Catholicism, and therefore with crucifixes
and icons? Jesus is God? A Jew would surely say, “This
cannot be! Num 23:19 and 1 Sam 15:29 flatly state that God
is not a man, yet you are saying that God became a man. Impossible!
Moses warned us about this explicitly in Deut 4:15-19: ‘You
saw no form of any kind the day the LORD spoke to you at Horeb
out of the fire. Therefore watch yourselves very carefully,
so that you do not become corrupt and make for yourselves
an idol, an image of any shape, whether formed like a man
or a woman, or like any animal on earth or any bird that flies
in the air, or like any creature that moves along the ground
or any fish in the waters below.’ Yet you worship God
in the form of a man!”
We then
explain the Trinity, to which the Jew replies, “Our
ancestors died with the Shema on their lips [referring to
Deut 6:4ff.] rather than deny the oneness of the Lord. That
for us is the highest honor: To die for Kiddush HaShem, the
sanctification of the name of the Lord. And every day, when
we recite the Shema, we focus all of our energy and intellect
on the revelation of God’s uniqueness and absolute unity.
How dare you tell me that He is three in one! That is not
the God of Sinai, and that is not the God of our forefathers.
I will not betray my God or my people!”
Sadly,
at this point, the traditional Jew might begin to recount
the horrors of Church history as he knows, beginning with
the demonization of the person of the Jew among some of the
early Church fathers, then moving to Saint John Chrysostom’s
infamous seven sermons against the Jews, in which flatly declared
that God hated the Jews and that the synagogue was worth than
a brothel, then skipping to the Crusades and the Inquisitions,
before quoting from Martin Luther’s venomous “Concerning
the Jews and their Lies,” a little book whose strategies
Adolph Hitler carried out with precision. As Daniel Jonah
Goldhagen pointed out in his book, Hitler’s Willing
Executioners:
One
leading Protestant churchman, Bishop Martin Sasse published
a compendium of Martin Luther’s antisemitic vitriol
shortly after Kristallnacht’s orgy of anti-Jewish violence.
In the foreword to the volume, he applauded the burning of
the synagogues and the coincidence of the day: “On November
10, 1938, on Luther’s birthday, the synagogues are burning
in Germany.” The German people, he urged, ought to heed
these words “of the greatest antisemite of his time,
the warner of his people against the Jews.” 1
Thus,
when Julius Streicher, one of Hitler’s top henchmen
and the publisher of the anti-Semitic Der Sturmer,
was asked during the Nuremberg trials for war criminals if
any other publications in Germany treated the Jewish question
in an anti-Semitic way, he replied.
Dr.
Martin Luther would very probably sit in my place in the defendants’
dock today, if this book had been taken into consideration
by the Prosecution. In the book “The Jews and Their
Lies,” Dr. Martin Luther writes that the Jews are a
serpent’s brood and one should burn down their synagogues
and destroy them…. 2
So, according to Streicher, the Nazis only did what Luther urged
them to do! Tragically, as expressed by the Catholic scholar
Edward Flannery:
The
vast majority of Christians, even well educated, are all but
totally ignorant of what happened to Jews in history and of
the culpable involvement of the Church. . . . It is little
exaggeration to state that those pages of history Jews have
committed to memory are the very ones that have been torn
from Christian (and secular) history books. 3
To offer
you some Jewish perspectives on Church history – remember
again that most Jews do not know the difference between the
professing Church and the true Church, and, more importantly,
the true Church has also been corrupted at times by anti-Semitism
– consider these words penned in the last third of the
twentieth century. First, the perspective of an Israeli writer
in his Hebrew book on false messiahs in Jewish history:
Instead
of bringing redemption to the Jews, the false Christian messiah
has brought down on us base libels and expulsions, oppressive
restrictions and burning of [our] holy books, devastations
and destructions. Christianity, which professes to infuse
the sick world with love and compassion, has fixed a course
directly opposed to this lofty rhetoric. The voice of the
blood of millions of our brothers cries out to us from the
ground: “No! Christianity is not a religion of love
