Reading the Bible with Rabbi Jesus: How a Jewish Perspective Can Transform Your Understanding
Rate it:
Open Preview
3%
Flag icon
In the past few decades, we’ve been realizing that Jesus has been overly cast within Greco-Roman society to the neglect of his Jewish context.
5%
Flag icon
What a thought—that as much of a hurdle as it seems to travel back in time to the Emmaus road, the gap between us and the biblical world is actually wider culturally than temporally.
6%
Flag icon
“Come up to me on the mountain and be here.”
6%
Flag icon
If a person exerts himself and ascends to the summit, it is possible to reach it, while not being there. He stands on the summit of the mountain, but his head is somewhere else.
8%
Flag icon
In the biblical world, youth was seen as a disadvantage.
9%
Flag icon
Daniel and his friends had become “fatter in flesh than all the youths who ate the king’s food” (emphasis added).
9%
Flag icon
To search the Bible for secrets for slimming down is to read it upside down and backward of what it meant in its time.
10%
Flag icon
In much of the world, it would be shocking that the farmer didn’t share his windfall with his community.
10%
Flag icon
What defines you are your relationships, and what orders your life are your responsibilities to others, not your personal freedom to do what you like.
12%
Flag icon
The act of anointing with sacred oil emphasized that it was God himself who had ordained a person and given him authority to lead his people and act as his representative.
12%
Flag icon
In simple terms, we could say that “Jesus Christ” means, “Jesus, God’s chosen King.”
12%
Flag icon
Christians can’t miss God’s remarkable words about him: “I will be his father, and he will be my son” (v. 13 NIV). This “Son of David” would be the Son of God!
14%
Flag icon
When a new king was crowned, the euanggelion was the announcement that the monarch had taken the throne, that a new kingdom had taken power.
14%
Flag icon
Strictly speaking, the gospel, the euanggelion, is simply that God had appointed Jesus as his chosen King. This was why Paul was utterly focused on preaching the “euanggelion of Christ” and spoke of himself as his “ambassador” to the Gentile world.
16%
Flag icon
it simply isn’t possible to perfectly reproduce a painting with a different palette and different brushes.
16%
Flag icon
Why Hebrew? Well, Hebrew is God’s heart language—the mother tongue of the Scriptures Jesus read.
17%
Flag icon
Although the New Testament was written in Greek, it was composed almost entirely by Jews growing up in a Semitic-thinking culture. Often Hebrew’s deep, rich pigments diffuse through, showing evidence of the writer’s original “accent.”
17%
Flag icon
Martin Luther shares a wise thought with us: If I were young, I would contrive a way and means for the perfect learning of the Hebrew tongue, which is both glorious and profitable, and without which the Holy Scriptures cannot rightly be understood; for although the New Testament be written in Greek, yet it is full of the Hebrew kind of speaking, from whence it is truly said, “The Hebrews drink out of the fountain, the Grecians out of the springs that flow from the fountain; the Latins out of the ponds.”6
18%
Flag icon
In Hebraic thought, the “fear of the Lord” (yirat Adonai7) is better understood as an awe and reverence for God that causes us to want to do his will.
18%
Flag icon
Over the ornate cabinets that hold the Torah scrolls is the phrase Know Before Whom You Stand.
19%
Flag icon
Without having the word stingy, Hebrew speaks of being “tight-fisted” or of having a “bad eye”—being unable to see the needs of the person right in front of you.
20%
Flag icon
To “remember their iniquity” is the same as to “punish their sin.”
20%
Flag icon
the Hebraic idea of “remembering sins” really encompasses the idea of seeking revenge for sins, not just knowing about them.
22%
Flag icon
Israel was not untouched by Hellenism, but the Judaism of Jesus’ day retained much of its traditional, Hebraic, Middle Eastern pattern of thought.
23%
Flag icon
Our culture is a master of droning prose. We believe that religious speakers are effective when they can string out long arguments to defend their points, when they can persuade by the force of argument—this for us is theological sophistication. But this view betrays an important Western prejudice, that storytelling cultures are less sophisticated than prose cultures like our own. They are not!
23%
Flag icon
Jesus, rather than Paul, was the major theologian of the New Testament.
23%
Flag icon
“In the Middle East, from the beggar to the king, the primary method of creating meaning is through the creative use of metaphor and story,”
25%
Flag icon
Throughout the Bible, “dust” signified insignificance or finiteness.
27%
Flag icon
we often conduct our advanced discussions in the abstract rationalism of theology and don’t check to see if the Bible actually confirms our ideas.
27%
Flag icon
The book of Acts, I’ve found, is a great place to ground speculation about how Jesus’ words were interpreted by his original disciples.
28%
Flag icon
Jewish believers in Jesus were careful to observe the Torah, and were known for their avid observance (Acts 21:20, 25). They even asked Paul to sponsor a sacrifice in order to show his commitment to living by the law (v. 24).
28%
Flag icon
Through God’s name he was proclaiming how he would reveal himself: “I will be known by what I do.”
29%
Flag icon
The Shema, however, is a recollection of history, a reminder of the oath that established Israel’s relationship with God.
29%
Flag icon
As important as creeds are, what brings us into relationship with God is not a creed but the covenant Christ enacted that night.
30%
Flag icon
In many cultures in the world, a family line is essential to have any identity at all.
31%
Flag icon
This family-centric logic is behind the importance of all the “begats” of the Bible.
32%
Flag icon
First, we assume that the overall goal of marriage is to satisfy romantic longings, and the purpose of a marriage covenant is to legitimize a sexual relationship.
33%
Flag icon
“To the eunuchs who keep my Sabbaths, who choose the things that please me and hold fast my covenant, I will give in my house and within my walls a monument and a name better than sons and daughters; I will give them an everlasting name that shall not be cut off.” (Isa. 56:3–5)
33%
Flag icon
But in God’s glorious kingdom, those who choose to serve him will receive an eternal legacy even more enduring than sons and daughters. He will graft them into his own family tree, and they will never be cut off.
33%
Flag icon
Abraham is the “father of all who believe but have not been circumcised,” in the sense of being the archetype and prime example.
34%
Flag icon
There is neither Jew nor Greek, slave nor free, male nor female, for you are all one in Christ Jesus. If you belong to Christ, then you are Abraham’s descendants, and heirs according to the promise.
34%
Flag icon
Paul’s focus was not on each person individually but rather on the body of believers as a whole.
35%
Flag icon
When I allowed God to make this promise to the ancient people of Israel instead of to me, I got to see God’s tremendous, redemptive love.
35%
Flag icon
But I keep one eye on the original listeners all the while, trying to think about them too.
35%
Flag icon
Individualism is highly prized in Europe, and perhaps nowhere more so than in America; in Africa, it is synonymous with unhappiness, with being accursed. African tradition is collectivism for only in a harmonious group could one face the obstacles thrown up by nature.
36%
Flag icon
There, the word shem is much more about one’s identity within a community than the verbal label that a person bears, like “George,” “Bill,” or “Mary,” even though the word shem does mean “name” in that sense too.
36%
Flag icon
To speak “in the name” of someone is to speak by his or her authority.
36%
Flag icon
Collectivist cultures that emphasize “honor” and “shame” are really thinking in terms of shem in the biblical sense.
36%
Flag icon
This is why the word shem is sometimes translated as fame, renown, reputation, authority, or honor rather than name.
37%
Flag icon
When the Scriptures talk about God giving a person a “new name,” it denotes that they are being given a new status in society.
« Prev 1