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Did the Jews kill Christ (or was Jesus a Victim of Identity Theft)?
http://www.crosstalk.org ^ | 12/2004 | Dr. Randy Weiss

Posted on 03/28/2005 5:03:23 AM PST by RedBloodedAmerican

Consider the facts:

It seems to me that the folks who confuse these matters misunderstand the real character and true identity of Jesus. Actually, many people reinterpret the life and purpose of Jesus to fit their own agendas. They recreate Jesus to fit a pattern they prefer. Perhaps that is what happened in Mr. Gibson’s film.

The producers substituted bread for matzah in the Feast of Unleavened Bread. Whether intentional or not, this error moved Jesus to a place outside the flow of Judaism. It is well known that Jews were forbidden to eat leavened bread during the time of Passover. To ignore this lowest common denominator that Jesus shared with the Jews of His community is to ignore that He was a faithful member of the Jewish community. If He can be extricated from His situation in life as a Jewish man in the first century, He can be recreated and recast in anyway that anyone chooses. In essence, He could be molded to fit the need anyone wished for Jesus to fill. But Jesus does not change at our insistence; we change at His. God does not change; He is perfect. We must change because we are imperfect. This may seem like an abstract philosophical concern, but it is not. It is a fundamental truth and we must let Jesus be Jesus. If we are permitted to modify Him to suit our fancy then we become God and He becomes our servant. That is why I refuse to ignore that the Last Supper was a traditional Jewish Passover. To make it less is to rob Jesus of His heritage on this earth. Of course that is the pattern for many Christian traditions. Leonardo Da Vinci had the same problem when he was commissioned to create The Last Supper for the Convent of Dominican friars at Santa Maria delle Grazie in Milan. If one looks carefully at this most famous religious painting, the traditional Gentile dinner rolls will become evident.

Jesus was born into the line of Jewish kings. Christians believe He is King eternal. Had He been born into a non-Jewish home, He would have been discredited from inheriting this throne. The prophetic mantle would have remained unfulfilled. Had He sinned in His dietary regimen eating food not kosher for Passover, He would have been disqualified as a perfect sacrifice and the Cross would have been pointless in the Father’s plan of salvation. If we ignore the small details of the food Jesus ate at His final Pesach seder, it becomes easier to ignore other details, such as the clothing Jesus wore.

Consider what the poor woman with the issue of blood would have done if the wardrobe designer from Mr. Gibson’s film had outfitted our Savior? She touched the “hem” of His garment and was healed according to Matthew 9:20. To the uninitiated reader, it might seem that Jesus wore Levi Docker slacks and the woman grabbed the neatly turned, starched hem of His pleated trousers gently draping over His penny loafers. Of course that would be quite ludicrous to suggest because everyone knows Jesus did not wear slacks. Would dressing Jesus in slacks be anymore foolish than presuming He disobeyed the commands of Numbers 15:38 and disregarded wearing His tallith with the proper long tsithith—fringes in the corners? According to Jewish practice and the best scholarship, it is these fringes that the women touched. It was not the hem of His trousers, it was the borders (corners or wings) where the tsithith hung.1

If we can quietly allow Mr. Gibson to separate Jesus from His Jewish food and His Jewish dress, we can begin to disentangle Him from His other Jewish characteristics. That is why the subtitle of this book asks the question, Did the Jews Kill Christ or Has Someone Stolen His Identity? The Jews are not to blame for His death. I believe He lives! There is no body. The accusation of murder is a moot point in light of the Resurrection. The crime is in how Jesus is usually represented. Many groups have stolen His identity.

That is how the founder of The Great Passion Play of Eureka Springs, Arkansas, promoted Jesus. He presented images of a blond-haired, blue-eyed, WASP Savior. Jesus was the victim of identity theft. He stole the true identity of Jesus and created a fairy tale Christ invented in his vain imagination. The Bible commands us not to worship false gods, yet that is what happens when we worship an idea of God that is a fabrication. This can happen quite easily if we become distracted from worshipping the God of the Bible and begin to serve an illusion about God presented by false teachers.  

WILL THE REAL JESUS PLEASE STAND UP?

