Sunday, October 3, 2010

What Did Jesus Teach About the Torah, Part 3?

Therefore go and make disciples of all nations, baptizing them in the name of the Father and of the Son and of the Holy Spirit, and teaching them to obey everything I have commanded you. And surely I am with you always, to the very end of the age. -Matthew 28:19-20

This is the eleventh part of my series on what Yeshua (Jesus) taught his Jewish disciples to teach the newly minted Gentile disciples to obey. It is also the third part of my series that specifically focuses on what Yeshua taught about the Torah (the Law) that can be applied to non-Jewish disciples. Before continuing, let's review the summary for Part 2 of What Jesus Teaches About the Torah:
In a nutshell, Yeshua taught that the Torah commandment to not murder includes not denigrating another person. "Do not commit adultery" is not just a matter of refraining from extramarital sex, but a prohibition of even looking at another woman with lustful desire and intent. Although Torah allows divorce, no married couple should remove the bond between them created by God except under the most serious circumstances. It is better to take no oath at all than to take an oath before God and then fail to complete it. Even if you are in the right to sue another, consider the consequences before proceeding. Loving those who love you is easy. Loving someone who doesn't love you is from God.
While each of these commandments has their source in the Torah of Moses, Yeshua brings the correct and original understanding of each of these statements to his Jewish disciples and, through the Matthew 28 directive, to the Gentile disciples; to us. However, there's a problem.

In my previous conversations with Messianic Jewish adherents to Bilateral Ecclesiology, Divine Invitation (as defined by First Fruits of Zion or FFOZ), and to others aligned with the specific teachings of organizations such as the Union of Messianic Jewish Congregations (UMJC), the only standard they believe is valid for Torah observance by Gentile disciples of Yeshua is found in Acts 15, in what we now call "the Jerusalem Letter". Let's take a look at it.
We have heard that some went out from us without our authorization and disturbed you, troubling your minds by what they said. So we all agreed to choose some men and send them to you with our dear friends Barnabas and Paul - men who have risked their lives for the name of our Lord Jesus Christ. Therefore we are sending Judas and Silas to confirm by word of mouth what we are writing. It seemed good to the Holy Spirit and to us not to burden you with anything beyond the following requirements: You are to abstain from food sacrificed to idols, from blood, from the meat of strangled animals and from sexual immorality. You will do well to avoid these things. Farewell. -Acts 15:24-29
This letter seems to have been written in response to a situation described by Paul in his Galatians letter. Here's a small sample:
Mark my words! I, Paul, tell you that if you let yourselves be circumcised, Christ will be of no value to you at all. Again I declare to every man who lets himself be circumcised that he is obligated to obey the whole law. You who are trying to be justified by law have been alienated from Christ; you have fallen away from grace. But by faith we eagerly await through the Spirit the righteousness for which we hope. For in Christ Jesus neither circumcision nor uncircumcision has any value. The only thing that counts is faith expressing itself through love.

You were running a good race. Who cut in on you and kept you from obeying the truth? That kind of persuasion does not come from the one who calls you. "A little yeast works through the whole batch of dough." I am confident in the Lord that you will take no other view. The one who is throwing you into confusion will pay the penalty, whoever he may be. Brothers, if I am still preaching circumcision, why am I still being persecuted? In that case the offense of the cross has been abolished. As for those agitators, I wish they would go the whole way and emasculate themselves!
-Galatians 5:2-12
Paul appears to be describing a group of Messianic Jews who were struggling with the idea that Gentiles could enter the community of Messianic faith and become disciples and worshipers of the One God without actually converting to Judaism (circumcision is the shorthand Paul is using to describe conversion). If Gentiles were being instructed that they could only become disciples by becoming Jews, it would completely undo everything Yeshua had done and taught, according to Paul. Yet, it was understandable that many of the Jewish disciples of Yeshua would have a tendency to not want Gentiles to share the status of full disciples with them.

In that place and time, Jews generally believed that any sort of contact with a Gentile would make a Jew unclean. Even being in a Gentile's house would be like touching a corpse. There were already many Gentile God-fearers worshiping in Jewish synagogues (see Acts 17 for examples of God-fearers worshiping with Jews in Thessalonica, Berea, and Athens), but their status would not have been as equals before God among the Jews, even though Gentiles too were created in the image of God.