but a religion of unfathomable hate! All history, from ancient
times to our own day, is one continuous proof of the total
bankruptcy of this religion in all its segments.” 4
Next,
I cite the words of Reform Jewish scholar Eugene Borowtiz:
We might be more inclined to give
Christian claims some credence had we seen Christians through
the ages behave as models of a redeemed humanity. Looking
through the window of history we have found them in as much
need of saving as the rest of humankind. If anything, their
social failings are especially discrediting of their doctrine
for they claim to be uniquely free of human sinfulness and
freshly inspired by their faith to bring the world to a realm
of love and peace. . . . Until sinfulness ceases and well-being
prevails, Jews know the Messiah has not come. 5
As the
great scholar Franz Delitzsch sadly noted, being himself actively
involved in Jewish apologetics and evangelism in the 19th
century: “The Church still owes the Jews the actual
proof of Christianity’s truth. Is it surprising that
the Jewish people are such an insensitive and barren field
for the Gospel? The Church itself has drenched it in blood
and then heaped stones upon it.”6
Yet we somehow think that by quoting an isolated Messianic
proof text, one whose original context we have often not even
explored, we will be able to convince a religious Jew to “become
a Christian,” or, if he rejects our words but is honest
with himself, we expect him at least to acknowledge the truthfulness
of our position.
Can you
see now that, in his eyes, we are asking him to deny God,
deny Torah, deny the eternal covenant, deny his people, and
embrace an alien, idolatrous, and seriously flawed religion?
And can you see how this insensitivity smacks of the very
triumphalism that has been such a curse on our history? And
isn’t it striking that we find the need to have a serious
apologetic arsenal to address the cults, to address other
major, world religions, and to address post-modernism and
evolutionism, yet we fail to recognize how essential it is
that we massively shore up our Jewish apologetics? And isn’t
this lack all the more striking when we remember that, according
to Rom 1:16, the gospel is to the Jew first? And that according
to Rom 11:17-24, the Jews are the natural olive branches who
can be more readily grafted back into their own olive tree?
And that according to Rom 11:11-15, a major reason for reaching
out to the Gentile world is to provoke Israel to jealousy?
And that according to those very same verses, “if their
transgression means riches for the world, and their loss means
riches for the Gentiles, how much greater riches will their
fullness bring,” and, “if their rejection is the
reconciliation of the world, what will their acceptance be
but life from the dead?” Don’t these truths urge
us to make solid and sensitive Jewish apologetics a mainstay
of our teaching, not just for the specialist but for all apologists?
And, given the Lord’s words in Matt 23:39, viz., that
Jerusalem will not see Him again until it recognizes Him as
the Messianic King, which by implication means that no one
will see Him until Jerusalem welcomes Him back, shouldn’t
we be working with God to help see this come to pass? How
then should we respond to the challenge of Jewish apologetics?
I would offer the following, general considerations, referring
those interested in further study to a number of relevant
volumes I have been privileged to write on the subject.
First,
you should recognize that religious, observant Jews make up
at most 10% of world Jewry, meaning that many of the issues
I have raised here are not issues for the majority
of the world’s Jews (although in a country like Israel,
despite most of the population being secular, there is a gut
level connection to many of the objections and issues I have
raised here). That is to say, most of the Jews you meet will
not be particularly religious or especially educated in their
faith, and so there will not be a major, Jewish apologetic
need when dealing with them. However, through internet and
various other means, more and more Jews now have access to
anti-missionary apologetics, and so, once they come to faith
in Yeshua, they will often be assaulted with these issues,
thus the need remains to address these questions at some point.
But to repeat: For the vast majority of Jews you meet, solid
Jewish apologetics will not be needed at the outset.
