Christian
Churches of God
No.
212E
Descendants of Abraham
Part V: Judah
(Edition 2.0 20070115-15-20070115-20070417)
This sequence of
papers deals with the conversion of the sons of Abraham and their part in the
coming Kingdom of God. Part V deals with the conversion of Judah.
Scripture tells us that a hardening came over the hearts of Judah and that in the Last Days they will turn and be converted so that Messiah might return to his own people and his own inheritance.
Christian Churches of God
E-mail: secretary@ccg.org
(Copyright ă 2007 Reginald
Scott and Wade Cox)
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Descendants of
Abraham Part V: Judah
It is a matter of Scripture that Judah will be converted in the Last Days and the hardening of their hearts will be removed.
A hardening came upon the hearts of Judah, and the Messiah had to be killed in accordance with prophecy. Judah had to be removed from Israel and the physical Temple destroyed because of their blindness on the first part and the Plan of God in relation to the Temple on the second part. The sequence was done in accordance with prophecy we see from Daniel regarding the Temple and as explained in the paper The Sign of Jonah and the History of the Reconstruction of the Temple (No. 13). The blindness that came upon Judah is detailed in the paper War with Rome and the Fall of the Temple (No. 298).
In the Last Days the blindness will be lifted and the Holy Spirit will be poured out on Judah so that they are converted and the Plan of God is implemented.
The sequence of the changes of Judah’s beliefs and the trials they have suffered when seen in context of Scripture and prophecy are recognisable as fitting into the overall structure. They need not have suffered as much outside of the Plan of God but they are a stiff-necked people and a hardness did come upon their hearts.
Soon they will repent and their eyes will be opened.
They still have a number of trials to endure (see the paper War of Hamon-Gog (No. 294)).
However, Judah will survive and they will overcome and be restored.
Their story is Scripture and Scripture cannot be broken (Jn. 10:34-35).
In the same way prophecy deals with the Church and with the other nations surrounding the Holy Land. The prophecies cover the Middle East, including Egypt, Persia, and the nations allied with, or placing themselves in league with, those nations.
There has always been a question of freedom and persecution for Jews. For an example of their handling we will turn to England.
The Jews in England
The year
2006, or 29/120, marked the 350th anniversary (equal to 7 Jubilees)
of the decision by Oliver Cromwell as Lord Protector to readmit the Jews to
England. Their expulsion, lasting about 366 years, had been by edict of King
Edward I enacted on All Saints’ Day in 1290. England was thus the first
European country to formally expel the Jews following several hundred years of
persecution.
Their
readmission came about mainly through the efforts of one man, Rabbi Menasseh
ben Israel of Amsterdam. In 1655 he presented a petition to the Council of
State in England asking that the Jews be granted freedom of trade, freedom of
religion – including their own synagogues and cemeteries, and the right to
operate under Mosaic Law – and calling for the revocation of all anti-Jewish
laws. However, no decision was made by the committee formed to look at the
question of their readmission. Most of the members of that committee of judges,
merchants and clergymen were in fact opposed to the idea, but Cromwell himself
gave permission in 1656. Cromwell and his Puritans had also sensibly supported
an earlier parliamentary ban on the celebration of Christmas, Saints’ days and
other non-biblical holy days.
It was noted
that the ban by Edward was by royal prerogative only and not by any Act of
Parliament, hence there was no actual law of expulsion to revoke. It wasn’t
until over 200 years later in 1858, however, that Jews in Britain received full
and equal rights as citizens. Cromwell, who died in 1658, sought to readmit the
Jews for a number of reasons. Many of his fellow Puritans had a sincere
interest in the Hebrew language and literature and felt a certain sympathy for
the ‘people of the Old Testament’, while for others it was a matter of
political expediency. The primary reason was apparently for straightforward
commercial advantage, as there was a lucrative trade operating between Holland
and England at the time and the Jews were recognised as master traders and
merchants who could facilitate that trade. Lucien Wolf, founder of the
Anglo-Jewish Historical Society, wrote early in the 20th century on
what he considered was the motive for readmission: “It was really the
deficiency of bullion in the country which, as early as 1643 … suggested to
Cromwell the desirability of settling Jewish merchants in London.”
And settle
they did, in ever-growing numbers. Expelled earlier from Spain and Portugal
during the Catholic Inquisition, the Jews had set up business in Amsterdam and
had been instrumental in making the city one of the busiest ports in the world
at that time. Following Cromwell’s decision many of these Sephardi and other
Jews began moving to England and reintroducing some aspects of Torah-observance
to Britain. Someone who visited the Sephardi Synagogue in Creechurch Lane,
London in 1662 was told: “One year in Oliver’s time, they did build booths on
the other side of the Thames and keep the Feast of Tabernacles in them.” In
October 1663, the famous diarist Samuel Pepys also visited this Sephardi
Synagogue, the immediate successor of which, Bevis Marks, remains the oldest in
Britain today.
Since their
formal readmission, the Jews have become fully integrated into British society
and have proven themselves loyal servants of the Crown and an invaluable asset
to the country in a great number of ways. Today there are about 300,000 Jews in
the UK, out of an estimated 13-14 million scattered throughout the world. There
are more Jews in the USA than in Israel and the US and British Commonwealth is
the true home for the majority of Judah today. In that sense the Jews are being
reunited with Israel and the nation called Israel is really a section of the
Commonwealth. It is ironic that Israel and Australia are grouped together in
the same division of the world by the Rome agreements.
In The
Times (London) of 1 June 2002, Rabbi Jonathan Romain wrote an article
entitled ‘Pariahs, heroes and a loyal people: how England’s monarchs saw their
Jewish subjects’, part of which reads as follows.
