Ma-wij

In the classic film “The Princess Bride”, Cambridge-trained actor Peter Cook plays the Impressive Clergyman, presiding at the almost official wedding of Prince Humperdinck and Buttercup.  His famous lines are known and loved by many moviegoers: “Ma-wij! Ma-wij is wot bwings us togevah today! Ma-wij – that bwessed awangement, that dweam wifin a dweam …”  The contrast between the solemnity and pomp of a High Church of England Royal Wedding ceremony and the comic antics of the actors makes for a droll and humorous scene.

The disparity between a loveless wedding and “twu wuv” (true love), however, is no joke. There have always been and still are many broken and lifeless homes from where passion and joy have long departed, leaving a grey existence and a jaded reality in their stead.

It is thought-provoking that the God of Jacob has used the institution of marriage to reflect the burning center of His love for the human race, for believers in Yeshua, and in a challenging way for the entire people of Israel. Yet though some excellent works have been written about God’s love for the bride of Christ, less has been written and grasped among Christian believers about God’s blazing passion and tender marital love for Israel, Messiah’s own Jewish people. Indeed, the relationship between Israel and YHVH is described by some in a way that lacks passion. Others describe that relationship as being full of hair-trigger anger and toxic silence on both sides.

A marriage covenant between YHVH and Israel

The Hebrew prophets did not blush to describe the relationship between the Jewish people and their God as a passionate connection between a man and his bride on their wedding night: “Then you grew up and became tall. You reached the age for fine ornaments … You were exceedingly beautiful” (Ezekiel 16:7, 13).  The attraction between God and Israel is so powerful that the air fairly crackles on the pages of Scripture. Passages such as Hosea 2:1-13, 14-23, Isaiah 50:1; 54:4-12; Jeremiah 3:1-3; Ezekiel 16:1-6, 7-14, 15-59; 60-63; Song of Solomon 8:6-7 all describe aspects of God’s passionate embrace of His beloved Jewish bride.

Mark Twain once said. “It ain’t the parts of the Bible I can’t understand that bother me.  It is the parts that I do understand” (The Wit and Wisdom of Mark Twain). There can sometimes be aspects of theology that are hard to grasp, like how God’s love for the Church and for Israel all balance out in the end.

Sometimes theologians try to play down God’s love for Israel or try to elevate God’s love for the Gentiles to be the main issue. Perhaps we can have the grace to allow for both to co-exist simultaneously as we try to delve into the depths of God’s heart about the matter. “For God has revealed these things to us through His Spirit. For the Spirit searches all things, even the deep things of God” (1 Corinthians 2:10-11).

What is clear is that YHVH is not an uninvolved bystander. He’s passionately caught up with the Jewish people. He is their passionate Pursuer and Lover.

YHVH is a jilted Lover

The prophets tell us that God has not only fallen head over heels in love with Israel. He has also had His heart broken by the fact that His beloved wife has had ‘a case of the straying eyes.’ Her willingness to give her heart over to other passions, to be consumed with other loves, to pour her affections, time and energies into other activities – all these have meant that YHVH is the “owner of a broken heart.”

The prophets convey God’s deep grief at this tragic turn of events, “How can I give you up, Ephraim? How can I surrender you, Israel? … My heart is turned upside down within Me, and all My compassions are kindled!” (Hosea 11:8).

Holy grief, holy anger

YHVH the Consummate Husband and Lover sent His own express delivery messengers to His beloved wife Israel for centuries, pleading with her to return to her First Love. “Since the day that your fathers came out of the land of Egypt until this day, I have sent you all My servants the prophets, daily rising up early and sending them. Yet they didn’t obey Me or incline their ear, but instead stiffened their neck” (Jeremiah 7:25).

YHVH brought military invasion, famine, wild beasts and plagues and even exile to His beloved wife (Ezekiel 14:21) in order to shock her into repentance (2 Kings 17:23; 1 Chronicles 9:1).  Though YHVH expressed His righteous anger, fury and jealousy (Ezekiel 16:38-43) through these judgments, He also expressed His own deep anguish, grief and horror at what He was doing. “I will not execute My fierce anger, nor will I destroy Ephraim again. For I am God and not man, Holy in your midst, and I will not come in burning wrath” (Hosea 11:9).

