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Recently, I
had a conversation about the task of the Union of Messianic Jewish
Congregations (UMJC) to define Messianic Judaism. The individual with whom I
spoke said, "Good luck, why not just follow the Lord?" My first thought was, "I
did not know that the two were mutually exclusive." In addition, the question
that entered my mind was, "What exactly does it look like to, ‘just follow the
Lord?'" At that moment, I did not actually respond to my conversation partner,
yet once again, I found myself confronted with the reality that Messianic Jews
are either indifferent to, struggle with, or just are not concerned with
finding an appropriate Jewish response to our beliefs regarding Yeshua. Even
more so, the prevailing "us and them" attitude that exists with many Messianic
Jews in relation to the rest of the Jewish people makes our people no more than
an outreach target at best, calling into question the depth-if not the actual
authenticity-of our own Jewish identity while devaluing theirs on some level.
Why do Jews who follow Messiah Yeshua see Jewish life as a "take it or leave
it" culture? The centrality of our identity as Messianic Jews, as we shall see,
is foundational to our covenantal relationship with, and our responsibility
to, Hashem.
The
UMJC statement, "Defining Messianic Judaism," presented at the 2002
international conference in Orlando,
FL, fulfilled the three-year
mandate of the Theology Committee to produce a definition of Messianic
Judaism. Of the many points of attention that might emerge from the statement
itself, the one that will be of the most interest here will be the nature of Israel, asking the question, will the real Israel please
rise? This is precipitated by the state-ment's centrality of Israel that
markedly looms large in the definition of whom we claim to be. A problem that
exists within contemporary Messianic Judaism is the relationship that we have
to our fellow Jews. The net result, unfortunately, has yielded a new boundary for
Israel,
locating Messianic and non-Messianic Jews in both communal and theological
polarity. This creates a tension in tandem with the UMJC statement that asks
whether or not we really tell our story within the larger Jewish story.
Likewise, how can we tell our own Jewish story if we are not a part of larger
Jewish story as it states in the document? The larger Jewish story is directly
related to whom we say Israel
is, and who Israel
is has everything to do with who we are as well as our relationship to our
fellow Jews. The more that we define ourselves in antithesis, the more we run
the risk of defining ourselves outside the greater Jewish story.
The above, then, speaks to the sociological implication of the
statement itself with respect to the community of faith (in our case, Israel). It
would therefore conclude that without the historical community or the
hierarchical grid behind the community's teachings, individual faith is not
only minimized, but is also rearranged elsewhere.1 Simply saying, "just
follow the Lord," contains a human and communal disconnect, better understood
by the words of French sociologist Pierre Bourdieu who writes:
"The performance of magic ritual [the ways of the community]
functions fully only as long as the religious official who is responsible for
carrying it out [does so] in the name of the group [and] acts as kind of a
medium between the group and itself; it is the group which, through its intermediary,
exercises on itself the magical efficiency contained in the performance
utterance...To speak of rites of institution [the institution of the above
official] is to suggest that all rites tend to consecrate or legitimatize an
arbitrary boundary...which represents a very effective way of [human]
naturalization." 2
While
Bourdieu speaks to his own community (the Roman Catholic Church), we can
certainly apply his findings to our own situation. It is the responsibility of
our Rabbis, and non-ordained leadership, to lead our constituency in the
traditions of "our" greater community; such traditions called "magic ritual" by
Bourdieu, as foundational to the humanity of our faith. Our identity comes
from a sense of tangible belonging, or "human naturalization," in connection
with the historical faith community [the Jewish people], not only for us, but
also as a means to pass it on to the next generation as the UMJC statement also
concludes. The traditions we practice as part of our community creates an
"arbitrary boundary" between the sacred and the common, what is Jewish and what
is not (e.g. Shabbat and Sunday), giving life to our faith practice. The
statement goes on and tells us that Messianic Judaism "must be fully part of
the Jewish people, sharing its history and covenantal responsibility as people
chosen by God."
That means that the community of our identification and "magic
ritual" goes beyond the Messianic Jewish community. The Messianic Jewish
community is part of the greater Jewish commu-nity.3 Bourdieu would say
that a Roman Catholic congregation is not the community in and of itself, but
is part of the greater worldwide Catholic body. In response to the UMJC
statement, Rabbi Russell Resnik concludes, "‘To be fully part of the Jewish
people' means that in Messianic Judaism we must tell our story within the
larger Jewish story."
