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This brings us now to the
frequently misunderstood fifteenth chapter of Acts and the Jerusalem Council.
Sha’ul and Bar Nabba were still in Antioch when “some men came down from
Y’hudah[80]
to Antioch and began teaching the brothers, ‘You can’t be saved unless you
undergo b’rit-milah[81]
in the manner prescribed by Moshe.[82]’”
Dr. Luke doesn’t tell us for certain who these “some men” were, and he does
not specifically identify them as either natural-born Jews or proselytes.
However, according the “Church father” and historian Epiphanius,[83]
one of these men was a heretic named Cerinthus[84]
who was a circumcised Egyptian, and who apparently felt that since he had
been circumcised in order to be accepted into the synagogue, then everyone
else should also have to be circumcised.
Unable to resolve the
conflict without becoming dictatorial and running the risk of dividing the
fledgling Messianic movement over the issue, it was wisely determined by the
Community leaders that Sha’ul and Bar Nabba would take the issue to the
Shliachim and Zakenim[85]
in Jerusalem. Three of the most influential Zakenim that were in Jerusalem at
the time were Yeshua’s brother Ya`akov,[86]
who is considered by most to have been the pastor of the Messianic Community
in Jerusalem, Kefa,[87]
and Yochanan.[88]
After considerable deliberation and prayer, Ya`akov rose to announce the
decision of the meeting that has come to be known as the Jerusalem Council:
“My opinion is that we should not put obstacles in the way of the Goyim who
are turning to G-d. Instead, we should write them a letter telling them to
abstain from things polluted by idols, from fornication, from what is
strangled and from blood.” (Acts 15:19-20)
Please note very
carefully that these conditions are almost exactly the same as the conditions
that were listed above, which had always been expected of the
G-d-Fearers:
“But of the stranger it was expected that he would forego the
worship of idols (Lev. xx. 2; Ezek. xiv. 7) and the practice [sic.] of
sorcery, incest, or other abominations [which include fornication] (Lev.
xviii. 26), and that he would refrain from eating blood (Lev. xvii. 10), from
working on Sabbath (Ex. xx. 10, xxiii. 12), from eating leavened bread on
Pesach (Ex. xii. 19), and from violating Yom ha-Kippurim [Yom Kippur] (Lev.
xvi. 29).”[89]
[Compare Acts 15:28-29]
In short, Ya`akov
declared on behalf of the Council that the Goyim would be accepted into
fellowship in exactly the same way that Goyim had always been
accepted into fellowship—simply by acting in a manner that the Jewish
people considered the “minimum requirements” for any civilized person.
Then Ya`akov added
a comment that, in my opinion, has almost always been misinterpreted by Bible
commentators who fail to recognize the historical fact that early Messianic
Judaism was part and parcel of the synagogue:
“For from the earliest times, Moshe has had in every city
those who proclaim him, with his words being read in the synagogues every
Shabbat.” (Acts 15:21)
For example, John
Gill begins his exposition of this verse with what I believe is the correct
historical information:
“That is, for many years past, even from the times of Ezra,
the law of Moses has been publicly expounded by them, whom the Jews call
Derashim, preachers, or expounders, in every city where there was a
synagogue; and every city belonging to the Jews, were obliged to build a
synagogue, yea, they were obliged to do it where there were but ten
Israelites: this is given by James[90]
as a reason why the Gentiles should be wrote unto concerning the above
things; …”[91]
But in the middle
of his reasoning as to why the Gentile Believers should be made aware
of the Council’s decision, and why the Gentile Believers should be given only
these conditions for fellowship, he suddenly takes what may be a
significantly wrong turn when he begins to try explain why the Council
as arrived at this determination. Can it be that he, like so many others,
fails to accurately comprehend the “Jewishness” of the first-century
“church?”
“… because that they hearing the law read and expounded every
week, would be ready to conclude that they were obliged to submit unto it, as
to circumcision, and other things; unless they were told that they were free
from it; only in order to maintain peace with their brethren the Jews, it
would be necessary for them to abstain from the above things: and it may also
carry in it a reason, why the Jews need not be wrote unto, and why they had
no reason to complain for thus writing to the Gentiles; since they had the
law read and explained to them every week, and there would be no attempt to
make any alteration in that form of service: …”[92]
Gill, as do many
others, makes the erroneous assumption that the Council was concerned that
when Messianic Goyim heard the Torah taught in the synagogues they might
“conclude that they were obliged to submit unto it.”