When the late Princess Margaret visited Maidenhead Synagogue ten years
ago - the first Jewish worship she had attended - she admitted afterwards that
what had amazed her most was not the Hebrew or the rituals, but the discovery
that Jews recited a Prayer for the Royal Family at every Sabbath service.
…
It is not just the present Queen for whom the Jews have prayed; it has
been a long-standing tradition to ask for God’s blessing on the monarch as the
symbol of national stability, although, frankly, some kings and queens have
deserved it less than others.
The relationship between the Crown and the Jews started with William I,
when a settled community was established here after he brought across Jews from
Normandy to help colonise his new kingdom. They were seen as a trustworthy
element in an otherwise unstable population, with Anglo-Saxons wishing to be
rid of him and his own nobles vying for power. Their relations with William II
were even more cordial and he even jested that he would consider converting to
Judaism if they could out-debate his bishops - much to the horror of the
latter, although it was never put to the test.
As newcomers to the country, the Jews … were formally declared to be
“the chattels” of the Crown, responsible directly to the Throne and belonging
to it. This definition held many advantages, giving Jews rights of residence
and protection. …
Subsequent kings abused this special power, levying punitive taxes on
the Jews … For her part, Elizabeth II has treated her Jewish subjects as they
would wish: exactly the same as everyone else. …
Most Jews would be delighted to see a multi-faith element to any future
coronations, with Orthodox and Progressive rabbis participating alongside other
religious leaders, but for now they are more than happy to join in the acclaims
of ‘Long live the Queen’ (emphasis added).
Such
dedication and respect for the Monarchy is rarely to be seen among the most
loyal of her other subjects, Christian or otherwise. Perhaps unknowingly, the
Jews are actually praying for their own kin, as it has been proven that members
of the present Royal Family are direct descendants of King David of Israel and
are therefore of the tribe of Judah. See the paper From David and the Exilarchs to
the House of Windsor (No. 67) and the Sabbath Message 16/4/27/120 at:
http://www.ccg.org/_domain/ccg.org/Sabbath/2004/S_07_03_04.htm
Many royals
know this fact, as there is a genealogical table in Windsor Castle actually
showing their descent from King David. Queen Victoria (reigned 1837-1901) was
fully aware that she occupied the throne of David. The majority of the subjects
of the Crown, however, remain in ignorance to this day.
As a point
of interest, the present Queen, Elizabeth II, began her reign in February 1952,
so that the year 1977 was her official jubilee (albeit a silver one,
i.e. a half jubilee). Her silver jubilee coincided with the true year of
Jubilee. The first year of the new jubilee in 1978 was the beginning of the
true 120th Jubilee of God’s Calendar.
David’s everlasting throne
Both kings
David and Solomon were told that the throne they had been given would be
everlasting (2Sam. 7:13,16; Jer. 33:17).
2Samuel
7:12-17 When your days are fulfilled
and you lie down with your fathers, I will raise up your offspring after you,
who shall come forth from your body, and I will establish his kingdom. 13
He shall build a house for my name, and I will establish the throne of his
kingdom for ever. 14 I will be his father, and he shall be my
son. When he commits iniquity, I will chasten him with the rod of men, with the
stripes of the sons of men; 15 but I will not take my steadfast love
from him, as I took it from Saul, whom I put away from before you. 16
And your house and your kingdom shall be made sure for ever before me; your
throne shall be established for ever.'" 17 In accordance
with all these words, and in accordance with all this vision, Nathan spoke to
David. (RSV)
It could be
inferred from some Scriptures that total obedience to God and His Laws was
required for the promise to remain in force regarding the physical throne of
Israel (e.g. 1Kgs. 2:1-4; 2Chr. 6:16; Ps. 132:11-12). However, verse 45 of
1Kings 2 suggests the throne would be established forever from its
inception, irrespective of obedience by the kings (and queens) who would ascend
it.
In verse 14
of 2Samuel 7 above, it appears that Solomon and the kings after him would be
chastised severely for their sins, but the promise regarding the continuity of
the royal line on Israel’s throne would never be revoked.
1Kings
2:1-4,45 When David's time to die drew
near, he charged Solomon his son, saying, 2 "I am about to go
the way of all the earth. Be strong, and show yourself a man, 3 and
keep the charge of the LORD your God, walking in his ways and keeping his
statutes, his commandments, his ordinances, and his testimonies, as it is
written in the law of Moses, that you may prosper in all that you do and
wherever you turn; 4 that the LORD may establish his word which he
spoke concerning me, saying, 'If your sons take heed to their way, to walk
before me in faithfulness with all their heart and with all their soul, there
shall not fail you a man on the throne of Israel.' … 45 But King
Solomon shall be blessed, and the throne of David shall be established
before the LORD for ever." (RSV)
And again in the Psalms:
Psalm
89:35-37 Once for all I have sworn by
my holiness; I will not lie to David. 36 His line shall endure
for ever, his throne as long as the sun before me. 37 Like the
moon it shall be established for ever; it shall stand firm while the skies
endure." (RSV)
An analogy
can be made between the throne of David and God’s Laws. The latter have not been
repealed for the last two thousand years since the death of Messiah, only to
become enforceable, as Scripture unequivocally indicates they will, in the
coming Kingdom of God. Neither has the physical throne of David disappeared for
2600 years or so (i.e. since the captivity of Judah in 586 BCE), only to
reappear when Messiah comes to take up his kingship. Rather, both the royal
line on the throne and God’s royal Law have been in continuous operation from
their inception.
