MESSIANIC RABBINIC
DIALOGUE
Through the centuries there was always an ambivalence
among Jewish rabbinic leaders
as to whether to ignore Messianic
proofs for Jesus’ Messiahship and Divinity, or to treat them seriously
by using counter arguments.
It seems that the latter view prevailed.
J.D. Eisenstein in his Hebrew book entitled, “Polemics
and Disputations” makes the following observation:
The first Christians, who were Jewish, some half, some one third
and some
one fourth Jewish, were called Minim (a sectarian; a believer in Jesus).
These Minim were always on the lookout for opportunities of disputations
with rabbis,
especially in the matter of interpreting Scriptures.
The rabbis, however, pushed them aside
as with a straw, i.e., they
did not give them sincere or weighty answers, only a sharp work, or saying,
like it is written in the Passover Hagadah, in regards to the wicked,
But
do thou set his teeth on edge and answer him. ...”
As example, the following story is quoted from the Talmud
1:
The minim asked R. Saphra (a third century Jerusalem
Amora-teacher):
What is the meaning of Amos 3:2, You only have I known of all the families
of the earth, therefore will I visit upon you your iniquity?
Does one treat kindly a bad horse? (If God is unkind to the Jews then
they must be bad.) He did not know the answer,
so they threw a kerchief on his neck and were bothering him. But R.
Abahu explained it to them in this way:
It is like one having two creditors to whom he made loans. One is
a friend, the other an enemy.
From his friend he agrees to collect the debt in small installments(as
god does with the Jews),
but from his enemies he demands payment in one lump sum (Gentiles will be
punished in one lump).
The other example is quoted from Midrash 2:
R. Samlai was asked: How many Divinities participated
in the creation of the universe?
He answered we should inquire from the ancient days as it is written in
Deuteronomy 4:32: ‘For ask now of the days that are past, which
were before thee,
since the day that God created man upon the earth. ...’
It is not written created in a plural Hebrew form but in a singular form.
They asked further, Why is it written, Bereshit bara elohim (Elohim
is a plural form in Hebrew)? He answered again that bara (created)
is a singular form.
They asked again, why is it written in Genesis 1:26, ‘Let
us make man in our image.’ He answered, read what is written
in the following verse,
‘God created man in His own image.’ It is not written
‘In His images’ but ‘in His image.’
They asked again, Why is it written in Joshua 22:22,
‘The Lord, God; The Lord, God, God’ (Hebrew El, Elohim,
Jehovah). He answered it is not written, ‘They knew’ but
‘He knows,’. His disciples objected again saying, you pushed
them aside with a weak reed, but explain it to us. He answered, all
three are names of God as one says, Basileus (king), Caesar, Augustus.
Oft repeated in the Talmud is the pun made on Matthew 5:13:
How do you salt the salt that lost its savour?
[answer] With the offal of a mule.
But does a mule have an offal (since it is incapable of giving birth)?
[Answer] And does salt lose its savour? 3
The following story, in a similar vein, attempts to show
the superiority of the rabbis as compared with the Minim.
R. Joshua ben Hananiah was standing before king Hadrian. There was
also one of the Minim present and the latter hinted before the king
[by sign language] that the Jews are a people from whom God has turned away
His countenance. R. Joshua, in turn, showed
[by sign language], that God still has His protecting Hand over us.
The king asked R. Joshua quietly, What did he show you? He answered,
The Min showed that God turned away His countenance from us, but I showed
him that God’s hand is still outstretched over us.
Then the king asked the Min: Explain what you showed him?
He answered, I showed him that he belongs to the people from who
God turned away His countenance. And what did R. Joshua show you?
He answered: I do not know. The courtiers said,
A man who does not know what was shown to him by sign language dares speak
in sign language before the king?
They took the Min outside and killed him. 4
We could summarize this rabbinic
relation to Jewish believers in this way: The Jewish
believers in Messiah Yeshua were convinced of their bounden duty to witness
to their Jewish brethren about the One who died and rose from the dead according
to the Scriptures, who was the Way, the Truth and the Life. Their proofs
were from the Hebrew Scriptures and from history. The disaster of C.E.
70 was special proof to them that this extreme judgment was the result of
the non-acceptance of Yeshua as Messiah by the Jewish leaders. Although
it irked the rabbis, they had not ready reply to these arguments. The
Bar Kokhba revolt in 132-135 failed miserably in spite of the fact that the
leading Rabbi Akiba hailed him as the Star of Numbers 24:17. 5
Laking the answers, the rabbis resorted to denigrating the
Jewish believers, calling them Minim, although some Jewish believers see
in this term the initials for Ma’min Yeshua Nozree - Believer in Yeshua
the Nazarene.