Empathy --  not just sympathy

The God of Jacob testifies that whenever the Jewish people suffer or are struck in judgment, He also feels their pain – and in ways far beyond that of President William Clinton. “In all their (the Jewish people’s) afflictions He was afflicted” (Isaiah 63:9). God not only sorrowfully brings judgment; He cries out with His own beloved Jewish wife as she goes through that suffering, because He feels every blow, every slash, every bullet, every drop of poison gas.

In a very similar dynamic, both the Holy Spirit and the Apostle Paul feel agony at the majority of Israel’s turning away from their God and from David’s Greater Son. Paul testifies that the Ruach HaKodesh also feels the unceasing grief and anguish that is in Paul’s heart (Romans 9:1-2) over the current spiritual status of the majority of Jacob’s children.

Tenderness in the midst of trouble

The prophet Hosea conveys some exquisite jewels in his descriptions of God’s heart. Whereas Ezekiel will later describe a time of purification in the desert in aggressive terms, Hosea describes this same process from a different angle – that of a Husband who is attempting to woo His wife back into a tender love relationship: “Therefore, behold, I will allure her, bring her into the wilderness and speak kindly to her” (Hosea 2:14).

Singing in the vineyards

The entire scenario of this re-marriage is one of singing, of romance in the vineyards and of tenderness: “Then I will give her the vineyards from there that were hers, and the valley of Achor as a door of hope. And she will sing there as in the days of her youth, as in the day when she came up from the land of Egypt” (Hosea 2:15).

The language of this encounter between YHVH and His Jewish bride is enscripturated with great tenderness and marital affection. “I will betroth you to Me forever; Yes, I will betroth you to Me in righteousness and in justice, in loving kindness and in compassion, and I will betroth you to Me in faithfulness. Then you will know YHVH” (Hosea 2:19-20). As many are already aware, the Hebrew word for “to know” is the same wonderful word used of Adam and Eve’s first intimate encounter (see Genesis 2:24; 4:1).

YHVH declares with great tenderness at the close of this song, that His wife Israel will no longer whisper intimacies to Him using the name “Lord” (in Hebrew, Ba’al). That would remind her and Him both of her prior unfaithfulness to other lords, including to Baal Zaphon of the Canaanite pantheon.  Instead, Israel will have the privilege of calling YHVH “my man” (in Hebrew “Ishi”), signifying renewed intimacy and tenderness at a new level. “It will come about in that day, declares YHVH, that you will call Me Ishi, and will no longer call Me Ba’ali” (Hosea 2:16).

Yeshua never asked us to be rage-aholics

Family counselors use the term ‘rage-aholic’ to describe a person who slips quickly into a violent rage, and who uses that strong anger to keep his or her family in check. Of course, any family member can play that addicting role, although many husbands and fathers in modern society find themselves glitching down the playground slide of rage all too often.

Theologians can have the same problem vis-à-vis interpreting the Scriptures.  It is not an easy challenge to keep Scriptural equilibrium when processing the length and breadth of the Bible, especially when trying to balance God’s love for His Jewish bride with His righteous anger, His grief with His tenderness.

This is why the community of saints, the interaction of believers, is so important in these matters.  Yeshua intended that we each help to balance out the other. When youthful zeal results in washing people’s feet in boiling water, then more seasoned saints can help bring balance (and help avoid medical bills too!). When courage has given way to fear of man in the hearts of some older battle-scarred leaders, sometimes it is the younger saints who can encourage through their fighting spirit and feelings of ‘invincibility.’

Rabbi Sha’ul (known in Latin as the Apostle Paul) put it elegantly: “Speaking the truth in love, we are to grow up in all aspects into Him who is the head, even Messiah, from whom the whole body, being fitted and held together by what every joint supplies, according to the proper working of each individual part, causes the growth of the body for the building up of itself in love” (Ephesians 4:15-17).

How can we pray?

Your prayers and support hold up our arms and are the enablement of God to us in the work He has called us to do!

In Messiah Yeshua,

Avner Boskey

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Prophesying the destruction of Zion?

