Posted on 06/11/2019 8:45:31 AM PDT by SeekAndFind
For several decades, I have drawn attention to the Churchs historic persecution of the Jews in Jesus name. It is one of the ugliest and longest chapters in Church history, and it cannot be downplayed, forgotten, or ignored. With Gods help, I will continue to call out Christian antisemitism wherever I see it today. But I will not ignore Jewish persecution of Christians. It too must be called out.
In the Gospels, Jesus and His followers, all of them Jews, were persecuted by hypocritical Jewish leaders, ultimately leading to the Lords death on the cross. And that pattern continued in the Book of Acts, where the Jewish leadership stood in opposition to the message of Jesus the Messiah, sometimes persecuting His Jewish followers to the death (see Acts 7).
Some even stirred up trouble wherever these Messianic Jewish emissaries went to share the good news (see Acts 17), and this continued in the centuries that followed, with some documented cases of Jewish leaders siding with local efforts to persecute Christians.
Of course, no amount of Jewish persecution of Christians can justify the horrors inflicted on the Jewish people by professing Christians, including torture, exile, being forced into ghettos, being burned at the stake, being offered baptism or death, and much more.
And it is an open secret that the Nazis drew on Martin Luthers antisemitic writings to help enflame German hatred against the Jews.
None of this can be denied, nor should it be denied. To the contrary, we must be ever mindful of this tragic history lest we repeat it in our day.
But, to say it again, when there is Jewish persecution of followers of Jesus, that must be called out as well, especially when it takes place in Israel.
It was a radical Jew who delivered a bomb, disguised as a holiday gift, to the house of Ami Ortiz, the son of Jewish Christian parents. He miraculously survived the bomb blast, which took place in 2008.
But this act, extreme as it was, was not in isolation.
As reported by Time Magazine in 2008, Messianic Jews, as these Jews who believe in Jesus are called, number just a few in Israel anywhere between 6,000 and 15,000 but they provoke hatred all out of proportion to their meager numbers. Many orthodox Jews view them as traitors for joining the Christian faith, which for centuries has persecuted Jews. One Messianic Jew, Tzvi Sadan, a teacher and editor, recalls telling his father, a Holocaust survivor, that he had accepted Jesus as his savior. My dad flipped out. He said that the SS guards in the camp had 'God Is With Us' written on their belts. He told me, You've joined the enemy. But he calmed down a bit when he saw my prayer shawl. (What Sadan means is that he didnt stop being a Jew by following Jesus.)
Over the years, Messianic Jews have suffered different levels of persecution within Israel, although none so violent as the bomb attack on Ami Ortiz.
But there have been protests and even vandalism at Messianic Jewish meeting places, attempts to get some believers deported, and various threats and harassments.
Virtually all these acts are carried out by ultra-Orthodox Jews, who view missionary activity as diabolical, destructive, and dishonest. As some of these protestors once chanted outside of a large Messianic Jewish gathering I was attending in Israel, Hitler wanted our bodies. You want our souls!
Today, as the number of Messianic Jews in Israel has risen to about 30,000 and as the society at large is much more open to these Jewish believers in Jesus, opposition from ultra-Orthodox Jews continues to rise. (For my little run-in with some ultra-Orthodox protesters last year, see here and here.)
As my friend and colleague Ron Cantor reports from Israel (with a video link worth watching), Believers attending a Messianic concert last week in Jerusalem were accosted by dozens of Orthodox Jewish protestors, who held a violent and chaotic riot for hours, calling the people missionaries and Nazis, and telling them to get out of Israel. They held up several signs saying, Beware, Missionaries! in Hebrew. In Hebrew the world Missionary is a slur. Of course, we are not missionaries, but citizens of Israel.
Again, I understand how these protesters view us. As a rabbi said to me decades ago, Our ancestors died rather than believe what you believe. Yet, without coercion or pressure, you not only believe in Jesus, but you try to proselytize as well.
But, to say this yet again, none of this justifies the actions of these protesters, who were held back by police.
Ron writes that, Jenya Lempert and his teenage daughter were accosted by swarms of young men blowing whistles at excruciating pitches and linking arms to block the entrance into the concert hall.
As Lampert told KNI News, It was a pure act of hatred. They hate us, they were standing against us, they brought their minors as human shields.
Indeed, Ron explains, Orthodox protesters have been known to bring teens, who have more liberties than adults to break the law.
But his response to all this is right on: It is important to not get angry but pray. At the same time, understand that this is pure fanaticism and brainwashing of children. However, it only represents a tiny minority of Israelis.
And how should Christians around the world respond to these harassing acts?
First, they should pray for the believers being persecuted, sending them a message that they are not alone.
