What
Is Messianic Judaism?
Messianic Judaism is a biblically based movement of Jewish people who have come
to believe in Yeshua as the promised Jewish Messiah of Israel. Yeshua is the Hebrew
name for Jesus which means Salvation.
Today, there are tens of thousands of Messianic Jews in the United States alone.
Some have estimated the number to be as high as 100,000. Messianic synagogues
are springing up in almost every major city across the country including Philadelphia.
Other nations such as Argentina, Australia, Brazil, Canada, England, France, Holland,
Israel, Mexico, New Zealand, Russia, and South Africa are experiencing a growing
movement of Messianic Jews as well.
Is it Jewish to Believe in Jesus?
To some, the concept of a Jew believing in Yeshua seems to be a contradiction.
The reason is, many people have a dichotomy set up in their minds. On the one
hand, you have Jews and Judaism and on the other hand, Christians and Christianity.
You are either one or the other...so the thinking goes.
But this simple dichotomy is in reality not so simple. If we go back 2000 years
we find that Yeshua was a Jew living in a Jewish land among Jewish people. All
the apostles were Jewish as well as the writers of the New Covenant and for many
years this faith in Yeshua was strictly a Jewish one.
From the Book of Acts and other historical evidence, many believe that in the
first century there were literally hundreds of thousands of Messianic Jews (Acts
2:41, 2:47, 4:4, 6:7, 9:31, 21:20). In addition, there were Messianic Synagogues
scattered throughout the Roman Empire and beyond (James 1:1, 2:2).
These first century Messianic Jews remained highly loyal to their people.
Whether it was Jewish to believe in Yeshua was never an issue. Of course it was
Jewish! What else could it be? The big question back then was whether Yeshua had
been sent for the Gentiles also. When God miraculously showed the Messianic Jews
that he was the Messiah for both Jew and Gentile alike, then Gentiles from every
nation began to pour into this Jewish faith.
Through the years, as the numbers of Gentile believers increased, they began to
predominate in this Messianic faith. With the passing on of the Jewish apostles
and the early Messianic Jews, the Jewish roots of the faith were eventually lost.
This "De-Judaizing" process continued until in one of the greatest paradoxes
in history, it became alien for a Jewish person to believe in Yeshua as his Messiah!
The Real Issue
Today we are are seeking to put the Messiah back within His biblical and Jewish
context. Messianic Judaism is a spiritual renaissance, a revival, a return to
the faith as the Messianic Jews had in the first century, unencumbered by the
traditions of men. It is a return to a pure and simple faith based upon having
a living, vibrant and personal relationship with the God of Abraham, Isaac and
Jacob through the Messiah Yeshua.
The real issue we must recognize is not whether it is Jewish to believe
in Yeshua, because the Jewishness of Yeshua is historically unquestionable. The
real issue at stake here is whether Yeshua is truly the Messiah or not. If He
is, then it is the most Jewish thing in the world to believe in Him. If He is
not the Messiah, then we should not follow Him.
There is only one way to find out, and that is to go back into the Jewish Scriptures
ourselves and study the Messianic prophecies. According to the Jewish Scriptures,
the Messiah was to come twice; the first time to suffer and die and the second
time to usher in the Messianic era of peace upon the earth.
Why Did the Messiah Have to Die?
The Jewish prophet Isaiah answered this question when he said, "All we like
sheep have gone astray, we have turned everyone to his own way, And the Lord has
laid upon Him (the Messiah) the sin of us all." (Isaiah 53:6)
Without God there is no hope for mankind. It is obvious that man is separated
from God when we view the ever-worsening situation in the world today. That is
why He sent Yeshua, the Messiah, who came to deliver us from our sins and to bring
us into a new life in Him.
For tens of thousands of us today, we know that we have found the Messiah who
said, "Do not think that I came to abolish the law or the prophets; I did
not come to abolish, but to fulfill." (Matthew 5:17)