From time to time I am asked to review a book or a musical project. This has occasionally led to some pleasant discoveries. Recently some acquaintances have asked me to analyze and respond to the teachings of Dalton Lifsey’s recent “The Controversy of Zion and the Time of Jacob’s Trouble” (Maskilim Publishing, 2011). The author himself had asked for my feedback just prior to the publishing, but since the book was already at the printer’s, initially I was only able to give a cursory response.

Lifsey’s book raises some important issues. In my mind one of the most important is his forceful attempt to get believers to consider those prophetic passages in Scripture which describe military invasion of the land of Israel, subsequent havoc, and Israel’s cry to Messiah Yeshua for deliverance. I am confident that some beneficial debate will result from these discussions.

However, along with this, some of the book’s teaching has the potential to create prophetic confusion, weaken intercessory passion for Israel, estrange the hearts of believers from what God is doing today in restoring the Jewish people, and even possibly catalyze a pathological fixation, an unbalanced fascination and a cold-hearted attitude about Israel’s most intense period of suffering in history future.

A summary of three main points

Lifsey expounds on three main themes:

An initial response to these three points

A full response to this book’s arguments would require at least half a book. Here are my responses in capsule form:

Though the book quotes many biblical passages, it does not present a balanced weighing of both negative and positive passages. There is nearly an exclusive focus on passages of destruction.

The rest of this newsletter examines various aspects of this book’s teaching in greater detail.

Horsing around with a balanced gospel

Many years ago Martin Luther described the world as a drunken peasant. “If you lift him into the saddle on one side, he will fall off again on the other side.” The history of the Christian Church has often illustrated Luther’s proverb with sad accuracy.

The original and entirely Jewish apostolic community of faith in the Book of Acts spoke to their own Hebrew people with a heart of tenderness and compassion (see Isaiah 40:1-2). Yet within less than two hundred years an in-house argument between Jews had given way to the strident accents of baptized anti-Semitism.  The good news of Israel’s Messiah had become the bad news of condemnation, legal discrimination and murderous riot – those were now the definitive voice of Christian theology.

The gospel is a binary message – for it to be balanced, it must contain both the crucifixion and the resurrection. Neither is complete without the other. Neither is balanced without the other. Some believers focus on the sufferings of Messiah to the exclusion or detriment of the resurrection. Other trends focus on resurrection power as if there were no call to take up one’s cross and follow Messiah. Each aspect is important, and each one must be in balance.

Over the past millennia many believers have ignored the irrevocable gifts and calling of Israel. In recent years a healthy stream is re-embracing the biblical realities of Israel as God’s firstborn son. This stream is a healthy antidote to the ‘Theology of Contempt’ (see Jules Isaac’s The Teaching of Contempt: Christian roots of anti-Semitism; (https://jcs.oxfordjournals.org/content/6/3/382.extract).

A balanced portrayal of the heart of the prophetic scriptures means that both the amazing calling and the heartrending stumbling of the Jewish people must be addressed. Last Days events regarding the Jewish people must also be subject to the same balance: some biblical passages describe Israel’s trials and troubles, others describe Israel’s mighty prophetic army, its defeat of its enemies, and its continued tenacious hold on Jerusalem even in the worst of days.

A balanced biblical perspective will not attempt to champion either Jewish victories or Jewish defeats at the expense of the other. It will attempt to create a synthesis – a systematic theology – which allows both streams to flow in one mighty river.

Such a book which manages to discuss these subjects in a balanced way is needed, and it could be of real help to the body of Messiah. Unfortunately, this is not that book.  Lifsey’s book has failed to strike that necessary biblical balance.

He who does not learn from history …

George Santayana once said that he who does not learn from history is doomed to repeat it.  The book being considered occasionally shows a glib and careless hand as it approaches Jewish and Christian history.

The entire scope of Jewish history is described in this book as condensed into “the most significant events in two millennia of Jewish history” –

Speaking from the perspective of one who both has a degree in Jewish History and is a life-long student of that subject, I am surprised by the unprofessional nature of Lifsey's statements. There is a distinct lack of awareness and appreciation for all that God has done in guiding and preserving His Jewish people through the period of Exile.

The fast-food McDonald’s approach has spread across the world from Downey, California to New Zealand. But what works for hamburgers does not always carry the same weight in theology or history. The riches of Jewish history and of God's watch care for His exiled people demand far more honor and respect than this book has managed to extend.