Second, they should pray for the repentance of the persecutors, believing that there are many Sauls of Tarsus among them.
Third, as friends of Israel who appreciate the liberties that the nation affords its citizens, they should encourage the government to stand with those who are being persecuted to send a message the government will not tolerate this kind of behavior.
All that being said, my personal expectation is that the final generation whenever that will be will look a lot like the Gospels and Acts, except that in the end, there will be mass acceptance of Jesus by His own people, rather than mass rejection.
May the Lord turn the hearts of His people Israel!
Jews regard “Messianic Jews” (who are not Jews in any sense of the word) as a) a fraud; and b) hostile, aggressive attempts at conversion through deceit.
RE: aggressive attempts at conversion through deceit.
I’m trying to understand the words “aggressive” and “deceit”.
Can you be more specific?
If you believe Jesus was the Messiah, you are a Christian - full stop.
If a person who believes that calls themselves a Jew, that is deceit. The promotion of this false Jewry as a means of converting Jews into Christians is the aggression.
They are simply obeying the “great commission”.
Until now I have avoided threads like this one, but I have seen a few of them lately and I wonder if someone has a mission of separating Jewish and Christian conservatives from one-another.
Israel is the homeland of the Jewish people. It is not just a geographic area; it is the place that the Jewish Bible identifies as the home of the Jews’ Temple in Jerusalem, the land where certain laws relating to the land are followed (and they do not apply anywhere else in the world). The Five Books of Moses tell the story of the Jews being sent by G-d to Israel, the promised land. The prophets and the other writings (by and large discuss the penalties imposed on the Jews for misbehavior in the land of Israel.
Since the expulsion of the Jews by the Romans following the Bar Kokhba rebellion about 70 years after the Second Temple was destroyed, Jews have longed to be back in Israel. The cry of “Next Year in Jerusalem” was said at the end of the Passover seder; Jews would leave a little bit of their homes unfinished in commemoration of the destruction of the Temple; at Jewish weddings the Groom breaks a glass under his foot just when he is married in order to commemorate that destruction.
Hatikva, the national anthem of the Jewish State of Israel, expresses the hope (that is what HaTikva means) that the Jews can be a free people in their land).
Jews do not begrudge a Christian presence in Israel. To the contrary, they are welcomed. The Christian sites, including monasteries, the Church of the Holy Sepulchre, and others, are visited by millions of Christian pilgrims every year. In 2018 alone, some 25 million tourists visited Israel, and most of them are not Jews.
All the Jews ask is that Christians not try to convert Jews by subterfuge. Pretending to be Jews, approaching uninformed Jews to convince them that they can be both Jews and Christians, inviting them to Christian prayer meetings without calling them Christian — all of this is a sly, underhanded way to insinuate their religion into the body politic of the Jewish people.
In my opinion, it is unethical to do this, and the consequence is that it makes Jews distrustful of Christians and makes Christians resentful of Jews. It is time for this to stop. We have so much more in common than what divides us. Sneaky efforts like these destroy those common bonds.
So then, you consider a person Jewish only by belief and not by DNA?
Ibtz
Take you anti- Yeshua hate somwehere else, it doesnt belong on fr.
By your use of the word "Yeshua", you have identified yourself as either a messyonic or a sympathizer of them. That is a word that they use, providing a convenient identifier. Therefore, it is YOU who advocates perpetuating a fraud on FR, not me. I've done nothing but provide a complete explanation of what messyonics do.
So full of hate for the LORD. So sad.
You WILL bow to Yeshua one ray, I pray you do it in this life.
Ein is expressing his opinion. He/she is an old timer here. There are strong feelings expressed in the article. What’s wrong with that? Why not ask what Ein’s experience has been? Any Jew living in NYC has known folks on both side of this issue.
Messianic Jews are Christians. And their practice is to fool Jews to think they are NOT CHRISTIANS. Their mission is to convert JEWS to CHRISTIANITY. Jews consider this dishonest and unethical.
Jews do not consider Jesus a prophet, as do Muslims. They do not consider Jesus the Son of Gd and Savior and the Messiah as Christians do.
If you consider Jesus the Messiah you are BY DEFINITION a Christian. Nothing wrong with it: own it and be honest.
Dishonesty, trickery, and deceptively converting people to Christianity is wrong.
There is no deception, as he vlaoms. The first belivers remained Jewish, and the roots of the faith are Jewish. He is lying, and the truth must be told.
Thanks for providing everyone here a beautiful demonstration of your lack of respect for other religions. And I suppose you'll take up sticking your rear end up in the air 5 times a day out of respect for Allah, hmmm?
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