Second,
given what religious Jews know about “Christendom,”
before extolling the wonderful contributions of Christianity
to society or lauding the powerful effects of Jesus’
teaching on humanity or proclaiming the great love for Israel
found in many evangelical circles, it would be wise to begin
with humility and a spirit of identificational repentance,
asking forgiveness for the atrocities that have been committed
by false Christians in Jesus’ name – and then
seeking to demonstrate by personal and corporate example what
the life-transforming power of the gospel is really all about.
Third,
recognize that there is a zeal for God among many religious
Jews (cf. Rom 10:2), despite customs and practices that often
seem odd to us, and despite the occasional presence of legalism
or religious hypocrisy (these exist in many other circles
as well!). It is part of our triumphalist mentality to think
that all religious-but-non-Christian people are walking around
in total spiritual apathy and ignorance, with no light of
revelation at all, and with no true desire for God. In the
case of religious Jews, it is best to see them as “so
near and yet so far,” praying to the same God to whom
we pray (even if they do not truly “know” Him
the way we do), reciting the same psalms, meditating on the
same scriptures, seeking to emulate the same holiness and
morality, and longing to see the fulfillment of the same prophetic
promises. A daily prayer of religious Jews – often recited
when at death’s door – ends with these two stanzas:
He
is the living God to save,
My Rock while sorrow’s toils endure,
My banner and my stronghold sure,
The cup of life whene’er I crave.
I
place my soul within His palm
Before I sleep as when I wake,
And though my body I forsake,
Rest in the Lord in fearless calm.7
How then
should we respond to those who pray to Israel’s God
with such pathos and conviction?
Fourth,
when addressing the issue of the nature of God and the deity
of Yeshua, I would strongly suggest that we speak of God’s
complex unity, opening it up as a mystery, and being very
biblical in the language we use. There is a reason John 1:1-18
is written the way it is. Do we express ourselves in similar
terms? This, of course, is a massive subject in itself, but
I offer this as a seed for thought. Fifth, it is important
that we understand the coming of the Messiah as the fulfillment
– not abolition! – of the Torah and prophets,
in both a holistic and specific sense, emphasizing the continuity
of God’s purposes for Israel. (This, of course, will
also challenge us to recover some of the lost, biblical Jewish
roots of our faith.) Yes, it is true that, in Jesus, God did
a radically new thing, but it was the thing that was prophesied
and anticipated in the Tanakh, which much of it, according
to Paul, being a mystery that had been hidden in the Scriptures
but was now being revealed. Again, God’s dealings with
Israel and the nations represents continuity rather than discontinuity.
In keeping with this, it is important to emphasize that Yeshua
the Jew brings to fulfillment God’s destiny for Israel
– making the one true God known to the ends of the earth,
to be worshiped by Jew and Gentile alike. (To put this quaintly,
“One of our boys made it!) Jews need to reclaim Him,
but only on His terms.
Sixth,
we should remember that, in reality, Jews do not hold simply
to the written Torah but to their traditional interpretations
as well. In fact, it is the oral traditions that are the heart
and soul of Judaism – there is no traditional Judaism
without the traditions – and so it is only fair to ask:
Do the Messianic Writings (i.e., the New Testament) represent
God’s continuing Word to His people, or should we follow
the rabbinic traditions? To press this point, we should emphasize
that, just at Jesus predicted, the Temple has been destroyed
and the Jewish people dispersed throughout the world, bringing
about profound questions for the Jewish people with regard
to Torah life. Is God’s answer to these questions the
Messianic faith in Yeshua or is it rabbinic Judaism? Certainly,
the latter has helped to preserve the distinct identity of
the Jewish people for the last two millennia, and this is
no small thing. But has it brought the full realities of forgiveness
of sins, intimacy with God, and life in the Spirit? In that
sense, can we demonstrate that in Yeshua, there is something
more? I understand, of course, that many religious Jews will
claim to have a close relationship with God, but there is
something divinely unique in our experience in Messiah.