Jeremiah 33:14-26 "Behold, the days are coming,
says the LORD, when I will fulfil the promise I made to the house of Israel and
the house of Judah. 15 In those
days and at that time I will cause a righteous Branch to spring forth for
David; and he shall execute justice and righteousness in the land. 16 In those days Judah will be saved and
Jerusalem will dwell securely. And this is the name by which it will be called:
'The LORD is our righteousness.' 17
"For thus says the LORD: David shall never lack a man to sit on the
throne of the house of Israel, 18
and the Levitical priests shall never lack a man in my presence to offer burnt
offerings, to burn cereal offerings, and to make sacrifices for ever." 19 The word of the LORD came to Jeremiah: 20 "Thus says the LORD: If you can break
my covenant with the day and my covenant with the night, so that day and night
will not come at their appointed time, 21
then also my covenant with David my servant may be broken, so that he shall not
have a son [or sons] to reign on his throne, and my covenant with the
Levitical priests my ministers. 22
As the host of heaven cannot be numbered and the sands of the sea cannot be
measured, so I will multiply the descendants of David my servant, and the
Levitical priests who minister to me." 23
The word of the LORD came to Jeremiah: 24
"Have you not observed what these people are saying, 'The LORD has
rejected the two families which he chose'? Thus they have despised my people so
that they are no longer a nation in their sight. 25
Thus says the LORD: If I have not established my covenant with day and night
and the ordinances of heaven and earth, 26
then I will reject the descendantsof Jacob and David my servant and will not
choose one of his descendants to rule over the seed of Abraham, Isaac, and
Jacob. For I will restore their fortunes, and will have mercy upon them."
(RSV)
In
anticipation of widespread scepticism, God offers a challenge in verses 20 and
21. Day and night have come at their appointed time with absolute certainty
since the Earth was renewed, hence God’s covenant concerning them has never
been broken – and neither
has His covenant of putting an unbroken line of David’s descendants on the
throne of Israel (cf. vv. 25-26). The Levitical priesthood mentioned is now
(since the destruction of the Temple at Jerusalem) the elect among the Churches
of God, who have performed the continuous spiritual service since the Holy
Spirit was given in the new era. The elect in fact are of the superior
Melchisedek priesthood, of which the Levitical was only a temporary subset. We
see also that the Levitical priesthood is never referred to as royal,
unlike that of Melchisedek (1Pet. 2:9). The Law of God is similarly called royal
(Jas. 2:8).
Royal obligations
This royal
aspect brings with it certain privileges as well as duties, in the same way
that the present Royal Family has obligations to the United Kingdom and the
entire Commonwealth, which currently consists of about 54 nations and is undoubtedly
the Ephraimite company of nations spoken of in Genesis 48:19.
If there are
any ‘privileges’ of royalty they are ones associated with selfless dedication
and service to the nation, of noblesse oblige, which the present Queen
in particular has consistently demonstrated. She was born to a job she never
wished for and which is thankless at the best of times, as alluded to in a
recently-released film The Queen, starring Helen Mirren in the
title role.
The Chief
Rabbi of the United Hebrew Congregations of the Commonwealth, Professor
Jonathan Sacks, had something to say about things ‘royal’ from a biblical
perspective.
The Bible suggests that royalty isn’t about privilege and wealth,
splendour and palaces. It’s moral courage. Moses, in discovering that he is the
child of slaves, finds greatness. It’s not power that matters, but the fight
for justice and freedom. Had Moses been an Egyptian prince, he would have been
eminently forgettable. Only by being true to his people and to God did he
become a hero.
Freud [author of Moses and Monotheism, in which he tried to prove
that Moses was actually an Egyptian] … failed to see that he had come face to
face with one of the most powerful moral truths the Bible ever taught. Those
whom the world despises, God loves. A child of slaves can be greater than a
prince.
God’s standards are not power and privilege. They are about recognising
God’s image in the weak, the powerless, the afflicted, the suffering, and
fighting for their cause. … the story of Moses is one of the great narratives
of hope in the literature of mankind (The Times (London), 23 June 2001).
Judah’s pre-eminence
As mentioned
earlier, the Jews have made an enormous contribution to the UK and most other
countries as well. They have been pioneers in virtually every field, from
science and medicine (since the mid-1800s, about 25% of the world’s scientists
have been Jewish), to invention and commerce, and to the law, art and music
(both as composers and performers). They possess natural intelligence and great
energy which, for instance, has helped them to literally make ‘the desert bloom
as a rose’ in the State of Israel, in marked contrast with many of its
neighbouring states. From an objective and unprejudiced viewpoint we see that
the Jews, who together account for only about 0.23% of the world’s population,
must surely rank as the most talented and productive group of people, bar none.
They thereby invite envy if not outright hatred from less-energetic and
less-creative peoples.
However,
Rabbi Harold S. Kushner, in his book To Life! A Celebration of Jewish Being
and Thinking (Warner Books, NY, 1993), had this to say about the Jews who,
as a result of their accomplishments, might consider themselves to be superior
to other people:
What does it mean for us as Jews to consider ourselves a “chosen
people”? It certainly does not mean that we think we are better than other
people, either individually or collectively. I was a congregational rabbi for
thirty years, dealing professionally with Jewish families, and if there is one
thing I know beyond the shadow of a doubt, it is that Jews are just as flawed,
just as average, just as imperfect as anyone else. There is no claim of Jewish
biological superiority … We have no way of knowing how many of today’s Jews are
the pure biological descendants of Abraham and Sarah, though we are all their
spiritual descendants. …
But it is a historical fact that the Jews, and no one else, gave the
world the Bible … God, for reasons of His own, chose to make the Jewish people
the instrument of His self-revelation to the world (p. 32).
The fact is
that only about a third of Jews are actually even Semitic let alone Jews. The
origin of the Jews are detailed in the paper Genetic Origin of the Nations
(No. 265) 2nd edition.
Judaism is a
religion now and not a single people.
The key
there is that God chose, as He is the Master Potter who fashions and
selects human vessels for use according to His will (Isa. 64:8), and it is no
one’s right to question that or be envious toward those whom He has chosen.
They should be and will be praised.
