Netivyah Bible Instruction Ministry
Jerusalem, Israel
ISSUE 34 FEBRUARY 2016 / ADAR 1 5776
The Synagogue
INSIDE THE SYNAGOGUE AND MESSIANIC JUDAISM | CHAPPATI TO CHALLAH | CHOSEN PEOPLE
The Synagogue
Teaching rom Zion
ISSUE 34
he Institution of the Synagogue and Its
Impact on Early Messianic Judaism
JOSEPH SHULAM . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
FEBRUARY 2016 / ADAR 1 5776
Published by Netivyah Bible Instruction
Ministry, Jerusalem, Israel
4
Layout: Anne Mandell
From Church Liturgy to Synagogue Liturgy
YITSHAK KUGLER. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 11
he articles printed in this issue of Teaching rom
Zion are the sole responsibility of their authors.
Feel ree to contact us at fz@netivyah.org.il or by
mail at PO Box 8043, Jerusalem 91080, ISRAEL.
Synagogue Worship by Jewish Disciples
DROR SHANNON. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 12
More Information
Website: www.netivyah.org
Youtube: www.youtube.com/netivyahisrael
From Chappati to Challah
JAI RUBIN . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 15
www.facebook.com/netivyah
he Chosen People
ELHANAN BEN AVRAHAM
. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 16
Rabbi Daniel Zion z"l
JOSEPH SHULAM . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 18
Rooted in the House of the Lord
EMILY SHKEDI. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 20
Synagoga vs. Ekklesia
SOLOMON INTRATER . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 21
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Teaching from Zion
FEBRUARY 2016 / ADAR 1 5776
About Netivyah
Netivyah in Hebrew means “the Way of the Lord.”
“he Way” was one of the names by which the
early community of believers was known in the Brit
Chadashah (New Testament). Paul says: “… According to
the Way which they call ‘sectarian,’ I do serve the God
of our fathers, believing everything that is accordance
with the Torah, and that is writen in the Prophets” (Acts
24:14). As followers of “the Way,” we believe in the God
of Israel, the God of Avraham, Yitzchak, and Ya’akov. We
try to be faithful to God’s law (the Torah) and to the rest
of Scripture—the Prophets and the Writings. We believe
that the Messiah promised in God’s word is Yeshua
(Jesus), the one who “saves His people rom their sins”
(Mathew 1:21).
News from Netivyah
W
e m ay
say that
t h e
building project is
inished. Although
there are still more
littl e thin gs that
must be done and
many new things that
already need ixing, the
frustration level is high
but the inal approval
from the municipality
is almost in our hands. We so deeply appreciate everyone
who has prayed and contributed inancially to make this a
reality. Some gave much and others prayed more. All of you
dear brothers and sisters are measured equally by the Lord
and He who gives life to all will bless you according to His
everlasting mercy and truth. hank you all for your goodness
and generosity standing with us and with Israel.
he building is however in full use. We have celebrated
the Biblical Holidays this Fall and it was such a pleasure to
worship here. Altogether we had more than 200 people attending, and many of them had to be sent downstairs to the
fellowship hall, where there is a large screen that enables us
to extend the services from the sanctuary. his is how we can
accommodate large groups of people. But there were also
many people standing upstairs because all the chairs were
being used even downstairs. May God be praised!
here are two new congregations connected to Netivyah,
born in the last couple of months. One is just outside Helsinki
in Finland, the name of which is “Shepherd of Israel”, just
like us in Jerusalem. he second is in Vitoria, in the state of
Espirito Santo, Brazil. Both count more or less 50 adults, a
great number for starting a new congregation. Please keep
them in your prayers. he congregation in Finland was actually started by children of believers who have been committed to the restoration of the New Testament Church for
some 30 years. Miika, a teacher and founding member in this
congregation is the son of one of my teachers at Lipscomb
University, Dr. Tim Tucker!
www.netivyah.org
his is a real fulillment of the blessing in Psalm 127:5–6,
“he LORD bless you out of Zion, and may you see the good
of Jerusalem all the days of your life. Yes, may you see your
children’s children. Peace be upon Israel!”
Please pray for all of Israel and for the Christian Arabs in
Israel, in the West Bank, in Syria, Iraq, and in Gaza. We must
show both physical and spiritual solidarity with our brothers
and sisters and also with the State of Israel as it is honestly
seeking peace with our Arab neighbors. We want peace but
we are not naive or suicidal. We won’t allow the jihadist organizations like Hamas, Hezbollah, and ISIS to succeed. Pray
for real and lasting peace, based on mutual recognition. Pray
that the Palestinian Authority would recognize the Israel as
the national homeland of the Jewish people. he only “wrong”
that we are doing is defending ourselves and our God given
right to live in the Land that God gave to Abraham.
One of the things we need you to pray about is the overall
growth spiritually and numerically in all our congregations.
Also, pray for inspiration and zeal for our young leadership.
It is hard to inherit a position in leadership after one like
me. he qualiications needed are hard to ind, but Netivyah
is fortunate enough to have wonderful young families who
were raised in the congregation and who are not only capable, but better equipped than me and my generation. he
future of the Jewish people in relationship to Yeshua and to
Christianity is rapidly changing for the better. he younger
leaders will be faced with new challenges and opportunities
that will enhance the importance of the GOOD NEWS and of
YESHUA in the Jewish World and therefore inluence greatly
general Christianity as well. Finally, pray for the children in
our congregations. hey are our most precious cargo.
I prefer not to share about new inancial needs of Netivyah in this issue of Teaching from Zion, I just give thanks
to God for you who have given so lovingly and liberally for
the building project. I ask you to continue praying for us and
for Israel. Our Father in Heaven bless each and every one of
you with His bounty and goodness, and with grace and truth!
Joseph Shulam
NETIVYAH BIBLE INSTRUCTION MINISTRY
Teaching from Zion
JULY 2015 / TAMMUZ 5775
3
BY JOSEPH SHULAM
The Institution of the
Synagogue and Its Impact on
Early Messianic Judaism
uring the era of the Second Temple period, the synagogue was an established institution in the Jewish
community in both the land of Israel and in the
diaspora. It was the place where the people assembled for
the divine service. he synagogue also served as the center
for all the community’s cultural and religious activities. As
Jews returned rom the Babylonian and Persian exiles, they
brought a new approach to the religion of their ancient
forefathers. he diaspora was instrumental in developing
a religion that centered on the community experience.
During the First Temple Period, the levitical priesthood and
the Temple were the exclusive centers of religious activity.
D
After the destruction of the Temple and the subsequent diaspora, the Word of
God—the text of the Torah—became the most signiicant instrument for discerning the will of the Almighty. he priesthood and the urim and tumim were replaced
by the text of the Torah and the Prophets, which became the means by which a
man could know what God required of him. We can see the signs of these changes
in the book of Nehemiah 8. In this book, Ezra and the Priests read the Torah with
the intent to obey upon their return from the Babylonian exile. his knowledge
and understanding of the Word of God became central in the Jewish community
experience during the Second Temple Period. We see here the birthplace of the
synagogue as the place of gathering for the main purpose of the public reading
and hearing of the Word of God.
We must note that in what is commonly called the “Old Testament” there
is no mention or hint of such an institution as the synagogue. he synagogue is
strictly a Second Temple Period institution. By the time of Yeshua, however, it was
4
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FEBRUARY 2016 / ADAR 1 5776
already fully grown and developed. It is
interesting to note that the Apostles recommend that even gentiles who believe
in Yeshua attend the synagogue on the
Sabbath day in order to hear “Moses”
being read publicly.1
We should also note that there is a
basic diference between the worship
in the Temple and in the synagogue.
he Temple is an innately holy institution that receives its holiness by virtue
of the fact that God dwells therein and
it houses the holy implements of God.
he synagogue has no such holiness attributed to it. It is a place to conduct
“public business.” he signiicance of the
synagogue was that it was regarded as
the assembly of the local Jewish community, giving expression to the civic
and communal spirit of the people of
that community. he word “synagogue”
itself means “a gathering place.” It served
as the rallying-point of the community
in the land of Israel and in the diaspora.
By the beginning of the irst century
ce, synagogues existed in most of the
cities and villages of the land of Israel.
he Gospels witness that there were
synagogues in Nazareth, Capernaum,
elsewhere in the Galillee, and in Jerusalem. Josephus mentions synagogues in
Ancient synagogue at Capernaum, Israel
Tiberias, Dor, and Caesarea Maritima,
while Philo of Alexandria says that there
were many synagogues in Alexandria
and in Rome. he book of Acts speaks of
synagogues in Damascus, Antioch, Salamis in Cyprus, Iconium, Ephesus, hessalonica, Beroea, Athens, and Corinth.
