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Toward a Mature
Messianic Judaism
With the cry "Hashivenu"
the Torah service concludes, imploring God to bring us back to himself.
It is our conviction that HaShem brings Messianic Jews to a richer
knowledge of himself through a modern day rediscovery of the paths of
our ancestors--Avodah (liturgical worship), Torah (study of sacred
texts), and Gemilut Chasadim (deeds of lovingkindness).
Our goal is a mature
Messianic Judaism. We seek an authentic expression of Jewish life
maintaining substantial continuity with Jewish tradition. However,
Messianic Judaism is energized by the belief that Yeshua of Nazareth is
the promised Messiah, the fullness of Torah. Mature Messianic Judaism
is not simply Judaism plus Yeshua, but is instead an integrated
following of Yeshua through traditional Jewish forms and the modern day
practice of Judaism in and through Yeshua. Messianic Judaism will only
attain maturity when it has established communal institutions which are
capable of expressing its ideals and transmitting them effectively to
ourselves, to our children, and to a skeptical world.
Values and Convictions
of Hashivenu
1. Messianic
Judaism is a Judaism, and not a cosmetically altered "Jewish-style"
version of what is extant in the wider Christian community.
2. God's
particular relationship with Israel is expressed in the Torah, God's
unique covenant with the Jewish people.
3. Yeshua
is the fullness of Torah.
4. The
Jewish people are "us" not "them."
5. The
richness of the Rabbinic tradition is a valuable part of our heritage
as Jewish people.
6. Because
all people are created in the image of God, how we treat them is a
reflection of our respect and love for Him; therefore, true piety
cannot exist apart from human decency.
7. Maturation requires a humble openness to new
ideas within the context of firmly held convictions.
Core
Value #1
Messianic
Judaism is a Judaism and not a cosmetically altered "Jewish style"
version of what is extant in the wider Christian community.
This was the
great leap which was taken when we changed our self-designation from
"Hebrew-Christian" or "Jewish-Christian" to "Messianic Jew." We were
saying that we no longer saw ourselves as Christians-Presbyterians,
Baptists, Episcopalians, Pentecostals, etc.-who happened to come from
Jewish ethnic backgrounds. Instead, being "Jewish" is, for us, a
fundamental religious category. We are those who by birth share in the
covenant G-d made with Abraham, Isaac, and Jacob, and whose ancestors
pledged themselves and their descendants to a particular way of life
with G-d at Sinai. Having been born into the covenant, we have also
come to recognize Messiah Yeshua as the One sent by G-d to bring the
covenant to its appointed goal.
We expressed this
reality by switching our worship day from Sunday to Saturday, by
celebrating the biblical feasts, by adopting traditional Jewish
religious terminology (such as "rabbi" and "synagogue") and traditional
Jewish religious customs (such as wearing tallit and kippot, having
Torah services, and reciting the Shema), by employing selected Hebrew
prayers in our services, by singing in a minor key and dancing Israeli
dances. All of this was positive and good, though for the most part,
superficial. The surface structure is the easiest to change. Of more
importance is the deep structure, and this level has proved more
intransigent.
The deep
structure of religious life consists of the rooted patterns of thought,
speech, action and identification reflected in our daily lives as
individuals, families, and congregations. How do we think and talk
about G-d, about His involvement with the world and with Israel? What
is the actual texture of our daily and weekly religious practice? How
is our sense of connection with the Jewish people as a whole expressed?
Too often the
deep structure of Messianic Jewish religious life is indistinguishable
from that of popular evangelicalism and bears little or no resemblance
to any form of Judaism, past or present. When the world is easily
divided into the classes of "saved" and "unsaved," when our speech is
peppered with casual references to "what G-d just did" and "what G-d
just said," when our exclusive mode of prayer is conversational and
begins "Father G-d" and ends "in the precious name of Yeshua," when our
kids go to Christian schools because the public schools are filled with
"satanic influences," when speculation about the end-times is more
natural to us than reciting a berachah -- then we know that the deep
structure of our religious life is Hebrew Christian and has been
untouched by the drastic changes in the surface structure of our
movement.
We in Hashivenu
believe that the radical innovation initiated in the 70's with the
birth of "Messianic Judaism" -- founded on first century precedent but
radically "new," nevertheless -- has not yet been brought to its
logical conclusion. The deep structure must now be transformed.
When we say that
Messianic Judaism is "a Judaism," we are also acknowledging the
existence of other "Judaisms." We do not deny their existence, their
legitimacy, or their value. We are not the sole valid expression of
Judaism with all else a counterfeit. We recognize our kinship with
other Judaisms and believe that we have much of profound importance to
learn from them, as well as something vitally important to share with
them.
