I was about ten
years old the first time somebody called me a Christ-killer. I had just come
out of Morris Schaeffer's candy store, on the corner of Winthrop Street and Nostrand
Avenue, in Flatbush, Brooklyn. A bunch of kids whom I had never met before
jumped me, pummeling me to the ground, while making a profound theological
query: "Why'd you kill God?" I had no answer for them. At that moment I didn't
know what they were talking about. Only later, while tending to bruises and
scrapes and checking for broken bones did I realize that they were talking
about Jesus. Thus ends my first experience with witnessing.
My bruises and
scrapes healed a long time ago. Still, fifty-three years later, I am still
hurting. But the pain of being picked on as a child is nothing compared to how
I feel now when friends and colleagues in the missions and Messianic Jewish
world, most of them Jews, beat up on the Jewish people. It isn't any prettier
when we lump the Jews or any group of Jews into a distrusted, despised class,
than it was for those Irish kids to beat me up one cool and clear autumn in New
York.
I confess that, in
part, I am missiologically directed and driven by my sensitivity to theological
Jew-bashing. I know we all agree that this should have absolutely no place in
our outreach to our people. But, beyond contradiction, most of us are well
practiced in bashing Jews and Judaism. These old and deep prejudices are mostly
hidden from us. In this paper I want to show that this is true, and outline a
better way for us to think about our people and serve them in Yeshua's name.
"What Is The
Gospel We Should Be Commending To All Israel[1]
In These Times Of Transition?" It is in four parts: Matters of Context, Matters
of Content, Matters of Controversy, and Cumulative Conclusions. My argument is
inductive, making its case moving from particulars to a general conclusion;
cumulative, because each component contributes to the credibility of the whole;
and synergistic, because the contribution of each component can only be rightly
perceived through appreciating how the components work together, with the whole
being greater than the sum of its parts. Only by keeping the parts and the
whole dynamic tension will readers rightly understand, evaluate, and most
important, respond to what I say here.
Today I want to
pull the covers off a sleepy movement, arousing all of us to a unified,
demanding, and sacrificial evangelistic mandate, appropriate to our times, to
the whole counsel of God, and to our identity as the Remnant of Israel. Mine is
a call to inconvenience ? a call to radical change. Mine is a call to
sacrifice ? it is call to risk and discomfort. And above all, mine is a
call to seek, speak, and live a gospel that is good news for all Israel.
Matters of Context
We communicate an eternal gospel[2]
in the midst of time. Therefore, we can only do so at specific times, in
specific places, and to specific people. "Context" should not be dismissed as a
trendy buzzword: it is instead our unavoidable reality. Since only those who
properly analyze the soil have a right to expect a good harvest, we would be
foolish to omit this step in our rush to sow the seed. Since we must begin by
assessing the soil of our context, I begin by examining five contextual issues
demanding our attention: Living in Times of Eschatological Transition; New
Paradigms, New Tensions; The Bad News Gospel; Individualism, Community and
Consummation; and, Implications of Adopting a New Creation Eschatology.
Living in Times of
Eschatological Transition
The first of our
five contextual factors identifies five signs that these are eschatological
times, with the consummation of all things drawing near. God's agenda has begun
to shift from a focus on the ingathering of the fullness of the Gentiles to the
ingathering of the fullness of Israel.
1. The
Founding of the Modern State of Israel
--- The Prophet Zechariah tells us that at the time of the end the
Jewish people will be living in the Land, with all the nations of the world
gathered against them.[3]
This could not have happened for 1900 years, and only became a possibility
again in 1948, with the establishment of the Jewish State. This is a sign of
the times.
2. The Liberation of Jerusalem --- The
prophets remind us as well that Jerusalem will be a Jewish city in the
end-times. This was a non-issue for two millennia, until the Liberation of
Jerusalem in 1967. This too is a sign of the times.
3. The Regathering
of the Jews to Israel From the Land of the North --- Part of the
nexus of events in the latter days is the regathering of Jewish exiles not only
from the nations in general, but also explicitly "from the land of the north,"
commonly associated with the heartland of the Former Soviet Union. Many of us
are old enough to remember when it was front-page news when one Jew from the
former Soviet Union emigrated to Israel. But all of this changed forever with
the advent of glasnost and perestroika under Mikhail Gorbachev in
the 1980s, and the astounding break-up
of the former Soviet Union (FSU) in
1991. It was Ronald Reagan who said, "Mr. Gorbachev: tear down this wall," but
God swung the hammer.
Since the 1980s, well over a million Jews from the FSU have immigrated to Israel. When we combine
this statistic with others such as the massive airlifts and repatriation to Israel
of over 85 percent of Ethiopia's Jews, can we be blamed for seeing these events
in the context of this prophecy from the Prophet Jeremiah?
So then, the days are coming when they will say, ‘As
surely as the LORD lives, who brought the descendants of Israel
up out of the land of the north and out of all the countries where he had
banished them.' Then they will live in their own land (Jer 23:7-8).
4. The Repentance-Renewal of the
Jewish People ---Deuteronomy 30 and Ezekiel 36-37 are among the texts
connecting this return to the Lord with a renewal in covenantal faithfulness,
when God will spiritually renew his people and cause us to "again obey the
voice of the LORD, and keep all his commandments . . . and his statutes which
are written in this book of the law."[i][4]
Today, we are seeing this spiritual renewal becoming a manifest reality, at
least in nascent stages. Ever since the Liberation of Jerusalem in 1967, Jews
have begun coming to Yeshua-faith in increasing numbers. Many who have come to Israel
from "the land of the north" are already Yeshua-believing Jews. Today
it is impossible to find an Israeli congregation of Jewish Yeshua-believers that
does not include a substantial number of Russian speakers. In Israel today,
greater numbers of Jews are coming to believe in Yeshua that at any time since
the first century. Mitch Glaser, Executive Director of Chosen People
Ministries, estimates that the numbers of Israeli Yeshua-believers have grown
by three or four hundred percent in the past ten years, with sixty or seventy
percent of this growth among Russian speakers. Something is happening which
Scripture foretold, and the times are changing.
5. A New
Concern for Messianic Jewish Covenant Faithfulness --- In recent years, the
issue of Torah-based covenant faithfulness has moved to the forefront of
Messianic Jewish discussion. On July 31, 2002, the Union of Messianic Jewish
Congregations ratified a definitional document including these words:
"Messianic Judaism is a movement of Jewish congregations and congregation-like
groupings committed to Yeshua the Messiah that embrace the covenantal
responsibility of Jewish life and identity rooted in Torah, expressed in
tradition, renewed and applied in the context of the New Covenant."[5] The reference to
"covenantal responsibility of Jewish life and identity rooted in Torah [and],
expressed in tradition" is nothing short of revolutionary. Such a sentence
would never even have come to mind when I came to Yeshua-faith in the early
1960s. The statement contravenes the older consensus that Torah observance was
to be regarded as strictly a matter of personal preference, and to only be
pursued in circumspect moderation.
Can it be that
such indicators are heralding the promised shift of God turning His attention
from accomplishing the fullness of the Gentiles, to pursuing the fullness of
Israel? I am convinced it is so. Now is a time when both the Church and the
Remnant of Israel need to reexamine their priorities and embrace paradigms and
priorities suited to the times.
New
Paradigms, New Tensions
Times of
transition not only bring new missional dynamism; they are also times of
destabilization, threat, and jockeying for power. Any of us who have been
change-agents in times of transition can attest to the controversies,
denunciations, and resistance attending such efforts. For example, have we
forgotten how many in the conservative Christian world resisted what Jews for
Jesus stood for in its early days? As one ridiculous example, Moishe Rosen, the
founder of Jews for Jesus, and former Executive Director, had a file of letters
exhorting him to "have the Jews for Jesus guys cut their hair and shave their
beards." Of course the author of the missive had chapter and verse to back him
up. And, I am sure that all of us who are leaders of groundbreaking
Yeshua-groups have been called on the carpet by concerned or outraged critics
not only differing with us, but denouncing us in some way. Today you can
discover alleged "proof" on the Internet that many of us are involved in a
one-world, one-religion conspiracy, or some other mishegoss.
Because we
represent groups birthed in God-ordained times of transition, we have all had
to learn to live with opposition and vilification. Now new and different
transitions are upon us, and with the growth of new paradigms, new tensions
have arisen. Now the tensions and vilifications are not from outsiders, but
among ourselves.
Now the tensions and
vilifications are not from outsiders, but among ourselves.
David Bosch traces
the past and future of mission theology under the overall concept of paradigm
shifts. Beginning with the writings of Thomas Kuhn, the father of modern
paradigm theory, he explains reasons why advocates of new paradigms always meet
with denunciations and resistance. We may see our situation magnified and
clarified through the lens of his words:
[A shifting of paradigms] seldom happens without a struggle,
however, since scientific communities are by nature conservative and do not
like their peace to be disturbed; the old paradigm's protagonists continue for
a long time to fight a rearguard action. . . . Proponents of the old paradigm
often just cannot understand the arguments of the proponents of the new.
Metaphorically speaking, the one is playing chess and the other checkers on the
same board.