The
problem to be noted, in light of the UMJC statement, is the existence of
differing views that compete for the definition of Israel, and therefore the story
itself. The statement then says, "Messianic Judaism...committed to Yeshua the
Messiah [embraces] the covenantal responsibility of Jewish life and identity
rooted in Torah, expressed in tradition." "Jewish life" is the ways of the
Jewish people, and Jewish identity "rooted in Torah [and] expressed in tradition,"
is Judaism. Torah and Jewish tradition are the pillars of Jewish life
experience, meaning that they are key to Israel's makeup. Conversely, if
we, as the statement suggests, are part of the Jewish people, then our own
self-identity emerges out of that same Israel, as well as the very same
Torah and traditions. Messianic Judaism must first reconcile the identity of Israel before
we may truly state our own identity.
Dr. Kinzer's Nature Of Messianic Judaism
The
relationship of Messianic Judaism to Israel is very much at the center of Dr.
Mark Kinzer's The Nature of Messianic Judaism: Judaism as a Genus and
Messianic as a Species.4 In his monograph, the first installment of
this process, he sought to tell our story within the larger story of Israel.
In response to Dr. Kinzer, those who interacted with his writings sought to do
the same-tell our story within the larger story of Israel. But while Dr. Kinzer and
his respondents5 agreed on Israel's
centrality, it was also their point of departure. The nature of Messianic
Judaism for Dr. Kinzer, incorporates the Messianic Jewish relationship to Israel and its
relationship to the greater community of Messiah, concluding that our "genus"
is Judaism while our "species" is Messianic. What that means is that our
Judaism (the way Jewish people relate to God) is unique and foundational, yet
as Jews who have embraced Yeshua, our Judaism is Messianic.6 Our
belief and practice, born and molded within Israel, has changed Judaism
forever, reflecting the eternal peace of God in this age renewed, within the
teachings of the Renewed Covenant.7
As
for Judaism itself, Dr. Kinzer defines it as "the religious tradition of the
Jewish people, in all its diversity, throughout history." in response to Torah.8 Such a
definition of Judaism is more reminiscent of those who practice it-the Jewish
people-verses a Christian, or even a Messianic Jewish view, of what Judaism is
thought to be; a system of religion to secure one's salvation as opposed to
Yeshua.9 Israel
and Judaism may not be separated since one defines the other, which then
impacts how Messianic Judaism is to be understood. Israel
would also include a remnant-from now on simply referred to as Messianic
Jews-of Israel
who would follow Yeshua.
According to Dr. Kinzer, who portrays the remnant from
Israel as faithful Jews in
this new age of Messiah, Messianic Jews10 need to be faithful to Israel to best support their role as an
"eschatological bridge joining Israel
and the Gentiles."11 The
Messianic Jewish remnant of Israel
stands in a new "corporate relationship" with the chosen of the nations
"supporting [their mission] and recognizing Gentile believers in Yeshua as
siblings and sharers in Israel's
covenant blessings."12 The
significance of this new "corporate relationship" represents a subcommunity
within God's people that would be "the sign of peace and reconciliation that
Messiah brings to the entire creation," to anticipate the peace of the world to
come. The witness of this new community is a "new partnership he (God) forges
between Jews and Gentiles...not as a mark of his [Paul's] failure but of his
[and ultimately Israel's]
success." What makes the Messianic Jewish mission successful is its communal
identification with Israel
to confirm her existence, while participating in her priestly call to the
nations to confirm her mission.
In
response, Derek Leman raises the question, "Is Judaism [really] the primary
identity of Messianic Judaism?"13 Whereas Dr. Kinzer defined Judaism as
"the religious tradition of the Jewish people, in all its diversity, throughout
history," Rabbi Jamie Cowen defines it as being "built upon a foundation of the
rejection of New Testament Judaism."14 Independently
from Rabbi Cowen, both Michael Rudolph and Ralph Finely hold that the rejection
of the New Testament invalidates Judaism because it rejects Yeshua.15 As a result,
intended or not, Israel is bifurcated into two different Israel's, not one of
diversity per Dr. Kinzer. These "two" communities of Israel, are referred to by Derek Leman as
"Covenant Israel
and the Israel of God," whose differing practices are said to be Rabbinic and
Biblical Judaism respectively.