If a heretic can separate Jesus from His own people, he becomes capable of casting Jesus as a member of any people. Yasser Arafat declared that Jesus was a Palestinian. It served Arafat’s political purposes. If no one points out the lunacy of such errant claims, the alleged Palestinian Jesus serves Arafat obediently. The very thought is sacrilegious at numerous levels.

My wife and I recently visited a huge outdoor flea market. One seller had a plethora of Christian art. My favorite was the “Black Last Supper” where an African-American Jesus was surrounded by African-American disciples. Though this odd vision drifted further than Mr. Gibson’s, I was at least pleased to see there was no pork identified on the table. I did comment to my wife that the dinner rolls were a nice touch. They were attractive in the spirit of DaVinci. Embracing Jesus as one of their own apparently serves the African-American community. It is always wiser to serve Jesus as He is than to expect Him to serve us as we are.

Jesus was neither Aryan, nor a Nazi sympathizer. Yet that is how He was portrayed in the 1934 presentation of the most famous passion play of Europe. It was a crime of identity theft that permitted the Oberammergau Passion Play to insure that all of the main characters were Aryans during the Nazi era. Hitler loved it and insisted it be preserved forever to show the world the menacing story of the Jews. The show still goes on. Jesus served Hitler in that presentation, but Hitler never served Jesus.

Neo-Nazis and Christian Identity adherents declare Jesus was not Jewish. The heretical proponents of British-Israelism shift the heritage of Jesus and the promises of God from the Jewish people of Israel to the Anglo-Saxon people in Great Britain. They don’t want to be confronted by a Jewish Jesus. Of course, neither did the Catholic leaders of the Cathedral of Florence, when they commissioned Michelangelo to create the larger-than-life statue of King David (23 feet tall on pedestal). If you dare to peek, David was cast as an uncircumcised Gentile. In a truly classic faux pax, the 1988 edition of the World Book Encyclopedia described Michelangelo’s artistry as “best known for his treatment of the human body . . . but is never false or artificial. See the picture of his statue of David with the David article.”2 How could they not notice? Apparently, the Church could not tolerate a Jewish hero. In their view, it was wise to recreate David as one like themselves, instead of one like their enemies. That could have been an embarrassment.

The gay community desires to paint Jesus as a homosexual. The women’s liberation movement prefers goddesses to God and they have cast Jesus as a woman. The truth is that once Jesus is removed from the pages of the Bible, there is no anchor to hold people to truth and Jesus to His birthright.

Jesus was a poor, itinerant, Jewish rabbi teaching in the Galilee region of ancient Israel. Yet modern prosperity preachers would have us believe that Jesus was a well-to-do, name-it-and-claim-it faith preacher in an Armani robe, Gucci sandals and a Rolex sundial. If you listen to some prosperity-preaching charlatans with nice hair and big churches, you’d think God had dumped the poor people to shower all His blessings on the fat cats and major donors.

Perhaps you’ve heard that some are asking, WWJD—What would Jesus drive? Well, Jesus didn’t tool into Jerusalem on Palm Sunday driving a donkey named Mercedes.

Like a famous American general, Jesus is coming back. But the Second Coming of Jesus will bring eternity. He is Lord of peace and Lord of the judgment.

This work is intended to be taken seriously so it is inappropriate to contain too much sarcasm. Yet there is a great irony that many seem to miss. Jesus does not need us to make Him more appealing to those who reject Him. We need Jesus to make us more appealing to those who reject Him because of us. Jesus is sufficiently winsome and wonderful that anyone who considers the true nature of Christ can easily identify the virtue that dwells in Him. It is only when we betray His love by representing Him reprehensibly that He seems unloving. It is only when we rob Him of His glorious character by infusing our own lack into His being that His worth is diminished and His value depreciated by our flawed transmission of His message.

I am here to declare that a crime has been committed. Jesus is the victim of identity theft. Every cause and each group has adopted Jesus as their own. They have created Jesus in their own image. It is one of the greatest crimes of history. Even the new improved mellow Saint Mel of the Passion recreated Jesus to suit his view.