Judah’s
pre-eminence and pioneering spirit were demonstrated in former times by the
fact that they were required to march in the vanguard of the armies of Israel
(Num. 2:2-3,9), and were the first to move out of the camp following the Ark of
the Covenant. Their ensign or standard was a young lion (cf. Gen. 49:9).
Messiah is referred to as a Lion of the Tribe of Judah, and is himself set in
the vanguard of spiritual Israel.
During the
wars of conquest and possession in the Promised Land, Judah uniquely was
given its inheritance in the territory which that tribe had conquered (Jos.
14:6-15; 15:13-17). The reason for this is contained in verses 8,9 and 14, and
was essentially because Caleb the son of Jephunneh (of the tribe of Judah) had
“wholly followed the Lord God”, as noted also in the Book of Numbers.
Numbers 14:24 But my servant Caleb, because he has
a different spirit and has followed me fully, I will bring into the land into
which he went, and his descendants shall possess it. (RSV)
Even though Joshua the Ephraimite
was also loyal and apparently had the right spirit, his descendants were not to
possess the land on a continuous basis, as were the generations of Caleb, the
representative of the tribe of Judah.
It is
estimated that Judah actually occupied one-third of the entire western side of
the Jordan once all the tribes had been settled in their respective areas. The
tribe of Simeon also came to be incorporated or enfolded into Judah’s territory
(Jos. 19:9), although it retained a separate identity. Just as the term Joseph
most often applies to the combined tribes of Ephraim and Manasseh, it
appears that when Judah is spoken of in Deuteronomy 33 it includes
Simeon, as this tribe is included with Judah in their inheritance and was
scattered amongst Israel. (cf. Jos. 19:1; Jdg. 1:3). There was also the close
historical relationship between Simeon and Levi (Gen. 49:5), so there is a
great deal of interconnection between the tribes. The name Judah means praised
(SHD 3063), and perhaps suggests that this tribe will one day be praised by
its brother tribes and the rest of the world as having been a vital instrument
of God’s salvation, quite apart from Judah having provided the Messiah through
King David.
Judah’s enemies
Just as spiritual
Israel, the true Unitarian Law-keeping Church of God, has suffered intense
persecution over the centuries, so too Judah, as the most readily-identifiable
part of physical Israel, has suffered horribly. On several infamous
occasions Judah has even been the target for attempted annihilation by its
enemies: once by the Amalekite Haman, whose plan was thwarted by Esther and
Mordecai (Est. 3-9), but even then the Jews had to fight for their lives; and
secondly, in the 20th century, with the anti-Jewish pogroms in both Tsarist and
Communist Russia, along with the mass extermination in Hitler’s Germany and its
occupied (and often complicit) territories in Europe.
More
recently, we have seen the unequivocal call by President Ahmadinejad of Iran
for the extermination of the State of Israel (and presumably all the Jews with
it), as if this would somehow solve the chronic and intractable problems in the
Middle East. It is a call which conveniently overlooks the fact that the most
vicious wars in that region have been fought (and continue to be fought)
between so-called Muslim brothers, such as Iraq and Iran in the 1980s, and more
recently between the differing sects of Islam, namely Shia and Sunni, within
modern Iraq.
The origins
of these people and the determinations of what is to happen to them is dealt
with in the other papers in the series dealing with those countries. Much of
the conflict is between sons of Shem and between Elam and Ishmael and Keturah
as well as Judah. Iran is dealt with in Sons of Shem: Part I (No.
212A) and in the papers concerning the coming of the Messiah and also
World War III.
On the
Middle East question, it is worth reading what Rabbi Sacks wrote in The
Times (London) of 7 September 2001 regarding the permanent and often
violent friction between the Jews and the sons of Ishmael, all descendants of
the Patriarch Abraham:
We are both
the same race, both Semites. It is purely a political matter. We have to
co-exist. Islam is closer to Jewry than Christianity. If Jews and Christians
can live together, there’s no reason why Jews and Muslims can’t. Israel is not
going to go away. Palestine is not going to go away. And shared tears do bring
people closer together. Jews are not optimists, but we never give up hope for
Israel.
Professor
Sacks said in a subsequent article:
It is not that
religion is intolerant. Rather, we must learn the hard way that religion must
never have recourse to power.
Nowhere is this told more dramatically than in the story of Elijah. He
had come to the mountain fresh from a decisive and bloody victory over the
prophets of Baal. God asked him, “What are you doing here, Elijah?” The prophet replied, “I have been very
zealous for Your sake.” He then witnessed a whirlwind, an earthquake and a
fire. But “the Lord was not in” the
wind or the earthquake or the fire. Then came the “still small voice” that was
the voice of God.
The zealot believes that God is power. That is why zealots must learn.
whether through a vision or a tragedy of history, that God lives in the still
small voice of reason, compassion and peace
(The Times, 20 April 2002).
Words of
wisdom, and therefore almost certainly bound not to be heeded in this
age at least (and without divine help) for “the way of peace they know not”
(Isa. 59:8), as evidenced by man’s entire history, not just that of the
chronically troubled Middle East.
However,
when Christ gets here he most certainly will take power and enforce a religion
and one that is not kept on this planet at present except for a very few people
who are persecuted for that faith.
It may seem
to many that the Jews remain insular and aloof, if not arrogant, and that they thereby
invite persecution upon themselves. Under the headline “The Burning Question”,
the Russian author and dissident Alexander Solzhenitsyn said that the Jews were
unique in never assimilating with another nation in 2,000 years of history,
adding that this was their most striking and admirable characteristic (The
Times, 20 June 2001). It is certain that God arranged the separateness of
the Jews that way for a number of reasons; however, it has also allowed them to
be singled out from much of the rest of the population, as on the occasions
mentioned.
However,
they have absorbed a number of people and their diverse DNA structure proves
that fact.