Rabbinic-based
Jews practice the Judaism of the Rabbis in "Covenant Israel,"
and Biblically-based Jews are the faithful of Israel who believe in Yeshua and
practice the true pristine Judaism of the Bible as the "Israel of God." The
Biblical practice of Messianic Judaism that represents the Israel of God
includes the incorporation of gentiles into correct Biblical obedience. Both
Messianic Jews and the remnant from the nations then worship together; a relationship,
according to Michael Rudolph and Ralph Finely, best confirmed in the local
body of worshippers-not corporately as suggested by Dr. Kinzer.16
According
to this view, the Israel of God has new boundaries of practice by taking into
account a new community and relationship to the nations, even though the Jewish
cultural affectations and influences may remain. Since Messianic Judaism is
Biblical Judaism, the gentile followers of Messiah may rightly incorporate
Jewish practices within their own faith since they are following the Judaism of
Yeshua, instead of the Judaism of the Jewish people. Covenant Israel and the Israel of God, are in a
"corporate relationship" with one another (opposite of Dr. Kinzer's model)
whereas the community of identification for Messianic Judaism is the ekklesia,
in the age of Yeshua, not the rest of Israel.
In defining Messianic Judaism, the meaning of Judaism and who is
Israel
is salient. Dr. Kinzer allows for one Israel of diversity whose people
share a common mission and practice called Judaism, despite its shades of gray,
and the Judaism of Jews who follow Yeshua is therefore Messianic. His
respondents allow for two Israels
(Covenant Israel and the
Israel of God) with two different Judaisms (Rabbinic and Biblical Judaism), and
a new community of our Jewish identification (the ekklesia instead of
physical Israel).
While it is true that Dr. Kinzer's respondents, and others before them, seek to
resolve the very real tension left behind in scripture concerning the place of
Messianic and non-Messianic Israel,
it will be demonstrated that Dr. Kinzer's view actually supports the New
Covenant on a topic that is somewhat unresolved for some. In the end, clearly
with two views of Messianic Judaism built upon two different views of Israel, further
investigation in required. In so doing, here too we will look at the Pauline
epistles, as did Dr. Kinzer and his respondents, as we seek Israel's
clarification. In the next section, the questions we want to address then will
be; 1) Is there one Israel
or two? and 2) Which Israel
would have been the Israel
of Paul?
The Israel Of Paul
If
Messianic Judaism springs forth from the ways of Israel, in light of Messiah-as Dr.
Kinzer and his respondents tell us-then Paul, beforehand, would have held this
view as well. Furthermore, if Israel
were central, as the above seems to say, then not only would he have felt the
same, but who is the "Israel of God" according to Paul is more than a mere
afterthought. What we will see is that the "Israel of Paul" becomes the lynch
pin to the gospel of Messiah, and is inseparable from the Jewish people as they
are. Even more so, given Paul's self-proclaimed rights to Jewish lineage and
status (Romans 11:1ff), to assert that he taught a gospel removed from
his community of origin (i.e. Israel/the
Jewish people) seemingly would call into question thelegitimacy of the New
Covenant text, making Messianic Judaism little more than a good idea. Looking
at Paul's Israel, let's
begin with a quote from Luke, in the book of Acts, where he records Paul
standing before the Jewish leaders in Rome after
his arrest in Jerusalem
saying,
"Brothers, I have done not one thing opposed to the ways of our
people or the traditions of our fathers.' " 17
The
above quote is from Luke about Paul, and not by Paul concerning
himself. The only comment offered here is that the strength of "Jewishly"
strong sections of Acts surrounding Paul have to be supported by his letters,
and not the other way around. More importantly, Paul is reported as saying
that his own teachings regarding Messiah are faithful to the Jewish people.
This means that if Paul has accepted a faith and taught others to do so outside
the boundaries of Israel we must rethink the inner congruence of the New
Covenant itself (i.e. Luke and Paul, and the rest of the Tanakh), and
our claim that the New Covenant is Israel's book containing a Jewish foundational
faith for all humanity must also be revisited. Luke is trying to tell his
readers that Paul's teachings are a part of the Jewish people.