Jesus loved women but not as sex objects. Although He may as well have, if you believe the disgusting, immoral, promiscuous, portrayals of some pre-Mel Hollywood representations of Jesus. The Last Temptation of Christ depicted Jesus fantasizing having sex with Mary Magdalene.

Jesus loved His mother but He wasn’t a momma’s boy. Jesus was a strong, bold, male role model. Nevertheless, when viewing the film, one nagging question refused to fade from my mind.  

Surviving the Beating in the Passion?

The beating endured by Jesus in the film was so intense that it seemed impossible for a man, even a strong, bold man, to have lived through the preliminary stages of His torture. Perhaps that is why so much criticism has been leveled against the film from those who believed it to be too violent. The same critics were probably not offended by the violence in other films that included Mel Gibson. Yet some critics skewered his film of the Passion due to the graphic violence. Was the film too violent? No, I do not agree with that assessment. The violence contained in the film was certainly not gratuitous. It was a purposeful fair representation of what Jesus endured. There was a reason for the suffering of Jesus to be shown in the film. It was part and parcel of the Gospel story. In fact, some have posited that the film was not violent enough. That analysis is not unfounded based on the condition described in the Bible. One could still recognize the character playing Jesus on the Cross. The Scripture details that He was beaten beyond recognition.

Why did Jesus keep getting up? Why didn’t He just stay down and symbolically cry “Uncle?” The Cross would not have been escaped. Only the added suffering would have been bypassed. What possessed Him to continue?

Could a normal human being have lived through the beating? I found it perplexing to watch Jesus continue to carry the Cross after being beaten with such severity. It was quite telling to see a strong, healthy man struggle with the same Cross. Simon the Cyrenian was drafted by the Roman soldiers to help Jesus. Simon could barely manhandle the Cross in their two-man team. It was too much for him. Jesus had lost so much blood and had so many unbearable wounds. It seemed impossible for Him to be able to move under His own power, let alone drag a heavy cross through the streets of Jerusalem. Could a normal man have endured? Could a normal man have trudged up the slope to the site of His execution? I guess the answer is dependent on the man’s passion. It may have been impossible for a normal man. But Jesus was not normal. You see, Jesus was on a mission. His will to live exceeded His desire to avoid pain. His will to live exceeded the murderous intent of His enemies. But His will to live was limited to His need to live until He could die the death for which He was destined.

Jesus was divine. But this is not what separated Jesus from other men. I do not ascribe super-human strength to the Son of God. Rather, it was super-human love. Jesus would not quit because He would not fail. Jesus would not stop short of Calvary because He knew all about our need for His death. He knew that our salvation was at stake. Many men and women have been known to accomplish feats of strength beyond their natural ability when called upon in desperate conditions. Some people simply refuse to die until they accomplish their goals. Then they quietly pass on. I chose to attribute His ability to survive the beating and His choice to endure sub-human treatment to the unstoppable love He exhibited. Yet I could not remove the nagging doubt about a human’s ability to endure that much physical torture. Then a country preacher cleared it all up for me.

Pastor Kerry McDaniel put the human ability of Jesus into focus on this subject. He reminded me that Jesus had no sin. Sin is what brought death to mankind. When he stated that, I had a revelation about the character of Jesus in Mr. Gibson’s film. Could any man have endured such a beating and lived? The answer became clear. Yes! Any man who had no sin, because it is sin that brings death. The Jews did not kill Jesus. The Romans did not kill Jesus. I think those nasty soldiers could have beat Jesus until their arms turned into rigatoni. The beating would not kill Jesus. Not even the Crucifixion killed Jesus. He was fully human. But Jesus was without sin. Jesus died on the Cross, but not before He was ready. It was not before His mission was accomplished. My revelation was that it was just as the Bible had detailed the event. In John’s Gospel it is written that “He said, ‘It is finished’ and he bowed his head and he gave up the ghost” (John 19:30). Jesus knew when His work was complete. He knew when He had completed the task of taking our sins away. He would not die until this task was completed. And then no man took His life. He willingly gave it as an offering for sin that we might have life eternal. Jesus could have endured all of the pain inflicted in the film and more. His love was greater than any suffering this world could inflict. His love and His life are eternal. The pain was only temporary.

