Posted by
Bob Siegel on Tuesday, January 22, 2008 1:17:45 PM
They called themselves Jews for
Jesus. I knew nothing about them,
absolutely nothing. And I knew nothing about Christianity itself. For that matter, even though I was raised
Jewish, I knew nothing about Judaism. In fact, I grew up as an atheist. How can
one have an atheistic background and a religious background at the same time?
Allow me to correct one of the greatest misconceptions about Jews: It is
often thought they are a people who believe in the Old Testament, but not the
New Testament. Nothing can be further from the truth and it was certainly not
true of me. Actually, most Jews do not believe in either one. Oh, many will
claim to accept the Old Testament but they don’t. Not really.
As you know, Judaism has three major sects (just as Christianity has one
hundred and fifty-three thousand different sects). In Judaism, they are called;
Reformed, Orthodox and Conservative. Although the Orthodox Jews verbally
ascribe to the Old Testament (or Holy
Scriptures, as they call it) in fact, they have a large set of commentaries
entitled The Talmud and The Midrash which interpret what these
scriptures actually mean. Talmudic and Midrash teachings were originally handed
down orally and were finally put to writing a number of years after the Romans
destroyed Jerusalem. Eager, zealous
Christians often show their Jewish friends some Old Testament prophecy,
supposedly predicting the coming of the Messiah and allegedly fulfilled by Jesus. Much to their surprise, they hear the words,
“That’s your interpretation. Our wise
rabbis over the years have told us what this really means.” So yes, they are claiming to accept The Holy Scriptures as the Word of God, but what the rabbis say the scriptures mean
is what they mean. It is similar to Mormons, who say they believe in the
Bible but who really believe in Joseph Smith’s interpretation of the Bible or the interpretation of their other
prophets.
With Reformed Judaism, (the brand I was born into) theology is much
simpler: The Reformed Jews have more in common with liberal Christian
denominations (members of the World Council of Churches) than they do with the
Bible. At a Reformed Synagogue, the emphasis is
kind of hit and miss. The Rabbi
may indeed expound upon some scriptural passage, but he is just as likely to
preach about something he read in the newspaper. He (or she) views Judaism more
as a community and less as a literal doctrine. You see, to many, Judaism is every
bit as much a culture as a religion. And to some, Judaism is only a culture. One can be an atheist
and still be considered Jewish by a Reformed Rabbi. I myself was raised by atheistic parents.
Later in life they did turn Orthodox, but while I was growing up, I heard that
God did not exist and the Bible was a book of fairy tales. I was also taught
that being Jewish was very important. My Jewish education informed me about
Zionism and about the horrors of the Holocaust. I learned all about
Anti-Semitism. I learned nothing about
God. To put it quite bluntly, as a Reformed Jew, I was taught by my parents
that I may believe anything I wanted, so
long as it wasn’t Jesus.
“Jesus” was a forbidden word in our household. If the subject even came up at the table, my
father would shout, “I will not allow that name to be mentioned in the house!”
In defense of my dad, his reaction was understandable. From Constantine to Hitler, Jews have been
forced from sword point to gun point to either convert or die. In some cases (the Nazis most specifically)
even Jews who became Christians were put to death. Racism knows no bounds.
Now, here I was, in the year 1973, nineteen years old, staring at a Jews for Jesus poster on a college
campus. Evidently these dudes had come out to the campus to publicize their
meetings. I had heard of the freaks but had never actually encountered them. Oh
sure, I had dialogued with a few other nut-case Christians but I knew of Jews For Jesus only through name and
rumor. Actually I did not even witness their presence on this occasion.
(Perhaps they came by night to put up the poster) But however the poster got
there, I was enraged by it. I thought Jews for
Jesus were traitors. I thought Jews for Jesus were cowards, hoping to
avoid future Anti-Semitism by “selling out.” I also thought they were idiots.
In fact, I thought anyone who made such a big hullabaloo about a man who had
been dead for two-thousand years was naïve at the very least and moronic at the
very most.
I was a commuter student at the time, living at home with my folks,
experiencing my second year of San Jose City College, where I
hoped to get my General Ed out of the way before transferring to San
Jose State University as a
Drama Major. This was the only field I knew, theater. But religion? I didn’t
know the Bible from the back of my hand. Like most people, this did not keep me
from forming opinions about the Bible.
Ironically, there was already a passage of scripture that applied to my
arrogance.
A fool finds no pleasure in understanding
but delights in airing his own opinions.
Prov 18:2
Are you catching the irony here? I
knew nothing about Judaism or Christianity! I knew nothing about religion at
all! But fools aren’t interested in learning, only in expressing their opinions
and I expressed my opinion with extra finesse.
I bought some construction paper and a great big felt pen. Then I made a
sign of my own. I had never made a sign in my life, but I made this one and I
was quite proud of it. My sign, (which I pinned up right next to Jews for Jesus), said, “How about people
for people?” I thought the sign
displayed unparalleled brilliance and philosophical wisdom. Still, had you
asked me what my sign actually meant,
I would not have been able to tell you. It looked good. It sounded good. It meant nothing, absolutely nothing.
Discussing the sign with two women students, (friends whom I had also
known in High School) I told them how much the sign enraged me and how fed up I
was with Christians who could not keep their stupid religion to themselves. I
told these friends of mine I would
rather go to hell than become a Christian even though I did not believe Hell
actually existed.
One day later, I committed my life to Jesus Christ. One week later I went
back to my lady friends and told them they should give their lives to Jesus. You should have seen the expressions on their
faces. As the old saying goes, “Their jaws dropped down so low, they could suck
marbles out of a gopher hole.”
How did my conversion come about so quickly, so dramatically and against
such tremendous odds?
Read the rest of Bob’s testimony in tomorrow’s blog entry.
All Scripture taken from THE HOLY BIBLE
New International Version
NIV
Copyright 1973, 1979,
1984 by International Bible Society
Used by permission of Zondervan Publishing House.
All rights reserved.
Other related posts:
Why Are There Different Versions of the Bible?
Posted at 9:28:29 AM
on
Friday, January 18, 2008
Why
This Evangelical Christian Minister Does Not Support Huckabee Posted at 5:24:28 AM on Saturday, January
05, 2008
So What If He's A Mormon? Posted at 4:05:11 AM on Sunday, December 16,
2007
Was Joseph Smith Really a Prophet of God?
Oh, That Horrible Christianity!
Posted at 4:53:43 AM on Thursday, December
13, 2007
Is The DaVinci Code Something to be Taken Serliously?
How Does One Become a Christian?
Are Christian Ministers Just In It For The Money?
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