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Core
Value #2
G-d's
particular relationship with Israel is expressed in the Torah, G-d's
unique covenant with the Jewish people.
Within the
Messianic movement it is an accepted assertion that the Jewish people
have a unique covenant relationship with G-d and a particular vocation
in this world. The Pauline affirmation of the irrevocable nature of the
promises, gifts, and calling of G-d is axiomatic throughout the
movement. While opening up new possibilities for the Gentiles and
placing them in a new relationship to Israel, the coming of Yeshua does
not obliterate Israel's character as a people set apart with a special
destiny.
Neither is the
ongoing value of Torah a contentious issue within our ranks. It was the
embracing of noteworthy elements of Torah observance, such as Shabbat,
the festal calendar, and tzitzit, which distinguished our movement from
its inception. Matthew 5:17, with its assurance that Yeshua came to
fulfill and not abolish the Torah, is just as foundational for our
movement as is Romans 11:29.
It is the
connection between these two affirmations that causes some
consternation among us. We in Hashivenu believe that the specific
observances of the Torah serve as signs of the distinctive character
and calling of the Jewish people: "You must keep my Sabbaths, for this
is a sign between me and you throughout the ages, that you may know
that I HaShem have consecrated you" (Exodus 31:13). It is emphasized
time and again throughout Jewish tradition that the Torah is G-d's
special gift to the people of Israel: "Blessed are You ... who chose us
from all nations and gave us Your Torah."
This is not to
say that the Torah is irrelevant to Gentile Christians. Though it
addresses a particular people and serves as its national constitution
and customs, it also has universal implications. It points
prophetically and typologically to the coming of Yeshua and the
inclusion of the Gentiles in a covenant relationship with G-d. The
specific ordinances of the Torah also reveal principles that apply
beyond Israel's collective national life. Nevertheless, in all its
particularity, the Torah is G-d's gift of love for one particular
people, the people of Israel.
We in Hashivenu
believe that this truth requires emphasis within the Messianic Jewish
movement. Though Messianic Jews never cease to attack "replacement
theology" (usually known outside our movement as "supersessionalism"),
we are in danger of failing prey to a more subtle form of the same
error. If, in all its ordinances, the Torah addresses Gentiles as much
as it does Jews, if it defines the life of the Church as much as it
defines the life of the Jewish people, then what remains of Israel's
unique character and calling? In the past Jews who entered the church
were compelled to surrender Jewish observance and identity and, as a
result, they were assimilated and they and their children lost any
sense of being Jews. If, contrary to the Apostolic decree and the
Pauline injunction, Gentiles in the church are now encouraged to live
just like Messianic Jews, will not the same result occur? And what of
the Jews who do not believe in Yeshua? What need is there for them? G-d
now has a people who are truly keeping his Torah-the Church! We are
left with a Messianic Jewish movement without any Jews, a movement that
loves Jewish things but not Jewish people.
In our second
core value, we express our love for the Jewish people, as rooted in the
unique divine love for the Jewish people. We also make known our love
for Torah as the divine gift to the Jewish people. Last, but not least,
we affirm our conviction that this divine gift to Israel, the Torah,
manifests this unique divine love for Israel and is not applicable in
the same way to the Gentiles.
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Core
Value #3
Yeshua is the
fullness of Torah.
As long as
theological statements have been codified, the Torah has been viewed
against Grace. This phenomenon has colored the perception and
understanding of many generations of people regarding Torah. People who
have seen the world through the Christian worldview have, along with
the many advantages, accepted a distorted view of Torah. To them, the
Torah is bad, the Gospel is good. Gospel is life and freedom; Torah is
seen as slavery and death. With this view as their starting point, it
would have been impossible to avoid the inevitability of a negative
view of the Law.
With the birth of
the Messianic movement, Jewish believers began to have a new
self-perception in which their Jewishness was something good and
positive and not something to be "saved from." Yet the misperception of
Torah persisted as that which was, at best, a "schoolmaster to lead one
to Christ" and, at worst, "the temptress who seeks to seduce its
victims from salvation by grace through the lure of a salvation of
works righteousness."
The real problem
with the Torah is not the Torah but the human misunderstanding of
Scripture. The Torah was given by G-d at Mt. Sinai. Yeshua was more
than a latter born Moshe. He is the Word who was in the Beginning,
through whom the world was created. He is the G-d of Israel, the G-d
who gave the Torah to the sons of Israel through the hand of Moshe. The
commandments of the Torah are Yeshua's commandments, not an arbitrary
set of rules or rituals. They are a revelation of the heart of G-d;
they are a reflection of Yeshua's heart. They cannot be understood to
be G-d's lesser commands. Yeshua's teachings do not permit such a view.