Peter was only convinced to visit the home of the Roman God-fearer Cornelius after having a vision on a rooftop where God explained to him that Gentiles were in fact not unclean (see Acts 10:9-22). The following shows what a total shock it was for Jewish believers to witness Gentiles also being accepted as Messianic disciples and receiving the Spirit:
While Peter was still speaking these words, the Holy Spirit came on all who heard the message. The circumcised believers who had come with Peter were astonished that the gift of the Holy Spirit had been poured out even on the Gentiles. For they heard them speaking in tongues and praising God. -Acts 10:44-46
Witnessing Gentiles being accepted as disciples of the Jewish Messiah and actually receiving the Holy Spirit just as the Jewish disciples did in Acts 2, was a completely mind-blowing experience for many of the Jewish disciples who witnessed the event. Imagine how difficult it was for the hundreds or thousands of Jewish Messianic disciples of that time to believe that Gentiles could receive the Spirit, since they had not seen this event with their own eyes. Were they willing to take Peter's and Paul's word for it? Were they be willing to take the Jerusalem Council's word for it?

Some of them obviously were not willing, hence Paul's comments to the Galatians and the necessity of the Jerusalem letter. But let's get back to the problem.

While Acts 16:4-5 describes the response of the Gentile believers to the delivery of the letter, given what Yeshua taught in Matthew 5:21-48 and the directive Yeshua gave to the Jewish disciples in Matthew 28:18-20, are we to believe that the conditions James and the Council wrote in their letter to the Gentile disciples were the only behavioral changes the Gentiles had to make? How could the Gentiles make sense of these directives if they didn't have access to the larger body of scriptures for context? Even assuming a different set of behavioral expectations for Jews and Gentiles in the synagogue and as believers, how could Gentiles understand this difference and why it exists if they didn't have access to the larger body of scriptures, and particularly to the teachings of the Messiah, to whom the Gentile believers were to be disciples and students?

Also remember this:
"It is my judgment, therefore, that we should not make it difficult for the Gentiles who are turning to God. Instead we should write to them, telling them to abstain from food polluted by idols, from sexual immorality, from the meat of strangled animals and from blood. For Moses has been preached in every city from the earliest times and is read in the synagogues on every Sabbath." -Acts 15:19-21
Somehow, the fact that the Torah of Moses was read in the synagogues on every Sabbath factored into the way the Council crafted their letter in response to the Jewish believers who had erroneously been attempting to get the Gentiles to convert to Judaism as a requirement of worshiping God.

Now remember that we're dealing with two general classes of Gentile disciples: those who had been God-fearers, had a familiarity with the synagogue, and had heard the Torah taught on Shabbat, and those who had just come out of pagan worship and hadn't a clue what was going on. The former population were already somewhat "on board" with having faith in God and they already loved the Jewish people. The latter population came to faith through hearing Paul or another Messianic emissary, but largely had no understanding of God, the Messiah, and Judaism, beyond what would have been common knowledge in the diaspora.

It must have been quite a shock when the Gentiles were originally told (erroneously) that they had to convert to Judaism and take on board the whole of Torah obedience and halacha; behaviors and concepts that were likely completely mysterious to them, confusing, and maybe even a little terrifying. Becoming a Gentile disciple of the Master would have seemed an overwhelming task for someone coming out of paganism if conversion to Judaism were a major requirement. How could they possible ramp up to speed in any reasonable amount of time and come to an understanding of all the commandments, equal to born Jews who had been hearing the Torah since childhood? You might not get any Gentile converts to the Messianic faith at all if they had to face that sort of chore. What to do?

In this context, the Jerusalem letter makes a great deal of sense. James could be saying, "Let's calm the Gentiles down". And to the Gentiles, the letter could say, "Don't worry, guys...you don't have to do everything all at once." But does the Jerusalem letter override what Yeshua said in Matthew 5 and Matthew 28? Of course not. If James (and interestingly enough, the Holy Spirit) had contradicted Yeshua's teachings, then the Apostolic Scriptures wouldn't be worth the paper they're printed on. So what do we do and how do we understand all this? The clue is here:
For Moses has been preached in every city from the earliest times and is read in the synagogues on every Sabbath. -Acts 15:21
If Yeshua expected what he taught the Jewish disciples to obey to be transmitted to the Gentile disciples, then the Acts 15 letter cannot be the totality of what a Gentile disciples were to learn and obey. Based on my previous conclusions, Yeshua directly taught the correct interpretation of portions of the Torah, specifically from Exodus, Leviticus, and Deuteronomy. The only way for the Gentile disciples to make sense of Yeshua's teachings and to put them in proper context, was for the Gentile disciples to be able to study the original portions of the Torah they were expected to understand and obey.