Archaeologists have found inscriptions
in Greek from Mount Ophel in Jerusalem, Corinth, Korazin, and Capernaum.
he Jerusalem Talmud speaks of a multitude of synagogues in Jerusalem.2
Origins
he origin of the synagogue is sometimes attributed to the Babylonian Exile
and texts are brought from Ezekiel3 and
Jeremiah4 to substantiate this position.5
According to Prof. S. Safrai, these texts
do not have any connection with the
institution of the synagogue. he synagogue was rather instituted during the
third century bce for the main purpose
of reading the Torah and teaching it to
the people. It was as much an institution
in the land of Israel as it was in the diaspora. he evidence is that synagogues
existed in Jerusalem side-by-side with
the Temple and were not a replacement
of the Temple following its destruction.
www.netivyah.org
he New Testament evidence supports this position. hus we read in 15:21
that “from early generations Moses has
had in every city those who preach him,
for he is read every Sabbath in the synagogue.” Josephus and Philo further support the evidence from archaeology and
from the tanaaitic sources that the main
purpose for which people gathered in
the synagogue was to read and study
the Torah.
We see in Luke 4 that Yeshua read
from the Prophets in the synagogue in
Nazareth and then sat down to expound
on the text and explain its meaning. he
New Testament is consistent with the
evidence that other Jewish sources present as to the activities that took place
in the synagogues of the irst century.6
In the heodotus inscription we read:
“heodotus the son of Vettenus, priest
and archisynagogus, son of the archisynagogus and grandson of the archisynagogus built the synagogue for the reading
of the Torah and the study of the commandments …” 7 his inscription stands
as unprejudiced evidence of the fact that
synagogues were built for the purpose of
the “reading of the Torah and the study
of the commandments.”
When one seeks to see what Yeshua
and the Apostles did in the synagogues
the overwhelming evidence is that they
read from the Torah and teaching or expounded its meaning to the crowd:
And Jesus went about all Galilee,
teaching in their synagogues,
preaching the gospel of the kingdom,
and healing all kinds of sickness and
all kinds of disease among the people. (Matthew 4:23)
hen Jesus went about all the
cities and villages, teaching in their
synagogues, preaching the gospel of
the kingdom, and healing every sickness and every disease among the
people. (Matthew 9:35)
Now when He had departed from
there, He went into their synagogue.
And behold, there was a man who
had a withered hand. And they asked
Him, saying, “Is it lawful to heal on
the Sabbath?”— that they might accuse Him. (Matthew 10:9–10)
And when He had come to His
own country, He taught them in their
Teaching from Zion
FEBRUARY 2016 / ADAR 1 5776
5
synagogue, so that they were astonished and said, “Where did this Man
get this wisdom and these mighty
works? “Is this not the carpenter’s son? Is not His mother called
Mary And His brothers James, Joses,
Simon, and Judas? “And His sisters,
are they not all with us? Where then
did this Man get all these things?”
(Matthew 13:54–56)
hen they went into Capernaum,
and immediately on the Sabbath He
entered the synagogue and taught.
And they were astonished at His
teaching, for He taught them as
one having authority, and not as
the scribes. Now there was a man
in their synagogue with an unclean
spirit. And he cried out, saying, “Let
us alone! What have we to do with
You, Jesus of Nazareth? Did you
come to destroy us? I know who
you are—the Holy One of God! (Mark
1:21–24)8
And He entered the synagogue
again, and a man was there who had
a withered hand. So they watched
Him closely, whether He would heal
him on the Sabbath, so that they
might accuse Him. (Mark 3:1)
And when the Sabbath had come,
He began to teach in the synagogue.
And many hearing Him were astonished, saying, “Where did this Man
get these things? And what wisdom
is this which is given to Him, that
such mighty works are performed
by His hands! (Mark 6:2)9
he New Testament is full of texts
which speak of the synagogue as the
community meeting place. In fact, the
letter to the Hebrews gives a warning
to the readers “not to neglect to meet
together.” he Greek word used here
is, επισυστώμεν. In the New Testament
the word “church” or ἐκκλησία is not
used as a “place” but as a people or a
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Teaching from Zion
community. he word συναγωγή is often used as a place of meeting. It is my
opinion that looking into the New Testament more closely will reveal to the student the distinction today between the
“church” and the “synagogue.” It is also
my opinion that this diference is the key
to understanding the relationship between the ἐκκλησία and the συναγωγή.10
hese two institutions were not mutually exclusive one; they had a symbiotic
relationship because the ἐκκλησία was
“people” and in most common usage the
συναγωγή was the place of worship. he
ἐκκλησία could worship anywhere and
there were times when it worshiped in
the συναγωγή together with members
of the Jewish community, who were not
followers of Yeshua. To demonstrate this
point let us look at the letter to Jacob
(James). We read in Jacob 2:1–8:
My brethren, do not hold the
faith of our Lord Jesus Christ, the
Lord of glory, with partiality. For if
there should come into your assembly a man with gold rings, in ine apparel, and there should also come
in a poor man in ilthy clothes, and
you pay attention to the one wearing
the ine clothes and say to him, “You
sit here in a good place,” and say to
the poor man, “You stand there,” or,
“Sit here at my footstool,” have you
not shown partiality among yourselves, and become judges with
evil thoughts? Listen, my beloved
brethren: Has God not chosen the
poor of this world to be rich in faith
and heirs of the kingdom which He
promised to those who love Him?
But you have dishonored the poor
man. Do not the rich oppress you
and drag you into the courts? Do
they not blaspheme that noble name
by which you are called? If you really
fulill the royal law according to the
Scripture, “You shall love your neighbor as yourself,” you do well.”
An analysis of this text from the let-
FEBRUARY 2016 / ADAR 1 5776
ter to Jacob ( James) reveals some interesting facts. he people who are addressed are followers of the Lord Yeshua
our Messiah. hey have an “assembly”—
the Greek word is συναγωγή υμων—
“your synagogue.” he word συναγωγή
is used here in its irst century Jewish
context.11 In the same “gathering”/“synagogue” there are believers and also
unbelievers: “Do not the rich oppress
you and drag you into the courts? Do
they not blaspheme that noble name by
which you are called.”
he most common use of the word
“church” today is for a building—not for
a people or for a gathering of the community. In the New Testament, the word
church never means a “building,” nor
“an institution,” nor “an organization”—
it always means “a people.” he normal
word for the gathering of the saints in
the New Testament is “synagogue.”12
Note that there is no such a terminology as “going to church” or “worshiping
in church” in the New Testament. When
the writer of the letter to the Hebrews
wants to encourage the readers not to
forsake their assembly he uses the word
“epi-synagogen”13
Various texts in the New Testament
describe what believers did when they
gathered together in the context of the
synagogue:
And they continued steadfastly
in the apostles’ doctrine and fellowship, in the breaking of bread, and
in prayers. hen fear came upon
every soul, and many wonders and
signs were done through the apostles. Now all who believed were
together, and had all things in common, and sold their possessions and
goods, and divided them among all,
as anyone had need. So continuing
daily with one accord in the temple,
and breaking bread from house to
house, they ate their food with gladness and simplicity of heart, praising God and having favor with all the
people. (Acts 2:43–46)
So, when he had considered this,
he came to the house of Mary, the
mother of John whose surname was
Mark, where many were gathered together praying. And as Peter knocked
at the door of the gate, a girl named
Rhoda came to answer. When she
recognized Peter’s voice, because of
her gladness she did not open the
gate, but ran in and announced that
Peter stood before the gate. But they
said to her, “You are beside yourself !”
Yet she kept insisting that it was so.
So they said, “It is his angel.” Now
Peter continued knocking; and when
they opened the door and saw him,
they were astonished. But motioning
to them with his hand to keep silent,
he declared to them how the Lord
had brought him out of the prison.
(Acts 12:12–16)
Now when they had come and
gathered the church together, they
reported all that God had done with
them, and that He had opened the
door of faith to the Gentiles. (Acts
14:27)
Now on the irst day of the week,
when the disciples came together to
break bread, Paul, ready to depart
the next day, spoke to them and continued his message until midnight.
here were many lamps in the upper
room where they were gathered together. And in a window sat a certain
young man named Eutychus, who
was sinking into a deep sleep. He
was overcome by sleep; and as Paul
continued speaking, he fell down
from the third story and was taken
up dead. But Paul went down, fell on
him, and embracing him said, “Do
not trouble yourselves, for his life is
in him.” Now when he had come up,
had broken bread and eaten, and
talked a long while, even till daybreak, he departed. (Acts 20:7–11)
How is it then, brethren?
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What most evangelicals do in their
congregations today is very close to the
things that happen in the synagogue.
Whenever you come together, each
of you has a psalm, has a teaching,
has a tongue, has a revelation, has an
interpretation. Let all things be done
for ediication. (1 Corinthians 14:26)
Let us examine what the believers
of the irst century did when they gathered together.