If Messianic Judaism was to hold a town meeting, with Paul of
Tarsus as the invited guest, and the question was asked, "What is the nature of
Israel?"
I would suggest that Paul would say the following:
"Certainly Israel is central to the gospel of Messiah, but to
say that Israel has been put into categories of ‘Covenant Israel and the Israel
of God,' historical Israel and eschatological Israel, or an Israel according
to the flesh and an Israel according to the spirit, referring to two different
Israels, is neither something I would have taught, nor would it be a teaching
from Torah. I, like some of you, do not quite understand why ‘all Israel' has not
embraced Yeshua as Messiah according to our sacred writings, but in this
mystery, God has brought his mercy to the whole world. What I do know is that
‘the gifts and the calling of Israel
are irrevocable, and the place of Israel's remnant is key in these
days of Messiah. Still, for the sake of our patriarchs and matriarchs, in the
end God will vindicate all Israel,
even if it remains a mystery to us today."
The
sad thing is that if Paul had said the above in many theology classes, he would
have failed. Certainly theologians have labored hard to provide a resolution to
a perceived tension surrounding Israel
left behind by Paul; as already mentioned, a tension that has to do with
Messianic and non-Messianic Israel
and God's people. Yet, even in this tension, Paul was faithful to the Jewish
people even if he broke our theological protocol. His faithfulness to the
Jewish people, just like Luke said, can be seen in his teachings on topics such as Wisdom (1 Corinthians 2), resurrection (2 Timothy 2) or
the dual role of Messiah (1 Cor. 15). In each case he taught on the heels of
Jewish tradition (for example: Enoch 63:2ff, 2 Maccabees 7:14 and the
Testament of the Twelve Patriarchs), affirming their heavenly truths and
continuing in their teachings. This means that Paul was faithful to Judaism as
a legitimate Jewish response to the divine revelation of Torah itself.
It would, therefore, be hermeneutically incorrect to have a theology
of Paul that "leap-frogs" the teachings of the Jewish people (what we would
call today non-canonical writings) in this new age of Messiah-a subject we want
to handle briefly but an in-depth treatment will not be possible since it would
be beyond the scope of this article. In the same way, there would also have
been differences, an example being Paul's view of Gentiles as fellow heirs with
Israel.
In books such as Jubilees and 4 Ezra, the plight of Gentiles is less than
favorable, but Paul makes it perfectly clear that the God of the Jews is also
the God of the Gentiles, a reality of the Messianic age itself (Romans 3:29,
Ephesians 2:11, Galatians 3:29). Such discontinuity is more about a new day in
Israel
than it is an aberration of the Jewish people (1 Cor. 3; cf. Isaiah.
49:6; Hoshea 2:25).18
In Paul's relationship to Judaism, regardless of whether or not
some of his teachings and beliefs are new and even perceived as problematic,
there is not such an aberration that he is outside the Jewish pale. That being
so, what of the bifurcation of the Jewish people as "Covenant Israel and the
Israel of God?" Would the Jewish response-more so would Paul's response as a
Jew-to Torah and the prophets allow him to teach such a thing? In his wrings,
Paul mentions Israel
sparsely, but poignantly 17 times (11 of those in Romans 9-11). His teachings
are also a challenge, because while he writes about Israel, he does so in light of
Gentile inclusion as a covenant people, not so much on how to be a Jew.19
While
it is true that Paul longs for his fellow Jews to hear the voice of Torah about
Messiah, and is not afraid to speak to their unfaithfulness, Israel is very much a part of his
teachings in terms of covenant instruction, example and servanthood. The
importance of Israel
for Paul becomes central to his own teaching as he relates to the nations on
each and every topic. For example, if we look at his letter to the Ephesian
congregation, we see that, when speaking to this new relationship that the
Gentiles there have to the God of Israel in light of Messiah, Paul uses
language that is very reminiscent of the Torah's covenantal language,
referring to them as "sons" (compare Ephesians 1:3-10 with Deuteronomy 7:6-11).
It is the Gentiles in Ephesus (and elsewhere)
who have entered into "the commonwealth
of Israel" (not in any sense becoming Israel), instructed by Israel's
teachings. In fact, Paul needs to protect the integrity of Israel by
teaching her ways to confirm her national identity and call.