The only way to make things right is to put Jesus back into the context in which He lived, died, and rose again. As I say in every radio or TV program I produce, “Jesus is Lord . . . and He vuz such a nice Jewish boy.” To that, I will simply add, “Thank you!” 

Copyright 2004 by Randy Weiss, PH.D.


TOPICS: Culture/Society; Editorial
KEYWORDS: christ; easter; jesus; jews
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To: stuartcr
"Just as no one does, I have no proof of God, just a belief...but I also have no need or desire for proof, or to convince others.<

What is the God you believe in like? Does he have a call on your life? Is he all knowing and all power full?
121 posted on 03/28/2005 9:21:39 AM PST by Blessed
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To: stuartcr
So, how can you show someone that you have been saved? How do you convince someone that this is a fact?

No need to convince anybody. Christ already knows and others if they are interested will be able to observe the fruit as appropriate.

122 posted on 03/28/2005 9:23:16 AM PST by Cvengr (<;^))
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To: Blessed

I do not know what He is like, because I don't believe we humans, can understand God.

I don't know what you mean by having a call on my life?

I believe that the only God there is, is all-knowing and all-powerful. I think He would have to be, to be the creator.


123 posted on 03/28/2005 9:29:42 AM PST by stuartcr
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To: Cvengr

How could one become distracted from their destiny? Isn't destiny preordained, and everything that happens, part of that destiny, including distraction and remaining faithful?


124 posted on 03/28/2005 9:32:49 AM PST by stuartcr
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To: Cvengr

What do you mean by...'others will be able to observe the fruit as appropriate'?


125 posted on 03/28/2005 9:35:29 AM PST by stuartcr
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To: normy

The required sacrifice that Mary and Joseph made when they presented the infant Jesus at the temple shortly after his birth indicates that they were poor. They chose to offer pigeons rather than the prescribed lamb, a substitute acceptable under the law of Moses only for those in poverty.

According to Luke, the wise men from the east did not arrive until months, perhaps as long as two years, after the birth, when Joseph, Mary, and Jesus were living in a house in Bethlehem. The magi's journey apparently started when the star appeared at the time of the birth. Joseph and Mary probably used the proceeds from the wise men's gifts to finance their flight to Eqypt to escape Herod's assassins.

Granted, while Jesus no doubt had the ability to have become quite well-to-do by earthly standards, he chose instead a modest life. Scripture says he "had no place to lay his head," a reflection of his chosen itinerant lifestyle. The women who witnessed his crucifixion also provided monetary support for his ministry (Joanna, Susannah, Mary Magdalene, etc.)


126 posted on 03/28/2005 9:37:15 AM PST by Jedidah
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To: stuartcr

>I don't know what you mean by having a call on my life? ,

You have said the God you believe in is the creator.a creator has certain perogatives when it comes to the creation.( call on our life)One of these would seem to be that we should adhere to his wishes.Obey his commands.Wouldn't you agree with that?


127 posted on 03/28/2005 9:52:23 AM PST by Blessed
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To: Just mythoughts
Really, blaming God for what was done?

Not really “blaming God”, but if the crucifixion had not happened, what would be said of the prophecies, and would there be a Christian religion today?
128 posted on 03/28/2005 9:53:30 AM PST by R. Scott (Humanity i love you because when you're hard up you pawn your Intelligence to buy a drink.)
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To: WKB
John 14:6 Jesus answered, “I am the way and the truth and the life. No one comes to the Father except through me.

...according to John, which incidentally, most biblical historians concur was written by THREE different authors approximately 110 YEARS after the death and resurrection of Christ (therefore, the deciples of John as the apostle could not have lived that long...

129 posted on 03/28/2005 9:54:04 AM PST by meandog
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To: avile

Rolls of bread in any depiction of the Last Supper are an obvious error. Regardless of when it was held, preparation for the Feast of Unleavened Bread, which lasted a week after the Passover night itself, required that all Jewish homes be cleansed completely of any type of leaven. Leavened bread just was not there that night.