Those who wish to be more like Him must follow the Torah's teachings
because they are His very heart. This is the true meaning of the Torah
as a schoolmaster to lead us to Messiah. The Torah is not a divine
introduction service, arranging blind dates, after which its usefulness
is completed. It is a schoolmaster, a teacher -- to guide and train us
to become more like Him because this was how He lived and what was in
His heart.
The Torah is not
a lesser revelation of Yeshua, like an uncompleted puzzle. Simply
attaching an addendum to a prayer or commandment does not make it any
more complete than it was prior to the addendum. The mitzvah is already
complete in that it reflects the heart of Yeshua. When a mitzvah is
completed as it was intended when given, it reflects the heart of G-d.
Our goal should not be to amend every prayer, commandment, and ritual
with Messianic nomenclature. Rather, our goal should be to follow
Torah, having faith and a desire to connect with G-d through the act of
following. Surely, this was the life Yeshua lived and the life He
desires His people to live. Every act of observance is an opportunity
to connect with Him. He is the fullness of Torah. Our lives should be
so full.
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Core
Value #4
The Jewish people are "us," not "them."
Like a boat that
had drifted from its moorings, we were not cognizant of what was
happening to us until a key event, conversation, or combination of
factors jolted us awake to the realization that we were farther from
our Jewish moorings than we had realized.
For most of us,
experience in evangelical contexts taught us to look at Jews only as
people to whom we ought to witness. For us, the subtext of every family
gathering became "How can I bring the subject up?" and the objective in
our relationships with Jewish family, friends and acquaintances became
"How can I witness to them without their closing the door on the Gospel
and on me?" As important as these issues are, we realize now how wrong
it was for these evangelistic concerns to be the sole axis of
measurement of relationship with other Jews, even our own family
members. We became church-culture chameleons, adept at blending in,
showing that even though we were Jews, "we weren't like the other
Jews": we were real Christians, too. More often than we were prepared
to admit, though, we felt ourselves uneasy strangers in a strange land
of potluck suppers, hallelujahs, and obligatory right-wing politics.
But we had been taught, "You can't go back to what you were. This sense
of distance from the Jewish people, Jewish ways, and from family is the
cost of discipleship, the cross you are called to gladly bear. Rejoice
and be exceedingly glad." One day we discovered that we had become
habituated to speaking of the Jewish community in third person. We
awoke with a start.
Now we know we
can go home again. In fact, we must go home again for, truly, there is
no place like home. And home for Jews is Jewish life. No doubt, we will
have to remodel that home a bit to properly accommodate Yeshua, our
Messiah, but better to remodel our own home than to be a permanent
guest at someone else's address.
We dare to
believe that among the many mansions prepared for Yeshua's people, some
have mezuzot on the doors. We dare to believe that by rediscovering and
reclaiming our own identity as Jews, we will be better brothers and
sisters to Gentiles who love our Messiah. In all aspects of life, we
want to live in a Jewish neighborhood socially, culturally,
conceptually so that we and our children and our children's children
will not only call Yeshua Lord but also call the Jewish people "our
people" and Jewish life "home."
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Core
Value #5
The richness
of the rabbinic tradition is a valuable part of our heritage as Jewish
people.
Although weaned
and wooed to believe that our New Covenant faith was based on the Bible
and nothing but the Bible, "the only rule of faith and practice," we
gradually discovered that living out our faith inevitably had a
cultural component. The Bible cannot be understood apart from a
community context, which helps one understand its deepest meanings. In
this way, obedience might become incarnate in daily life. We realized
that having our views shaped entirely by a non-Jewish context was
leaving a foreign imprint on our hearts, minds and lives. We wondered
if this was the best we could expect.
Many of us had
been brought up ignorant of, or even hostile to, the varied voices of
Jewish tradition. Some had parents who paid lip-service to the G-d of
our fathers, while in reality served the lesser G-ds of assimilation,
success, and the unquestioned ideals of a good marriage, a home of
their own in a good neighborhood, a comfortable retirement, and a
better lifestyle for their children. Although these ideals were not
unworthy in themselves, they become a form of idolatry when they get
treated as the ultimate good. This form of idolatry can never, in the
end, satisfy a people formed by HaShem to show forth His praise. But,
we had been taught by omission not to look to Jewish tradition to learn
how to live "the good life" in the modern world.