Can
we conclude that the Israel
of this commonwealth is the same Israel of God that Paul speaks of in Galatians
6:16? It would be simple if we could just look at Paul's blessings "upon us and
the Israel of God" in the Galatians passage as Paul pronouncing a blessing on
all those in Galatia, and a general blessing over Israel as the covenant people
of God. Such a conclusion would not, however, be accurate. While the topic
surrounding the identity of the "Israel of God" in Galatians 6:16 is lengthy,
and one that will not be undertaken in great detail here, a brief word is most
definitely in order. The "Israel of God" has become a theological synonym [in
most cases] when speaking about the faithful of Israel who are referred to by Paul
as the "remnant." Yet the teaching of "Covenant Israel and the Israel of God"
by no means is new, finding its roots as early as the second century CE with
Justin Martyr [Dial. 11] and later Irenaeus [Against Heresies 1.10.1]). This
early view held that Covenant Israel is the Jewish people within the old
dispensation (before Messiah), and that the Israel of God is "the Church" who
is the new Israel
made up of all Christians in the new dispensation. While this replacement view
is still held today in the wrings of Herman Ridderbos,20 it is
the views of Terence Donaldson21 and William Campbell22 that
will concern us. In this case, both Donaldson and Campbell appeal to Galatians
6:16 in juxtaposition with Romans 9:6 when identifying Israel, a definition
that holds in tension the faithful in Israel who follow Messiah and the rest
that do not. Donaldson understands Paul's "Israel of God" to represent the
remnant who are the seed of Isaac, opposed to the rest of Israel who are
the seed of Abraham. On the other hand, Campbell
understands the "Israel of God" to be the seed of Abraham, opposed to the
remnant who are the seed of Isaac. The net result feeds an internal
supersessionist view within Israel,
even if that is not intended.
Paul is not silent on the internal makeup of Israel. While
we do not want to interpret Galatians by looking at Romans, we too will view
the "Israel of God" in Galatians in juxtaposition with Romans, but mainly
because Romans contains the most Pauline information about Israel. It is a
theological mistake to allow Romans and Galatians to interpret each other.
Concerning Israel, Paul
teaches about the mission of the children of Israel
(Rom.
9:4), who were a people of lineage (9:6ff ) which aspired to pursue
God's righteousness (Rom. 9:31). Paul expresses anguish for his fellow Jews
who have missed the voice of the prophets, while at the same time he is able to
recognize their desire to achieve what he knows they can, having that much more
in Messiah (10:1-4). But despite the fact that their trust is misplaced for the
depth of righteousness they seek (10:9ff ), "heaven forbid" that God has
turned his back on his people (11:1). When identifying with Israel and the Jewish people, Paul claims
lineage [not faith in Messiah] and sees the providence of God in this new age
working in Israel's
remnant, as well as her national lack of acceptance (11:5, 12). In the end,
Paul's conclusion concerning the place of the Jewish people is that their
"gifts and calling are irrevocable" (11:29).
According
to the tradition based upon Torah itself, Israel was a nation unique among
all other nations, who were a people of lineage, aspiring to maintain the
covenants faithfully (2 Baruch 48:20; 78:4; 84:8-9). The importance of the
Patriarchs as the hearers and transmitters of Israel's foundational covenant lead
to a nation (Jub. 15:9ff, 21:22ff, 26:22ff, 45:3) whose
priestly role was for all humanity (TLevi 14:3-4). The above is not designed to
find a neatly pontificated set of "Jewish" proof-texts to support a Pauline
theology, more than to speak of the existence of the traditions themselves
which would have schooled Paul and therefore would be evident in his teachings.
Turning back to Paul, it seems obvious in the quote below that he was clearly
influenced by such traditions as part of his own convictions. In Romans 9:4-5,
it says about the children of Israel:
"They were made God's children; the Skekinah has been with them;
the covenants are theirs; likewise the Torah; the Temple service and the promises; the
patriarchs are theirs; and from them, the Messiah according to the flesh."