Conclusion: What do we learn about Yeshua's Torah teachings as connected to the Jerusalem letter to the Gentiles?
  1. Yeshua taught the correct interpretation to a number of Torah commandments as seen in Matthew 5.
  2. Yeshua specifically directed the Jewish disciples to teach the Gentile disciples to obey everything Yeshua taught, as seen in Matthew 28.
  3. Some Messianic Jewish disciples were teaching the new Gentile disciples that the only way to become disciples of the Messiah was to convert to Judaism, as described in Paul's Galatians letter.
  4. Paul and the Messianic authorities in Jerusalem correctly taught that Gentiles do not have to convert to Judaism in order to be Messianic disciples.
  5. In order to calm the Gentile disciples down and to tell them that they did not have to take on board a totally Jewish obedience to the Torah, a letter was sent out as recorded in Acts 15.
  6. Acts 16 shows how the letter was well received among the Gentiles.
  7. Matthew 5 and 28 and Acts 15:21, as well as Acts 17:10-15, show that Gentiles were expected to learn, understand, and obey at least some of the Torah commandments outside the direct context of the Jerusalem letter.
There's no way around it. The Acts 15 letter cannot be the total and absolute limit of a Gentile disciple's behavioral compliance to God. At least some portions of the Torah of Moses must be included for the Gentiles to even make sense of who the Messiah is and what righteous living really means as an expectation of God.

Notice though, so far, I haven't presented one line of evidence that could support the idea that Gentiles are supposed to wear tzitzit, pray with teffilin, or to keep the totality of the 613 commandments (or at least that portion that's possible to keep outside of Israel and without a Priesthood or a Temple) as understood in rabbinic Judaism. So far, what I've found (but I'm not done, yet) is that, according to the teachings of Yeshua and the Jewish disciples, Gentiles, when they have become Messianic disciples, are required to change their behaviors based on more than just the Acts 15 letter. However, the Gentiles do not necessarily have to obey each and every Torah commandment exactly as a born Jew is required (and in fact, we see that Gentile conversion to Judaism in order to become a disciple is not only not required, but severely frowned upon).

We're getting rather deep into this topic, and so far, not many folks have been responding, although Judah Gabriel has started his own blog post to comment on this portion of my study. My conclusions aren't precisely lining up with either the understanding of the One Law/One Torah congregations nor the teachings of the Messianic Jewish adherents to Bilateral Ecclesiology (as defined by Union of Messianic Jewish Congregations or UMJC) or Divine Invitation (as defined by First Fruits of Zion or FFOZ).

I want to assure you that I'm not expending all this time and energy just to be disrespectful and offensive to people who don't share my exact viewpoint, so please don't take what I'm writing as some sort of slap in the face. I really am trying to make sense of what the Bible is saying to Gentiles without "drinking the Kool-Aid", so to speak, of any particular group's theology. Once married to a theology, having an objective viewpoint can be something of a challenge. If I can present this information while standing even a little bit outside my own assumptions, then perhaps I, and everyone else reading my blogs, can learn something new.

Needless to say, to be continued.

11 comments:

Judah Gabriel Himango said...

I really am trying to make sense of what the Bible is saying to Gentiles without "drinking the Kool-Aid", so to speak, of any particular group's theology. Once married to a theology, having an objective viewpoint can be something of a challenge. If I can present this information while standing even a little bit outside my own assumptions, then perhaps I, and everyone else reading my blogs, can learn something new.

Well said. Don't drink the Kool-Aid. :-)

I think it's entirely reasonable to believe the answer to the Torah for gentiles question is somewhere in between the BE and OL positions.

It seems to me the BE position on Torah for gentiles is more than we often glean from the blogs. I think a lot of BE folks will say, "Acts 15 is a minimum for table fellowship", and I bet most would agree all of the human-made category of moral laws are also applicable.