The fact is
that only very few people are actual Jews of those claiming Judaism and when
they cease to practise the religion they are simply Gentiles within Judah
claiming protection under the Laws of God.
The Holocaust
Many secular
Jews today consider themselves either atheistic or agnostic. Those in the State
of Israel take the view that their country has survived for nearly 60 years in
a supremely hostile environment due to their own efforts and a particularly
effective military force; in other words, by a not-unjustified pride in their
own power, but without acknowledging God’s undoubted help and protection during
their many battles for survival.
This is a
rather dangerous position to take, as even the Gentile Assyrians were to
discover (Isa. 10:12ff.). They were punished by God for exalting themselves and
their own abilities without reference to their Creator and the fact that they
were merely a tool in His hands. At any time, God may choose to remove His
protection from individuals or from a nation, including the State of Israel,
because of an arrogant attitude on their part.
The secular
Jewish rejection of the God of their fathers is perhaps understandable
considering the number of deaths in the concentration camps both immediately
before and during the Second World War in Europe. Many faithful Torah-observant
Jews in those camps prayed to God for deliverance and even marched into the
crematoria praising Him; many asked where God was at a time like that and how
He could allow them to suffer as horrifically as they did if they were His
chosen people. As a result of what they’d witnessed, many who survived these
death camps simply deserted their faith altogether.
Judah and
his brothers sold their half-brother Joseph into slavery in ca.1727 BCE. About
3664 years later, Judah itself was sent into captivity in the Third Reich and
brother Joseph (basically modern America and the British Commonwealth) was
instrumental in rescuing their remnant from the death camps. For more
information, see the Holocaust Revealed website at:
http://www.ccg.org/_domain/holocaustrevealed.org
The Jews had
been sent like lambs to the slaughter, to be ‘holocausted’ in their millions in
the crematoria like so many animals of the burnt offering (cf. Lev. 1:13)
which, although an unfortunate analogy, is nevertheless fitting. The Jewish
adults and children were literally made to pass through the fire, as
their forebears had unwisely done with their own children during the worship of
pagan gods centuries earlier (2Chr. 28:3). In order not to compare these more
recent events with the burnt offerings of the sacrifices, the term Holocaust
is not used in some modern Hebrew texts; instead, it is often referred to
as the Shoah or Calamity.
Rabbi
Kushner had this to say on the subject:
It is nearly impossible for non-Jews to appreciate the meaning of the
scar that the Holocaust, and the centuries of persecution leading up to it,
have left in the Jewish soul. I don’t know of any other people that wakes up
virtually on a daily basis wondering if the world will let them live. … But after
the Nazi experience, Jews understand that no matter how economically successful
or socially integrated we are, we can never feel totally secure. …
This, I suspect, is why so many of us react so defensively when Israel
is criticized: because we are always afraid that criticism will lead to a
withdrawal of approval of Israel’s right to exist at all … It is not
hypersensitivity on our part to notice that no other country is called on
continually to justify its right to exist. (Does anyone call for the dismantling
of Pakistan and giving the land back to the tens of millions of Hindus who were
displaced when a Moslem state was created there in 1947?) (op. cit., pp.
247-9).
Earlier in
his book Rabbi Kushner dealt with the age-old question, Why does God permit evil?
Sometimes bad things happen to good people because laws of Nature can’t
tell a good person from a bad one, and sometimes they happen because God will
not interfere to take away our human freedom, no matter how destructively we
intend to use it.
Even something as monstrous as the Holocaust comes to be seen as Man’s
doing, not God’s. “Why did God let it happen?” Because God determined at the
outset that He would not compromise our human freedom to choose between good
and evil, no matter how atrociously we misused it. If we didn’t learn from
history, from experience, from the voice of conscience, we would go on hurting
and killing each other. ‘Couldn’t God have made an exception to that rule in
this one case, to save so many millions of lives?’ … would that mean He should
also have intervened to stop Stalin and Pol Pot from killing millions of people
in Russia and Cambodia? … on what grounds would God suspend the rules in one
case and not in others? For me, the Holocaust is not a theological issue: “Why didn’t
God stop it?” For me, it is a psychological issue: “How could human beings have
so grossly misused their freedom to decide how to treat each other?” It does
not challenge my faith in God. If anything, it makes it harder for me to
believe in man without God (ibid., pp. 162-3; emphasis added).
Hence,
despite the understandably horrific memories and intense grief engendered by
the Holocaust (or Calamity), there are those who demonstrate a certain dignity
in being able to be more understanding, if not forgiving, about this most
unpleasant episode in Jewish history.
God’s displeasure with Judah
While R.
Kushner and others may not blame God, the chronic persecution of the Jews and
the Holocaust itself may actually have been direct punishment from God (for, at
the very least, He did allow it to happen). However, this should not be
construed as His hatred for or abandonment of the Jewish people. Quite the
contrary, in fact, as God says through His prophets and in the Writings that He
chastens those whom He loves, as any loving parent chastises his son for the
son’s ultimate benefit, irrespective of how harsh that punishment may appear at
the time.
To quote the
words that Jesus Christ gave to the angel assigned to the Church at Ephesus in
Asia Minor, “Nevertheless, I have somewhat against you, because you have left
your first love” (Rev. 2:4). He could just as easily be speaking to Judah or
the Jews today, as they also have left their first love – Eloah, the One
True God –
and have suffered for it.
God is clear
that He doesn’t only want our ‘hands’, i.e. merely following the letter of
the Law as many adherents to Judaism do. More importantly, He requires our
‘hearts and minds’ as exemplified by adherence to the spirit of the Law.
Among the called of God, the Holy Spirit is presently conducting ‘a campaign to
win hearts and minds’, with far greater meaning than the present clichéd
military term. However, it won’t do so by loud insistence. We are told rather
that it will be as a still, small voice behind us saying, “This is the way;
walk you in it” (Isa. 30:21).