π hey prayed
π hey broke bread together
π hey reported the miracles that
God had done for them
π hey sang songs and psalms
π hey gathered money for the poor
saints of Judaea
We know that the Jewish believers
in Jerusalem also went to the Temple to
pray. Paul was puriied in the Jerusalem
Temple from a vow he had taken, and he
also ofered sacriices. he picture that
the New Testament gives of what the believers did when they gathered together
and how they worshiped is not so diferent from what Jews who did not believe
in Yeshua. In fact, what most evangelicals do in their congregations today is
very close to the things that happen in
the synagogue. In the synagogue people
pray, study the Word of God, give of their
means, and sing. Are these not the very
same things that people do in the Protestant and Evangelical churches today?
In the Second Temple Period there
were two main models for worship and
service to God. he standard model
of the Torah was the “temple” and
“priestly” model. In this model, the individual worshiper is dependent on the
“temple” and the “priest” who links the
worshiper to God. In this model there is
a “holy precinct” which has innate holiness attributed to it. In order to have a
“temple” you must have something that
gives it “physical holiness.” he buildings are holy, as are the tools and instruments of worship and service, and
the priests who serve are also holy. he
worshiper who goes to the temple has
very little to do himself. he priest does
the major part of the “work”/“service.”
he synagogue, on the other hand, is
the “assembly of the people.” Each person can worship for himself. Each person can know the will of God by studying the Torah. Each person is equal to
the person standing or sitting next to
him. Each person can be a leader of the
congregation and serve before the Lord.
he centerpiece of holiness is the Torah
itself and there is no need for a “relic” or
a mystical presence to provide a cover of
“holiness.” he occasion and the people
are holy in the synagogue and not the
buildings or the precinct. he synagogue
is a place—it has no ecclesiology. he
people who gather there and make up
the community are the “people of God”
and the community! In the synagogue
the community is the main thing and
the structure of the community is designed to function in every aspect of life,
not only in “worshiping God.” Because
in Judaism there is no division between
the common/mundane and the “spiritual,” everything from the education of
the children to the burial of the dead
becomes a part of the community concern, i.e., the synagogue.
Eight pillars have kept the Jewish
community alive even during the darkest of dark periods of Jewish history:
π Mikveh ( for family purity laws)
π Torah schooling for children
(Heder)
π Torah adult education (Beit Midrash)
π he soup kitchen (Beit Tamchui)
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FEBRUARY 2016 / ADAR 1 5776
7
Outwardly, the public gatherings and the
functioning of the early church was no
different than the synagogue, but inwardly
these two differences brought about a great
difference—as well as some problems.
he burial society (Hevra Kaddisha)
π Alms giving to the poor (Tzadaka)
π Slaughter house ( for slaughtering
kosher meat)
π Beit din (a court for settling grievances in the community)
When we talk about New Testament
ecclesiology, we should look at the community of the followers of Yeshua in light
of the synagogue. he ekklesia did the
following things—things that churches
today are just beginning to understand
and do, praise the Lord.
π hey studied: “And they continued steadfastly in the apostles’
doctrine.”
π hey ate together and worshiped
God: “And they continued steadfastly in the apostles’ doctrine
and fellowship, in the breaking
of bread, and in prayers.”
π hey took care of their poor by
sharing their wealth: “Now all
who believed were together, and
had all things in common.”
π hey gave of their money for the
poor.14
We do not know much about the
burial practices of the early church,
but we do know that they had some
organization for burial of their members. We can learn this from the story
of Ananias (Acts 5). After he died the
Word says: “And the young men arose
and wrapped him up, carried him out,
and buried him.”
he early church’s function was
nothing less than a synagogue. But it
was also much more than a synagogue
π
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Teaching from Zion
because it had additional dimensions
provided by the Holy Spirit. hese were
related to the diferences provided by
faith in Yeshua and by the inclusion of
the gentiles into the family of God’s children. hese two areas of diference make
the church of the New Testament much
more than a man-made institution like
the pharisaic synagogue. We should not
forget that the synagogue is not a Torah. he Torah knows of no such institute as a synagogue; the synagogue was
established by the Jewish community
without a direct command from God.
If the synagogue has any divine sanction it was received a posteriori. When
God poured out on the early church His
Holy Spirit and opened His gates to the
nations, the community of followers of
Yeshua changed. Outwardly, the public
gatherings and the functioning of the
early church was no diferent than the
synagogue, but inwardly these two differences brought about a great diference—as well as some problems.
If we look at the ecclesiology of the
early church in the categories of sociology and theology, we should see that on
both of these grounds a great similarity
and also a great diference both exist.
he similarity of the early church and
the synagogue is in “form” and “style.”
he diference between the two is in theology and gifts of the Holy Spirit which
have enabled the church to communicate with God and serve the community
with God’s power delivered by the gifts
of the Holy Spirit.
I have demonstrated up to now that
the synagogue was an important insti-
FEBRUARY 2016 / ADAR 1 5776
tution in the life of Yeshua the Messiah
and in the life of the early church. But
the question must now be asked: Do the
Torah and the Pharisees who put themselves as the guardians of the Torah have
any authority for us as followers of Yeshua the Messiah? his question could
have some interesting answers if we ignore one very important passage from
the words of Yeshua: “hen Jesus spoke
to the multitudes and to His disciples,
saying: “he scribes and the Pharisees
sit in Moses’ seat. “herefore whatever
they tell you to observe, that observe
and do, but do not do according to their
works; for they say, and do not do” (Mt.
23:1–3). Do these words of Yeshua have
any meaning for us today? And if they
do, how do they apply after both Judaism and Christianity have developed almost beyond compare or recognition
from the reality of the irst century?
hese questions are not easily dismissed
without a major compromise of the respect which the Word of God deserves.
he seat of Moses was a physical
seat stationed in synagogue—it would
be something like a pulpit in the average
church. he seat of Moses was the place
where the Rabbi would sit when he explained the Torah and made halachic
rules. Whatever these words of Yeshua
mean, it is clear that they do give the
Pharisees of the irst century, at least,
the authority to interpret the Scriptures
in some binding way. Yeshua was a Pharisee. In his doctrine Yeshua was a Pharisee. He believed that angels exist, and
in the resurrection from the dead. he
strong words that Yeshua had for the
Pharisees in Matthew 23 and in other
discussions were not words for the enemy. Yeshua’s criticism of the Pharisees
was of someone who cares for the “company.” It is the criticism of someone who
cares that things should go right in every
situation. Yeshua criticized the Pharisees because he wanted to see them doing the right things for the right reasons
and with the right motives. According to
this text, Yeshua believed that the Phar-
isees were teaching the true interpretation of the Torah—but they were not
doing it for the right reasons.
Modern Context
he implications of the understanding of this text for the Messianic Jewish
Movement are far-reaching. If Yeshua is
giving the Pharisees the right to interpret Scripture with authority, it means
that when they, or their descendants,
interpret the Torah their interpretation
of halacha (because Yeshua said that his
followers should do what they are told
by them) has some meaning for us today. In today’s Jewish context today the
group which is setting the tone for faith,
morality, and Jewishness are the descendants of the Pharisees—the Orthodox
Jewish community. he members of
the Messianic Movement in America
have attached themselves to the more
“Reform” type of Jewish expression because most of the Jews in the movement
have come from a “Reform” type of Judaism. It is my opinion that the “Reform”
movement today is much more equivalent to the Sadducees than to the Pharisees of the irst century ce. If the Messianic Movement wants to remain a Jewish movement, the model for worship
and for expression of our faith in Jewish terms ought to come from the more
traditional and more authentic Jewish
community. his, of course, goes without question in Israel, where the majority of God believing Jews are Orthodox. he “Reform” and “Conservative”
Jews in Israel are a minority and they
are almost in the same situation as the
Messianic Movement far as civil rights
are concerned. So, when we are talking
about having Messianic synagogues and
discuss the question of tradition, style,
and interpretation of Scripture, should
we not hear what Yeshua was teaching
his followers in Matthew 23?