Lifsey’s book categorically states on a number of occasions that the return of Jewish people to the Land of Israel began in 1948. This would probably come as a surprise to the following Jewish people movements: the 300 English Tosafists of 1211; Rabbi Yehiel of Paris who moved with many followers to Acre in 1260; the Sephardic Jews of Spain led by Don Joseph Nasi after 1492; over 1,500 Polish Jews who moved to Israel in 1700 led by Rabbi Yehudah he-Hasid; the Hasidic waves in the 1770’s and the Misnaged waves in the 1830’s. Of course, one would have to include the First through Fifth Aliyahs (1882-1939), as well as the Aliyah Bet (1932-1948) which together brought nearly a half a million Jews home.

Such historical inaccuracies show that the author has not done sufficient homework to be able to speak authoritatively on significant events of Jewish history, whether past, present or future. The book has also not grasped the intimate, prayerful bond between the Jewish people and the Jewish homeland – something that Isaiah’s mystic words convey in his description of the Land of Israel being married (beulah) to her own Jewish people – a cause of great rejoicing in Isaiah 62:1-7. The Bible sees the connection between the Jewish people and their land as something good, healthy and righteous, and not as a divine mousetrap. Exile is described in the Scriptures as "eating unclean bread among the nations" (Ezekiel 4:13) who are "the enemies of God" (Leviticus 26:41. 44; Psalm 83:1-5). Lifsey nowhere grapples with this biblical worldview.

Speaking as an Israeli Messianic Jew, I found this book lacking in at least three areas – little to no awareness of events taking place today in Israel; no expressed understanding concerning the pulse of the country and people of Israel (including what is going on among Messianic Jews here); and the use of language and thought which reflects a considerable tactlessness regarding Jewish sensitivities. The author has much to learn about how to talk to the very people he writes about.

One striking example of this insensitivity to Jewish hearts is the author’s arcane use of the strange phrase “an ethnic Jew.” What exactly is an ‘ethnic Jew?’ Is it something like being ‘an ethnic Afro-American,’ an ‘ethnic Hispanic’ or an ‘ethnic Maori?’ The very phrasing shows estrangement, and it reveals a marked dislocation from interaction with living Jews, who would interpret Lifsey's term to be a convoluted cryptic Christian buzzword best left ignored in polite company.

Sour grapes

Those who have walked the paths of the Messianic Jewish world for the last four or five decades will probably recognize a hidden voice echoing throughout the pages of this book – that of Art Katz, who is now with the Lord. Lifsey states at one point, “I agree with Art Katz who said, ‘The State of Israel exists not for its success but for its necessary failure’” (p. 127).

Art Katz was an outspoken and courageous figure, not known to back down from an argument. His groundbreaking book Ben Israel demonstrated that he was one of the rising prophetic voices of a new Messianic generation – Messianic lions of Judah in the 20th century.

At the same time, Art was known throughout the Messianic movement for espousing some extreme positions that at times appeared to be anti-Jewish.

Art and I were acquaintances, although we did not have much common personal history. Years ago Art came to Israel, wanting to spread his message of the coming destruction of the Jewish State among the Messianic congregations. At a gathering of some of the country’s leaders (including those most sympathetic to him), his message was judged as imbalanced and doors were closed to his message. Art (unsurprisingly) saw these closed doors as another justification of his own prophetic calling.

It concerns me that a similar message to Art’s is again being propagated, this time not by a Jewish high school teacher from New York, but by other voices at the uttermost parts of the earth.  But the song remains the same. A prophet who rails against the Jewish people without divine commissioning and without Jeremiah's tears can end up polluting waters and causing good grapes to sour on the vine (see Jeremiah 31:29-30; Isaiah 5:20; James 3:11; Hebrews 12:15). Such things could poison a new generation all over again. May it never be (μὴ γένοιτο – Romans 11:1b)!

Handling the word accurately (2 Timothy 2:15)

The hypothesis of Lifsey’s book is bold – it is asking believers to reject the present return of Israel as an expression of God’s goodness, and to see it instead as a “probational gathering” of rebellious Jewish people who are being led into a divinely crafted slaughterhouse, out of which a small number alone will be saved when they turn to Jesus as a totally shattered people.