. . . This explains why defenders of the old order and
champions of the new frequently argue at cross-purposes. Protagonists of the
old paradigm, in particular, tend to immunize themselves against the arguments
of the new. They resist its challenges with deep emotional reactions, since
those challenges threaten to destroy their very perception and experience of
reality, indeed their entire world.[6]
Bosch and Kuhn are reading our
mail. This is us, and this is now.
The Bad-News Gospel[7]
Because our
sojourn in Christian space-particularly
the evangelical camp-affects all our
missional thinking and doing, we must recognize how Christendom has not
presented the gospel as good news for all Israel since the end of the first
century, and what this should mean for us now.
In the famous
story of the birth of Jesus, we read words so familiar we miss their import.
They provide a core insight we must embrace if we would be faithful messengers:
And in that region there were shepherds out in the field,
keeping watch over their flock by night. And an angel of the Lord appeared to
them, and the glory of the Lord shone around them, and they were filled with
fear. And the angel said to them, ‘Be not afraid; for behold, I bring you good
news of a great joy which will come to all the people; for to you is born this
day in the city of David a Savior, who Christ, the Lord.'[8]
Notice the phrase,
"good news of a great joy which will come to all the people." It is too easy to
misread the reference as "good news of great joy which will come to all the
peoples of earth," but that is not the referent here. The context speaks of one
people in particular ? the Jewish people. Many will recoil from this
aspect of our text due to reflexively regarding the Jewish people as
fundamentally spiritually lost, eternal losers, and the coming of Christ as not
being good news for the Jewish people, but at best, good news only for some
Jews who are exceptions to the rule.
Although this is
the position most of us adhere to, it raises problems. Let one example suffice for now. The year before Yeshua
died and rose, faithful Jews needed only seek to live faithful to God, trusting
in His faithfulness to Israel and in the provisions He had made through the
Temple sacrifices. Under such an arrangement, certainly there must have been
tens of thousands, hundreds of thousands, or even millions of Jews whose status
with God was assured, in this life and the next. But with the coming of Christ,
all that changed. Now, according to the prevailing paradigm, all of these Jews
were fundamentally lost, unless and until they accepted Christ as their
personal Savior. Is this the kind of gospel we preach? And if so, how is this
gospel good news for all Israel rather than for a spiritually enlightened
elite minority? It will not do to respond that Yeshua is good news for all
Israel, as a medicine might be for seriously ill patients, who must take the
medicine if they would recover. To speak thus is to read back into the context
something which is not there: the angelic messenger assumes the gospel to be
good tidings for Zion for whom the triumphant and vindicating reign of their
God is becoming evident in the birth of the Son of David.[9]
Terrance Tiessen
reminds us that holding to the evangelical paradigm that salvation is a matter
of one-by-one destiny, with no salvation except for those who accept Christ as
their personal savior, means the coming of Jesus was bad news for the Jews of
his generation, as myriads of formerly saved Jews and perhaps God-fearers
slipped into perdition or least into eternal jeopardy, because the basis of
salvation had changed and narrowed with Yeshua's incarnation, crucifixion,
resurrection, or ascension, or take your
pick.[10]
This is like your car warranty becoming invalid because the warranty holder
went out of business, with you needing to buy a new warranty involving new stipulations
and costs if you want coverage. Is this good news for you? And is the
one-by-one gospel good news for all the people of Israel? Hardly.
Donald Anderson
McGavran, founder of the Fuller Seminary School of Intercultural Studies, took
as his watchword "panta ta ethne,"
all the nations. Today I urge that we take as our own a neglected biblical
mandate, "panti tow laow,"
all the people (of Israel).
As will become
clearer later, we have cropped and narrowed the gospel message due to our focus
on individual soul salvation. The eternal lostness of those who fail to accept
our "medicine" is always the backdrop of our presentation, even if not stated.
This means that the message we deliver to a Jewish "contact" is not only of the
opportunity for him or her to be "saved," but also of the certain perdition of
the vast majority of the descendants of Jacob, likely including fifty
generations (two thousand years) of his or her family. How is such a message
"good news of a great joy which will come to all the people (of Israel)?"
Years ago, Mark
Kinzer made an off-hand comment, the seed of what I am saying: "I just think
that somehow the coming of Yeshua the Messiah must have advanced the condition
of the Jewish people." Do we believe that with the coming of the Messiah, the
condition of the Jewish people as a whole took a great leap backward?
I am suggesting
that our paradigms and presentations of the gospel are imbalanced and
misshapen. Part of the problem is that our gospel is shrunken and distorted.
How and why this is so will become clearer as we proceed. For example, consider
the phenomenon of category mistakes.
Category Mistakes
One reason for our
confusion about Jews, Judaism and the gospel, is the category mistakes the
church, mission, and Messianic Jewish communities make about Jews and Judaism.
The term "category mistake," devised by English philosopher Gilbert Ryle, names
"cases where we talk of something in terms appropriate only to something of a radically
different kind."[11]
Many Christians,
many of us, and many of our constituents, act and think as if the seed of Jacob
is a nation like any other, and Judaism a religion like any other religion,
except for Christianity. This attitude is a legacy from supersessionism,
infused like dye throughout the warp and woof of much of our theologizing.
According to such assumptions, Jews no longer enjoy the status they once did
now that Christ has come "and his own received him not."[12]
Of course, we would protest that the Jews remain a unique and chosen people,
referencing numerous texts highlighting the unique status of the Jewish people.[13]
No doubt all of us here avoid this particular category mistake: we see the
Jewish people as still a unique and chosen people.
Yet many of us
make the same kind of category mistake whenever we feel and think of Judaism as
being a religion no different from other religions, and by extension, Jews who
do not believe in Yeshua as no different from other people when it comes to
knowledge of God, spiritual experience, status, and salvation. In feeling,
thinking, speaking, and writing, many view the Jews as simply non-Christians,
categorically bound for hell, without hope and without God in the world,
effectively pagans, even if religious ones. Whenever we do so, we slot the
Jewish people into a category Paul appealed not to Israel, but to Gentile
pagans. Still, some regard Judaism as a fruitless religion, no different
categorically from Hinduism, animism, or Buddhism. They consider Judaism to be
a dead, false religion, devoid of the Spirit, and its practitioners, wasting
their time on a religion that can neither save them, commend them to God, nor
mediate to them any measure of true knowledge and experience with Him. [14]
This
negation of Jewish religion is axiomatic for some of us, and woe to the person
who questions such a position or takes an opposing stance. He or she is sure to
be regarded as deviant, dangerous, and, at best, confused.
But something is
very wrong here. Judaism is not a religion just like all the others, any
more than Israel is simply a people like all the others. Just as the Jews
remain the chosen people, Judaism remains the context of this people's
trans-generational communal devotion to the God and Father of our Lord Yeshua
the Messiah, and their covenantal bond with him.[15]
Can this be said of any other people and their religion? Of course not! No, the
Jewish people are in a different category from any other people, and their
religion is not simply just another non-Christian religion.
John Howard Yoder
helps us here, correcting our category mistake and that of Christendom, by
referring to Judaism as "a non-non-Christian religion."[16]
We are not speaking here of a two-covenant theory, or of the alleged
impropriety or superfluity of gospel proclamation to this people. When we say
that the Jewish people are a non-non-Christian people, we correct the category
mistake of simply thinking of Jews as non-Christians and Judaism as a fruitless
and fundamentally false religion, equivalent to any other world religion one
might name. Paul was closer to the truth, when speaking to Herod Agrippa
regarding the Jews as his own people and religion:
My manner of life from my youth, spent
from the beginning among my own nation and at Jerusalem, is known by all the
Jews. They have known for a long time, if they are willing to testify, that
according to the strictest party of our religion [not their religion]
I have lived as a Pharisee. And now I stand here on trial for hope in the
promise made by God to our fathers, to which our twelve tribes hope to attain,
as they earnestly worship night and day.[17]
How many Jewish
mission newsletters would publish articles categorizing religious Jews as
"earnestly worshipping [God] night and day?" How many would refer to the
Judaism practiced by other Jews as "our religion." None, I would imagine. And
this is because our categories have changed. But if we would rightly commend
the gospel to the Jewish people we must repudiate the colossal category mistakes
of ham-fistedly thinking of the Jews as just like any other non-Christian
people, and Judaism as no different from any other non-Christian religion.
Although most Jews are not categorically Christians, Judaism is a
non-non-Christian religion, and we might even term Jews "non-non-Christians."
To paraphrase the Prophet Balaam, "Ours is a people . . . and a religion . . .
that dwells apart, that shall not be numbered with the nations nor with pagan
religions."[18]
Crypto-Supersessionism
In some ways, the
river of Jewish missions and much Messianic Jewish thinking flows between the
banks of unawareness on the one side and denial on the other. Ironically, this
flows from our Zionism, our conviction that the Jewish people remain God's
chosen people, and our vigorous opposition to supersessionism. Because we
denounce supersessionism, we imagine ourselves to be axiomatically positive
about the Jewish people in contrast to most of the church. But again, there are
problems.
Consider this teaching, popular in some of our circles: the Law
of Moses is categorically rendered inoperative, and that, since the death of
Messiah, the only Law that applies to Yeshua-believers is the Law of Christ.