We should further note that there is
no record in the Word of God that the
Apostles, the Elders, or the members
of the church in Jerusalem or Corinth,
www.netivyah.org
Ephesus, Smyrna, or Rome, attended
the local Baptist, Pentecostal, or Presbyterian churches. We do have record
that the believers, Jews and Gentiles,
attended the synagogue of their choice
even after they were cast out of a few
such places of worship. It was the custom of the Apostle to the Gentiles, Saul
of Tarsus, to attend the synagogue every Sabbath. he Book of Acts gives us
ample evidence that this is what he did,
even when he was away from home, and
when he came into a new city.15 I often
times wonder how those Jews would
have allowed the Apostle Paul to come
into their synagogue, particularly if he
was dressed in a brown habit with a
hood hanging on his back and a large
olive wood cross on his chest, looking
real Christian. Can you imagine such
a thing?
he Jews invited him to read from
the Torah and “reason with them from
the Scriptures, explaining and demonstrating that the Messiah had to sufer
and rise again from the dead.” he only
way I can imagine this happening is if
the Apostle Paul looked like a Jew, acted
like a Jew, and spoke Torah like a Jew.
he “early church” was, in their meetings
and fellowships, a synagogue. In fact,
there is ample evidence both in the New
Testament and in the Talmudic sources
that Jewish believers and Jews who did
not believe in Yeshua continued to worship together until well into the second
century ce. It is a well-established fact
that what is called “Birkat haMinim”
in the Amida prayer was composed after the Bar Kochba rebellion precisely
for this reason. his prayer was composed to separate and expose those
who believe in Yeshua as the Messiah
and the Son of God from the crowd in
the synagogue. here would be no need
to compose such a prayer if the Jewish
followers of Yeshua did not attend the
synagogue with their “unfaithful” Jewish brothers. he relationship between
the church and the synagogue became
complicated mainly because the syna-
gogue rejected the Jewish followers of
Yeshua—not because these Jewish believers wanted to leave. Most of the contacts, and in fact converts, of the Apostle
Paul were made through the synagogues
where these believers were invited to
preach and reason with the Jews about
the Scriptures and what they teach
about the Messiah. his was the case in
Pisidian Antioch, as well as in Ephesus,
Corinth, Lystra, Derbe, Iconium, Berea,
hessalonica, etc. 16
he church has repaid the synagogue for this behavior a thousand
times over, and with such animosity
and hate that our fathers and mothers
were sent into the gas chambers which
smoked next to the church steeples
during the beautiful fall, and summer,
and springs of Europe. Yet although the
synagogue did expel the followers of Yeshua from the Jewish community the
question which now needs to be asked
is: How should we make our way back to
the synagogue and bring Yeshua home
with us? An even more basic question
should be if we should return back to
the synagogue, or just join the “church”
of our choice. In so doing, we continue
to propagate the myth that when a Jew
believes in Jesus he stops being a Jew
and his seed is lost from the commonwealth of Israel. It is this writer’s opinion
that with the restoration of the Jewish
people to the Land of Israel, we have a
sign that God does not want the Jewish
nation to be deleted from the face of His
earth. If God’s purpose is truly to restore
His people we must ask ourselves: What
should the role of the church be in promoting and helping restore the Jewishness of the Good News that Yeshua is the
Messiah of Israel and the world? How
can we—as Jewish believers—help bring
unity and biblical faith to our Gentile
brothers and sisters who are at least as
much captive to their traditions as we
are of ours?
In the irst century ce the synagogue
was the place where Jews and god-fearing Gentiles gathered to discover the
Teaching from Zion
FEBRUARY 2016 / ADAR 1 5776
9
The church without the synagogue
is only a shadow of itself.
will of God, through the reading of the
Torah.17 he synagogue was where Paul
met the Jews and the Gentiles who were
interested in God and in His Word. Today, after traveling in more than 40
countries and teaching about the Jewishness of the New Testament, I am convinced that what is going on around the
world is the work of the Holy Spirit and
that Gentile brothers and sisters all over
the world are looking again towards the
synagogue and towards the Jewish followers of the Messiah. hey want to rediscover their own connection and faith
in the God of Israel and in the historical
Jesus whose name in Hebrew is Yeshua.
In the irst century the synagogue provided the stage and meeting place for
the early church in the diaspora. It was
the only place where both Jews and nonJews could go every Sabbath to hear the
Word of God the Torah being read. It
was the only place where followers of
Yeshua could have fellowship with other
people who are not “pagan” and believe
in the One and only God of Israel who
created the world and everything that
is in it.
The Bridge
In today’s situation I believe that the
Messianic synagogue, if it is authentically a synagogue and authentically
Messianic, can again become a bridging place and conduit for both Jews and
Christians to ind a common ground
and a path to return to our true faith and
common heritage. God has preserved
both the church and the synagogue for
a reason. I believe that this is the restoration of both peoples into His will and
goal for all mankind. he church without the synagogue is only a shadow of
itself. It can be only an empty shell that
is more easily swayed into idolatry than
into turning to the knowledge of God
10
Teaching from Zion
and Yeshua His Son. he synagogue
without Yeshua is also a form without
the true substance of God’s Spirit and
without any biblical means for atonement. hese two great historical institutions need each other desperately—
and the Messianic Jews ought to be the
bridge between them.
he challenge of the messianic community and movement today is not in
the use of “semantics” and outward
forms. he challenge is in building biblical communities in which the expression of Jewishness is authentic, true, and
traditional, so that both the Jewish community and the church can identify us
as Jews who believe and follow Yeshua
as our Messiah. his is a big challenge
and, frankly, I do not see much hope in
my generation that it will be met. My
generation of Messianic Jewish leaders
is like the generation wandering in the
wilderness. While we were educated
and raised in Egypt we can build the infrastructure for those that follow us so
that they will not be a part of the Christian denominational world or need to
accommodate the divisions and creeds
of those who have traditionally hated
us. We can do this by building congregations which are authentic and independent, together with educational institutions which will train the next generations of leaders to be 100 percent Jews
and 100 percent followers of Yeshua.
I must say in closing that already
many gentile Christians have realized
these ideas and are giving of themselves
to see them realized. If the Messiah Yeshua does not come back soon, the next
generation of leaders in the Messianic
Movement will hopefully be diferent,
better, more authentic, and better educated in Judaism and in Bible than my
own present generation of leaders. Let
us all pray that God’s plan will be known
FEBRUARY 2016 / ADAR 1 5776
and accomplished for both the church
and the synagogue. Because ultimately,
we are one in the Messiah as He and the
Father are One.
Endnotes
1 See Acts 15:19–21.
2 Palestinian Talmud Megillah 3I, 73d
3 Ezekiel 11:16: “hough I removed them far of
among the nations, and though I scattered
them among the countries, yet I have been
a sanctuary to them for a while in the countries where they have gone.”
4 Jeremiah 39:8: “the house of the people.”
5 S. Safrai, he Jewish People in the First Century (Van Gorcum / Fortress Press 1987),
909–911.
6 Talmud Bavli Megillah 29a; P.T. Megillah 4, 75a,
Philo, De Vita Moses II, 215–6; De Opiicio
Mundi 128; Josephus, Contra Apion 2.175.
7 R. Weill, La citè de David I (1920), 1f; T. Reinach, “L’ inscription de heodotos,” in REJ 71
(1920), 46–56; CII no. 1404.
8 he word “synagogue” appears several times in
this chapter (cf. verses 21, 23, 29, 39).
9 We see the same context also in Luke 4:15 as
well as other texts which relect the fact that
Yeshua visited the synagogues in the Galilee
to “teach” from the Word of God.
10 he word synagogue appears 61 times in the
Nestle Aland edition of the Greek New Testament.
11 Johannes P. Louw and Eugene A. Nida (eds.),
Greek-English lexicon of the New Testament
based on Semantic domains: “Synagogue.”
12 See the previous footnote and the list of
references there for the use of the word
“synagogue.”
13 See Hebrews 10:25: μὴ ἐγκαταλείποντες τὴν
ἐπισυναγωγὴν ἑαυτῶν, καθὼς ἔθος τισίν,
ἀλλὰ παρακαλοῦντες, καὶ τοσούτῳ μᾶλλον
ὅσῳ βλέπετε ἐγγίζουσαν τὴν ἡμέραν.
14 See 1 Corinthians 16:2; 2 Corinthians 9; Romans 15:27.
15 See Acts 17:1–2.
16 Acts 13:14f, “But when they departed from
Perga, they came to Antioch in Pisidia, and
went into the synagogue on the Sabbath
day and sat down. And after the reading of
the Law and the Prophets, the rulers of the
synagogue sent to them, saying, “Men and
brethren, if you have any word of exhortation
for the people, say on.” hen Paul stood up,
and motioning with his hand said, “Men of
Israel, and you who fear God, listen: “he
God of this people Israel chose our fathers,
and exalted the people when they dwelt as
strangers in the land of Egypt, and with an
uplifted arm He brought them out of it.”
17 See Acts 15:19–21.
BY YITSHAK KUGLER
From Church Liturgy
To Synagogue Liturgy
hen I irst started to visit the Netivyah
Congregation, as it was called in those days,
the service was just about like any Bible Church
service. here were some songs, a reading rom the Bible
and the sermon, which was the major part of the service.
here was talk of being Jewish and the implementation of
Synagogue worship but for years nothing was done.
W
One year I came to visit the congregation on a Shabbat morning to ind that
things had changed. Asher Intrater, who had become one of the elders of the congregation, had introduced a new format of worship that was based on Synagogue
liturgy. To help the worshipers ind their way in the new service, a duplicated
sheet was handed out with the page numbers and the Messianic songs that were
to be sung.
he Torah scroll, which until then had not been used, was taken out and several
of the aliyot (calls for reading) were done with the traditional prayers before and
after each reading. In those days only a few were capable of reading the text in the
Torah scroll without the punctuation marks, and only one was able to do so even
according to the cantillation marks; his name was Joseph Vactor. Most of those
who were called up would read the blessings before and after, while the designated
reader would do the actual reading.