Judah Gabriel Himango said...

>> "We're getting rather deep into this topic, and so far, not many folks have been responding"

Don't be discouraged. As Dr. Schiffman recently said, and I concur in my experience, you don't get too many comments unless you write something inflammatory. An example of an inflammatory post in the Messianic blogosphere would be a post questioning a person's place in the movement.

That said, you do write long posts. :-) It takes every ounce of concentration to read your posts from top to bottom while I have my 1 year old stepping on my keyboard and climbing over me, while my son is asking me something and my wife is telling me to take out the garbage. ;-)

Despite the long posts, I not only enjoy them, but actually learn from them and make things clearer in my head. I consider your writings to be some of the most relevant content currently on the Messianic blogosphere.

James said...

Thanks for the complements, Judah. I'm really sorry about the long blog posts (and the long comments I make on your blog). You're not the only one to point this out to me, but unfortunately, these thoughts and how I express them come out just the way they are (OK, I edit for grammar and spelling afterwards). It would be difficult to express a complete thought using less words. Imagine what it would be like to actually have a conversation with me? :P

I agree, unless I called someone a #*&$^*(! or words to that effect, I'm not going to draw a lot of attention, or at least a lot of response. I just hope some of this is doing someone out there a bit of good. The thoughts and words keep coming out of me, like blood streaming from a ripped artery. I barely plan what I'm going to write. It's more like being plugged into a high voltage cable. I'm charged whether I want to be or not.

Yahnatan said...

James,

This is definitely one of the longest-running blog post series, and I'm continuing to enjoy the fruits of your work.

I do wonder if the BE position is getting a little bit caricatured here (as perhaps Judah is suggesting). After all, while some BE advocates would point to Acts 15 as a seminal passage, I am sure they would also affirm Paul's letters as explicitly laying out a pattern of life for Gentile followers of Messiah, and I would be surprised if anyone made a case that Paul's ethics, spiritual values, and teachings weren't rooted in Torah.

Also, you wrote:
Peter was only convinced to visit the home of the Roman God-fearer Cornelius after having a vision on a rooftop where God explained to him that Gentiles were in fact not unclean.

I'm curious about this; specifically, I wonder if the Jewish concerns about entering the home of a Gentile had to do simply with ethnicity (the interpretation your wording implies to me), or did it have more to do with the potential involvement of this man or some members of his household (i.e. servants) with idolatry? If food was offered to idols and then served, could it be eaten? What about food prepared by idolaters? What precisely was the concern there?

Also: should God's statement to Peter("Do not call unclean what I have made clean") be understood as a blanket statement applied to ALL Gentiles (i.e. all Gentiles prior to some point in time around then were somehow unclean, and then God made them clean)? Or should we understand it in a more particular sense with regards to Cornelius (i.e. God is saying, I am drawing this man and his household to myself, and therefore you shouldn't refuse to associate with them).

I have to admit that the "blanket" interpretation of "do not call unclean" troubles me. On the one hand, people take God's statement as good news because it's saying the unclean state of the Gentiles was taken away ("what I have made clean")--but this means God is affirming that, prior to this point in history, "uncleanness" WAS somehow related to genetics/ethnicity. Does that work for you? I don't really see it in the Scriptures where cleanness/uncleanness is discussed, and given that Luke consistently writes so favorably about Gentiles, it's difficult for me to see Luke affirming that Gentiles were categorically unclean. Thus, the more limited interpretation of God's statement to Peter appeals to me at this point...

Thoughts?

Judah Gabriel Himango said...

Hey, let the words flow. It's rare when I can achieve the "thoughts flowing into words" stream of consciousness. That's good.

But those can be some of the better posts -- pure vision, writing exactly what's on your mind, little worrying what people think. My best posts have been "just started writing" stuff, turns into a hay-maker.

James said...

I suppose my field of view regarding Acts 15 could be pretty narrow, but I'm like a person building a house. I need to take each piece, both as an isolated, single element, and as something on which other pieces will be built. You're right, there's a lot of context involved in terms of how we are to understand a Gentile's obligation to God and the Torah and I just want to make sure Acts 15 is taken as only one element rather than the element. I suspect that a few folks out there may have focused too hard on "the letter".