Since the church too is subject only to the Law of Christ, is it not clear that
this teaching postulates the expiration of a major status marker that formerly
attached to the Jewish people? Yes, I know there are those who would say that
the Abrahamic Covenant with the promise of blessing and the Land remains in
effect, but in practical terms, the jettisoning of the Law of Moses and the
substitution of what is termed "the Law of Christ" means abolishing Judaism for
Jewish Yeshua-believers and assimilating them into a code of conduct and way of
life indistinguishable from Gentile Christians. I must protest, and suggest you
join me. It will not do to imagine that maintaining pride in Jewish lineage, or
attending periodic Jewish Yeshua-believer meetings will sustain Jewish identity
for us and our descendants.[19]
It will take more than nostalgia about our Jewish ancestors and the expectation
of a Millennium to come to inform and sustain Jewish continuity, covenantal
living, and trans-generational identity.
If we accept that we are subject to
no religious law other than the same Law of Christ to which the average
white-bread Gentile in Tulsa subscribes, then we are fitting Jewish community
and continuity into a plain pine box. It's time to say Kaddish. 
This doctrine of
the expiration of the Law of Moses for Messianic Jews is but one example of
crypto-supersessionism, an unconscious cluster of presuppositions which assume
the expiration, setting aside, or suspension of that status and those status
markers formerly attached to the Jewish people. Unlike supersessionism itself,
crypto-supersessionism is a virus epidemic among those who repudiate
supersessionism. This plague casts its cold shadow across almost all of the
Jewish missions and Messianic Jewish world, leaving behind a trail of misdeeds
and misstatements. Examples surround us like Spanish moss in the bayou. For
example, a contemporary Jewish mission newsletter said this:
Scripture teaches that God has called a social community into
being, a community comprised of both Jews and Gentiles, what one early church
writer even called a ‘third race.' . . . We are not advocating that Jewish
believers distance themselves from their Jewish heritage. May it never be! But
our primary spiritual and social home must be among those whom we allow to
influence us the most and that should be the body of believers.[20]
While I applaud the author's caveat
concerning not distancing ourselves from our Jewish heritage, his wider context
and choice of language enfeebles its force. The Jewish covenantal calling is a
communal calling, requiring of us an ever-renewed engagement with the wider
Jewish community, rather than the stand-offish caution proposed here. The
author further vitiates our covenantal calling by terming it our "heritage."
Whenever
the holy obligations of the Jewish people are treated like cultural souvenirs
instead of mandates from on high, we encounter crypto-supersessionism.
More alarming
still is the author's telltale reference to Christians as "a third race." This
expression from the second century Epistle to Diognetus, is used
to mean that in Messiah, Jews are no longer Jews, and Gentiles no longer
Gentiles, that the two constitute a third race. I imagine we all find this
rather repugnant when so stated. The concept feels Neo-Platonic, treating Jew
and Gentiles in the Body of Messiah as discarnate and denationalized souls,
negating the persistence of Jewish communal identity. Only the virus of
crytpo-supersessionism could cause a Jewish Yeshua-believer to issue a caution
against bonding with the Jewish community, advocating a superseding bonding
with the church, in view of the third race nature of the people of God.
Individualism, Community, and the Consummation
Post-Enlightenment
individualism corrupts our relationship with our people and our understanding
of their status. Such individualism, endemic in our time, blinds us to the
communal context of our gospel proclamation. Bosch strikes a necessary balance
here, and we need to hear his critique of how individualism corrupts our
perceptions and activities:
The
gospel is not individualistic. Modern individualism is, to a large extent, a
perversion of the Christian faith's understanding of the centrality and
responsibility of the individual. In the wake of the Enlightenment, and because
of its teachings, individuals have become isolated from the community which
gave them birth.[21]
How many of us
are isolated from the community which gave us
birth? And how many of us preach a gospel which isolates Jews from the Jewish
community? While at first we recoil from the suggestion, further thought should
leave many of us shuddering with recognition.
We need to recover
again or discover for the first time a deep sense of communal identity and
responsibility, and of the communal nature of God's eschatological purposes for
Israel and the nations. This sense of the Jewish communal context is summarized
nicely for us in Ezekiel 37:21-28, where five facets of God's eschatological
purpose for the Jewish people are named. In these times of transition, we can
only faithfully serve God's purpose among the Jewish people by treating each of
these facets as a non-negotiable priority. Notice that they are all
communal-good news for all Israel, not as individuals, but as a whole, communal
good news.
Ezekiel lists the
facets of this good news in this order:
- The regathering of the Jewish to our homeland,
Israel (thus, Aliyah)
- The restoration of the unity of the people of
Israel
- Repentance-renewal[22]
for the people as a whole
- Messiah reigning in the center of this gathered
people
- Torah living as the communal life of this people
Anything less
and anything other than this is at best someone else's gospel.
Thank God that each of these priorities is
being widely reflected in the Messianic Jewish movement, although, in most
cases in an inconsistent and rudimentary manner. Yet for others, these facets do not describe their current
mentality, practice and message because of
crypto-supersessionism and individualism. In broadest outline, this is the kind
of gospel we should be proclaiming to the Jewish people, seeing Yeshua in his
reigning role, bringing communal blessings to the whole people of Israel. And
God is calling us, infused with his Spirit, to vigorously, joyously and
communally incarnate and serve these synergistic priorities. Anything less
and anything other than this is at best someone else's gospel.
Our people will rightly continue to find an individualistic message of soul
salvation which fails to highlight God's continued commitment and consummating
purposes for the community of Israel to be stale, irrelevant, and foreign-far
less and far other than God's invitation to participate in the anticipated
vindication and blessing of the seed of Jacob. We must repent and return to
this perspective.
Adopting
a New Creation Eschatology
Craig Blaising
identifies another habit of thought to recognize and forsake: the explicit or tacit
acceptance of a spiritual vision eschatology.
Spiritual vision eschatology views eternal life
as timeless, changeless, spiritual existence consisting primarily in
the human soul's full knowledge of God . . . a direct view, a beatific vision."[23]
Such a vision sees the redeemed with spiritual bodies composed of some sort of
spiritual substance, and views earthly life as a symbol (and preparation) for
these eternal realities. Because "a future for Israel literally has no place in
a spiritual-vision eschatology,"[24]
when we hold to these assumptions, we are desensitized to the prophetic
expectation that drove the apostles. Even tacitly, our sympathies for a
glorious and eternal future for Israel are weakened.
Some want to have
it both ways, seeing the physical promises for Israel fulfilled in a
Millennium, with the eternal state being some version of spiritual-vision
eschatology. Without dismissing millennial beliefs, I concur with Blaising's
critique, that "a limited duration [millennial] kingdom alone does not do full
justice to the Biblical vision for Israel and the Gentiles."[25]
New creation eschatology restores the
communal dimension individualism destroys, providing a holistic vision of time
and eternity fully compatible with the thrust of this paper:
New creation eschatology emphasizes the
liberation of the cosmos from sin, the bodily resurrection and glorification of
the righteous, and the liberation of the cosmos to share in the liberty of the
children of God. It does not see the eschaton as simply a continuation of the
past, but does emphasize its continuity with the past as seen in the
resurrection of the body. New creation does not see the eschaton as a timeless,
changeless or essentially visionary-like epistemic state. It is not eternal in
the classic timeless sense but everlasting. New creation has a place for the
earth, the cosmos, for the fullness of created life, but especially for
resurrected human life living under the lordship of the resurrected Jesus
Christ in fellowship with the Triune God. It would see human life in created
wholeness-not as undifferentiated individuals but as differentiated
individuals. But neither would it see them as just differentiated individuals,
but rather differentiated in ethnic and communal dimensions as well, since these
form an essential aspect of our identities. And what will we find here except
Israel and the Gentiles who are together blessed by God, living under the
lordship of Jesus Christ to the glory of God.[26]
Blasing's views
point us to the outreach revolution which summons us. Such views not only
uproot post-Enlightenment individualism, they also unseat a tunnel-vision focus
on heaven and hell issues, while disempowering the seduction of
crypto-supersessionist assumptions such as third-race ecclesiology. Instead, we
see a panorama of the covenantal and communal future of the Jewish people, and
the promise of resurrection to communal life in a new heavens and a new earth
where righteousness dwells. God is glorified not simply by the salvation of
nationals, individuals extracted from the nations and incorporated into a
homogenous people of God, but by his saving work among nations and people
groups, all destined to retain their creational distinctiveness into the
eschaton: resurrected, glorified humans in community, not a non-diffentiated
crowd of souls gazing forever in adoring wonder before the Throne.
More
Matters of Content
In the second
chapter of Hard Times, Dickens draws an indelible portrait of Victorian
education at its worst, describing how the strict school master Thomas
Gradgrind torments sweet little Sissy Jukes over her inability to
satisfactorily define a horse. Sissy's father works with horses, and she
certainly knows and loves them. But the abrasive Gradgrind gets her flustered
and tongue-tied. Predictably annoyed, Gradgrind turns instead to a pupil more
to his liking, a lad named Bitzer, who does not disappoint him.
‘Bitzer,' said Thomas Gradgrind. ‘Your
definition of a horse.'
‘Quadruped. Graminivorous. Forty teeth,
namely twenty-four grinders, four eye-teeth, and twelve incisive. Sheds coat in
the spring; in marshy countries, sheds hoofs, too. Hoofs hard, but requiring to
be shod with iron. Age known by marks in mouth.' Thus (and much more) Bitzer.
‘Now girl number twenty,' said Mr.