Certainly, our
evangelical contexts taught us to distrust the opinions of "the rabbis"
whose views on life and faith were perceived as a deceptive and
legalistic counterfeit of the more abundant life to be found in Yeshua.
After all, we had the Holy Spirit! What could we possibly learn from
the rabbis except dead religion? "The letter kills but the Spirit gives
life." Eventually, we recognized the superficiality of our judgments.
We began to reckon with the fact that the proclaimed polarity between
Torah and Spirit distorts the testimony of Scripture. We came to
appreciate that New Covenant benefits include the Holy Spirit writing
the Torah on our hearts, therefore causing us to walk in the statutes
and ordinances of G-d. We began to appreciate the unity of Torah and
Spirit.
We also began to
appreciate how our own spiritual lives stood to benefit from the fruit
of thousands of years of Jewish struggle for understanding. Like Paul,
we began to bear witness to the undying flame of Jewish zeal for G-d.
We began to lean upon these structural pillars, which stabilize Jewish
religious life, understanding that they could help strengthen us and
the Messianic Jewish community as well.
And what are
these three pillars? The first is Torah, instruction for the good life
based on the study of the sacred texts. This practice is helping us
become more deliberate and informed in discerning the shape of
obedience as we encounter life in all its complexity and particularity.
Here, too, we learn afresh of the saving acts of G-d, of His promises,
and see a reflection of His face.
The second pillar
is avodah, the practice of liturgical prayer, which continues to
surprise and delight us in its power to enrich our lives. In daily
davvening we take our place with our people in the promises and
purposes of G-d, reminded again and again of His irrevocable promises
to the Patriarchs. We sing His praises with them at the shore of the
Red Sea, celebrating our deliverance, sobered by the righteous judgment
that overtook our foes, of which not one was left. We hear again and
again, as if for the first time, His promise to gather our people from
the four corners of the earth, for not one letter of His word will go
unfulfilled. Is He not the Blessed One, who says and performs, who
decrees and fulfills? We rediscovered daily the faith-transforming
power of the Passages of Praise, the time-honored wisdom of the prayer
agenda mapped out in the Amidah, and the stability and challenge
encountered as we join our people at the foot of Sinai, listening again
to the living word of the one who never stops saying to us, "Shema
Yisrael." And we leave His presence reoriented and renewed, having
again pledged allegiance to Him in the stirring words of the Alenu.
The pillar of
gemilut hasadim, deeds of lovingkindness, supports and informs us as we
learn to understand the meaning of "true religion," which one New
Covenant writer defined as "visiting orphans and widows in their
affliction and keeping oneself unspotted by the world." His is a vision
totally consonant with this third pillar. The splendid and rich
tradition of Jewish ethical writings and discussion of the fine print
behind "doing justly, loving mercy and walking humbly with your G-d"
never ceases to chasten us, providing teaching, rebuke, correction, and
training in righteousness, that we might be fully equipped for every
good work.
In all these ways
and more, we have become informed and transformed by our own heritage.
We rejoice at the privilege of drinking from our own wells, the wells
from which our fathers, and from which Yeshua and the Apostles also
drank and were sustained. Besides these wells we meet with Yeshua
today, and here He speaks with us anew.
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Core
Value #6
Because all
people are created in the image of G-d, how we treat them is a
reflection of our respect and love for Him. Therefore, true piety
cannot exist apart from human decency.
In the science
fiction saga, Star Trek, there was a planet of people who had a
cloaking device for their ships. They were able to fly around the
universe while escaping the detection of any other starships. While
their cloaking device was in operation, they were able to travel where
and when they wanted without opposition from others, and it gave them
an advantageous position from which to attack their enemies. In a
similar way, people have misused religion as a cloaking device through
which they could maneuver through life, escape detection for wrongs
committed and even launch attacks on others.
Historically,
this misuse of religion can be seen as far back as organized religion
itself. All the prophets cried out against this abuse; Yeshua of
Nazareth railed against it as well. The Church persecuted the Jewish
people for almost two millennia in the name of religion.
Most thinking
people would admit it is not fair to blame religion itself for these
things. The problem is one of human nature. It is easy to cloak wrong
intentions and problems under a cover of religious piety. Karl Marx
thought the answer was to ban religion, but communism proved that
politics could be just as effective a cloak as religion.
Religion can be
affirmed as good and right. Ritual can be affirmed as a valid
expression of faith and a means of connecting with G-d. Sadly, wherever
the valid expression exists, the corruption of the ritual can also
exist.