For all
Judah, Yom Kippur, the holiest day of the year, should have been a time
for reflection and re-evaluation along with Godly repentance. However, this
fast wasn’t actually being observed on the correct day according to the
original Temple calendar anyway. (See the papers God's
Calendar (No. 156) and The New Moons (No. 125).) The correct days for worship do seem to matter
to God and His Messiah, and there are definite consequences for devising one’s
own agenda, as King Jeroboam of Israel was to discover when he commissioned a
festival one month later than the God-ordained Feast of Tabernacles; his whole
house or heritage was later cut off (see 1Kgs. 12:32-33 and 13:33-34).
Maybe as a
result of the postponements of His ordained Holy Days and Sabbaths and
non-observance of the New Moons for centuries past, God has postponed the
deliverance and salvation of Judah … until these Last Days, when He will once
again have mercy upon them.
When God
tells us to keep the Sabbath holy, which includes not speaking idle gossip, He
means just that. It’s not a matter of simply observing the Sabbath as a
duty or weekly ritual; instead, it is the spirit in which it is kept that most
pleases God, as He says quite plainly.
Isaiah 58:13-14 "If you turn back your foot
from the sabbath, from doing your pleasure on my holy day, and call the sabbath
a delight and the holy day of the LORD honorable; if you honor it, not going
your own ways, or seeking your own pleasure, or talking idly; 14
then you shall take delight in the LORD, and I will make you ride upon the
heights of the earth; I will feed you with the heritage of Jacob your father,
for the mouth of the LORD has spoken." (RSV)
Neither does
He want people exchanging financial advice and business ideas on the Sabbath
like modern-day equivalents of the money-changers in the Temple. That task can
be done on any other day of the week. Jesus, or Yehoshua ben Yoseph, adhered to
this injunction when he forcibly drove the money-changers and other
Sabbath-breakers from the Temple precinct (Jn. 2:13-17). The same could apply
in many Synagogues today where a good deal of worldly business is conducted on
the Sabbath.
The Qur’an
also forbids trading on the Sabbath yet on both Friday and Sabbath on the
Temple Mount to this very day money-changers charge people access to the Al
Aksah mosque in direct violation of the Koran and the Scriptures.
The
undoubted money-making ability of the Jews today was evident much earlier in
their history, when the Patriarch Judah suggested to his brothers that they sell
Joseph into captivity rather than kill him (Gen. 37:26-28). It may have
been to save Joseph’s life, however, financial gain seems to have played a
large part in Judah’s motivation and thinking … and perhaps still does,
although they are far from alone in that in today’s world, where materialism
and love of money hold unprecedented sway. Through His prophets, God promises
that our idols of silver and gold –the riches and possessions that have become our little gods – will be thrown to the
bats and moles at the culmination of this age, when they are finally recognised
as being of so little real value (Isa. 2:20).
Jesus, or
Yehoshua, had a great deal to say on the subject of money and riches.
Matthew 6:24 "No one can serve two masters;
for either he will hate the one and love the other, or he will be devoted to
the one and despise the other. You cannot serve God and mammon. (RSV)
Mark 10:17-25 And as he was setting out on his
journey, a man ran up and knelt before him, and asked him, "Good Teacher
[didaskalos, SGD 1320; or Rabbi], what must I do to inherit
eternal life?" 18 And Jesus said to him, "Why do you call
me good? No one is good but God alone. 19 You know the commandments:
'Do not kill, Do not commit adultery, Do not steal, Do not bear false witness,
Do not defraud, Honor your father and mother.'" 20 And he said
to him, "Teacher, all these I have observed from my youth." 21
And Jesus looking upon him loved him, and said to him, "You lack one
thing; go, sell what you have, and give to the poor, and you will have treasure
in heaven; and come, follow me." 22 At that saying his countenance
fell, and he went away sorrowful; for he had great possessions. 23
And Jesus looked around and said to his disciples, "How hard it will be
for those who have riches to enter the kingdom of God!" 24
And the disciples were amazed at his words. But Jesus said to them again,
"Children, how hard it is to enter the kingdom of God! 25 It is
easier for a camel to go through the eye of a needle than for a rich man to
enter the kingdom of God." (RSV)
Rabbi
Saul/Paul of Tarsus, who apparently studied under Gamaliel the Elder, was also
certain that love of money was a primary cause of people separating themselves
from God and forsaking their Faith.
1Timothy 6:6-11 There is great gain in godliness with contentment; 7
for we brought nothing into the world, and we cannot take anything out of the
world; 8 but if we have food and clothing, with these we shall be
content. 9 But those who desire to be rich fall into temptation,
into a snare, into many senseless and hurtful desires that plunge men into ruin
and destruction. 10 For the love of money is the root of all
evils; it is through this craving that some have wandered away from the
faith and pierced their hearts with many pangs. 11 But as for you,
man of God, shun all this; aim at righteousness, godliness, faith, love,
steadfastness, gentleness. (RSV)
Similarly,
the pseudepigraphical work called The Testaments of the Twelve Patriarchs (R.H.
Charles, SPCK, London, 1917; translated from Armenian), which was supposedly
written in the second century BCE and was therefore contemporary with the Dead
Sea Scrolls, contains some incisive observations and warnings. The
Testaments are based upon the supposed deathbed comments of the sons of
Jacob to their children. Of particular relevance here are those made by the
Patriarch Judah, the fourth son of Jacob and his first wife Leah. (Known
interpolations have been removed from the text.)
XVII. And now
I command you, my children, not to love money, nor to gaze upon the beauty of
women; because for the sake of money and beauty I was led astray to Bathshua
the Canaanite.