I don't have a lot more information to determine how Jews and Gentiles interacted in 1st Century Israel beyond the bits and pieces we find in the Apostolic Scriptures. As Judah pointed out, my blog posts tend to be long, so I didn't want to go back and reference every single Jewish/Gentile interaction to build a case for how Jews tended not to desire contact with Gentiles. In Acts 11, other Jews criticize Peter for going into a Gentile's home, so clearly this was an "issue".

Are human beings unclean? Well, you can't eat them, so in that case, the answer is "yes" (a little joke). Does it make a Jew unclean to step across the threshold and enter a Gentile's home? That may be what God was addressing in Acts 10, since in the next sequence of events, that's exactly what Peter was expected to do. The "unclean" issue and Gentiles could have been a custom or tradition that was associated with the fact that Israel was an occupied country and I can only imagine that more than a few Jews didn't have a great deal of affection for Gentiles. Peter may have held that personal issue with Gentiles (and Luke may not). If that's the case, the Acts 10 vision was a matter of God straightening Peter out.

Dan Benzvi said...

Yahnatan,

I see Peter's vision as just that a vision that was supposed to teach. I think God used a vision in the way Yeshua used the parables, to convey a point.

Yahnatan said...

BTW: Judah, you wrote:

It seems to me the BE position on Torah for gentiles is more than we often glean from the blogs.

Thanks for pointing this out!

James said...

Interesting point, Judah and Yahnatan. A number of weeks ago, I had the opportunity to meet with Boaz Michael over morning coffee and he suggested that these sorts of conversations would be different if we could have them face to face rather than in the blogsphere.

Of course, he was just passing through Boise on his way to Seattle, which illustrates how difficult it is for us to really communicate due to the distances betweeen us. Yes, the Internet is a boon to distance communication, but it does lack the ability to really help clear up misunderstandings. Fellowship and unity are indeed about being able to break bread together.

Unknown said...

I sent this to Toby. It's my rebuttal to the "do your seven go to heaven"

 I think the  "everything" in Brsht 9:3 is contrasting the "that lives" against the non living thing(or the thing that dies naturally).

Genesis 9:3-5
3 You may eat any moving thing that lives. As I gave you the green plants, I now give you everything. 4 But you must not eat meat with its life( that is, its blood) in it. 5 For your lifeblood I will surely exact punishment, from every living creature I will exact punishment. From each person I will exact punishment for the life of the individual since the man was his relative. 


In the same way Vayikra makes the contrast;

Leviticus 17:14-15
14 for the life of all flesh is its blood. So I have said to the Israelites: You must not eat the blood of any living thing because the life of every living thing is its blood- all who eat it will be cut off. 15"'Any person who eats an animal that has died of natural causes or an animal torn by beasts, whether a native citizen or a <<< proselyte >>> must wash his clothes, bathe in water, and be unclean until evening; then he becomes clean. 

Many feel that proselyte is an appropriate translation for "foreigner and stranger" in passages referring to the phrase "One Law".
Some feel this was the understanding of the first century judaisms including The apostles.

What does this mean for the Acts 15 ruling as they were essentially treated as proselytes. Clearly there are some contradictions here.

Unknown said...

As for Peter and the vision;

Notice how Peter says, " at no time have I eaten anything "koinos/common/defiled" or "akathartos/tamay";
then when HaKadosh Baruch Hu responds he says "what G-d has purified do not make common"!

Why doesn't HaShem say, "call not "common" nor, "Akathartos/tammay"!! He only corrects peters word common he doesn't tell Peter not to call things tamay which are tamay.

If all these animals are in the sac touching each other rubbing shoulders and all, Peter assumes when he is told "sacrifice" it means of couse a clean animal that has become common by contamination and therefor "tammay" BUT HaShem says nope don't make it contaminated!!!

Further clarified in verse 10:20 "Examine" nothing. See "examine" in Act 11:2,12;Rm 14:23


Bottom line even if HaShem says eat something unclean/tammay and Peter says, "No sir three times(possibly representing the Three visitors in 10:19, or the other times peter is asked something 3times) Peter is correct in saying No, No, No, about food and then when the people come (as you said) People arnt food!!! So why make distinctions about food for people!!

Further see Eze 4:14!