Gradgrind. ‘You know what a horse is.'[27]
Didn't Sissy Jukes
know better than either Gradgrind or Bitzer what a horse is? Did Bitzer's
definition really capture the wonder that is a horse? Is it not clear that
Bitzer's definition, however accurate, remains wholly inadequate? Obviously, we
all want to avoid duplicating Bitzer's blunder in "defining" the gospel.
Conditioned by
evangelicalism and post-Enlightenment conceits, we may at first think that
defining the gospel is a straightforward matter, and simple, really: begin by
quoting 1 Corinthians 15:3-4, and throw in some discussions of the etymology
and uses of evangelion. I advise against this approach! The gospel
should not and cannot really be defined in the same manner as other terms. We
must not convert the wonder that is the gospel into some slot in our
systematics. We can define philosophical terms, because they are constructs of
the mind devised to facilitate thought, but the gospel is something else
entirely. It is fundamentally a report we have received and which we pass on,
an authoritative, empowered, but always fragmentary report concerning God's
saving intervention in Jesus Christ.
We all saw news
reports about the 9-11 tragedy. Some of us were eye-witnesses, or nearly so,
while others of us were a continent away, glued to the television. But,
whatever the case, whenever we speak of 9-11 we are exchanging impressions,
perceptions and something always greater than what we know, think, and say.
The gospel is not
a concept, nor even a term to be defined. Rather, the gospel is fundamentally a
report (Isaiah 53), good tidings of great joy for all the people of Israel
(Luke 2), and yes, a message to be delivered (1 Cor 15) that is always a
reduction of the reality being reported. Although the gospel is not whatever
one says it is, nor everything in general, it is and always will be more than
we can grasp and define. After all, when we speak of the gospel, angels bow.
In Be My
Witnesses, Darrell Guder repeatedly visits this issue:
Only through its pilgrimage through
time can the church discover the vast dimensions of the meaning and application
of the gospel. The early Christian community, although evangelized and
instructed by the apostles themselves, did not fully grasp what the gospel
meant. In fact, the church has not yet grasped the full meaning of the gospel.[28]
Reflecting
further, he calls for a theological modesty seldom found in our ranks:
It would be wise for us to approach with modesty the task of
gospel definition. . . . When we assume that our confidence is to be placed in
the accuracy of our dogmatic formulations, the reliability of our particular
confessional definitions of the gospel, or a particular version of the
inspiredness of Scripture, we have transformed the gospel into a subtle kind of
Gnosticism.[29]
Theological immodesty and
certitude-addiction leads to truncated, mangled truth. Worse still, convinced
partisans often will denounce and attack others, who may, like Sissy Jukes,
actually sense or know aspects of the gospel invisible to them.
Matters of
Controversy
Before turning to
a concluding and summational report, or description, of the gospel, we should
clear from our path matters of controversy blocking our way.
"Find
Heaven, Avoid Hell"
In 2002, I
attended the meeting of the Evangelical Theological Society at the Opryland
Hotel in Nashville, Tennessee. Riding from the airport to the hotel, a
missionary to the Jews whom I hardy knew, without any foreplay whatsoever,
badgered me with one question: "Do you believe that a Jew who does not believe
in Jesus goes to hell?" Aside from being put off by his abrasive approach, I
was mystified as to why, of all questions he might have selected, he chose this
one to test my orthodoxy? Why this preoccupation with the population of
perdition?
Of the eighteen
evangelistic sermons in the Book of Acts, none uses the find- heaven-avoid-hell
approach as a motivation either for missional engagement by the apostolic
messengers, or for repentance by their hearers. Neil Rees, International
Coordinator for World Horizons International, forcefully reminds us that "the
basic apostolic kerygma fails
to mention hell as a motive for accepting the gospel message," adding that "the
apostles were perfectly capable of evangelizing without threatening their
hearers with hell . . . [and] this is never developed in evangelistic
preaching."[30]
He states further that using the prospect of others going to hell as a goad for
missionary action or financial support "succeeds only in producing feelings of
self-condemnation rather than considered and solid commitment."[31]
Shouldn't this make us suspicious of a
fixation on heaven and hell issues?
"You Are Going to Destroy the Engine Driving
Outreach to the Jews"
I would not and do
not deny the reality of hell, nor minimize its significance in Holy Writ. But I
do question why this was such a focus of attention for my tram-mate and for
many others, whether explicitly or implicitly, considering its total absence
from the apostolic kerygma. It seems current vehemence surrounding this issue stems
from how this doctrine has been long-used to spur missional action, support and
response, and how it is used to inform polemical sparring. My guess is that
some imagine my calling to ease off on
this approach is nothing less than an attack on mission to the Jewish people,
through disassembling its engine.
The reverse is
true. Instead, I want to replace this non-apostolic engine with an older one,
better rooted in the Bible and better behaving on the road God is calling us
to. This engine has four "pistons" helpfully summarized in the opening verses
of "The Lord's Prayer."
The First Piston of Our
Missional Engine: Sharing Our Relationship with God
The Lord's Prayer
begins "Our Father." Our first motivation for missional action is to call
others to the depth of relationship with God we ourselves enjoy. A moment's
thought will prove that this is what energized the apostles. Through their
encounter with Messiah and their infusion with His Spirit, God had become so
luminously real to them that they could not but tell others what they had seen
and heard which had brought them to this joy, this power, this intoxication.
Our first missional motivation should then be to share with others the vital
relationship with God driving us. But what is our experience with God?
The early church was awash in wonder. Are we? Or, are we practiced
professionals, with a Bible verse and answer for anyone who asks us for a
reason for the hope that is in us, while, to tell the truth, we are out of
touch with the God of hope. I know that when I was in my forties, I had to
repent of how my relationship with God had become peripheral to me, even while
I was preoccupied with "ministry." Can anyone relate?
The Second Piston of Our
Missional Engine: The Doxological Motive
The second phrase
of the Lord's Prayer, "Hallowed be Thy Name," names what missional literature
terms "the doxological motive," a passion to see God glorified and worshiped.
Contemporary scholars are nearly unanimous in emphasizing this to be the most
powerful piston of all, able to drive the entire engine, and do it well.
After tracing throughout the Bible the centrality of the glorification of
God, Steve Hawthorne applies his findings to the contemporary missional task,
contrasting the doxlological motive with other motives, including
"find-heaven-avoid-hell." "Guilt-based appeals to care for billions of people
continues to soften our hearts a little. In practice, however, they weary and
harden believers to a minimal token obedience. . . . Now more than ever, believers need to be nurtured into a jealousy
for God's glory."[32]
Today, John Piper is the leading advocate of the preeminence of God's
glory. His perspective is a much-needed counterbalance to task-oriented and
statistically driven approaches:
Worship is
ultimate, not missions, because God is ultimate, not man. . . . Worship,
therefore, is the fuel and goal of missions. It's the goal of missions because
in missions we simply aim to bring the nations into the white-hot enjoyment of
God's glory. The goal of missions is the gladness of the peoples in the
greatness of God.[33]
Some might
imagine that Piper wins adherents to his view from Reformed circles alone.
However, this is not the case. In a fascinating article, fundamentalist pastor
and educator, Sam Horn (B.A., M.A., Ph.D. Bob Jones University!) tells how he
encountered, resisted, and was eventually converted to Piper's views. Using the
same metaphor of the missional engine, he makes the issue unmistakable:
I was also forced
to consider that God's desire to be worshipped by men of all nations is
actually the engine that drives biblical missions rather than the need of lost
men to be saved from an eternal hell. In short, my perspective on missions was
too man-centered.[34]
He goes on to
highlight a related concept which Mark Kinzer and I highlighted in our flyer,
"The Emerging Messianic Jewish Paradigm," and not without controversy. We said
this:
Such outreach proclaims the Name of
Jesus, not the neediness of Jews.
Sometimes mission approaches to the
Jewish people include the assumption or even declaration of the emptiness and
inadequacy of Jewish religious practice and faith. In contrast, the apostolic
motivation for outreach to Jewish people was driven by the realization that in
Yeshua, the long awaited Messiah had come. The oft-quoted passage, ‘There is no
other name given among mortals by which we must be saved,' comes in a context
where Peter and John were seeking to lift up the name of Jesus rather than put
down the Jewish people: ‘for we cannot keep from speaking about what we have
seen and heard' (Acts 4:12, 20). We would do well to imitate their example and
lift up the name of Yeshua without denigrating the holy things already given to
the Jewish people (see Romans 3:1-4; 9:1-5).[35]
Sam Horn helps to silence outcries
against our call to leave off a preoccupation with Jewish "neediness" and
instead uplift the name of Yeshua.