Paul taught that the lineage of the patriarchs-the children of Israel-were to
be the bearers of God's covenants-Torah and the prophets-serving the Lord for
the sake of the nations-the message of human redemption. This is what Paul
would have learned about Israel-a
teaching that he would hold fast to with the advent of the Messiah, concerning
an Israel
in the present. But this lineage was "all Israel,"
not just part of Israel
or what they were. The redemption of the nations meant the glory of Israel and Paul hoped that this would make his
fellow Jews who did accept Yeshua as Messiah appreciate what was taking
place-the promise of the new day had arrived and all Israel was intimately involved.
Paul labored to maintain Israel's communal boundary. Given
the place of the Jewish people in God's plan for humanity, and in Rome, the threat of Israel's demise thrust Paul into
action. The Gentiles in Rome had claimed they
were descendants of Abraham, displacing the Jewish people before God as a new Israel.
While
it is true that the gentiles were now part of a faith whose father was Abraham,
and therefore theirs, it did not mean a displacement of Israel's
physical seed.23 More than likely, the gentiles interpreted
the Jewish expulsion from Rome (48 CE) as God's
judgment against Israel
for rejecting Yeshua as the Messiah. Upon the Jews return to Rome (54 CE), the
Messianic Jews renewing a relationship with their Gentile brothers and sisters
found that Israel had been usurped in general, while they found themselves
outside the loop as leaders in a community that they had originally started (cf.
Acts 2:10). The Messianic Jews in Rome, imploring Jerusalem to get
involved, subsequently shared in the reading of a letter from Paul who sternly
warned the Gentiles that God had not turned from Israel and that they had not
replaced Israel as God's covenant people (Rom. 11:21). In the same way that
Paul defined the nature of Israel's
call (see above) he also did so for her lineage. Paul writes in Romans 9:6-7:
"But the present condition of Israel does not mean that the word
of God has failed. For not everybody from Israel
is truly part of Israel;
indeed, not all descendants are [of the] seed of Abraham, rather, "what is to
be called your seed will be of Isaac."
Regarding the above verses, in conjunction with Galatians 6:16,
Donaldson and Campbell differentiate "Covenant Israel
and the Israel of God," in association with "for not everybody from Israel is truly part of Israel." Here,
however, I would like to consider another view. The "uniqueness" of Israel
emerged from her lineage, per God's covenant (as Paul himself above), and given
the situation in Rome as just explained, Paul's argument would then center
around the separation between the seed of the Patriarchs (cf. Rom. 9:6,
13) and the seed of the nations. There was a need for Paul to instruct the
Gentiles at Rome that Israel's
chosen status demanded her distinction and not her replacement, even though
they were now a part of the greater common wealth of Israel's faith. Therefore, in the
same way that the resurrection or the dual role of Messiah spoke to Paul's
teachings molded by his Jewish background, so did his view on Israel's lineage
and uniqueness as a chosen people. Consider Jubilees 16:16-17 that reads very
similar to Romans 9:6-7:
"He [Abraham] begot six more sons and he would see [them] before
he dies. And through Isaac a name and seed would be named for him. All of the
seed of his sons would become great nations. And they would be counted with the
nations. But from the sons of Isaac one would become a holy seed and he would
not be counted among the nations..."
The writer of Jubilees needed to clarify covenant Israel, much as
Paul needed to do so years later, albeit for different situations. Jubilees,
like Romans, refers to Isaac as the seed of promise and connects the seed to
its progenitor (Abraham) as well as to its future generational lineage through
Jacob (Jub. 15:9 and Rom.
9:6; Jub. 19:7 and Rom. 9:13). The lineage of Jacob would become the nation of Israel, the
Jewish people, who would be a covenant and servant people. Teaching on Israel, Paul relied upon Torah's tradition
surrounding the nature of Israel
in the book of Romans. He spoke to the "gifts and the calling" of Israel (see Rom.
9:4-5), and outlined Israel's
boundary so that no mistake would be made. Paul tells us that this very same Israel is of
"Abraham handed down through Isaac and carried on by Jacob," and in this new
age includes a messianic remnant as part of the people. Paul writes, in Romans
11:16, "Now, if the "piece" [the remnant of Israel]
offered as first fruits is holy, so is the whole loaf [Israel]."
Paul concludes that Israel included a remnant of Jews
who have accepted Yeshua [the piece] and Jews who have not [the rest of the
loaf]. The remnant, for the sake of the covenant in this new age, confirms
God's blessings on the whole nation and labors in her eschatological mission as
a part of Israel's greater call, as the very existence of Israel is a call
itself. If the remnant separates itself from the rest of the nation, what
happens to the nation? Conversely, what happens to the identity of the remnant?