And why should
they not submit to G-d’s divine instruction? As we saw earlier, Yeshua
taught:
“… whoever disobeys the least of these mitzvot and teaches
others to do so will be called the least in the Kingdom of Heaven. But
whoever obeys them and so teaches will be called great in the Kingdom of
Heaven.” (Matthew 5:19)
According to
Yeshua’s teaching:
• whoever [Jew or Gentile] obeys
the least of these mitzvot will be called great in the Kingdom of Heaven; and
• whoever [Jew or Gentile]
teaches others to obey the least of these mitzvot will be called great in the
Kingdom of Heaven; but
• whoever [Jew or Gentile]
disobeys the least of these mitzvot will be called the least in the Kingdom
of Heaven;
• whoever [Jew or Gentile] …
teaches others to disobey the least of these mitzvot will be called the least
in the Kingdom of Heaven.
Why would the
members of the Council wish to cause the new Messianic Goyim to be called
“the least in the Kingdom of Heaven” by failing to teach them to obey all
the mitzvot? Why would the members of the Council wish to be called “the
least in the Kingdom of Heaven” by teaching the new Messianic Goyim disobey
the these mitzvot? Simple logic alone dictates that the members of the
Council would certainly not wish to go against Yeshua’s teaching. They would
certainly wish to be called “great in the Kingdom of Heaven,” and they would
certainly wish for the new Messianic Goyim to also be called “great in the
Kingdom of Heaven.”
Scripture provides
us with no possible reason for exempting the new Gentile Believers from
obedience to the loving instruction of G-d, nor is there any Scriptural
precedence for the idea that after having come to faith in the Messiah there
is no necessity of seeking after righteousness and obedience.
The understanding
of most Gentile Christian theologians is that Gentile Believers should be
required to conform to a different standard of righteousness than that
required of Jewish Believers, and traditional Judaism has long held that
while the Torah is the standard of righteousness for Jews, and the standard
of righteousness for non-Jews is the so-called Noahide Law.
According to
traditional Judaism, G-d gave Noah and his family seven commandments to
observe when he saved them from the flood. These commandments, referred to as
the Noahic or Noahide commandments, are inferred from Genesis Ch. 9, and are
as follows:
1) to establish courts of
justice;
2) not to commit blasphemy;
3) not to commit idolatry;
4) not to commit incest and
adultery;
5) not to commit bloodshed;
6) not to commit robbery; and
7) not to eat flesh cut from a
living animal.
These commandments
are fairly simple and straightforward, and most of them are recognized by
most of the world as sound moral principles. Any non-Jew who follows these
laws has a place in the world to come.
The Noahic commandments are binding on all people, because all
people are descended from Noah and his family. The 613 mitzvot of the Torah,
on the other hand, are only binding on the descendants of those who accepted
the commandments at Sinai and upon those who take on the yoke of the
commandments voluntarily.”[93]
However, the letter from the Council to the Gentile Believers
did not cite the Noahide Law as the standard of righteousness or rule
of conduct they were to follow.
|
The Noahide Law |
The Council’s Determination |
|
establish courts of justice |
|
|
do not commit blasphemy |
|
|
do not commit idolatry |
abstain from things polluted by idols |
|
do not to commit incest or adultery |
abstain from fornication |
|
do not commit bloodshed |
|
|
do not commit robbery |
|
|
do not to eat flesh cut from a living
animal |
|
|
|
abstain from what is strangled |
|
|
abstain from blood |
Of the entire Noahide Law,
the only two requirements placed upon the Gentile Believers were to abstain
from idols and from sexual immorality. The Noahide Law says nothing of
abstaining from what is strangled and from blood, yet these conditions were
imposed upon the Gentile Believers . Therefore, it is not reasonable to
assume that the Council was simply telling the Gentile Believers to abide by
the Noahide Law, as is generally supposed.