At the heart of Biblical revelation is
God's self-revelation to man. Part of what God chose to reveal in the
Scriptures concerns His primary motive for the activities ascribed to Him in
the words of the Book. That motivation can be summed up in the phrase, ‘God
does what He does for the sake of His name.' God's primary motive in the
salvation of lost men is doxological, "for the sake of His name" (Isaiah
63:7-14; Acts 15:14; Romans 1:5). The Scriptures reveal God's primary motive in
delivering His children from their troubles is ‘the sake of His name' (I Samuel
12:22; Psalm 106:8). God's primary motive in showing mercy to sinning people is
‘the sake of His name' (Isaiah 48:9; Ezekiel 20:44). God's primary motive in
dealing with the wicked is ‘the sake of His name' (Exodus 9:14-16; Romans
9:17). Finally, God's primary motive in His dealings with saved men is ‘the
sake of His name' (I John 2:12; Acts 9:16).[36]
Sam Horn, John
Piper, and Steve Hawthorne are right in redirecting our attention to the
centrality of lifting up the name of God and the name of Yeshua. Can we deny
that the supremacy of Yeshua's name rather than the alleged spiritual bankruptcy
or neediness of the Jewish people or of a hell-bound Sanhedrin was uppermost in
the minds of Peter and John? I challenge all of us to examine deeply why it is
that some of us fight so energetically to maintain our habitual preoccupation
with the neediness of Jews, a habit that leads to repeatedly proving to
ourselves and to others the alleged futility, vacuity, and impotence of the
Jewish way of life. This is not the engine that drove the apostles who lived to
glorify Yeshua and the One who raised him from the dead. Is not this focus and
motivation good enough for us?
The Third
Piston of Our Missional Engine: Hastening the
Consummation of All Things
When we speak of
ourselves as "the Remnant of Israel," what do we mean? And what relationship
does this have to the consummation of all things?[37]
Dan Johnson[38]
demonstrates how Scripture presents two different modalities of remnant
identity, one being survivors of a time of judgment, the other being the seed
from which God's continuing purposes will be realized. Both of these
perspectives are to be found in Romans 9-11. Johnson finds the earliest
reference to the remnant as the seed and earnest of future blessing in the verb
form used in Gen 7:23, "only Noakh was left (vayisha'er akh Noakh), along with those who were with him
in the ark," the term, vayish'er being related to the term sh'erit (remnant).
As Noakh, his family, and the animals left with them in the Ark (as a remnant)
were a sign of God's continuing purpose for the earth, and instruments for its
realization, so the eschatological remnant of Israel of Romans 9-11 is meant to
be a sign, demonstration and catalyst of God's continuing purposes for the
Jewish people-a seed of good things to come. This is our calling.
In Romans 9-11,
Paul speaks of two "fullnesses," "the fullness of the nations" (11:25) and "the
fullness of Israel" (11:12). Paul calls Israel's fullness greater than the
fullness of the Gentiles (posow mallon to
pleroma autown). "How much greater will
their fullness be?" [Ro 11:12]). Therefore if the fullness of the Gentiles is
associated with the Great Commission, the fullness of Israel, that "greater
riches" (Ro 11:12, NIV) God will bring to pass, may be termed "the Greater
Commission," as this reality affects our Remnant responsibilities.
Because we are so
used to operating out of an older paradigm, these concepts, and terms like "the
Greater Commission" may come as a shock. However, these reflect biblical
realities. The Great Commission might more properly be termed "the Penultimate
Commission," for it is the magnificent prelude to something greater. The
Greater Commission is our Remnant calling. God is calling us to prepare the way
for the fullness of all Israel.
But are we
listening? If we are nearing the pivotal juncture when the gigantic wheel of
God's purpose is turning toward the fullness of Israel, we cannot simply go on
with business as usual, living by older paradigms. Our responsibility is as
great as our privileges.[39]
Our role in the consummation of things is crucial and pivotal.
The Fourth Piston of Our Missional Engine: Obedience
Obedience to God,
"thy will be done, on earth as it is in heaven," is our fourth powerful piston.
And even if this were the only one, it would be more than enough to drive our
engine. We must speak to our people about Yeshua because we have been commanded
to do so. Paul's words apply to us: "For if I preach the gospel
that gives me no ground for boasting. For necessity is laid upon me. Woe to me
if I do not preach the gospel!"[40]
Cannot such a piston drive our engine? Of course it can! And
beyond that, should we not be passionate to "bring about the obedience of faith
for the sake of His name" among all the people of Israel, as was Paul's passion
for the nations?[41]
Such a mighty
missional engine roars at the curbside like a Maserati, its door open, waiting
only for us to get in the driver's seat to go zero to sixty in five seconds
flat. By comparison, the find-heaven-avoid-hell motivation seems like a donkey,
energized by a carrot and a stick! I may be taking away our donkey, but our
Father in heaven has given us the keys to the Maserati. Let's take her out on
the road!![42]
"The
Law of Moses Has Been Rendered Inoperative"
On the basis of
the lexical meaning of katargeo ("render inoperative"), some argue that
the Law of Moses has lost all force and authority, having now been replaced by
the law of Messiah, by extension making inoperative any argument for God's
preordained return to Torah-based covenant-faithfulness by the seed of Jacob.
Is there any answer to this objection?
First, defining
"the Law of Christ/Messsiah" as "all the individual commandments from Christ
and the Apostles applicable to a New Testament believer"[43]
should not be regarded as either the unanimous or majority view of the
exegetical community. Todd Wilson introduces his survey of recent opinion on
the matter in a manner which should at least give all of us pause before
confidently asserting the Law of Messiah is a code of law replacing the Law of
Moses. "While the phrase [the Law of Christ] has traditionally been harmonized
with Paul's negative portrayal of the law by treating the phrase either as a
circumlocution for Christian living or as a reference to some other "law," a
growing number of interpreters want to treat the "law of Christ" as a reference
to the law of Moses." Wilson also surveys the widening group of
exegetical opinion viewing Paul's "law of faith" and the "law of the Spirit of
life" as referring likewise to the Law of Moses.[44]
My point here is
not to summarize or advocate for any of these arguments in the literature but
instead to caution against accepting as self-evident a position which is by no
means a settled issue. We still have homework to do. [45]
But I have a stronger argument against those who would confidently discount the
persistence of the Law of Moses on the basis of the alleged meaning of katargeo.
D.A. Carson names
sixteen word fallacies, of which the eighth is "false assumptions about
technical meaning," in which cases, "an interpreter falsely assumes that a word
always or nearly always has a certain technical meaning-a meaning usually
derived either from a subset of the evidence or from the interpreter's personal
systematic theology." He notes that one of this fallacy's corollaries occurs
whenever such interpreters "go one step further and reduce an entire doctrine
to one word which they have understood to be a technical term."[46]
The heart of the
matter is that words are best defined not from lexicons but always from
contexts, and often, slightly differently from context to context. Besides,
lexicographers have theological commitments, interpretative traditions, and
communal interests affecting their interpretations of word meanings. This being
the case, those who base their doctrines and stances on lexical data may wrongly
attribute objectivity and dependability to lexicons that are neither objective
nor dependable. Furthermore, we who consult lexicons have our own theological
commitments, interpretive traditions, and communal interests, all of which
cause us to eagerly welcome lexical "evidence" when it appears to confirm our
preferences. Lexical evidence is helpful, to be sure, but must always be
regarded as provisional, its validity contingent upon rigorous historical,
cultural, and semantic analysis of each separate textual context.
They illegitimately and prematurely
foreclose discussion on a matter that can only be rightly resolved by means of
exacting examination of each context where the word is used.
It seems to me
that those who base their "proof" of the nullification of the Law's authority,
alleging that katargeo means "to render inoperative," commit
methodological error. They illegitimately and prematurely
foreclose discussion on a matter that can only be rightly resolved by means of
exacting examination of each context where the word is used. Such contexts
may illumine or may, on the contrary, contrast with one another in how the term
in question is being used elsewhere. And Carson notes that despite our best
interpretive efforts, disputed interpretive matters may not be resolved at all,
and surely not by a lexicon: "The fallacy lies in thinking the correct
interpretation of a passage can be discovered anyway; and in many instances,
that is not possible"[47]
This calls for us to exercise far greater exegetical caution than is our habit.
Theological positions must be founded on rigorous and self-critical
inter-communal exegesis, not on the verdicts of lexicons.
Nor does this exhaust
the problems created by those who confidently assert that katargeo spells
the death-knell of the Law of Moses. They can be refuted by what I call
"Fruchtenbaum's Criterion." It was Arnold Fruchtenbaum from whom, thirty-five
years ago or so, I learned the foundational argument against those who dismiss
any distinction between Jew or Gentile on the basis of Galatians 3:28, "There
is neither Jew nor Greek, there is neither
slave nor free, there is neither male nor female; for you are all one in Christ
Jesus." Arnold, now Dr. Fruchtenbaum,
indicated that we must always ask in what sense there is neither Jew nor
Greek, neither slave nor free, and neither male nor female. Applying
Fruchtenbaum's Criterion to the case at hand, we must be careful to ask, "In
what sense, under what conditions, and for whom is the Law of Moses rendered
inoperative now that Messiah has come?" The blade of Fruchtenbaum's Criterion
cuts down those who, on etymological grounds, confidently assert the demise of
the Law.
..if
the Law of Moses is rendered inoperative, does this not have implications for
messianic prophecy?
Two more arguments,
briefly noted. First, it is not possible to separate the Law from the narrative
of the Older Testament, where the narrative justifies and explains the setting
and rationale of the laws there imbedded. The law can no more be successfully
extracted from the narrative (or vice versa) than the skeleton can be extracted
from a human without killing the patient. Second, and closely related, if
the Law of Moses is rendered inoperative, does this not have implications for
messianic prophecy? Is this too rendered inoperative now
that Messiah has come? And if not, on what basis do we make an exception for
the persistence of messianic prophecy from within a body of law and
inextricable narrative now declared inoperative?