XVIII. 2.
Beware, therefore, my children, of fornication, and the love of money, and
hearken to Judah your father.
3. For these
things withdraw you from the law of God,
And blind the
inclination of the soul,
And teach
arrogance,
And suffer not
a man to have compassion upon his neighbour.
4. They rob
his soul of all goodness,
And oppress
him with toils and troubles,
And devour his
flesh.
5 And he
hindereth the sacrifices of God;
He hearkeneth
not to a prophet when he speaketh,
And resenteth
the words of godliness.
XIX. My
children, the love of money leadeth to idolatry; because, when led astray
through money, men name as gods those who are not gods, and it causeth him who
hath it to fall into madness. 2. For the sake of money I lost my children, and
had not my repentance, and the prayers of my father been accepted, I should
have died childless. 3. But the God of my fathers had mercy on me, because I
did it in ignorance. 4. And the prince of deceit blinded me, and I sinned as a
man and as flesh, being corrupted through sins.
XXVI. Observe,
therefore, my children, all the law of the Lord, for there is hope for all them
who hold fast unto His ways.
There is an obvious theme here, and
the writer of the Book of Ecclesiastes had this to say on the same subject:
Ecclesiastes 5:10 He who loves money will not be
satisfied with money; nor he who loves wealth, with gain: this also is vanity.
(RSV)
However,
Rabbi Kushner then ties this issue to the perennial problem of latent
anti-Semitism often arising from envy.
If some Jews are loud and aggressive or guilty of unethical business
practices (as are lots of gentiles), one is entitled to dislike them as
individuals but has no right to extend that dislike to innocent members of the
larger group. Antisemitism, like all racial and religious prejudice, is a sign
that something is wrong with the hater, not with his victim (op. cit.,
p. 262).
Jewish advocacy
The
Patriarch Judah showed great compassion and impressive verbal skills as the
advocate for his half-brother Benjamin (Gen. 44:16-34), so much so that he
melted Joseph’s heart in Egypt. Judah nobly took upon himself the role of
protector, and his Christ-like act of intercession on behalf of his brother
probably bound the two so closely that, at the break-up of the Kingdom
following Solomon’s death, Benjamin became allied with Judah (along with half
the tribe of Levi) rather than with his full-brother Joseph’s tribe. It was
obviously God’s doing as part of His unfolding plan.
This
arrangement had been ratified and given permanence earlier by David (of Judah)
and King Saul’s son Jonathan (of Benjamin), as recorded in 1Samuel 20:42. The
name Benjamin means son of the right hand, so it seems he and his
descendants were always destined to be the right-hand man of Judah. It is
ironic that they were predominantly left handed-people and were almost
destroyed for their perversity. The right also means the South, as the
‘front’ is always facing the East in Hebrew. It is interesting that the royal
city of Jerusalem was apparently located within the historical boundary of the
tribe of Benjamin rather than Judah, as might be expected. Also, Joseph may
have had the primacy in Egypt, but it seems Judah is to have the ascendancy in
Jerusalem (metaphorically referred to as Egypt).
Justice must
be done and done correctly and the perversion of justice by Judah or the other
tribes will be punished, in the same way the Talmud perverts the Laws of God
and will be destroyed.
The basic
purpose of advocacy was supposed to be the defence of the innocent and needy
(Ps. 82:2-4) or to try and mitigate the sentence of a guilty person; it was
assuredly not to get the guilty off on a legal technicality. It is not
incumbent upon any lawyer to search out and exploit legal loopholes or defend
the indefensible, to the detriment of a nation’s system of justice and of the
society in general. That sort of unethical behaviour, by deliberately flouting
the spirit of the law, will be punished by God in the Last Days. He says
He hates injustice and the perversion of the justice system (cf. Job 8:3;
36:17). In order to be most effective, justice must also be swift and the truly
guilty punished as a warning to others. The Torah is quite specific on the need
for true justice for all people.
Exodus 23:6-8 "You shall not pervert the
justice due to your poor in his suit. 7 Keep far from a false
charge, and do not slay the innocent and righteous, for I will not acquit the
wicked. 8 And you shall take no bribe, for a bribe blinds the
officials, and subverts the cause of those who are in the right. (RSV)
The prophet
Isaiah was aware of the situation in his time and foresaw the same thing
happening in these Last Days, in line with the dual application of much of
Scripture.
Isaiah 59:4 No one enters suit justly, no one goes to
law honestly; they rely on empty pleas, they speak lies, they conceive mischief
and bring forth iniquity. (RSV)
It would
appear that truth, justice and equitable treatment are extremely important to
God as such requirements of the leaders and the people are mentioned often
enough in Scripture (e.g. Jer. 23:5; Ezek. 45:9).
Proverbs 21:3 To do justice and judgment is more
acceptable to the LORD than sacrifice.
For without
justice (tsedek, SHD 6664) there can be no righteousness (tsedek),
and vice versa. And as the writer of Ecclesiastes warns and the prophet Isaiah
enjoins:
Ecclesiastes
5:8 If you see in a province the poor
oppressed and justice and right violently taken away, do not be amazed at the
matter; for the high official is watched by a higher, and there are yet higher
ones over them. (RSV)
Isaiah
56:1-2 Thus says the LORD: "Keep
justice, and do righteousness, for soon my salvation will come, and my
deliverance be revealed. 2 Blessed is the man who does this, and the
son of man who holds it fast, who keeps the sabbath, not profaning it, and
keeps his hand from doing any evil." (RSV)
Again, justice
and righteousness here are synonymous and interchangeable.