The book’s claims need to be judged on how the author uses Scripture – is he fair, is he careful, is his exegesis grounded, etc. In most of these areas the book comes out sorely lacking.

The author repeatedly refers to the importance of exegesis (drawing or leading the meaning out of the text in the original languages). Here are some quotes which indicate his appreciation for exegetical accuracy:

Yet the rub is that in this book the author never conveys any exegetical argumentation which is based on the original Hebrew or Greek etymologies. He never appeals to the original meanings of biblical words in the original languages. His arguments are logical constructs based on his own understanding of the English text. This is praiseworthy in itself, but it cannot fairly be defined as exegesis. Therefore his stress on the importance of exegesis to his theologizing seems to be overstated.

Twisting on the Bed of Procrustes

In actuality, the author has made a category error, confusing the two terms ‘exegesis’ and ‘exposition.’ In one place Lifsey states that “‘Exegetical’ means ‘expository’” (p. 15). But these two terms are not synonymous, and the author’s theological teachings cannot be accurately described as based on exegesis.

Lifsey engages in the cherry picking of negative scriptures. Foreboding passages describing ‘the Time of Jacob's Trouble’ definitely do exist. They must be reckoned with, and are sobering in the extreme. Yet simultaneously the author studiously avoids those scriptures which present a differing and positive slant on Israel in the Last Days (e.g., Psalm 110:3; Ezekiel 37:9-14; Isaiah 11:14; 41:14-16; Zechariah 12:6-9 et al). The author does not welcome or offer Middle Eastern hospitality to these positive evidences, for their presence at the table would force a drastic reconsideration of his primarily negative message. More care, accuracy and intellectual honesty are needed here on the author's part.

Another striking example affects one of the author’s main hypotheses. Lifsey posits a total destruction of the Jewish State and of its capitol city Jerusalem, as well as a near total abandonment of Jerusalem. He bases his hypotheses on Zechariah 14. Yet a more careful reading of that passage reveals that Lifsey is not reflecting all that Zechariah is saying.

While Zechariah 14:1, 2a describe Jews being exiled from half of Jerusalem, verse 2b states that Jewish people will continue to live in the other half of Jerusalem. The author downplays this and other scriptures which do not fit into his larger eschatological scheme. The literary term for this hermeneutical process is “Procrustes’ bed” (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Procrustes).

The author twists scripture frequently in order to avoid clear biblical statements which would cause his hypotheses to disintegrate. Coming to Joel, Isaiah and Jeremiah (some examples) with his own preconceptions (that God cannot initiate an ultimate Jewish restoration to the Land before Israel repents), he twists the clear words of Scripture to mean the opposite of what they actually say (Isaiah 11:11 – pp. 161-65; Amos 9:15 – pp. 144-46 and 113-14; Jeremiah 30-31 – pp.191-202; Joel 3:1 – pp.203-6).

In these above examples Lifsey is using the opposite of exegesis (leading the correct meaning out of the text). What he is doing is actually called eisegesis (leading a non-original meaning into the text, which overwhelms and blocks what the text itself is communicating).

Weakness in interfacing with a biblical theology of Israel’s calling

Lifsey’s book does not base its theological constructions on the solid foundation of biblical teaching regarding Israel’s priority calling (as revealed in such scriptures as Genesis 12:3; Deuteronomy 21:15-17; Number 23:7-9; Romans 1:16 and 2:5-11 etc.). One could call this the heart of the matter, for what is being discussed is not a game of Russian chess but the heart of God. Years ago I taught a series at the Anaheim Vineyard titled “Touching the Father's Heart for Israel.” I have found that apart from a revelation about God’s tender heart for His people, all theologizing on Israel ends up losing the stamp of passion and authority.

It would be accurate to say that this book views the Jewish people’s history and destiny not through the primary lens of God’s loving strategy and heart attitudes, but through the monolithic prism of the covenantal judgments and curses of Deuteronomy 28.

Were the biblical foundations of God’s bridegroom love for Israel in proper place in this book, its superstructure might have had a better chance of standing firm.

An obsessive-compulsive hermeneutic

Four of the book’s philosophical underpinnings are:

These strongly asserted philosophical presuppositions are all slightly off kilter. Let’s consider the matter.