"Aren't You Arguing for ‘The Wider Hope'?"
I argue not for
the wider hope as much as against the wider ego. It has been decades
since I have heard anyone in our circles, speaking on a theological or
missiological issue, say, "I don't know." Not many manage to mumble these
monosyllables. But would our relationships with each other not be vastly
improved if we learned to so speak? As it stands, those who say, "I don't
know," especially when asked questions about the census of the redeemed, are
regarded as confused, deviant or dangerous. I am suggesting that this kind of
marginalization and stigmatization of the diffident is uncalled for, likely
rooted not only in theological commitments but also in an appalling lack of
theological humility: the wider ego.
I have been
encouraged to discover that even missiological giants like David Bosch and Paul
Hiebert had smaller egos. We would do well to heed these, who, being dead, yet
speak:
Our
theologies are partial, and they are culturally and socially biased. They may
never claim to be absolutes. Yet this does not make them relativistic, as
though one suggests that in theology - since
we cannot really ever know ‘absolutely'- anything
goes. It is true that we see only in part, but we do see (Hiebert). We are
committed to our understanding of revelation, yet we also maintain a critical
distance to that understanding. In other words, we are in principle open to
other views, an attitude which does not, however, militate against complete
commitment to our own understanding of truth, We preface our remarks with ‘I
believe. . . ‘ or ‘As I see it . . .' (Hiebert). It is misleading to believe
that commitment and a self-critical attitude are mutually exclusive.[48]
Applying
such theological humility to our missional task, Bosch says further,
"The commitment we give to any theological paradigm is therefore wholehearted
and provisional, wholehearted because we hold back nothing from our Lord,
provisional because our Lord makes us his witnesses, not his know-it-alls."[49]
I wonder if we got the memo.
Some no doubt remain
dissatisfied, demanding a verdict on the status of others, even hypothetical
others. Again, I must demur, especially in the case of God's chosen people,
whom he hardened for his purpose, but who remain beloved for the sake of the
fathers. The full outworking of the drama of the Jews and the Holy One remains
to be played out. A cloud of incense obscures our view of the mercy seat-by
divine design. I prefer to echo the roar of another giant, Lesslie Newbigin,
one of the most seminal missiologists of the past hundred years. We would do
well to hear him:
I confess that I am astounded at the
arrogance of theologians who seem to think that we are authorized, in our
capacity as Christians, to inform the rest of the world about who is to be
vindicated and who is to be condemned at the last judgment. . . . I find this
way of thinking among Christians astonishing in view of the emphatic warnings
of Jesus against these kinds of judgments which claim to preempt the final
judgment of God. Nothing could be more remote from the whole thrust of Jesus'
teaching than the idea that we are in a position to know in advance the final
judgment of God. It would be tedious to repeat again the innumerable warnings
of Jesus in this matter, his repeated statements that the last day will be a
day of surprises, of reversals, of astonishment. In his most developed parable
of the last judgment, the parable of the sheep and the goats, both the saved
and the lost are astonished. Surely theologians at least should know that the
judge on the last day is God and no one else. . . . If a theologian is really
serious he must learn to understand the impossible possibility of salvation.
In St. Paul we find this same tension
of confidence and awareness of the abyss that lies underneath. Paul, who is
certain that nothing can separate him from the love of God in Christ Jesus,
also tells his friends that he has to exercise severe self-discipline ‘lest
having preached to others I myself should be disqualified'' (I Cor. 9:27). The
Christian life, lived in the magnetic field between the two poles of the
amazing grace of God and the appalling sin in which I share, has a
corresponding synthesis of a godly confidence and a godly fear.[50]
Perhaps we should exchange our
wider egos for wider souls, like that of Newbigin. I would trade. Would you?
Cumulative
Conclusions
Some important disclaimers, lest all I have said be
misconstrued:
1. When I speak of the
gospel as good news for all Israel, I am neither saying nor implying that all
Jews will be in the world to come. I am no more entitled to claim expertise on
the census of the redeemed than are others to claim foreknowledge of the roll
call of perdition. God alone is judge, and many surprises await us all. I am
instead calling us back to a fundamental theme of both Testaments ignored or
marginalized by the Church and by Jewish mission for centuries, if not for
millennia. The Law and the Prophets point to a glorious hope for all Israel.
This concern motivated the apostles and informed their preaching, and is entirely
absent from our evangelistic practice, expectation and communal life.[51]
2. When I speak of the
gospel as good news for all Israel I am not saying or implying that helping
Jews come to Yeshua-faith is a superfluous non-issue. It is a matter of sharing
with others our intimacy of relationship with God, of glorifying him, of our
remnant responsibility in helping to bring in the consummation, of obedience,
and allegiance to the Son of David. Neglect of this responsibility is a matter
for which we will all give an account of ourselves to God.
3. I have sought to
avoid demeaning anyone of our number or of our broad circle of associates. If I
have failed in that regard, I ask forgiveness.
4. I am not saying
that my approach alone is worthwhile, with all others bogus or passé. But I am
certainly alleging that we have been grossly negligent in not pursuing such an
approach deeply aligned with the whole counsel of God, with these times of
transition, and with the prophesied consummation.
5. Although there is
no mention in this paper of God's will for the nations, this must not be taken
to mean that I am unconcerned about the nations or that the Great Commission
has no place in my missiology. Nor should my silence on these maters be taken
to mean that I am negative about the Church and/or its role. I have focused
solely on the people of Israel in keeping with the nature of our symposium,
concentrating on our role as part of the Remnant of Israel.
Integrational Thoughts
First, I affirm that repentance and faith play a central role
in the message we are called to proclaim. But I also believe that mission
culture has had an inconsistent and sub-biblical concept of what repentance
means and what it entails for Jews. R. Kendall Soulen helps us with this
clarifying statement:
According to the biblical witness, God's work as
Consummator takes enduring shape in the history that unfolds between the Lord,
Israel, and the nations. Accordingly, human sin is never merely the sin of
the creature against the Creator-Consummator. Human sin is also always the sin
of Jew and Gentile, of Israel and the nations.[52]
The sins of Messianic Jews and of all Israel are far more dire and
extensive than simply the record of individual human failings. The sins of all
Israel, including Messianic Jews, include and indeed are foundationally our
failure to live in covenant faithfulness with Israel's God.
Do
Jews need the atonement Yeshua provides? Yes, by all means, but for reasons
deeper than we have yet realized and proclaimed. Jewish missionaries and
Messianic Jews have always called for other Jews to repent and believe. But we
fail to ask, "Repent for what?" By default, we would say, "Repent for being a
sinner, for your sins," or perhaps, "Repent for not recognizing the Messiah
whom God sent for us."
But
this will not do, for we finally only know what sin is when we compare our
conduct with what God demands of us. We, the seed of Abraham and Sarah, whose
ancestors, standing at the foot of Sinai, said "na'aseh v'nishmah" (we will do and we will hear/obey all that
the Lord has spoken we will do) must repent not of being sinners in general,
but of being Jewish sinners specifically. The sins of all Israel,
including Messianic Jews, include continual and pervasive neglect of the
covenant to which we are all obligated (Dt 29:10-15). Although we may
confidently say, "There is therefore now no condemnation for those who are in
Messiah Yeshua," we may not say "there is therefore now no
responsibility for those who are in Messiah Yeshua." "Yeshua paid it all," but
not that we might go back to each of us turning to his own way (Is 53:6).
Surely, if our sin includes covenant violation, should not our repentance
include not simply faith in the sin-bearer, but also a return to that
covenant-faithfulness from which we departed? And is it of no significance that
it is precisely to the restoration of this kind of obedience (communally) that
God's consummating actions are directed?
Second,
under the influence of Enlightenment
rationalism, evangelicals have for too long been too focused on the gospel
being true news. We zero in on apologetics and Messianic prophecy, good in
their own right. However, when the subtext of our message is the certain
perdition of the vast majority of the Jews who ever lived, including the
intimate family members of those whom we evangelize, anyone who is reasonably
astute, or who has been influenced by those opposing our message, is likely to
turn to us a deaf ear. The "truth" of the gospel is not likely to make inroads
when the news is unwelcome, oppressive, and when it implies, or even
theologically requires, that the evangelized be eternally separated from
their people, axiomatically viewed to be lost forever. Nor will it do to try
and hide these implications from those we evangelize: Jewish people are not
stupid, and, sooner or later, they know when they have been duped. With our
prevailing propositions, we have news for the Jew standing before us: God is
going to take her away from her family for ever and ever to be in heaven with
him, with most if not all of her loved ones tormented eternally in the lake of
fire. Not so good. Can we get back to a gospel that is good news for all Israel
without betraying the text of Scripture? I believe we can and I believe we
must. And I have tried to help point the way.
Third, we
have been too focused on the salvation of individuals, and on individual
response, both of which are nevertheless crucial, since all of us will give an
account of ourselves to God, individually. But in the process, we have
forgotten that the Bible portrays the gospel as good news for Zion. It
is news of the vindicating and merciful reign of God displayed and accomplished
in the One whose goings forth have been from of old, from everlasting days,
whose incarnation, death, resurrection, ascension, High Priestly ministry and
Davidic reign need to be restored in our thinking to their central place as the
means toward prophesied national blessings.