Seventh,
we should not treat Messianic prophecies in an atomistic,
proof-texting form but should rather examine the original
contexts of the prophetic words, looking for larger redemptive
truths and for patterns of salvation history. While demanding,
this approach will prove to be of inestimable value once objections
are raised, not to mention the fact that it will certainly
prove enriching in our own study of Scripture. We should also
understand some basic keys to understanding Messianic prophecies,
another large subject that I can only address in passing right
now.
Eighth,
rather than simply speaking of a suffering Messiah and a royal
Messiah, we must develop the theme of Messiah as a priestly
King, understanding that it is the priestly aspect of the
Messiah’s work – something almost totally lacking
in traditional Judaism – that explains why he needed
to suffer and die. This too is a critical insight that requires
much, further elaboration. It is also important to establish
from the Hebrew Bible that the Messiah’s foundational,
priestly work had to be completed before the destruction
of the Second Temple, an important apologetic point in itself.
Ninth,
we can rightly press the issue that Yeshua is either the Messiah
of everyone or the Messiah of no one, noting that God has,
in fact, done something definite, intentional, and direct
on behalf of the Gentiles, just as the Messianic prophecies
proclaimed. (It is fair to ask a traditional Jew what God
has done – outside of Jesus – to make Himself
known to the nations in the last two thousand years, also
asking what role religious Jews have played in themselves
being a light to the world.) Succinctly stated, if Jesus did
not fulfill the Scriptures, if He did not die and rise from
the dead, if He is not seated at the Father’s right
hand, if He will not return in the clouds in the future and
establish the kingdom of God on the earth, then the faith
of hundreds of millions of Christians worldwide is a nothing
less than a sham. But if He is indeed the one spoken of by
Moses and the prophets, then every Jew needs to embrace him
as well! It is only liberal Christianity and liberal Judaism
that can claim complete mutual affirmation. So, let us emphasize
God’s calling on Israel to be a light to the nations,
to be a priestly people themselves, and let us demonstrate
that, through Jesus, God has fulfilled His Word. To repeat
(and I as I often say to my fellow Jews): Yeshua the Jew is
one of us, the one through whom Israel achieves its destiny.
Of course,
there is much more I could say, but I hope that, in some way,
you have gained a greater appreciation for the unique challenges
involved in Jewish apologetics, along with the confidence
that, in Yeshua, the treasures of wisdom and knowledge are
hidden. I close with the words of Paul from Romans 11: “Again
I ask: Did they stumble so as to fall beyond recovery? Not
at all! . . . If the part of the dough offered as firstfruits
is holy, then the whole batch is holy; if the root is holy,
so are the branches. . . . After all, if you were cut out
of an olive tree that is wild by nature, and contrary to nature
were grafted into a cultivated olive tree, how much more readily
will these, the natural branches, be grafted into their own
olive tree! I do not want you to be ignorant of this mystery,
brothers, so that you may not be conceited: Israel has experienced
a hardening in part until the full number of the Gentiles
has come in. And so all Israel will be saved, as it is written:
“The deliverer will come from Zion; he will turn godlessness
away from Jacob. And this is my covenant with them when I
take away their sins.” (Rom 11:11a, 16, 24-27)
1Cited
in Michael L. Brown, Revolution in the Church:
Challenging the Religious System with a Call for Radical Change
(Grand Rapids: Chosen, 2002), 168.
2Cited
in Ibid., 169.
3Cited
in Michael L. Brown, Our Hands Are Stained with
Blood: The Tragic Story of the "Church" and the Jewish
People (Shippensburg, PA: Destiny Image, 1992),
xii.
4Translated
and cited in Ibid., 89-90.
5Cited
in Ibid., 90-91.
6Cited
in Ibid., 92.
7The
prayer is called, Adon Olam, meaning,
"Lord of the World" (or, "Master if the Universe"),
cited in full in ibid., 110-111.
Dr. Michael L. Brown
ICN Ministries
PO Box 1446
Harrisburg, NC 28075
704-782-3760
e-mail: ministry@icnministries.org
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