The Council’s determination much more closely corresponds to the conditions
that had always been required of the G-d-fearer:
|
Conditions for
G-d-fearers[94] |
The Council’s Determination |
|
forego the worship of idols |
abstain from things polluted by idols |
|
forgo the practice of sorcery, incest, or
other abominations |
abstain from fornication |
|
refrain from eating blood |
abstain from what is strangled and from
blood |
|
refrain from working on Sabbath |
these would have been clearly understood
by anyone who was actively participating in the activities of the
synagogue |
|
refrain from eating leavened bread on
Pesach |
|
refrain from violating Yom Kippur |
The next step in this
careful evaluation forces us to ask ourselves whether or not the traditional
Jewish position concerning the Noahide Laws is correct. According to Jewish
tradition, the Noahide Laws are binding on all humankind, both Jews and
Gentiles, but the Torah is “only binding on the descendants of those who
accepted the commandments at Sinai and upon those who take on the yoke of the
commandments voluntarily.”
If Gentiles are now
permitted to participate in the blessings of the Covenant, are they
exempt from taking on its obligations? If obedience to Torah is such a
beautiful thing as the Jews claim, why should Gentile G-d-Fearers be denied
the right to also enjoy the beauty of obedience to Torah?
When G-d led Kefa to bring
the Gospel to the first Gentile Believers, Kefa said (Acts 10:34,35):[95]
“I
now understand that G-d does not play favorites, but that whoever fears him
and does what is right is acceptable to him, no matter what people he belongs
to.” (CJB)
“I most certainly understand now that G-d is
not one to show partiality, but in every nation the man who fears Him and
does what is right is welcome to Him.” (NAS)
“Truly I perceive that G-d doesn’t show
favoritism; but in every nation he who fears him and works righteousness is
acceptable to him.” (HNV)
“Of a truth, I perceive that G-d is no
respecter of persons, but in every nation he who is fearing Him, and is
working righteousness, is acceptable to Him;” (YLT)
“In truth I perceive that G-d shows no
partiality. But in every nation whoever fears Him and works righteousness is
accepted by Him.” (NKJV)
“Truly, I see clearly that G-d is no respecter
of persons: But in every nation, the man who has fear of him and does
righteousness is pleasing to him.” (BBE)
Regardless of the
translation, two things are abundantly clear: (1) G-d does not play
favorites; and (2) G-d accepts those who fear him and do what is right. From
this we may draw two conclusions:
1. God has only one standard of
righteousness, not two separate standards of righteousness (does not play
favorites, does not show partiality, is no respecter of persons); and
2. God accepts on an equal basis those who fear
him and live righteously (who live according to G-d’s one standard of
righteousness).
If G-d has only one standard
of righteousness for all people, whether Jew or Gentile, where is that
standard of righteousness revealed? In the Torah, of course!
It is clear from Scripture
that even though G-d does not play favorites, He does have a special covenant
relationship with the physical descendants of Avraham, Yitzchak, and Ya`akov,
whether or not they are believers in Israel’s Messiah, and we need to not
lose sight of that fact.
However, we must also take
into account the fact that Scripture teaches that Gentile Believers are
adopted into the family of G-d through being adopted into the family of
Avraham.
For
you did not receive a spirit of slavery to bring you back again into fear; on
the contrary, you received the Spirit, who makes us sons and by whose power
we cry out, “Abba!” (that is, “Dear Father!”). The Spirit himself bears
witness with our own spirits that we are children of G-d; and if we are
children, then we are also heirs, heirs of G-d and joint-heirs with the
Messiah—provided we are suffering with him in order also to be glorified
with him. (Romans 8:15-17)
Now
what if G-d, even though he was quite willing to demonstrate his anger and
make known his power, patiently put up with people who deserved punishment
and were ripe for destruction? What if he did this in order to make known the
riches of his glory to those who are the objects of his mercy, whom he
prepared in advance for glory—that is, to us, whom he called not only from
among the Jews but also from among the Gentiles? As indeed he says in
Hoshea, “Those who were not my people [Gentiles] I will call my people; her
who was not loved [Gentiles] I will call loved; and in the very place where
they were told, ‘You are not my people,’ there they will be called sons of
the living G-d!” (Romans 9:22-26)
For
we are the temple of the living G-d—as G-d said, “I will house Myself in
them, … and I will walk among you. I will be their G-d, and they will be My