Fourth, we
have been too focused on the gospel as atonement, as if this were all there is
or the main point, failing to see atonement as part of a "package deal" of
sorts, which includes the regathering, renewal, reunification, return to
covenant faithfulness and messianic fulfillment of all Israel. We have also
seen atonement as monolithically individual, which is a strange concept
considering the biblical evidence. (See for
one example, the prophecy in Daniel 9
which couches the atonement in this broader context of national vindication and
salvation).
Who Has Believed Our Report?
Toward a Gospel For All Israel
With all of this in view, consider the following
description of the gospel we are being called to commend to our people at this
time of transition.
1.
The gospel of God
for the Jewish people is above all else good news for all Israel rather
than for a fragmentary spiritually enlightened elite.
2. It is not entirely
new news, for the arm of the Lord has rescued Israel time and time again. But
it is the good news of God, in covenant faithfulness, doing again what he has
done before-coming to rescue his people-but outdoing Himself this time, in the
foretold ultimate deliverance, through the faithfulness of Yeshua the Messiah
in his incarnation, atoning death, resurrection, and ascension as Great High
Priest and ruling Son of David.
3. It is the good news
of God vindicating his name and his people Israel in the sight of all nations
in victorious strength and faithfulness, to be consummated in the regathering,
reunification, repentance-renewal, and return to Torah-based covenant
faithfulness of the community of Jacob, gathered around Yeshua the Son of
David, resurrected and renewed in a new heavens and a new earth where
righteousness dwells and joy prevails, in the sight of all nations.
4. Therefore, if we
and our communities are to be gospel messengers, we must passionately honor
these priorities in our own communities, and, as Remnant people, celebrate,
catalyze and advance these priorities in the life of wider Israel.
5. And so, in this
fashion and toward such ends," all Israel will be saved." Does this mean every
single Jew? Not likely. Rather, Paul is answering the question, "What is going
to happen to the Jews as a whole?" For details, see the Letter to the Romans,
chapters 9-11, against the background of the testimony of the Law and the
Prophets to eschatological blessings promised to Israel as a whole.
Related
Implications
And what of Jewish people who refuse the message?
That of course is a serious matter, as has always been the cases whenever our
people have rejected or been unresponsive to the saving acts of God. But it is
interesting that the Apostles, in their preaching to Jews, never pass a verdict
that their rejecting hearers are going to hell. Rather they warn them to
be careful concerning the possible consequences of such hardness of heart.
Giving warnings and delivering verdicts is not the same thing. Again, God alone
is judge.
Under this paradigm, we need to view ourselves
not as missionaries but as prophets. Missionaries come from outside a community
with a foreign message. Prophets come from within the community, calling the
people back to communal standards of faithfulness to God. However, our
evangelism will fail if it is only a sales pitch. We must ourselves exemplify
the faithfulness to which we are calling others, living for those things which
Messiah is bringing to pass-the regathering, unification, spiritual repentance
renewal, and Torah obedience of all Israel.
Our evangelism will
involve the following:
- Developing
modalities (communal expressions) where Yeshua-faith and the power of the Spirit
are realities making our pursuit of these goals qualitatively different from
what people are likely to encounter elsewhere.
- Seeing evangelism
as recruiting and involving other Jews in the passionate pursuit of these
priorities, we will be agents sensitizing them to the difference made by Yeshua
and the Holy Spirit, and inviting them to Yeshua-faith.
- Cooperating with
and commending Jews of all kinds in their pursuit of whichever of these
priorities to which they are committed. We are not in competition with them. We
should seek out opportunities for cooperation. In such contexts too, our
Yeshua-faith and the influence of the Spirit will be made known.
- Operating within
such a model, even if Jewish people do not receive our witness of Yeshua, they
will know that we are committed to the well being of the Jewish people and that
our gospel is proclaimed as good news for all Israel.
Epilogue
A week ago I
received a phone call from a friend, illustrating the burden of this article.
She is an outspoken Messianic Jew in Los Angeles, and an effective witness of
her faith. She had been invited to visit the sukkah of an Orthodox rabbi
active in the area who had been trying to win her back to mainstream Judaism,
while she had been witnessing to him.
She had been meeting
with him and his family for some time, and this time was quite unsuccessful. He
saw that she was "a lost cause" from his point of view. At that point she
mentioned Hashivenu, and encouraged him to visit our website. She also
mentioned me. It turned out he knew of me, but how?
About two years
ago, the Moderator of the General Assembly of the Presbyterian Church (USA)
visited Los Angeles to speak at a local church on the divestment issue. Advance
publicity indicated that his perspective was bad news for the Jews. I wrote a
letter to two rabbis in town. One was Orthodox, but has shown himself willing
to go outside the box. The other was a Reform rabbi with a strong social
justice record, whom I had met previously. In my letter to these two rabbis I
proposed that we picket the Presbyterian Church or the local Presbyterian
Church (USA) headquarters in protest of their position on divestment, as
highlighted by the planned visit of the denominational dignitary.
I never heard
back. But the truth came out in the sukkah. As I mentioned, my friend's
rabbi friend knew of me. And the reason he did was that "all the rabbis in town
had discussed my letter, and had decided it was too loaded an issue to picket
with a bunch of Messianic Jews."
What shall we say
about this? Should we say, "That just goes to show you. The rabbis will never
accept us and only want to convert us back and protect their people from us."
Should we say that the letter was a wasted effort and a total loss? To say such
things would be a grave mistake. It just will not do for the Remnant of Israel
to fold up its skirts and scuttle back into it own enclaves, or seek solace in
the lap of the church!
I would say that
it is wonderful that all the rabbis in Los Angeles know that the people at my
congregation, Ahavat Zion, care about Jewish concerns and stand for the issues
that matter to them. I am going to be sending more such letters in the future,
and meanwhile develop a synagogue that actively incarnates the glorious future
God has for all Israel: gathered, united, repentant, renewed, faithful to his
statutes and ordinances, around Yeshua, the reigning Son of David.
Is this not good
news for all Israel?
Stuart Dauermann,
(M.A., PhD, Fuller Seminary School of Intercultural Studies), is
Senior Scholar with Messianic Jewish Theological Institute and
President of Hashivenu, a Messianic Jewish think-tank. He serves as
Rabbi of Ahavat Zion Messianic Synagogue, Beverly Hills, and lives in
Southern California.
Notes
[1] "All Israel" is a term borrowed especially from Ro
11:26, connected in this paper to "all the people [of Israel]" in Lk 2:10-11.
It is a phrase found 149 times in Scripture. In the present discussion, I
believe the sense of the term is equivalent to "Israel as a whole," rather than
"every single Jew." This is compatible with the Talmudic view: "All Israel has
a share in the world to come: the following (out of Israel) do not have a share
in the world to come" (M. Sanhedrin 10:1).
[2] Rev 14:6..
[3] Zech 12:1-3, 9; 14:2-3; Micah
4:11-13.
[4] Dt 30:8-10; Eze 37:24: "They shall follow my
ordinances and be careful to obey my statutes."
[5] From the statement affirmed by the Delegates to the
23rd Annual UMJC Conference on July 31, 2002.
[6] David Bosch, Transforming Mission: Paradigm Shifts
in Theology of Mission. (Maryknoll, NY: Orbis, 1992),184-5. In part,
Bosch's argument paraphrases Paul Hiebert, "Epistemological Foundations for
Science and Theology," Theological Students Fellowship Bulletin (March),
9, and Paul Hiebert, "The Missiological Implications of an Epistemological
Shift," Theological Students Fellowship Bulletin (May-June), 12.
[7] Another aspect of the bad-news gospel is
Christendom's habit of denigrating Jewish faith and sancta, postulating that
these are worthless when compared with the church's patrimony. This too is bad
news, not treated here for the sake of space.
[8] Luke 2:8-11.
[9] See Isa 52:7.
[10] Terrance L. Tiessen, Who Can Be Saved? Reassessing
Salvation in Christ and World Religions (Downers Grove, IL:
InterVarsity Press, 2004), 199. Tiessen will argue for "accessibilism," which
asserts "God does save some of the unevangelized, but he has not raised up the
world's religions as instruments for achieving this" (Tiessen, 47).
[11] Definition accessed on line September 20, 2007 at http://www.philosophyprofessor.com/philosophies/category-mistake.php.
For a related study on the history of Christian negative categorization of the
Jewish people and Judaism, see Averil Cameron, "Jews and Heretics-A Category
Error?" in Adam H. Becker and Annette Yoshiko Reed, The Ways that
Never Parted. Texts and Studies in Ancient Judaism 95 (Tübingen: Mohr
Siebeck, 2003), 345-360.
[12] John 1:12.
[13] See, for example, Deuteronomy 7:6, 14:2, 32:8; Psalm
33:12, 147:19-20; Isa 43:20, 65:22; Amos 3:2; Romans 3:1-2.
[14] One does not have to look hard or long to find
explicit, bald and strident statements from within the Jewish missions and/or
Messianic Jewish world denouncing Judaism as categorically no different from
other non-Christian religions. Thus, one missionary to the Jews says this on
his website, "Rabbinic Judaism is a false religion. The synagogues of today are
deceptions, which lead Jewish people away from the way of salvation into a
system that rejects Torah, substitutes Torah with human tradition, and leads
them into destruction. Rabbinic Judaism is as much a false religion as any
other false religion." (Reference available upon request).