Torah observance
It appears
that Judah or Levi was assigned to be God’s scribes or lawgivers (chaqaq, SHD 2710). Some Kenites also had this
task. Scribes have been referred to as Sopherim (from saphar, SHD 5608) since
Ezra’s time, and were
given the task of faithfully preserving Scripture down through the centuries
(Pss. 60:7 and 108:8). It is recorded that the Jews and Levites were appointed
custodians of the Oracles of God from the beginning (Rom. 3:1-2), however, that
was only until the death of Messiah and the formation of the Churches of
God from the Apostles onwards (see the paper The Oracles of God (No. 184).
It was
perhaps the Jews’ and Levites’ natural abilities, with their dedication and
thoroughness, which particularly fitted them for the task of transcribing the
holy texts. By tradition, a detailed and reverent ritual for copying the
Scriptures was required, whereby each letter was considered holy in itself, so
no adjoining letters were permitted to touch; each word was to be read aloud
from an original version of the text; and every letter and word were counted to
ensure that none had been added or omitted, in accordance with the injunction
in the Torah (Deut. 4:2).
Christians
naturally owe a huge debt of gratitude to the Scribes for faithfully copying
and preserving the Hebrew Scriptures (the Tanakh) for hundreds of years,
so that, at the appropriate time, they might be translated into all the
languages of the world, as is still being done today. They did, however, take
liberties with the Scriptures but preserved those texts for a permanent record
and which we know today (see for example The Companion Bible notes to
the texts).
In addition,
the rest of Israel seemed more inclined to water down the Laws of God, until
finally deciding that these Laws had been done away with altogether and that we
are solely under “grace” within the new Christian dispensation. It seems
pseudo-Christianity is in such a rush to disassociate itself from everything
Jewish and the Jews (even until fairly recently known as “Christ-killers”),
they have forgotten that the majority of first-generation Christians were Jews
or Hebrews of all twelve tribes of Israel, located both within Judaea and in
the Diaspora, and who didn’t suddenly give up their keeping of Torah when they
became baptised Christians. They continued to worship in their local
Synagogues, although many were later expelled as Jesus/Yehoshua said they would
be (Jn. 16:2; cf. also Jn. 9:22), perhaps for mentioning the “heresy” that the
long-awaited Messiah of their liberation had already appeared, yet had been
ignominiously killed. It wasn’t the sort of information that many people wanted
to know (see Acts chap. 7).
In Acts 24,
Paul stated unequivocally before the Roman governor Felix and many eminent Jews
that he still observed the Law.
Acts
24:14 But this I admit to you, that
according to the Way, which they call a sect [heresy: KJV], I worship the God
of our fathers, believing everything laid down by the law or written in the
prophets. (RSV)
It simply
wasn’t a case of Paul believing everything in the Law but then not
acting upon that belief. Quite the opposite in fact, and his statement here
refutes the antinomian opinion that Paul denigrated the Law in his numerous
other epistles.
In contrast to
the pseudo-Christians’ willingness within just a few centuries to abrogate the
Law, Judah often went to the other extreme. They had a tendency to introduce
more and more man-made ordinances and restrictions, albeit with noble intent,
perhaps, claiming these were part of the Oral Law given to Moses. Certain
strands of Judaism also saw the need to put a fence around the Laws of God as
shown, for example, by their 39 Sabbath prohibitions, few of which bear any
resemblance to the original injunctions regarding the Sabbath in the Torah as
given directly by the Angel of the Covenant (who became the Messiah).
Geza Vermes,
in his book The Religion of Jesus the Jew (SCN Press, London, 1993), had
this to say about the prohibitions.
“We have to
wait until the Book of Jubilees (50.6-9) in mid-second century BC, and the
statutes of the Damascus Document (10.14-12.6) half a century later, before
encountering the first attempts at systematization, and until the relevant
section of the Mishnah (Shab. 7.2) before receiving a detailed list of
thirty-nine classes of proscribed action.” (fn. p.12)
The Mishnah
was compiled about 200 CE, long after the fall of the Temple. Hence it was long
after the written Torah was produced that this so-called Oral Law was codified.
This making of laws more binding and unnecessarily burdensome was what Yehoshua
condemned (cf. Mat. 23:1ff.). He obviously recognised the difference between
the Laws he had given to Moses and those added afterwards by over-zealous, and
often hypocritical, religious types.
R. Kushner
gave the Jewish perspective on God’s Law or Torah and why it is still binding
upon all who claim to love God and act as His servants today.
“We learn two lessons from the stories we tell about ourselves: that God
loves us and that God needs us.
God shows His love for us by reaching down to bridge the immense gap
between Him and us. He shows His love for us by inviting us to enter into a
Covenant with Him, and by sharing with us His precious Torah. The idea that
giving us laws is a sign of God’s love is one of the fundamental theological
differences between Judaism and [mainstream] Christianity. … Laws are seen [by
the latter] as the instrument of a harsh, restrictive, punishing God, and need
to be superseded by the rule of love and forgiveness. Judaism – while admiring love
and forgiveness … – sees the
role of the Law totally differently. In our view, a loving parent does not show
his or her love by telling a child, “Do whatever you want, and I will still
love you.” That is not love but an abdication of responsibility. … Jews have
understood from the beginning that ours was a religion of love because it did
not leave us to find our way through life unaided. It offered advice, insight,
and guidelines.” (op. cit., pp. 47-8)
He goes on
to share a few thoughts that should be noted by the antinomian Christians in
particular.
We tend to think of laws as restricting our freedom. … But Judaism
insists that living by God’s laws is a matter not only of obedience, but of a
more important kind of freedom.
It may seem strange to speak of the Torah, with its myriad regulations
and prohibitions, as a source of freedom. … The freedom the Law offers is the
freedom of the athlete who disciplines his body so that he is free to do things
physically that you and I are incapable of. It is the freedom of being the
master of appetite rather than its slave. … The freedom the Torah offers us is
the freedom to say no to appetite. …
The Law does not make us sinners. The Law tries to make us strong enough to resist the many temptations to sin to which the human b