Y E S H
U A (Jesus)
lS THE MESSIAH !
As a religious Jew raised
in the yeshivot of Poland, like my peers, I knew that
the secrets of Israel's redemption and the Messianic Days lay hidden in
the book of Daniel. I also knew that some of the great Talmudic and post-Talmudic
Rabbis had plunged into the study of this book and even plummeted the hidden
secrets of its symbolic signs and cyphers. The Talmud and Midrash, discussing
Israel's redemption, often refer to the book of Daniel as the revealer of
the secret time of Messiah's coming. However. at the yeshiva I was
ominously reminded of a warning and a curse pronounced against those who
try to figure out the end. The Talmud says:
May they drop who try to figure out the end; for
they say, since the time of his [Messiah's] coming
has already arrived yet he did not come, therefore he will not come at
all. 1
This extreme condemnation
can be understood when the error of Rabbi Akibah designating Bar Kosiba
the Messiah is considered :
Rabbi Akibah made the inference, from the verse. 'Yet
once, it is a little while, and I will shake the heavens,
and the earth, and the sea, and the dry land' (Haggai 2:6), that Simon
Bar Kosiba was the Messiah,
though he reigned only for two and a half years.2
In the yeshiva I was therefore, forewarned that the secrets
are in the Scriptures, but that it was dangerous to make assumptions or
to figure them out lest we come to the wrong conclusion, as did Rabbi Akibah.
The Midrash even states:
Two men had the end revealed to them; namely Jacob, as stated in Genesis
49 : 1,
'... that I may tell you what shall
befall you in the last days.' and
Daniel (12:1,4), 'And at that time thy people shall be delivered... .
But thou O Daniel shut up the words... .' So even these two men
were forbidden to reveal what they knew. ...3
W
hen Will Messiah Come?
The study of our greatest sages brought them to the conclusion
that if the dates in the Scriptures are correct, then Messiah should have
come in the first century of our era. or thereabouts. In a Talmudic
portion it is written concerning the timing of the Messianic Age :
The school of Elijah taught: The world is to be for six thousand
years; two thousand years empty without Torah; two thousand years with
Torah; and two thousand years Messianic Times... .4
The many Messiahs who flourished during that period, claiming
themselves to be redeemers, were all great disappointments. Finally.
Simon Bar Kosiba, whom Rabbi Akibah called “Bar Kochba," came. Though
he was active in the first part of the second century, Rabbi Akibah nonetheless
adjusted him to the Messianic claim. For the majority of the Jewish people
Bar Kosibah was a tragedy and a disappointment. Apart from the loss of tens
of thousands of Jews at his defeat in Betar C.E. 135, his activities resulted
in untold sufferings for the surviving , Jews.
In an eleventh
century rabbinic portion, we read:
Woe, for the salvation of Israel has perished!
But a voice came from heaven saying,
Elijah, it is not as you think, but He will be 400 years in the great
Sea, and eighty years with the Sons of Korah
where the smoke ascends, and eighty years at Rome’s gate, and
the rest of the years
He will travel about the great Cities until the end.5
In another rabbinic portion, based in part upon a scripture
in the book of Lamentations, ["she has none to comfort (Menachem) of all
her friends,"]6 the name of the Messiah is identified as Menachem Ben Ami-e1.7
Messiah, then, is clearly "alive and well" for the last nineteen hundred
years, according to these rabbinic writings. His name is Menachem (the Comforter)
Ben Amiel (God is with his People). He started to work around the
great Mediterranean Sea. went to Samaria (Korah), then Rome and the ends
of the world. We may ask : Why was He expected during the first century?
Clearly there was a certainty that Messiah had to appear at that period.
This conviction was probably based upon the following passages in
the book of Daniel:
Seventy weeks (or heptads - weeks of years) are
determined upon the people and upon the Holy City,
to finish the transgression, and to make an end of sins, and to make
reconciliation for iniquity, and to bring in everlasting righteousness,
and to seal up the vision and prophecy. and to anoint the most Holy.
Know, therefore. and understand that from the going forth of the commandment
to restore and to rebuild Jerusalem unto the Messiah, the Prince, shall
be seven weeks, and three score and two weeks; the street shall be built
again:
and the wall, even in troublous times. And after threescore and two weeks
shall Messiah be cut off, but not for himself and the people of the prince
that shall come shall destroy the city and the sanctuary. and the end
of it shall be with a flood,
and unto the end of the war desolations are determined.8
This revelation was a result of Daniel's prayers given
to him by the angel Gabriel to explain the time, substance and circumstance
of Israel's redemption.
The time embraced was “seventy sevens.”
Within the sixty nine heptads (weeks of years), that is within 483 years,
there will be a building up of Jerusalem's streets and canals, though in
troublous times. After these 483 years, “Messiah is cut off,
the city of Jerusalem and the Holy Temple will be destroyed "by the people
of the prince that shall come." Messiah was to come before the destruction
of the Temple. This is the picture that the archangel Gabriel gave to Daniel.
Who is the
Messiah?
It was Daniel's prophecy that challenged me many years
to consider the Messiahship of Yeshua the Nazarene. Rabbinic authorities
to whom I consulted said that the reference to Messiah in Daniel's prophecy
was to King Agrippa, Herod’s descendant, who is called "Messiah" here
and who was " before the Temple's destruction. Hence, the term "Messiah”
is transferred to a carnal king, like Agrippa, or to the unknown Menachem
Ben Amiel as recorded in the Midrash. On the other hand. I learned of Yeshua
the Nazarene, who was "cut off” forty years before the Second Temple
was destroyed.
The revelation given to Daniel also deals with the substance
and the circumstances of Messiah's activity, "to finish the transgression,
to make an end of sins and to make reconciliation for iniquity and to bring
in everlasting righteousness." In other words, Messiah's death is
distinctly connected with the atoning work that the Temple sacrifices were
to accomplish, except that it would be a work of completion and fulfillment
far greater than any Temple sacrifices could possibly secure. I was thus enabled
to lay aside my fears and prejudices and to open the Brit Hadasha (NT) and
learn more of him, who, as the Prophet says:
Hath borne
our griefs and carried our sorrows; yet we did esteem Him stricken, smitten
of God
and afflicted. But He was pierced through for our transgressions.
He was bruised for our iniquities, the chastisement for our peace was
upon him,
and with his stripes we are healed. 9
Yeshua indeed fits perfectly
into Daniel’s timetable. No one else qualifies;
neither King Agrippa nor the mystical Menachem fulfills Daniel’s
prophecy.
Yeshua is the Messiah! He came to give peace to the
individual who repents and accepts his atoning sacrifice.
He is coming again in might to establish his Kingdom l’olam
va 'ed. 10 Amen!
References:
1 Sanhedrin 97b 2 Ibid. 3 Midrash Rabbah
Gen. 98:3
4 Ibid. 5 B'reshit Rabbati, pp. 130-131; see Raphael
Patai, The Messiah Texts (Wayne State Univ. Press 1979) p. 125
. [hereafter referred to as Messiah Texts] 6 Lamentations
1:2 7 Messiah Texts at 26-27, 122-23 8 Daniel 9:24-26
9 Isaiah 53:/1-5 10 forever and ever
What The Rabbis Know About The Messiah
by Rachmiel Frydland
Reprinted With Permission of the
Messianic Literature Outreach
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