Martha Stern, with several women in the congregation, made a parochet (the
veil that is on the front of the Ark where the Torah Scrolls are kept), which is still
in use today. he words in Hebrew “He is our mercy seat” are embroidered along
the top. In the center is a large seven branched menorah, and on either side appear two pillars reminding us of those that were in front of the Temple. Along the
bottom, the words “I have set the Lord before me always” are embroidered in gold.
Today the service is similar, though some things have developed. We now
have full sets of prayer books and the Cantor has a much more prominent role in
www.netivyah.org
the service. A great deal of the service
is sung directly from the Siddur (traditional prayer book). Classic Messianic
songs are sung only seldomly. More often than not it is young men of the congregation who are called up to read from
the Torah. Somewhere along the line a
reading from the New Testament was introduced, which is read after the Haftorah. We have three men who assist the
Cantor in singing. hey lead from the
front facing the Ark, making a big difference in the congregational singing.
Once there was a break-in to our
auditorium and the one Torah Scroll
was stolen. he burglars apparently
intended to set the building on ire as
they left behind six bottles illed with
gasoline. Amazingly, the Lord provided
two Torah Scrolls and a scroll containing the Haftorah readings after this incident. In one case, an anonymous lady
who visited the congregation only a few
times heard about the theft of our Torah
Scroll and left in her will ten thousand
dollars to purchase a new one. Because
of the theft, the insurance company requires us to keep the scrolls in a ireproof safe. his safe is very heavy and
the veil had to be broadened to it the
new “Ark.”
Teaching from Zion
FEBRUARY 2016 / ADAR 1 5776
11
BY DROR SHANNON
Synagogue Worship
by Jewish Disciples
hy pray rom the siddur in exactly the same
manner as do other Jews in their synagogues?
he simplest response is to answer that question with another question: Why would anyone think they
should pray in any other manner? Ater all, Jewish messianists are, irst and foremost, Jews who are devoted to
an Israeli rabbi as their master teacher.
W
Further, we ind in the apostolic writings, in Acts 2:42 – “hey were continually
devoting themselves to the apostles’ teaching and to fellowship, to the breaking of bread
and to prayer.” A detail that rarely, if ever, appears in English translations is that
the inal phrase in the Greek text includes a deinite article, as a reference to “the
prayer”, which was a commonly recognized reference to the Amidah.
hus, Rav Yeshua’s disciples were devoted to praying in accordance with the
traditional Jewish prayer formulation. Indeed, the prayer taught to them per their
explicit request, often called “he Lord’s Prayer,” represents a brief summary of the
Amidah and associated traditional prayer phrases which also have been incorporated into the traditional liturgy that has been passed down to Jews throughout
our generations.
he essential deining point of the modern paradigm of Messianic Judaism is
that its adherents are Jews who behave Jewishly, who embrace their perception of
a Jewish Messiah in that manner and who embrace their participation within the
Jewish enterprise along with all of their fellow Jews. Any diiculties that may exist
currently in explaining and demonstrating how Rav Yeshua’s teachings are actually
supportive of that approach to spirituality, in the face of common misperceptions
of him and of his teachings, do not detract from that fundamental deinition and
religious model.
Much of this article will describe the beneits we may derive from following the traditional liturgy and worship as we do. hose beneits include, among
12
Teaching from Zion
FEBRUARY 2016 / ADAR 1 5776
others, the joy of knowing that we are
obediently following a spiritual path developed by people of wisdom who have
been exceptionally devoted to the instructions given to the Jewish people by
G-d Himself. In addition, we have the joy
of touching history, of connecting with
the culture and practices of our people,
reaching across literally thousands of
years and many generations.
he shape of contemporary Jewish
worship is rooted in Second Temple
Judaism. hree of the core sections of
the Shabbat morning liturgy, the Shm’a
(Deuteronomy 6:4–9), the Amidah or
Sh’moneh ‘Esreh (18 Blessings), and the
Torah reading service, may be dated as
far back as the return from exile in some
nascent form.
he Shm’a, a declaration of G-d’s singularity, is foundational to the life of the
Jewish community in the face of competing religious and political ideologies in the ancient world. he Sh’moneh
‘Esreh is the substitution of prayer for
Temple sacriice, when Jews outside of
Jerusalem would gather for prayer at the
same time as the Temple sacriices. he
Sh’moneh ‘Esreh would continue, even
after the destruction of the Temple, as
a reminder of this center of the Jewish
The Dramatic Structure
of the Prayer Service
he service serves metaphorically as
a weekly re-enactment of G-d’s revelation to Israel of the Torah at Sinai. We
announce to whom we are coming to
worship and prepare ourselves for worship. We sing songs along the way to the
mountain of revelation. We declare who
we are worshiping and ofer our sacriice
of prayer as we ascend the mountain.
In the Torah Service, we hear from God
through the Torah, and the Haftarah
(and also the apostolic writings) as G-d
meets us on top of the mountain. Finally,
in the Musaf we are sent back down the
mountain to live out that word in G-d’s
creation working in expectation of the
day when G-d’s kingdom will be fully realized on earth.
A second metaphor for understanding the service is thinking about worship as the drama of entering the Temple or the throne room of the King. he
synagogue remotely mimics the Temple service for those who could not attend services at the Temple in person. In
Ancient Israel, the Temple was seen as
G-d’s palace, the place from which G-d
ruled all of creation. Outside the gates
of the Temple we orient ourselves towards the One we are coming to meet in
that space and what is going to happen
www.netivyah.org
The synagogue remotely mimics the
Temple service for those who could not
attend services at the Temple in person.
there through praying. he hymns, poems and Psalms are recited as we move
towards the throne room of the King. On
the edge of the throne room, we declare
who is our ruler by reciting G-d’s gifts of
creation, revelation, and redemption in
the Shm’a and its blessings. Before entering, we ofer our sacriice of prayer in the
Sh’moneh ‘Esreh. After hearing His word
to us, inally in the Aleinu prayer of the
Musaf, we accept the yoke of the Kingdom of Heaven in expectation of that
kingdom’s realization and as a mantle
of service in the world.
eted, ranging from simple communications directed toward the heavens to
request help or express gratitude, to
more complex expressions of praise
or thanksgiving, and to deeper interactive spiritual expressions of meditation, self-examination, intercession,
and even prophecy. Traditional Jewish
prayer services in its structure particularly supports the pursuit of awe and
honor toward HaShem and His purposes, including the establishment and
preservation of a community known as
the Jewish people.
Meaning of Prayer
Commonality and Kavanah
he text serves as a springboard that
propels the worshiper toward higher
purposes. Practically speaking, the collected prayers with which we become familiar in the siddur also form a compendium of Jewish thinking, outlook, and
doctrine. hey remind us of a variety of
Jewish interests and concerns derived
from our historical experience as well
as from the spiritual instructions that
we have received from HaShem in the
form of Torah and prophetic writings.
Jewish prayer expresses its efects in
three dimensions, vertical, horizontal,
and relexive. he vertical represents
the “I/hou” relationship between the
individual and HaShem. he horizontal
represents the expanding circles of people around us, from our own friends and
family members, to our local community and to the larger society including
governmental or business entities and
others. he relexive represents the ways
we inluence ourselves, our own soul, by
the thoughts we think, the feelings we
feel, and the actions we perform.
he deinition of prayer is multi-fac-
While there exist a number of siddurim
(traditional prayer books), which vary
in the exact content of the standard
prayers, all of them may be traced back
to the siddurim that were compiled in
the ninth century CE by Amram Gaon
(~850 CE) and Saadya Gaon (~900 CE),
both of Sura, Babylon. hese siddurim,
in their turn, relect elements recorded
in earlier Jewish literature, demonstrating that they were not a new invention
so much as they were an attempt to
capture and codify longstanding common prayer practice that previously was
passed along only by the continuing experience of synagogue worship throughout generations. Of course, there has
been some growth and development
along the way, including the addition of
a variety of inspirational poems along
with the Psalms that were already part
of its recitation.
In modern Israel, some attempts
have been made to integrate previously
diverse versions into a more common
liturgy, though subcultural distinctions
can still be found between Ashkenazic
Teaching from Zion
FEBRUARY 2016 / ADAR 1 5776
13
WIKIMEDIA COMMONS/PUBLIC DOMAIN
community. he public reading of Torah with interpretation dates back to
at least the time of Ezra (see Ezra 7:20),
and it was a central component of synagogue worship on Shabbat and market days (Monday and hursday) by
the time of Rav Yeshua (see Luke 4:16f;
m. Megillah 3:4).
hese three components gradually became united with the morning
blessings (Birkot HaShachar), the liturgical poems, songs and Psalms (P’sukei
D’Zimra) and a series of concluding
prayers (Musaf). In contemporary Messianic Jewish worship these sections
constitute the bulk of Shabbat morning worship.
at other times the congregation will join
together in singing praise.