Who then is the "commonwealth
of Israel" that the
Gentiles are joining to? We must remember that when Paul speaks of a remnant
of Jews who have accepted Yeshua, they are a remnant of Israel rather
than a remnant of "the Church." It was already mentioned that Paul's own
identification was with the Jewish people (Rom. 1:1-2), and that he was
faithful to the teachings of the people and the traditions of the fathers, as
he saw the Messianic Jewish story "within the larger Jewish story."
Paul was telling his readers in Rome that their claim to Israel
is unwarranted and erroneous given the nature of Israel, and that their
inculcation into the commonwealth of Israel made them equals (cf. Rom.
3:29). The need for mutual blessing in the distinction of creation was what the
"one new man" stood for with Paul, and the restoration of that order fulfilled
the prophetic promises to Israel,
and the world. Concerning the "Israel of God" in Galatians 6:16 and Paul's Israel in
Romans, they are one and the same. When Paul taught, "for not everyone from Israel [all those who do not descend from
Abraham, Isaac, and Jacob) is truly part of Israel
[all those who do], he was careful to guard Israel's boundary in relationship
to God, the Jewish people, Torah, and the gospel of Messiah.
Implications For Messianic Judaism
This brief
analysis regarding Paul's Israel,
while not exhaustive by any means, has far-reaching implications for Messianic
Judaism today. This is especially true as it may relate to Dr. Kinzer, those
who responded to him, and the UMJC statement on "Defining Messianic Judaism."
Dr. Kinzer's bibliology was questioned concerning his interpretation of Paul,
where in all actuality he has presented us a position on the nature of
Messianic Judaism that is very much in support of Paul. We saw above that for
Paul, the Jewish people included a remnant, a key to the new age of Messiah,
and for Paul, the "Israel of God" was a people who descended from Abraham,
Isaac, and Jacob, whose "gifts and calling are irrevocable." We have also seen
that Paul appealed to Judaism as he taught Torah, although he had his points of
disagreement, and maintained Israel's
national covenantal blessings in light of Messiah. When Paul taught Torah to
Gentiles and spoke of his new relationship to Judaism, he saw his Judaism as
the ways of the Jewish people, and he related to and identified with Israel as he
fulfilled his call amongst the nations.
Dr. Kinzer has called Judaism "the religious tradition of the
Jewish people, in all its diversity, throughout history," and Paul's teachings,
whether on wisdom, resurrection, or Israel,
were a part of Israel's
conversation on Torah, expressed in tradition. Like Paul, Dr. Kinzer would say
that the Jewish people are a people of lineage and faith, and like Paul, he
also holds to one Israel.
Dr. Kinzer, who had a hand in the UMJC statement, rightly conveys the meaning
of "Covenant Israel
and the Israel of God," especially since such a teaching did not come from
Paul. Furthermore, as Paul interacted with Judaism, appealing to preexisting
traditions as his own, Dr. Kinzer (as I understand him) is saying that
ultimately the foundation of our praxis and beliefs is part of the religious
ways of the Jewish people. The UMJC statement holds that as Messianic Jews we
should be committed to the "covenantal responsibility of Jewish life and identity
rooted in Torah, expressed in tradition" because "we must tell our story within
the larger Jewish story." We tell our story as part of Israel's story by appealing to Israel's story
"rooted in Torah, expressed in tradition" today, as Paul did before.
The larger story of the "Israel of God" is the story of the
Jewish people-yesterday, today and forever-and demands, just as Dr Kinzer
suggested that we accept the Judaism of other Jews, defined here in
relationship to the UMJC statement. Our only alternative would be to locate
ourselves elsewhere in relationship to covenant Israel. If we deny God's covenant
relationship to all Israel
and accept ourselves as true Israel,
we create a polarity of internal supersessionism in Israel, something that Paul (and
the entire New Covenant) never did. But if Paul had any malcontent for Judaism-
it was not because it was the practice of the Rabbis-but without Messiah it
became meaningless based on what he came to know (Philippians 3:5-6). While
this might be difficult for some to accept, our Judaism, just as others, is
foundationally the Judaism of the Rabbis. In fact, even calling it Rabbinic
Judaism is problematic. It might better be called "Jewish." Therefore, in the
same way that the idea of two Israels
was dismissed, so too is the case with two Judaisms. The Rabbinic community
(the same community that birthed us as Jews) has carried Judaism
generationally, and that is our practice as well. Do we consider how many
"Rabbinic" things we do despite what may be unique to us; from the melodies we
chant to the order of our services; from the lighting of the candles to the way
we don tzitzit? Paul affirmed the Judaism of the Rabbis, even in his
departure, because he knew the Israel
of his identification.