After much study, I truly believe that the Last Supper and betrayal in the garden was on Wednesday night with the crucifixion on Thursday. That allows for the full three days and three nights in the tomb (The "sign of Jonah" in Matthew 12). We've been taught that the crucixion had to be on Friday because it was the day before the Sabbath. However, that week had two Sabbaths: in addition to the weekly Saturday Sabbath, the first day of Passover is always a Special Sabbath, and John uses those words to describe the day after Jesus died. So I believe there were two Sabbaths, back-to-back, Thursday and Friday.

Also, John says that the Jewish leaders would not enter Gentile buildings during Jesus' trial because they would become ceremonially unclean if they did. He says they had not yet eaten the Passover, which, if you believe his account (and he was there!) indicates that the Last Supper of the previous evening was a passover meal eaten early.

So, while Jesus, the Lamb of God, was dying a miserable death outside the city walls, priests and the religious leaders of the day were slitting the throats of sacrificial Passover lambs in the temple. They completely missed the point of the greatest event in human history.

Can you imagine the panic when darkness and earthquake interrupted the slaughter and the veil was torn in two?

Poetry. Pure poetry.


130 posted on 03/28/2005 9:55:12 AM PST by Jedidah
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To: meandog
Then according to the gospel of meandog just
which parts of the Bible ARE accurate.
131 posted on 03/28/2005 9:57:30 AM PST by WKB (You can half the good and double the bad people say about themselves.)
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To: R. Scott

"Not really “blaming God”, but if the crucifixion had not happened, what would be said of the prophecies, and would there be a Christian religion today?"


I am no preacher, just a very common unknown, but to discuss Christian religions of today is not necessarily what was foretold. I tend to stay in what the WORD actually says and let the religions speak for themselves.

In other words I do not want to offend just because I know I can.


132 posted on 03/28/2005 10:07:02 AM PST by Just mythoughts
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To: meandog

>according to John, which incidentally, most biblical historians concur was <

Actually a few modern day sceptics not most biblical historians.


133 posted on 03/28/2005 10:11:14 AM PST by Blessed
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To: stuartcr

Just as your personal computer has been preordained to run a calculator when that button is pushed, until it is pushed it isn't opertional. There are a number of things preordained for us, which if we rebel from Him and fail to return to Him we will aimply leave on the table as an eternal memorial of our foolishness.


134 posted on 03/28/2005 10:12:54 AM PST by Cvengr (<;^))
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To: Blessed

No, because we are talking about God, not a human creator.

How do you know God, the creator, has certain perogatives when it comes to the creation?


135 posted on 03/28/2005 10:13:41 AM PST by stuartcr
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To: Cvengr

But aren't all our button pushings, already known to God? And since He is the creator, didn't He create us, knowing what and when our button pushings will be...and the results and effects on others will be?


136 posted on 03/28/2005 10:16:45 AM PST by stuartcr
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To: RedBloodedAmerican; lupie; lightingguy
According to Jewish practice and the best scholarship, it is these fringes that the woman touched. It was not the hem of His trousers, it was the borders (corners or wings) where the tsithith hung.

Malachi 4:2 But unto you that fear my name shall the Sun of righteousness arise with healing in his wings; and ye shall go forth, and grow up as calves of the stall.

137 posted on 03/28/2005 10:18:05 AM PST by agrace
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To: Cicero

Well stated.


138 posted on 03/28/2005 10:20:18 AM PST by Redleg Duke (Don't let Terri's death be in vain!)
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To: stuartcr
>How do you know God, the creator, has certain prerogatives when it comes to the creation?<

You said he was all knowing and all powerfull. Those attributes alone would logically give him the prerogatives because he can take them.If we are discussing God in relationship to man we must assume a common definition of terms.It is not sufficient to say we are talking about God and not man.A creator can not be divorced from its creation.
139 posted on 03/28/2005 10:31:59 AM PST by Blessed
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To: Blessed

How do you know that there even are prerogatives? What would God need with them?

We have to assume a common definition of terms, in order for us to communicate between ourselves, but I don't think it is valid, to assign our definitions and terms to God.

I believe that it is sufficient to say we are talking about God, and not man. We can't define God by our terms.


140 posted on 03/28/2005 10:45:11 AM PST by stuartcr
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