Theology makes for strange bedfellows

Lifsey has adopted an “all or nothing” approach to Last Days’ prophetic scriptures. From his perspective, no return to the Land has the imprimatur of God unless Israel repents before that return.

Of course, there are a few logical problems with this position. Do the Jews repent first in Exile and only then return to Israel? But if they have to repent before they can return to Israel, what do we make of the biblical passages that talk about a Last Days’ repentance in Israel? That means that Jews are living in Israel and also repent in Israel.

And what about the biblical passages that describe a Jewish repentance in the Diaspora? Evidently the matter has various shades of subtlety here, many more than Lifsey might have led us to believe. One must be careful to avoid the temptation which an Old Testament professor of world renown once described for me, “Cutting the baloney so thin that there is only one side!” For more help, read chapter 17 in my book “Israel the Key to World Revival” (available at www.davidstent.com), especially the sub-section titled “Which comes first – the chicken or the Teshuvah”

Interestingly, and for the purposes of this discussion, two groups can be considered in this regard which insist on a dogmatic “all or nothing” approach to the fulfillment of Messianic prophecy. One group is Rabbinic Judaism, which refuses to accept a process of fulfillment in Isaiah 53 (especially as it pertains to Yeshua). A second group is the ultra-Orthodox sect Neturei Karta (“the guardians of the city” of Jerusalem, in Aramaic), which refuses to accept the theological validity of the modern State of Israel (for most of the same reasons as Katz and Lifsey, by the way!).

Nothing less than a Messianic kingdom descending deus ex machina would be acceptable to these rigid guardians. Neturei Karta refuse to acknowledge the authority of secular Jews in the State of Israel, but are quite willing to accept the oversight of cruel and murderous terror taskmasters like Yasser Arafat and his PLO/PA, Hamas and the Islamic Republic of Iran.

Neturei Karta believe that Islamic and Arab hatred of Israel is deserved, and is due to the Jewish people’s lack of repentance. According to their own beliefs, they strongly believe that the Jewish people should never have set up a secular state. They should have instead become ultra-Orthodox Jews. They refuse to accept the validity of the State of Israel due to the same reasoning.

Note the similarities between Neturei Karta’s views and Lifsey’s positions:

To sum up, this book invalidates the modern Jewish State as a positive work of God because, according to the author's logic, secular Israel refuses to wholeheartedly embrace Yeshua.

However, most secular Jews in Israel do not often think about Yeshua, and are not even sure that there is a God, or if He cares. Most have never heard the gospel, and some are quite open to the claims of Yeshua's Messiahship. It is actually the followers of Rabbinic Judaism who live for the most part in a cloistered community hermetically sealed (mostly!) against the Good News.

Ironically, it seems that Lifsey is proclaiming that secular Israel is guilty because the Rabbinic community refuses to accept Yeshua! This is another significant category error.

One of the book’s endorsers writes, “With the two-fold danger of replacement theology and what I would call ‘un-sanctified Zionism’ in the Church we need voices of truth to emerge” (p. iii). The position advocated by this man is that simple-minded lovers of Israel are as much of a danger to the cause of Christ and His kingdom, as are those Christians who deny the Jewish people’s gifts, calling and election. This is a skewed emphasis of significant proportions.

Double standards lead to double vision

Lifsey's book harps vociferously on Israel’s sin and rebellion, while the ungodly nations of the world are referred to in far less strident terms. Lifsey nowhere proclaims the burning judgments of God on New Zealand or America with the same passion as he targets Israel. This is what is known as a double standard. Jewish people would label it an anti-Semitic tendency.

A more balanced treatment of the whole subject would not only refer to Israel’s sins but also refer to Israel’s victories. A more balanced treatment would not only mention the rebels within the Jewish people, but would also mention her outstanding Jewish prophets and apostles. A fair treatment would do better at honoring Israel, and would stress that being Jewish does not equal being a reprobate sinner! It would make sure to strike a balance in reminding its readers that Gentiles can also be outstanding sinners in both quality and quality. In that this book gives a quite unbalanced impression on these matters, it would be fair to ask if the tone of this work could lead readers to mistake this book for anti-Jewish propaganda.