Queries for Future
Consideration
Men praying in Rachel’s Tomb Synagogue in Jerusalem.
and Sephardic compilations. he selection of a siddur is one of the elements
that will characterize the cultural lavor of the synagogue community that
prays with it. Traditionally observant
congregations are more likely to exhibit commonality than those which feel
compelled to innovate or to accommodate the unfamiliarity of their audience
with the common procedures. It is my
hope, as Jewish messianists continue
their religious development, that their
prayer-services also may come into
greater conformity with other traditional congregations.
he ixed order of prayers and phrasings in the siddur provides structure
and commonality and coordination of
prayer by a community that prays together in one accord. Such a community
is in agreement in prayer. Rav Yeshua
noted the inherent beneit of this when
he said, “Again I say to you, that if two of
you agree on earth about anything that
they may ask, it shall be done for them by
My Father who is in heaven.” (Matthew
18:19) he formulations of the siddur
permit a praying community to function
together, better than either silent or unstructured extemporaneous prayers can
support. However, for all its beneits, order and commonality alone are not suficient. How can a written prayer become transformed into a real one? he
answer is found in the concept of kavanah (i.e., intentness, directedness, focus,
sense of purpose, intensity of feeling)
that an individual worshiper applies to
that text.
14
Teaching from Zion
Maimonides himself ruled, though
this was not instituted by later codiiers, that “since prayer without kavanah
is no prayer at all, if one has prayed without kavanah he has to pray again with
kavanah. Should one feel preoccupied or
overburdened, or should one have just
returned from a voyage, one must delay
one’s prayer until one can once again pray
with kavanah … True kavanah implies
freedom from all strange thoughts, and
complete awareness of the fact that one
stands before the Divine Presence” (Yad
Teillah 4:15, 16). One who prays must
enter into it personally, contributing
to it a sense of self, which can only be
done via conscious participation. We
seek to live out this commitment by
having many diferent people involved
each week in worship, from children to
adults, from congregational leaders to
community members.
In a standard synagogue structure,
we are seated around the worship platform, which allows us to connect with
one another in worship. People leading
our worship come out from the midst of
our community and go up to the bimah
to lead prayers, to sing, to read scripture, or to address the congregation. he
leadership of our community’s worship
emanates from the center of our community. All of us, congregation, leaders,
assistants (and even possibly a choir)
are directed towards the Holy Ark in
which resides the Torah. In our worship,
we seek to create a responsive interaction. Sometimes the cantor will lead us
into worship through his or her voice,
FEBRUARY 2016 / ADAR 1 5776
here is one more, somewhat delicate,
matter yet to discuss in the context of
the content of traditional synagogue
services. Even if a given synagogue
community of Jewish messianists were
to employ all elements of the traditional
services in their entirety, there remain
some questions for this or any Messianic
Jewish community to address. hese include questions about whether to interpolate additional material not found in
the traditional format, and if so; how
and where to do so.
For example, is there speciic material relating to the notion of the “new”
(or renewed under the auspices of the
Messiah) covenant that might be beneicial? Should we add quasi-Hasidic
practices such as dancing, and perhaps
even some version of the modern charismatic practice of prophecy or other
spiritually-gifted ministry? Or are some
of these elements already present, latent in the existing structure, awaiting
only our emphasis and interpretation to
make them apparent? Are any speciic
capabilities that should more properly
be administered in a diferent congregational or private venue? Some forms of
dancing or congregational singing can
successfully supplement and enhance
the worship context. Some teaching,
springing from the Torah or Haftarah
context, borders already on the edges of
prophecy. here are already a few places
in the traditional context that are open
to healing emphases and could be elaborated further (not just in the middle of
the weekday Amidah).
In sum, each thing that is done has
implications and consequences and
these must be evaluated in consideration of how speciic congregational
practices are developed or discouraged
to formulate a comprehensive presentational and functional package.
From Chappati to Challah
DOLGACHOV/BIGSTOCK.COM
BY JAI RUBIN
G
rowing up in apartheid South Africa as a Hindu,
I did not initially come in contact with people of
other religions. Years later, while in a very dark time
I came to believe in Jesus through a newspaper advertisement
and attended Church services every week and read the Bible
for the irst time. When I came across the word “synagogue”
in the New Testament I was fascinated. When I asked one of
the elders about the Synagogue, I was told to keep reading and
one day I would understand.
Easy Challah
π
π
π
π
π
π
π
1½ cup boiled water
½ cup plus 1 tablespoon sugar
4 teaspoons active dry yeast
5 cups wheat lour
1¾ teaspoons salt
2 large eggs
1⁄3 cup oil
Directions
In a large dish mix 1 tablespoon sugar with ½ cup boiled water. As soon as sugar is dissolved, sprinkle 4 teaspoons of active dry yeast and let it rest for 10 minutes. It will froth and
rise, then add the sifted lour, salt, sugar, 1 egg, and the oil.
Mix and add 1 cup water to make dough.
Turn onto loured surface, knead until you have a good
www.netivyah.org
Now I live in Israel and attend the Synagogue of Roeh Israel. My journey from Hindu temple to church to synagogue
has lead me to understand that I am still a Gentile but have
been grafted in. A Gentile cannot become a Jew and a Jew
cannot become a Gentile. But if some of the branches were
broken of and you, a wild olive shoot, were grafted in their
place to share the rich root of the olive tree, do not boast over
the branches. Remember that it is not you that support the
root but the root that supports you.
soft dough, not sticky. Oil the dish, put the ball of dough into
it, cover with plastic wrap and leave in the refrigerator overnight.
Next day, take the dough out of the refrigerator and punch
it down and shape into either 3 small, 2 medium or 1 large
challah. Cover with plastic and leave it back in the refrigerator to rise. For each challah divide into 3, 4 or 6 strands and
then braid it to form a loaf. Remove from refrigerator and let
it stand out for 30 minutes to get to room temperature.
Heat oven to 375° F. or 190° C. When oven is ready brush
the top of the loaves with a beaten egg and sprinkle with your
choice (sesame seeds, poppy seeds, raisins, honey, cinnamon).
Bake the small loaves 25 minutes, medium loaves 30 minutes
or the big loaf 40 minutes.
*You can omit the ½ cup sugar, and you can use a diferent
lour, but adjust the amount of water.
Teaching from Zion
JULY 2015 / TAMMUZ 5775
15
BY ELHANAN BEN AVRAHAM
The Chosen People
“For the LORD will not reject his people; he will
never forsake his inheritance.” (Psalm 94:14)
ot the tall, beautiful, blond and
blue-eyed Aryan
race of bold goose-stepping conformists in perfect
ranks, nor the descendants
of Olympus, in the image of
Greek gods and goddesses
adorned with wreaths in
the aesthetic supremacy of
Apollo and Athena in their
columned temples built to
perfection on the principle
of the Golden Section.
N
he Chosen People are a somewhat battered and alicted race of oft
scorned and rejected Semites, historically outcast and nationless, despised,
persecuted by their hosts in a diaspora
of nearly two millennia, and cursed
before being expelled or killed. hey
have been inquisitioned and stretched
on racks into submission, and burned
alive at the stakes by the devout who
would thus save their souls. Sifted like
16
Teaching from Zion
FEBRUARY 2016 / ADAR 1 5776
wheat through the sieve of centuries,
they survived and remained a thorn in
the side, perennially creating discomfort
in the conscience and consciousness of
humanity. hey are Don Quixote chasing the impossible dream that humanity
would rather forget.
After a long absence culminating in
an unprecedented hellish burning called
the Shoah, in Hebrew (Holocaust in English), they straggled back to their ancient former estates in the Holy Land,
largely unwelcome there as well. Again
they were obliged to ight for their existence, this time for their very lives
against attacking armies of enraged
Arabs and, mercy, they prevailed more
than once. And all that opposition has
by necessity recreated them into a nation of poet-warriors and statesmen on
the order of David, the king of Jerusalem before them. hey are now called
Israelis.
he Chosen are not a pretty people
of great physical stature or beauty like
the children of Japheth, who have produced the most panted-after bathing
beauties, but are rather plain and even
gruf-looking. Aside from a rare dazzling
beauty of note, the women are not as a
rule terribly attractive, nor the men especially handsome. hey can even be
a bit harsh, in-your-face, but usually
straight-forward and honest people
who rarely kill each other. Many if not
most of the Chosen would prefer not to
be, but rather, as Tevye put it, “Maybe
you could choose somebody else for a
change?” hey carry the responsibility
and aliction with some reserve, but
also with lair.
Yet from within that fraction-ofa-fraction of humanity has arisen the
solution of the great mysteries of the
universe, the unleashing of the powers within the microcosm, the cures
for many of humankind’s ills in medicine and economics, major advances
in cutting-edge technologies, timeless
music and poetry and, in the Bible, the
greatest literature of the ages having the
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From this tiny people came forth Abraham
and Sarah, Moses and Joshua, Isaiah and
Jeremiah, Kings David and Solomon, Esther,
Saint Peter … and that quintessential Jew
himself, Yeshua of Nazareth—Jesus.
most profound efect upon much of the
world, its art and literature and music
and political philosophies, giving hope
in the knowledge and revelation of one
single Creator.
