Issue 18 - Winter 2005 cover18sh

This issue of Kesher includes additional articles and book reviews. Deborah Kaplan and Elliot Klayman explore the two most popular Messianic figures of the last four centuries. Both Shabbetai Zevi and the Lubavitcher Rebbe have been heralded as messiah by many Jews in the modern era and continue to impact the Jewish community.

Table of Contents
From the Editor The last issue of Kesher caused some controversy with the publication of "Competing Trends In Messianic Judaism: The Debate Over Evangelicalism," by Gabriela Reason. As Editor-in-Chief, I feel that it is necessary to clarify the position of Keshe...
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Competing Trends In Messianic Judaism: The Debate Over Evangelicalism One of the central challenges Messianic Judaism faces is how to orient itself against its two parent communities: modern evan­gelicalism and American Judaism. As modern Messianic Judaism is historically rooted chiefly in the evangelical movem...
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Lamentations, Mourning And Doom : A Response To "Competing Trends In Messianic Judaism A few years ago a group from the local Jewish community met with the president (an evangelical Christian) of my university and demanded that he fire me from my position in Jewish Studies. The charge, repeated in a subsequent meeting with the grou...
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Competing Trends In Messianic Judaism : A Response The mission of the UMJC can be captured in one sentence: We are committed to establishing, strengthening, and multi­plying dynamic congregations for Yeshua within the wider Jewish community. This one sentence, however, introduces the tension ...
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Describing A Movement And Universal Truth Many years ago, one of my favorite philosophy professors made this point: before we have the right to criticize another per­spective, we should understand the perspective of the other. The acid test of this dictum is that we can repeat the pe...
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Competing Trends In Messianic Judaism : A Response In the Spring, 2004, issue of Kesher, Ms. Gabriela Reason tackles a series of complex and controversial issues facing the modern Messianic Jewish movement. Her thesis focuses on the tensions inherent in the movement between the pulls of Evangelic...
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Messianic Judaism: Reframing The Choice: Not Competing - Defining I want to begin my response to Gabriela Reason's article titled, "Competing Trends in Messianic Judaism: The Debate Over Evangelicalism," with a "thank you" for her arduous work in gath­ering research. Every effort to gather data, whether ...
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Tracing The Antinomian Trajectory Within Sabbatean Messianism Antinomianism has been defined as the "subversion of a religious or moral code." 1 On a superficial level, this may be perceived as motivated only by a rebellious attitude towards author­ity. Yet what might outwardly appear as subversive beha...
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Does The Lubavitcher Rebbe Fit The Festinger Model? Toward A Quantifiable Approach To The Measurement Of Failed Prophecy In July 12, 1994 Menachem Mendel Schneerson, the seventh dynastic rebbe of the Lubavitch sect of the Chasidim was pronounced dead. Some cried while others danced; some faste...
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Reflections On Michael Wyschogrod's Critique Of Jewish Christianity Is there any merit in an Orthodox Jew's theological objections to Jewish Christianity? Much, in every way! Can believers in Yeshua agree with all these objections, and still be faithful? By no means! However, in several instances, the objectio...
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Book Section
Book Review
Messianic Judaism Is Not Christianity by Stan Telchin
(Chosen Books ©2004 A Division Of Baker Books, Grand Rapids, Mi) You can't tell a book by its cover, perhaps, but what about its title? Stan Telchin has written the latest in a series of oddly entitled books critical of Messianic ...
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Book Review
Judaism Is Not Jewish by Baruch Maoz
(Christian Focus ©2003 Scotland) In his recent volume, Judaism is Not Jewish, Baruch Maoz provides a notable service for the Messianic Jewish movement by drawing the distinction between Jewish Christianity and Messianic Judaism in a cl...
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Book Review
Imperialism And Jewish Society, 200 B.C.E. To 640 C.E. by Seth Schwartz
(Princeton University Press © 2001 Princeton, NJ.) In Imperialism and Jewish Society, 200 B.C.E. to 640 C.E., Seth Schwartz, the Gerson D. Cohen Professor of Rabbinic Culture and Professor of History at Jewish Theological Seminary, of...
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