The book's focus on “Israel's deserved judgment” is hard to blend with Lifsey's declaration that believers are mandated to stand with this “disobedient” people in their suffering. I suggest that more foundational work needs to be done in this area, because the logical, ethical and emotional inconsistencies between the two above-mentioned issues create the need for exceptionally sensitive pastoral counsel. When Jews get typecast as hostile infidels, one cannot simply issue a “mandate” (p. 210) to sacrifice yourself for them, and expect people to embrace that teaching with their full heart and mind.

I dreamed I saw Saint Augustine

Some of the theological presuppositions in the book are strikingly reminiscent of Saint Augustine’s less than positive declarations about the Jewish people. Augustine of Hippo was the first who recast the Jewish people’s “chosen people” status into the status of being chosen for persecution, conquest and exile. According to this North African Church Father, the Jewish people’s present role on earth is that of an unrepentant infidel groaning under the punishment and discipline of God.

“So to the end of the seven days of time, the continued preservation of the Jews will be proof to believing Christians of the subjection merited by those who, in the pride of their kingdom, put the Lord to death” (St. Augustine, Contra Faustum, 12.12, www.newadvent.org/fathers/140601.htm)

“But of the enemies themselves what? ... The Jews nevertheless remain with a mark ... Not without reason is there that Cain, on whom, when he had slain his brother, God set a mark in order that no one should slay him. This is the mark which the Jews have: they hold fast by the remnant of their law, they are circumcised, they keep Sabbaths, they sacrifice the Passover; they eat unleavened bread. These are therefore Jews, they have not been slain, they are necessary to believing nations” (Homilies on the Psalms, 59, 18).

One scholar has said, “It’s difficult for a modern reader to see (Augustine’s) doctrine as anything less than dehumanizing, reducing the Jews to little more than God’s pawns for furthering Christianity” (www.patheos.com/blogs/godandthemachine/2012/05/unwilling-witnesses-st-augustine-and-the-witness-doctrine/).

“Augustine’s purpose (...was...) to remind (the Jews) of just how evil they were in their past history and that their existence at large today has nothing to do with their claims to personal virtue or religious merit ... Augustine was very clear that the Jews’ present existence was tolerated by God for the purpose of authenticating the Christian religion and serving as a sign of His continuing judgment against the Jews” (Robert Sungenis, The Bellarmine Report; www.catholicintl.com/index.php/component/content/article/34-conversion/258-a-review-of-paula-fredriksens-qaugustin-and-the-jewsq).

Compare Augustine’s above-quoted words and views with selected quotes from Lifsey’s book:

Note in this regard a quote from Robert Baer, former CIA case officer in the Directorate of Operations from 1976 to 1997 (www.chronogram.com/issue/2006/02/news/index.php):

In light of the murderous consequences of anti-Semitic language on the part of the Church Fathers, every follower of Messiah Yeshua must exercise (at the very least) a modicum of discernment, gentleness, humility and love in discussing the Jewish people, their gifts and calling, and God’s unswerving heart of a Lover for them. The above quotes, while not exhaustive, show that the tenor of this book falls rather short of conveying God’s compassion and passion for Israel as described in Deuteronomy 7:7-8, in Hosea 11:1-4, 8-9 and in Hosea 14. The author has much to learn about how to engage in normal human conversation with real Jews on these subjects.

The reader of this book comes away having read precious little of God’s tender love for Israel. Au contraire, he has received a barrelful of tainted verbiage (like “gruesome judgment” and “vengeful anger”) which leave a toxic residue. The reader reads page after page of descriptions characterizing the Jews as the enemies of God, but he would be hard-pressed to find a truly tender call in this book to intercede for Jacob's progeny with tears (though a few attempts to do so are made in passing, scattered like the occasional used tissue in a handful of places throughout the book).

As a Jew I was offended and angered by the condescending and strident tone of the book. Though I believe and have always taught that God will purify His beloved people through both wooing and judgment, reading Lifsey's book was somewhat similar to peering through a distorted looking-glass into a hostile and unfriendly corner of a bizarre parallel universe.

Ramifications of this teaching – chilling the intercessory heart

The harsh and rebuking tone of this book has the potential to chill the hearts of intercessors who love and pray for Israel. Since (according to this book) the present State is merely a divine setup for God’s aktion against His own people, then why pray for Israel’s physical protection or spiritual benefit? If the Jews are simply a rebellious people and there is no spiritual awakening going on of any significant value with them (according to this book), then why pray for them?