people.” Therefore ADONAI says, “‘Go out from their midst;
separate yourselves; don’t even touch what is unclean. Then I myself will
receive you. In fact, I will be your Father, and you will be my sons and
daughters.’ says ADONAI-Tzva’ot. [96]”
(2 Corinthians 6:16-17)
It
was the same with Avraham: “He trusted in G-d and was faithful to him, and
that was credited to his account as righteousness.” Be assured, then, that
it is those who live by trusting and being faithful who are really
children of Avraham. Also the Tanakh, foreseeing that G-d would consider
the Gentiles righteous when they live by trusting and being faithful, told
the Good News to Avraham in advance by saying, “In connection with you, all
the Goyim will be blessed.” So then, those who rely on trusting and being
faithful are blessed along with Avraham, who trusted and was
faithful. (Galatians 3:6-9)
For
in union with the Messiah, you are all children of G-d through this trusting
faithfulness; because as many of you as were immersed into the Messiah have
clothed yourselves with the Messiah, in whom there is neither Jew nor
Gentile, neither slave nor freeman, neither male nor female; for in union
with the Messiah Yeshua, you are all one. Also, if you belong to the
Messiah, you are seed of Avraham and heirs according to the
promise. (Galatians 3:26-29)
Now
because you are sons, G-d has sent forth into our hearts the Spirit of
his Son, the Spirit who cries out, “Abba!” (that is, “Dear Father!”). So
through G-d you are no longer a slave but a son, and if you are a son you
are also an heir. (Galatians 4:6-7)
It is clear from the above
Scriptures that all those, both Jew and Gentile, who are in union
with the Messiah (Galatians 3:26) are “children of G-d” and “seed of
Avraham and heirs according to the promise.” Jewish Believers in Messiah
are the “seed of Avraham and heirs according to the promise” because they are
both the physical seed of Avraham and the “spiritual” seed of Avraham
because they share his faith. Gentile Believers are the “seed of Avraham and
heirs according to the promise” because they “rely on trusting and being
faithful” and are therefore “blessed along with Avraham.”
Those children who have been
adopted into any family as “sons and joint-heirs” are entitled to
share in all the benefits of being in the family, but they are also
obligated to share in all the responsibilities of being in the family.
So again we ask: if
Gentiles, as children who have been adopted into the family of Avraham and
into the family of G-d, are now permitted to participate in the blessings
of the Covenant, how can they possibly be exempt from taking on the
obligations of the Covenant? If obedience to Torah is a beautiful thing
as the Jews claim, why should Gentile G-d-Fearers be denied the right to also
enjoy the beauty of obedience to Torah?
Remember who it was that at
this time constituted the synagogue in every city where there were more than
ten Jews: Jews, Gentile Converts, and G-d-Fearers, some of whom were
Messianic and some of whom were not! There were no separate synagogues for
Messianic Believers; they met in the same synagogues as the non-Messianic
Believers in HaShem.[97]
There was not one version of Judaism for Messianic Believers and another
version for the non-Messianic Believers in HaShem. There was only one single,
united, Judaism for all who believed in HaShem, the G-d of Avraham, Yitzchak,
and Ya`akov.[98]
It is at this point, I
believe, that many become confused because of what is commonly taught about
the Pentecost event. Remember that when Ruach HaKodesh came at Pentecost,
those upon whom He fell did not become “the church” as it now exists.
They all remained Jews who, as we have discussed, remained part of mainstream
Judaism. There was no “church” for the new Gentile Believers to join. They
joined their local synagogue where they could learn to obey the teachings of
Torah as explained by the Shliachim and the other Messianic Rabbi/Pastors.
Returning now to the puzzle
of the Declaration of the Jerusalem Council, it should be more evident why
the decision was made to allow new Gentile Believers some leniency regarding
halakah[99]
and what was the intent of the statement, “For from the earliest times, Moshe
has had in every city those who proclaim him, with his words being read in
the synagogues every Shabbat.”
For a new Gentile Believer
who was previously a pagan and who had just learned about the G-d of Avraham,
Yitzchak, and Ya`akov for the first time, and who had never been exposed to
the righteous, Torah-observant life-style (halakah) that a faithful
Jew gradually learned over an entire lifetime, the task of learning to walk
halakah in a just a few weeks, or even a few months, would simply be
totally overwhelming, and the new Believer would certainly be doomed to fail,
and to fall away from fellowship out of sheer frustration.