There are many
Jewish people rediscovering their heritage as well as its beautiful
practices. This rediscovery enables us to affirm identity as well as
pass on our heritage to our children. Unfortunately, there are some who
misuse ritual and form as a pretext to gain acceptance and authority.
Some have taken to wearing the black hats and clothing of the
Ultra-Orthodox. Others have sought to learn the rituals themselves as a
means to grasp authority in the congregation. They have taken something
that, in and of itself, is good, and have transformed it solely by
their wrong intention into something malevolent.
Yeshua did not
speak against ritual and tradition but against the wrong attitudes of
those who taught and practiced them with improper motives. When people
treat people poorly, whether for religious reasons or non-religious
reasons, the value of their religious practice becomes nullified.
The parable of
the sheep and the goats makes this clear. To the sheep it is said, "I
was hungry and you fed me. I was thirsty and you gave me something to
drink. I was naked and you clothed me." They answered, "L-rd, When did
we ever see you in need?" And He said, "When you did so to the least of
these my brethren, you did it to me." To the goats it was said, "I was
hungry and you gave me nothing. I was thirsty and you let me thirst. I
was naked and you did not clothe me." They answered, "L-rd, When did we
ever see you in need?" and He said, "When you did not do so to the
least of these my brethren, you didn't do it to me." The only
difference between the sheep and the goats was what they did or did not
do. Yaacov, the brother of Yeshua, said that pure and undefiled
religion is to take care of the needs of widows and orphans. In the
parable of the Good Samaritan, Yeshua taught the issue is not WHO is
our neighbor, but that we are to BE a neighbor, rendering assistance to
anyone in need. When an individual becomes a neighbor, a person who
seeks to reach out and meet the needs of others, it can be a deeply
religious act.
Religious people
easily become preoccupied with words, presuming to become the voice of
G-d to those around them. But it is far more fulfilling to be the hands
of G-d in the world, as Yeshua and the prophets taught. Yeshua stated
"The Son of Man did not come to be served, but to serve," and "He who
wishes to be the greatest among you must become the servant of all."
Long ago people
tuned out the many self-proclaimed voices of G-d. It gave them
headaches. People need to experience His love through kind actions.
They need to feel His hands blessing them. The time is long past where
religious pretext can cover up man's inhumanity to man. "Holier than
thou" attitudes will prove unprofitable is unacceptable as we approach
the next millennium. Actually, they never were acceptable from G-d's
point of view. The ability to quote Bible verses or the practice of
dressing in religious attire are not acceptable alternative standards
of spirituality. All people are created in the image of G-d, therefore,
how we treat them is a reflection of our respect and love for Him. True
piety cannot exist apart from human decency. This is the heart of G-d;
people need to feel it beating.
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Core
Value # 7
Maturation
requires a humble openness to discovery within the context of firmly
held convictions.
The heavens
declare the glory of G-d;
the skies proclaim the work of His hands.
Day after day they pour forth speech;
night after night they display knowledge.
The psalmist
beheld the vastness of creation and stood in awe of the inscrutable
nature of the Eternal Personality who ordered the universe. Though most
religious thinkers would give intellectual assent to the abstruseness
of both creation and Creator, the human need for certainty has forced
most traditional religions to operate as closed systems, tightly bound
by a set of immutable presuppositions and dogma. Though we recognize
the importance of firm and clearly held convictions, we consider the
cultivation of supple hearts and minds essential if the Messianic
Jewish community is to move on to maturity.
With the
blessings of the information age, new challenges have arisen. The sheer
volume of new and continual discovery has been coupled with the nearly
unlimited potential to disseminate and receive information and insight.
The result is a new climate, which affects how we view Messianic
Judaism, our role, our past, our future and the world about us. Our
social, theological and philosophical paradigms have become subject to
both new and old thought, which may have previously been ignored, if at
all considered. Rather than retreat into the safe and sure fortresses
of our immediate past, we must courageously, yet wisely, engage and
interact with our dramatically changing world.
Hashivenu affirms
the titanic contributions and complementary relationship of the
historical Church and the Synagogue to the ennoblement and advancement
of the human enterprise. We therefore encourage the Messianic Jewish
community to avail itself of the insights of both institutions while
critically evaluating the usefulness of such insights as we pursue
maturation. We also recognize the tremendous value offered by
contemporary cross-disciplinary scholarship. Since truth may be found
in surprising places, the over- worn categorization of liberal and
conservative will not, in our opinion, serve the best interest of an
emerging Messianic Judaism.
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