From this tiny people came forth
Abraham and Sarah, Moses and Joshua,
Isaiah and Jeremiah, Kings David and
Solomon, Esther, Shimon Caipha (Saint
Peter), Miriam (Mary the mother of Jesus), Saul of Tarsus (Saint Paul), and
that quintessential Jew himself, Yeshua
of Nazareth—Jesus.
And descended from that line of
notorieties came forth Einstein, Freud,
Marx (Karl and Groucho), Pasternak,
Mendelsohn, Chagall, Spielberg, and
Dylan. From that aggrieved and resented Chosen race came those whose
works and discoveries have earned
above one hundred and seventy Nobel
Prizes in every category (above twenty
percent of all Nobel Prizes given) to the
beneit of the entire world.
Many have attempted to replace the
Chosen People, either by declaring that
they are no longer chosen, as proven
by arrogant theologies and impossible contorting of biblical passages, or
attempting to physically exterminate
them from existence, both which have
thus far failed in their eforts. Many have
declared themselves now the Chosen
in the place of the Hebrews, notably
Islam and large tracts of Christianity,
who though worshiping a Jew as their
God, and a Jewess as his mother, and
Jews as his apostles, see not the blind
dissonance of their scorn for the Jewish
people as the Chosen. But the Jews nev-
ertheless continue as the Chosen (Jeremiah 31:35–37), and continue to prosper
in their Promised Land, despite unending opposition.
Today all the above is again being
put to the test in the Jewish nation-state
called Israel, which has again drawn the
ire of much of the world, which insists
that Israel live by a standard of idealism
that they themselves do not adhere to,
and which is so detached from reality as
would precipitate the inal end of “the
Jewish Problem.” he land in question is
so tiny as to have its width be crossed by
a ighter jet in mere three minutes, and
its length in some twenty. And yet it is
blamed as the cause of all the woes of
its warring neighbors who are slaughtering each other in self-inlicted miseries. Iran, the culprit behind the Islamic
revolution, declares annually its desire
to wipe Israel of the map. Many insist
that the world’s problems would magically dissolve if only the already tiny land
in question could just be divided in two,
like the baby in King Solomon’s court.
It is an unlikely dream, considering even
the maelstrom of warring factions in the
Muslim world.
Be that as it may, facts on the ground
are hard things to deny, although many
do succeed in doing just that. Concrete
doctrines and dogmas are held so dearly
by their adherents as to their bending
of reality impossibly in order to force it
into their invented doctrines. But somehow reality manages to elude the doctrinaires, and persists on its own under
Heaven to the delight of some, and to
the dismay of others.
Teaching from Zion
FEBRUARY 2016 / ADAR 1 5776
17
BY JOSEPH SHULAM
Rabbi Daniel Zion z"l
he Chief Rabbi of Bulgarian Jews during World War II
n 1918, the head of the Yeshiva in hessalonica sent
his young son, Daniel to serve the Jewish community
in Soia, with the many new immigrants following the
wars. Rabbi Daniel Zion served loyally and was elected to
be the chief Rabbi of Bulgaria.
I
His notable accomplishment was his
activity during World War II years, saving thousands of Jewish lives from Nazi
destruction. his act of salvation was in
part due to his special relationship with
the Metropolite Stephan of the Orthodox Church of Bulgaria, whom he befriended after experiencing Yeshua in a
vision. Stephan, who was well versed in
the delicate relationship between Jews
and Christians only encouraged the
Rabbi to forget about Christianity and
concentrate on Yeshua himself.
Rabbi Daniel never converted to
“Christianity” he started to believe in
Yeshua and remained faithful to the Torah keeping life style of Orthodox Judaism. A song that he wrote about his faith
can probably best express his attitude
toward Yeshua the Messiah:
No not I, No not I, only you are
Yeshua in me!
18
Teaching from Zion
Only you bring me before the God
of my fathers,
Only you can heal me from every
evil illness,
No not I, No not I, only you are
Yeshua in me!
Only you teach me to love all
creation,
Only you teach me to love even the
enemy,
No not I, No not I, only you are
Yeshua in me!
For this reason I will stay in your
love,
For ever will I be within your will,
No not I, No not I, only you are
Yeshua in me!
Rabbi Daniel started to collect a very
select small group of Jewish people to
study the New Testament each Saturday
FEBRUARY 2016 / ADAR 1 5776
afternoon in his house. Among these
Jews were some of the leading members of the Jewish community in Soia.
His faith became a well known secret in
the Jewish community of Bulgaria. However his position was so honored and his
services so highly esteemed that none of
the Jewish functionaries in Soia could
openly criticize the Rabbi. And because
he remained well within the framework
of the Jewish community in Bulgaria and
did not stop living as an Orthodox Jew in
all the rigor of the strictest observance
of the Torah there was little that his opponents could point as heresy. In the
background of things the leadership of
the Jewish community started to isolate
him slowly.
In 1944, the Communists' coup d’état
brought down the fascist Government
of Bulgaria. Rabbi Daniel Zion remained
the leader and the chief Rabbi of Bulgaria until 1949 when he, with most of
the Bulgarian Jewish community immigrated to Israel.
In Israel Rabbi Daniel was immediately accepted as the Rabbi of the Bulgarian Jews. When in 1954 Rabbi Samuel Toledano became the chief Rabbi
of Israel, he invited Rabbi Daniel Zion
to be a judge in the rabbinical court of
Jerusalem. When the rumors started
to ly that Rabbi Daniel Zion believes in
Yeshua, Rabbi Toledano invited Rabbi
Zion to his oice and asked him personally about these rumors. Rabbi Daniel
explained to Toledano his position. He
explained that he accepts Yeshua as the
Messiah and he does not accept Christianity as the true expression of the teaching and person of Yeshua the Messiah.
Rabbi Toledano said to him that he can
live with this position as long as Rabbi
Daniel will keep it to himself.
When Rabbi Daniel said that he
did not think that such a message can
be kept a secret, Toledano was forced
to take Rabbi Daniel to the rabbinical
court, and allow the other Rabbis to decide what should be done. In the court,
after evidence of Rabbi Daniel’s faith in
Yeshua the Messiah was presented in
the form of four books that Rabbi Daniel had written in Bulgarian about the
Yeshua. he right to speak was given
to Rabbi Daniel. Here are the words
which Rabbi Daniel Zion spoke in his
own defense:
“I am poor and feeble, persecuted
and vulnerable,
Yeshua conquered me, and with the
New Man he honored me,
He delivered me from the poverty-stricken self with his great
love, he loved me.
Every day the cunning devil aspires
to grab my faith,
I hold on to my encourager, and
chase the devil away.
I stand here alone in my faith, the
whole world is against me.
I give up all the earthly honor for the
sake of the Messiah my friend.”
he Rabbinical Court striped Rabbi
Daniel from his Rabbinical Title, but
the Bulgarian Jews in Israel continued
to honor Rabbi Daniel as their Rabbi.
A Russian Jew who was one of the early
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Zionist settlers in Rishon LeZion, and
had become a “believer”, had given
Rabbi Daniel Zion a building on Yefet
St. in the heart of Jafa for a Synagogue.
In that Synagogue Rabbi Daniel oiciated until the 6th of October 1973. In
this Synagogue Rabbi Daniel Zion did
not often speak of Yeshua openly, but
many times he brought stories and parables from the New Testament. However, each Sabbath after the Synagogue
Rabbi Daniel would bring home a group
of his followers to study from the New
Testament.
Many missions, missionaries, and
Christian Societies, visited Rabbi Daniel
Zion in his Jafa home. hey wrote many
articles about him, and at rare occasions
would even ofer him large amounts of
money for the use of his name in their
ministries. In every case Rabbi Daniel
rejected their ofers. He did not want
to destroy his witness with the people of
Israel for a handful of dollars. If anyone
would give him some free-will ofering
without any strings attached the Rabbi
would accept it and pass it on to Jewish
charitable organizations of the blind,
or to orphans and widows. He himself
lived in abject poverty. here was nothing in his own house that was of value
and he would never lock his home.
Rabbi Daniel Zion wrote hundreds
of songs about Yeshua the Messiah, Sabbath, and the healthy living. He also
wrote books on the subject of vegetarianism, health food, and natural living.
Rabbi Daniel’s major contribution to
the Messianic Judaism is his personal
example.
He lived 100% a Jewish lifestyle, and
was 100% follower of the Messiah Yeshua. He did not compromise faith for
neither money from the Christian missions, nor did he succumb to the pressures of the chief rabbinate. Yeshua was
his savior and friend and until the last
days of his life Rabbi Daniel Zion lived
up to the poem that he wrote with the
acrostic of his name, Daniel Zion the
Servant of God.