The wise members of the
Jerusalem Council well knew that “from generations of old Moshe has those who
preach him in every city, being read in the synagogues every Shabbat.” Today
the entire Torah (the five books of Moshe, Genesis through Deuteronomy) is
taught in synagogues around the world in either a one-year or three-year
reading cycle. At the time of Yeshua and the Shliachim, the three-year cycle
was used, and Jewish children were not expected to walk halakah until they
had been through the complete teaching cycle four times and had reached the
age of bar-mitzvah.[100]
Just as a newborn Jewish
child was gradually exposed to “the teachings of Moshe” over a 12-year
period, so every newly born-again Gentile Believer would likewise be
gradually exposed to “the teachings of Moshe” over a three, six, nine, or
even twelve-year period.
Gentile Believers would most
certainly have been given the same options that non-Jewish Believers had
always been afforded in the synagogue. They could either go through the
formal “conversion” process (including circumcision) and thereby “become
Jews” [Proselytes or Converts] and fully embrace all the 613 mitzvot of the
Torah if they desired to, or they could remain in fellowship with the
synagogue as Messianic G-d-Fearers and embrace whatever extent of “the
teachings of Moshe” they had learned (provided, of course, that the “Minimum
Requirements” were always observed).
Gill was essentially correct
when he observed that the new Believers were given the very “minimum
requirements” for fellowship [“that you abstain from things sacrificed to
idols, from blood, from things strangled, and from sexual immorality” (Acts
15:29)], and that “there would be no attempt to make any alteration in that
form of service;” but not because the new Gentile Believers would be
excused from obedience to Torah, but rather because the new Gentile
Believers would be given the opportunity to learn over a long period
of time to become obedient, just as their Jewish-born brothers had been
given.
Consider this: If it is
true (and it is) that G-d gave the Torah to Israel through Moshe at
Sinai, and if it is true (and it is) that Yeshua is G-d, and if it
is true (and it is) that “God is one,” then it must also be
true that it was the pre-incarnate Yeshua who gave the Torah to
Israel through Moshe at Sinai. To believe otherwise, one is forced to depart
from monotheism (only one G-d) and enter the world of polytheism (more than
one G-d).
So then when Yeshua said,
“If you love Me, keep My mitzvot [commandments]” (John 14:15) and “If
you keep My mitzvot, you will remain in My love; even as I have kept
My Father’s mitzvot, and remain in His love” (John 15:10), then He
was referring to all the 613 mitzvot that He gave to Moshe for Israel
to observe as an everlasting covenant.
God does not change,
Yeshua does not change, and Torah does not change. Just as the Amendments
to the United States Constitution do not do away with the Constitution, so
the B’rit Hadasha does not do away with the Tanakh!
This is not to
suggest in any way, however, that the rabbinical interpretations and the
corresponding legalistic system as recorded in the Talmud have ever
been binding upon Believers in HaShem, whether Jewish or non-Jewish. In fact,
Yeshua condemned that legalistic system as “the traditions of the elders” and
called those who would force others into submission to it “hypocrites,”
“blind guides,” “fools and blind men,” and “sons of hell” (Matthew 23:13-33).
Nor should we think for even
a moment that even total obedience to Torah can ever save us or make us
righteous. Rav Sha’ul covered that idea very carefully in his letter to the
Galatians. Torah observance can never take the place of our faith and trust
in the Messiah, who alone saves us and because of our faith declares us to be
righteous.
The Temple service and
sacrificial system cannot save us; the writer of the Letter to the Messianic
Jews (Hebrews) makes it abundantly clear that Messiah is our only
propitiating sacrifice!
The ruling of the Jerusalem
Council, when properly understood, did not excuse or exempt those
coming to Messianic faith from among the Goyim from any provision of the
Torah except that they were not to be compelled to be circumcised. Nor did it
excuse the early Messianic leaders from teaching the non-Jewish Believers to
be obedient to the entire Torah.
Remember what Yeshua taught:
“Don’t think that I have come to abolish the Torah or the Prophets. I have
come not to abolish but to complete. Yes indeed! I tell you that until heaven
and earth pass away, not so much as a yud or a stroke will pass from the
Torah — not until everything that must happen has happened. So whoever
disobeys the least of these mitzvot and teaches others to do so will be
called the least in the Kingdom of Heaven. But whoever obeys them and so
teaches will be called great in the Kingdom of Heaven. For I tell you
that unless your righteousness is far greater than that of the Torah-teachers
and P’rushim, you will certainly not enter the Kingdom of Heaven!” (Matthew
5:17-20). |