The Talmud forbids the reading of the Gospels. Parts of them
were known to the rabbis, yet they preferred to treat these parts with contempt,
instead of searching their own hearts and determining how they could be the
light they were supposed to be. 6
Messianic Reactions
The Jewish Messianic reaction in the post-apostolic period
can be illustrated by the contents of the Epistle of Barnabas. On the
basis of Isaiah 1:11-13 and Jeremiah 7:22-23, Barnabas points out that
the ceremonial laws of sacrifices, feasts, and fasts, were never intended
to be observed literally forever. Only Messiah can and will purify us.
The Hebrew Scriptures make this clear by predicting Messiah’s incarnation,
death and resurrection. This is also hinted in the Tenach by the types of
the two goats for the Day of Atonement 7, and by the Red Heifer. 8
Even the laws of circumcision and the dietary laws of kosher and non-kosher
foods, have a spiritual meaning and intent. Believers in Messiah Yeshua
are, therefore, the true heirs of the Patriarches, of Moses, and of the Prophets.
The Messianic believers possess the true Sabbath and they are the true Temple
of God.
Dialog With Tryphon
Justyn, a Samaritan, composed this Dialogue soon after the
Bar Kokhba war of C.E. 132-135. He was martyred C.E. 165. Justyn
tells us how he met this venerable rabbi, whose name sounds like the R.Tarphon
of the Talmud. Justyn rebukes Tryphon for studying philosophy instead
of concentrating on the Hebrew Scriptures. He tells him how he, Justyn, a
philosopher himself, has come to the knowledge of Truth which is found in
the Prophets. These Jewish prophets of the Hebrew Scriptures glorify
the Creator of all things as God the Father and proclaim Messiah sent from
God as his Son.
Tryphon’s companions laugh aloud at this. Even Tryphon
himself smiles and says to Justyn that it were better for him to have remained
a philosopher. By believing in Yeshua “You have forsaken God
and placed your hope on man. What kind of salvation yet remains for
you?” Justyn is advised to get circumcised, keep the Sabbath,
and the Jewish feasts “and then perchance you will find mercy from
God.” As to Messiah, He is unknown “until Elijah shall
come and anoint Him ... but you ... shape a kind of Messiah for yourselves.”
Now Justyn seizes the opportunity to point out the prophetic
passages regarding Messiah. He reminds Tryphon that believers in Yeshua
are denounced in the Jewish synagogue in the twelfth benediction of the Shemona
Esreh. (In his days the text was: “To the apostates let there be no
hope, and the kingdom of pride do Thou quickly root out in our days.
And let the Nozrim (Nazarenes) and the Minim perish as in a moment.
Let them be wiped out from the Book of Life.” 9
Justyn then shows that the believers in Yeshua are the true
followers of Moses and the Prophets. This he finds in Genesis 49:10,
“The scepter shall not depart from Judah, nor the lawgiver from between
his feet until Shiloh comes, and unto him shall the gathering of the peoples
be.” He finds confirmation also in Jeremiah 31:31-34 which prophesies
about the New Covenant. He supports the pre-existence and the Divinity
of Messiah with Genesis 1:26 (Let us make man in our image.) He supports
the supernatural birth of the Messiah with Isaiah 7:14. This leads to
a lengthy discussion as to whether the Septuagint was correct in translating,
“Behold the Virgin. ...(parthenos)” or that it should be translated,
“Behold the young maiden. ... (neanis).”
Messiah is “the Stone cut out without hands”
of Daniel 2:34; hence, in a midrashic manner, Justyn explains that the
circumcisions by “knives of stone” in Joshua 5:2 suggests
the Stone which is Messiah Yeshua.
Tertulian, C.E. 200, in his discussion with Jewish people
introduced the additional proof, that Messiah is to be the light to the nations
according to Isaiah 10:11; 42:4; and 49:6 and says, “We see that the
prophecies that the nations should hear him are already being fulfilled,
even to the very ends of the earth including the parts of Britain unreached
by Rome.” 10
Conclusion
Believers in Yeshua took seriously their Lord’s command
to be witnesses to the end of the earth, but “first to the Jew”
and “beginning in Jerusalem” 11 To support their witness
they had a risen Messiah, prophecies in the Hebrew Scriptures, and the historical
facts that followed Messiah’s resurrection. The rabbis’
counter-arguments did not even satisfy their own disciples, therefore they
resorted to strengthening the wall of partition between those who believed
in Messiah Yeshua and those who did not.
This could not go on forever and so especially
today we see the wall, erected so artificially,
crumbling before our own
eyes,
and again thousands of Jewish people, especially the young
and the intellectual,
are finding their joy, salvation, and satisfaction in Messiah Yeshua.
References:
1 Aboda Zara 4:a 2 Rabbah Genesis 9
3 Berakot 8b
4 Hagiga 5:b 5 Bar Kokhba means the Star.
6 Isaiah 60:1-3 7 Leviticus 16
8 Numbers 19 9 Berakhot 19:a
10 Lukyn Williams, Adversus Judaeus (Cambridge 1935)
11 Acts 1:8; Romans 1:16
What The Rabbis Know About The Messiah
by Rachmiel Frydland
Reprinted With Permission of the
Messianic Literature Outreach
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