Notes:
- 1 For example: Orthodox, Conservative and
Reform Judaism continue to stand strong whereas Humanistic and other secular
Judaisms struggle to exist given that they are far removed from the historical
community, regardless if they have attracted followers.
- 2 Pierre
Bourdieu. Language and Symbolic Power. Cambridge, MA:
Harvard Press, 1994
- 3 The UMJC statement addressees our
relationship to greater body of Messiah even if I do not here.
- 4 Mark Kinzer. The Nature of Messianic
Judaism: Judaism as a Genus, Messianic as a Species. Hashivenu Archives, Pasadena, CA,
2001)
- 5 I assume no personal congruence between
the different responders and use of the term "respondents" is in a general
sense only.
- 6 Kinzer, pp. 4ff
- 7 The UMJC statement says our Judaism is "applied
within the context of the New Covenant."
- 8 Kinzer, pp. 4, 11-12
- 9 Michael Wyschrogrod. The Body of
Faith. introduction p. xxxiii. Aaronson,
New Jersey, 1983 (a Jewish
understanding of Judaism) in contrast to G.E. Ladd. The Theology of the New Testament.
pp. 406-407 Erdmans, Grand Rapids,
MI, 1974 (Christian understanding
of Judaism).
- 10 It is assumed that "Messianic Jew" is
not a generic name for a Jew who follows Yeshua as Messiah, but a Jew of Israel
who in Messianic and identifies with the larger community of Israel and the Jewish
people as they practice their faith. Also, Messianic Judaism is "our" name and
is not being used as a label of those in the First
Century who called it by another name.
- 11 Kinzer, p. 31
- 12 ibid. pp. 28-29
- 13 Kesher, Winter 2000, p. 98
- 14 ibid.
p. 99
- 15 ibid. p 113, 125. The
discussion is too long here, but the later Second Century reactions to Messianic
Jews by other Jews mimic language found between Hillel and Shammai in the First
Century; in and of itself it would have not constituted a break of its
magnitude. Conversely, the First Century view of Messianic Jews by the rest of
the Jewish community was vastly different than the Second Century. While the
opinions may differ, the help of others like Justin Martyr, and his views of
Jews and Judaism, arguably played into the Jewish reactions against their
fellow Jews who were Messianic, and really cannot be separated as a normative
Jewish response in a vacuum. Who knows what may have happened under another
scenario of a pro-Israel view from the early patristic fathers?
- 16 ibid. p. 110, 113
- 17 Acts 28:17. Acts must been seen as a
secondary source to help us with Paul.
- 18 Traditional Jewish writings are filled
with this very same view of the prophets concerning the nations.
- 19 Paul is writing to gentiles (1:13 and
(15:18) about this new relationship they have with Israel's God, and in as much
as there are Jews in these communities, he is writing to them about the
gentiles. Even more so, Paul's writings have been taken as universal
applications applying teachings to Judaism that were never contextually
intended. This is not to say that Paul did not maintain change within Judaism
given the new age, but not to its detriment or dismissal.
- 20 Herman Ridderbos. Paul, An Outline
of His Theology. p. 336. Eerdmans Press, translated into English 1975
(originally published in 1966)
- 21 Terence L. Donaldson. Paul and the
Gentiles. p. 177, 238 Fortress Press, 1997
- 22 William S. Campbell. Dictionary of
Paul and His Letters. pp. 442ff; IVP, Downers Grove,
1993
- 23 Stanley
K. Stowers. A Rereading of Romans. p. 36. Yale University
Press, 1994; Mark Nanos. The Mystery of Romans. pp. 1ff. Fortress Press,
1996. It is unclear as to what exactly such descendancy may have looked like
(i.e. physical or spiritual).
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