Rabbi Daniel Zion z"l
he (Daver) Word of God is my path,
he (Ner) Lamp of God is my guide,
he (Iraat) Fear of God is the beginning of Wisdom,
he (Ahavat) Love of God is my Life,
he (Laasoth) Doing the will of God
is my aspiration,
Righteousness (Zedek) and Justice
are my goals,
His (Isurim) Sufering is my
atonement,
He will (Veyagen) protect you in all
your ways,
he (Nezah) Eternal one of Israel is
my comfort.
In 1979 Rabbi Daniel Zion departed
to be with the Lord in a ripe old age of
96 years. he Bulgarian Jewish community of Israel gave him full military, and
state honors. His bier stood in the center of Jafa with a military guard and at
noon was carried by men all the way
to the Holon cemetery on foot. He was
buried as the Chief Rabbi of Bulgarian
Jews who saved them from the Nazi holocaust.
Teaching from Zion
FEBRUARY 2016 / ADAR 1 5776
19
BY EMILY SHKEDI
Rooted in the
House of the Lord
hildren light up a room! hey are our joy and our
future. hey are not only important to their parents
who love them but we know on a spiritual level
that they play a great role. hey held a special place in the
heart of Yeshua who opened his arms to them and took
the time to teach them with gentleness, and they have
the faith that we ourselves should patern ourselves ater
(Mathew 18:3). his brings children to a prominent role in
our Synagogue life.
C
At Roeh Israel, we have chosen a
style of worship that brings us alongside the house of Israel. Our children are
caught up in the low of Synagogue life
as they observe the holidays, life events
(such as Bar Mitzvahs) and following
the weekly Torah portion. hese acts in
and of themselves tie us to the greater
Jewish family in Israel and around the
world. his all inluences our children,
as they join us in worship, prayer and
learning together. Our goal is that they
grow up into a spiritual family, where
they may ind their place as followers
of Yeshua and as fellow Jews in Israel.
Biblically, spiritual education begins in
the home, from the God-fearing parents
(Deuteronomy 6:1–3). Any education
20
Teaching from Zion
the children receive outside of the home
should come secondary and as a supplement to their upbringing. his is why we
join the children to the rhythm of congregational life, to echo that of the Jewish home. We emphasize the Sabbath,
as family and community, which is central to biblical living and growing in His
ways. Daily prayers at the home blend
with the Sabbath prayers in the Synagogue so that spiritual life is painted in a
cohesive picture, providing the children
with foundations they need.
Additionally, in Israel the public
school education is special in that the
children learn the Torah there as well!
Each week, following along with the
weekly Torah portion, children come
FEBRUARY 2016 / ADAR 1 5776
home with a general understanding of
biblical stories. he home, the Synagogue
and even the school position our children
irmly in the Bible and greater Jewish
life surrounding them. We weave their
experience together by gathering their
sources of spiritual input and directing
them to the knowledge of Yeshua. his
is education in its most natural form.
It is a true privilege to see these children come each week to the Synagogue,
bringing all their understanding gained
from prayers, holiday and school, and
watch them connect the dots to Yeshua!
he roots in the Jewish biblical tradition
lead to Yeshua, of whom the Torah and
the Prophets speak (Luke 24:27). hese
little lives are the fulillment of God’s
word. hey are here, living in a promised land and learning His ways for their
life. As they grow in their understanding
of the Biblical texts, the holidays, the
traditions, their home and Synagogue
life they gain conidence in their understanding of the true God and in their
belief in the promised Redeemer in the
land of Israel. hey are securely rooted
in the foundations of Jewish heritage,
in the Synagogue, to stand among the
people of Israel and draw them towards
the knowledge and love of Messiah.
BY SOLOMON INTRATER
WIKIMEDIA COMMONS/PUBLIC DOMAIN
Synagoga vs.
Ekklesia
wish to deal with the terms synagoga and ekklesia
theoretically, in discussion pertaining to Messianic
Jewish religious identity and historical consciousness.
Alas, in the traditional sense, the synagoga is כנסת ישראל,
the Assembly of Israel, more speciically the body of Israel,
or Judaism as Israel, Israel as Judaism. he Ekklesia then is
the Church, as in the body of Christians, Christendom, or,
perhaps, the true Church, the body of Messianic believers
and that tradition of faith and practice.
I
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In Christianity, the Church or Ekklesia is the abstract body that various
Christians associate themselves with
in their mind, in their self-awareness,
identity and religious consciousness.
Evangelicals, for example, view their
heritage, albeit critically, as the Apostles
through the Church Fathers to the Catholic Church, and then from the Protestant Movement through the various
denominations and classic revivals to
interdenominational Western Evangelical Christianity, literature and culture.
Teaching from Zion
FEBRUARY 2016 / ADAR 1 5776
21
In Messianic Judaism, nomenclature is at the
heart of what it is and is not. Terminology
very easily gets murky, confused and confusing,
when anyone can redefine anything.
he Ekklesia is the Church, the Church
is their heritage, with all its history and
baggage, positive and negative. No one
can draw the vivid lines between those
who belong or do not belong, but the
important factor is rather the thought,
the value of the Church as historical-religious consciousness.
In Judaism, traditional religious
Jews would view themselves in a similar parallel manner to the Church, as
the Assembly of Israel, the Synagogue.
he Jewish people, practicing Judaism,
are Israel, which is embodied in and as
the Synagogue. Some Jews are loosely
connected to this historical-religious
consciousness, and over history they
would typically assimilate and leave
this concept, community and identity.
In modern history, many Jews, though
still identifying with Judaism as synagogue, established alternative streams
to Orthodox Judaism, namely “Reform”
or “Liberal,” “Reconstructionist” and
“Conservative.” Even many secular and
semi-observant Jews still identify with
Jews and Judaism as synagogue.
Typical Consistent Forms
In Messianic Judaism, nomenclature
is at the heart of what it is and is not.
Christian? Judaism? Messianic? Terminology very easily gets murky, confused
and confusing, when anyone can redeine anything. So while the descriptive
names are very signiicant, it would
make good use to look through and beyond, in order to understand. Perhaps,
this historical-religious consciousness, this self-awareness or identity, of
Church or Ekklesia and Synagogue will
help to bring clarity.
22
Teaching from Zion
In efect, we can assume three typical approaches, as I purposely leave out
the term “Messianic Judaism.” he irst
is Jewish-Christianity, simply ethnic and
cultural Jews joining Christianity, identifying with the Church and against the
Synagogue. [hey would typically carry
a “post-Torah” worldview.] he second
is the opposite on the spectrum, which
I will call Jesus-Judaism (sometimes referred to as Crypto-Messianic Judaism),
of Jews practicing traditional Judaism
while identifying with and among the
Synagogue (whether inconspicuous or
not) against the Church. [Needless to
say, they would embrace a covenantal
worldview of the New Testament and
traditional Torah observance.]
Finally, is a third approach, which is
more complex. It is not quite Judaism,
a term owned by traditional Orthodox
Judaism. It is Jewish in the sense that
the Karaites are Jewish. So it does not
associate with the synagogue but rather
skips two thousand years back to late
antiquity. he diiculty is, however, that
the Karaites really do trace back directly
to antiquity, while the very large majority of this third approach have gone
through Evangelical Christianity, before
striving to establish themselves as an
original unailiated community of faith.
he attitude towards religious consciousness is independent, at least in
theory, denying both church and synagogue, or semi-inclusive, admitting
shallow inluence from church and synagogue. hough refusing to identify with
the Synagogue religiously, association
with culture, Jewishness and Israel is acceptable. While refusing to identify with
the Church, the term ekklesia is accept-
FEBRUARY 2016 / ADAR 1 5776
able. his approach is protestant in its
nature, and may be described also as
modernist, revisionist and ambitiously
independent. [Regarding Torah worldview and practice, the approach would
not be traditional Judaism observance,
but, again similar to Karaites, supposedly biblical according to independent
interpretation and application.]
Summary
In reality, these theoretical approaches
are all often deemed Messianic Judaism.
No one is strictly in one group, most are
loosely and luidly between these three
approaches, which is probably normal
in social-religious camps. And I would
argue that the third approach, the independent protestant idea of Messianic
Judaism is nearly non-existent in a pure
form, though it is exactly what many
strive for and talk about. Messianic Jews
are a mix of all these ideas and inclinations. his “mixing” or crossover, is not
necessarily negative or even peculiar.
I suppose many Christians and Jews
move between institutions, practices,
ideas and camps. Of course, I have
mentioned three theoretical categories of grouping, in other words on a
corporate or collective level. Must individuals identify with a body? hough
some claim that being part of a body
is fundamental to the Christian faith
and the Jewish faith, so that in a sense
you cannot just be a disconnected individual, maybe in a postmodern society
this is possible, in which case believers
presume to defy all borders of identity
and corporate belonging, historic consciousness and all, while at the same
time maintain them borders and religious camps when they fancy.
his article was meant to bring clarity to the slight confusion of ideas and
rhetoric loating around the Messianic
Christian world. As such, my intention
is additionally to present critique, for
people to sharpen their own identity
and ailiation, for the sake of transparency and authenticity.
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