[15] Along with Mark Kinzer, I believe Judaism to be a
house still inhabited by Yeshua even though he is yet to be recognized and
explicitly honored by the majority of those living there.
[16] John Howard Yoder, The Jewish-Christian Schism
Revisited, ed. Michael G. Cartwright and Peter Ochs (Grand Rapids:
Eerdmans, 2003), 147-159.
[17] Acts 26:4-7.
[18] Nu 23:9.
[19] Although they say much on other matters for which I
am grateful and with which I heartily concur, Darrell Bock and Craig Blaising
are among those who unwittingly grease the skids for the assimilation of Jewish
believers in Jesus when they say "progressive dispensationalism . . . teaches
that Mosaic covenant law has ended dispensationally, it also teaches that it
has been replaced by new covenant law" Craig L. Blaising & Darrell L. Bock,
Progressive Dispensationalism. (Grand Rapids: Baker, 1999), 1999. If this
is so, then the on-the-ground distinction of Messianic Jewish life and
community rests on an exceedingly narrow bed. In their paradigm, in practical
terms of lifestyle and legacy, how are Messianic Jews fundamentally different
from other Yeshua-believers?
[20] Reference available upon request.
[21] Bosch, Transforming, 410-411.
[22] I hyphenate the two terms because repentance itself
is the fruit of the Spirit at work, and the renewal we value and long is
evident in repentance and not possible without it. The two realities,
repentance and renewal, are inseparably hand-in hand, and as perceived by the
human observer, they can occur in either order.
[23] Craig Blaising, "The Future of Israel as a
Theological Question," Journal of the Evangelical Theological Society 44,
no. 3(2001):448.
[24] Ibid., 449.
[25] loc. cit.
[26] Ibid. For a fuller treatment on the roots and
contrast between spiritual vision eschatology and new creation eschatology, see
Craig A. Blaising, "Premillennialsm," in Three Views of the Millennium and
Beyond, ed. Darrell L. Bock (Grand Rapids: Zondervan, 1999), 160-81.
[27] Charles Dickens, Hard Times, "Chapter Two -
Murdering the Innocents," found on-line at http://www.mtholyoke.edu/acad/intrel/hardtime.htm
(accessed September 28, 2007)
[28] Guder, Darrell
L. Be My Witnesses: The Church's Mission, Message, and Messengers (Grand
Rapids, MI: Eerdmans, 1985), 39.
[29] Ibid., 76.
[30] Neal Rees, "Snatch Others from the Fire and Save
Them": An Examination of Belief in Hell as a Motivating Factor in Missions." Unpublished
paper, originally submitted as a term paper to William Carey International
University, at http://web.archive.org/web/20050228025757/perso.wanadoo.es/neil/Hell.htm,
Accessed on line Sept 20, 2007.
[31] Rees, n.d. 12. After providing a succinct and helpful
historical survey of Protestant motivations for mission, Gailyn Van Rheenen
traces the contemporary shift in such motivations in his aptly titled essay,
"Changing Motivations for Missions: From ‘Fear of Hell' to ‘the Glory of God.'
" In Michael Pocock, Gailyn van Rheenen, and Douglas McConnell, eds, The
Changing Face of World Missions: Engaging Contemporary Issues and Trends, (Grand
Rapids, MI: Baker Academic, 2005), 161-181.
[32] Steven C. Hawthorne, "The Story of His Glory," in Perspectives
on The World Christian Movement: A Reader, Ralph D. Winter and Steven C.
Hawthorne, eds. (Pasadena CA: William Carey Library, 1999), 15; www.waymakers.org/_files/glory/StoryGlory.pdf
Accessed September 24, 2007.
[33] John Piper. Let he Nations Be Glad! The Supremacy
of God in Missions 2nd edition (Grand Rapids: Baker
Academic, 2003), 17.
[34] Sam Horn, "The Heart of Biblical Missions" on his
website Sharper Iron. http://www.sharperiron.org/2006/10/05/the-heart-of-biblical-missions/
Accessed September 2007.
[35] Stuart Dauermann and Mark Kinzer, The Emerging
Messianic Jewish Paradigm (2005).
[36] Horn, loc cit.
[37] Stuart Dauermann, Seeds, Weeds, and Walking the
High Wire: The Role of the Remnant - Embodying Israel's Destiny. Unpublished
paper from the Hashivenu Forum (Pasadena: Hasivenu, 2006).
[38] Dan G. Johnson, "The Structure and Meaning of
Romans 11." Catholic Biblical Quarterly, 46(1), 1984:91-103.
[39] "Every one to whom much is given, of him will much be
required; and of him to whom men commit much they will demand the more" (Lk
12:48).
[40] 2 Cor 9:16.
[41] Ro 1:5, 16:26
[42] Johannes Verkuyl, writing thirty years ago, reached
similar conclusions, naming six motivations for mission, including all four I
identified. His list, in order: obedience; love, mercy and pity; doxology; the
eschatological motive (where he makes mention of the Lord's Prayer!); haste;
and the personal motive-the arousing of ourselves through arousing others.
Verkuyl was the pre-eminent missiologist of the mid-twentieth century Contemporary
Missiology: An Introduction. (Grand Rapids: Eerdmans, 1978), 164-168.
[43] Arnold G. Fruchtenbaum, "Messianic Congregations May
Exist Within the Body of Messiah as Long as They Don't Function Contrary to the
New Testament," In How Jewish is Christianity?2 Views on the Messianic
Movement. Stanley N, Gundry and Louis Goldberg, eds. (Grand Rapids:
Zondervan. 2003), 121.
[44] Todd A. Wilson. "The Law of Christ and the Law of
Moses: Reflections on a Recent Trend in Interpretation." Current Issues in
Biblical Research. (London: SAGE Publications. Volume 5.1:125-144.. Found
on line at http://cbi.sagepub.com/cgi/reprint/5/1/123
(Accessed September 23, 2007).
[45] Some of our finest minds have done much of the
groundwork for us, although space does not permit a review of their
argumentation here. Among them, see John Fischer, "Messianic Congregations
Should Exist and Be Very Jewish: A Response to Arnold Fruchtenbaum" in How
Jewish is Christianity?2 Views on the Messianic Movement. Stanley N, Gundry
and Louis Goldberg, eds. (Grand Rapids: Zondervan. 2003), 129-139; "Torah" in
David L. Stern, Messianic Jewish Manifesto. 3rd edition.
(Clarksville, MD: Messianic Jewish Publications, 1997), 125-158; Dan Juster, Jewish
Roots: A Foundation of Biblical Theology for Messianic Judaism. (Rockville,
MD: Davar Publishing, 1986), and Mark S, Kinzer, Postmissionary Messianic
Judaism: Redefining Christian Engagement with the Jewish People (Grand
Rapids: Brazos, 2006). For succinct, illuminating treatments of all the
relevant texts, see David L. Stern Jewish New Testament Commentary: A
Companion Volume to the Jewish New Testament (Clarksville, MD: Messianic
Jewish Resources International, 1996). For a detailed presentation of the Law
of Messiah as an alternative code to an inoperative Law of Moses, see as well,
Arnold G. Fruchtenbaum, Israelology: The Missing Link in Systematic
Theology. Revision 2001. (Tustin, CA: Ariel Ministries, 2001.
[46] Donald A. Carson, Exegetical Fallacies, 2nd
edition (Grand Rapids: Baker, 1996), 45, 47.
[47] Carson, 60.
[48] Bosch, 186-7, quoting Hiebert, Epistemological
Foundations, 9.
[49] Bosch, 47.
[50] Lesslie Newbigin. The Gospel in a Pluralist
Society (Grand Rapids: Eerdmans, 1989), 177-8.
[51] In the first chapter of
Dispensationalism, Israel and the Church, Darrell Bock speaks of
"The Reign of the Lord Christ." His stated goal is "to argue
that any reconstruction of New Testament eschatology [indeed of Messianic
eschatology] must take into account the perspective of both Acts 2 and Acts
3" (37). In discussing the kingdom concept in Luke's gospel, he stresses
the immanence of the Kingdom, and the fact that kingdom period begins with
Jesus' ministry and message. "While the kingdom has not arrived in its
fullness, it has come in its initial stages. In that inauguration the
deliverance of God has come, and the future full rule of God has been
guaranteed" (40). Bock sees in Luke-Acts a tension between kingdom present
and kingdom to come [Acts 1:6]. When seen in context, the time of the
consummation of the Kingdom vis-a-vis Israel is tied in with Yeshua's
return [v.11]. Bock sees Acts 2 and 3 as being answers to the disciples'
question in 1:6, demonstrating the already of Jesus' kingdom reign [Act 2], and
the not yet when the political promises to Israel will be consummated [Acts 3].
What we should not miss is the seamless connection between the gospel and the
consummation: the one who tabernacled among us will return to consummate God's
good news for all Israel. This deserves to be central to our gospel during
these times of transition. See Darrell L. Bock, "The Reign of the Lord Christ,"
in Craig A. Blasing and Darrel L. Bock, eds., Disepnsationalism, Israel and
the Church (Grand Rapids: Zondervan, 1996), 37-67.
[52] R. Kendall Soulen, The God of Israel and Christian
Theology (Minneapolis: Fortress Press, 1996), 153, emphasis added.
|