The prophet Isaiah can help in restoring hope, heart and vision, “In all their (the Jewish people's) afflictions He was afflicted” (Isaiah 63:9). When we understand that God suffers with His people as they go through suffering, we will approach the subject of ‘the Time of Jacob's trouble’ with far gentler hands and with more tender words (see Isaiah 40:1-2“Comfort, comfort My people, … Speak to the heart of Jerusalem”).

Ramifications of this teaching – jamming the watchman’s radar

The confusion set loose by some of this book’s teachings could cause doubt to enter into the spirits of some prophetic watchmen, and make them wonder if they have really heard from God regarding His love and purposes for His people Israel.

A case in point can be illustrated by a prophetic word from Bob Jones, who in December 2006 declared that there are two issues that are holding back judgment from falling on America, and that if and when these positions change, judgment will be instant. The two issues are – standing with Israel, and love for the poor.

Yet if the central hypotheses of Lifsey's book are true, then standing with Israel today could be potentially “arrogant”  and “ignorant” (p. 69). It could even lead to “deception,” says Lifsey, because a pro-Israel position is fraught with “disastrous consequences in the generation of the Lord’s return” (p. 69).

In this matter, if Lifsey is right, then Bob Jones’ prophetic word is wrong.

But the converse is actually true here. Lifsey is off-course, and Bob Jones has delivered the word of the Lord to America.

Stop using Israel as a prophetic chess piece

Shunning Israel

Here is an extended quote from our February 2, 2010 newsletter. It still rings true today, and especially in this context:

“I regret to say that some believers have a detached heart regarding Israel. Their thought (and heart) processes would unfold something like this: they correctly observe that many in Israel turned away from following the Davidic dynasty (1 Kings 12:16-19), or turned away from honoring the prophets (Jeremiah 7:25-26), or again turned away from embracing King Messiah Yeshua when He came at His first appearing (Matthew 23:37-39).

As a result, these believers relate to Israel with a sense of offense, turning a cold shoulder and an even colder heart away from the Jewish people. This attitude is often blended with a false sense of spiritual superiority, ‘We Christians are not like these bad Jews. We follow Christ and we obey the truth. But as for these people, they obviously don't!’

From this skewed perspective, when tragedies happen to the Jewish people – like the Holocaust, pogroms, or Arab wars of annihilation waged against Israel – these brothers and sisters often respond, saying that we can be assured that such evils were prophesied against Israel in Deuteronomy 28, and that these events demonstrate that Israel is still not redeemed – that we are not yet in the decisive period of God's favor for the Jewish people.

As well, many would add that God cannot allow Himself to show any real favor to Israel until He has totally ‘broken the power’ of His own set-apart yet stubborn people (Daniel 12:7). Such believers would be hesitant about openly admitting that God is in the process of restoring His Jewish people to Zion. The present State of Israel, for these believers, might or might not have any theological significance or divine value.

For these believers it seems easier to theologically explain attacks against the Jewish people and their state, than to support the Jewish people and their state against such attacks. When anti-Semitic assaults are more easily justified than pro-Jewish restoration efforts, something is definitely wrong with this picture.”

Ramifications of this teaching – serious consequences

Any teaching that fosters a cold heart regarding the restoration of Israel in our day; any teaching that typecasts the Jewish people as calves to the slaughter awaiting divine destruction; any teaching that detaches intercessory and prophetic hearts from engaging with the Jewish people and the Jewish state in the here and now – I must confess that I have great concern for the spiritual blowback that attends such teachings, and for the spiritual wellbeing of those who disseminate such things. Let us pray for these people and about these matters!

Stirring up unbalanced controversy

As I said at the outset, the benefit of this book lies mainly in that it may get more believers to become aware of some of the deep challenges confronting Israel. This in turn could lead some into deeper intercession.

The liabilities (which potentially are many) have been explained throughout the body of this newsletter and do not need to be repeated here.

How can we pray?

Your prayers and support hold up our arms and are the enablement of God to us in the work He has called us to do!

In Messiah Yeshua,

Avner Boskey

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BOX 121971 NASHVILLE TN 37212-1971 USA

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