Applying
the Messianic Letters
(Designed for Messianic groups)
Of all the materials
of the Christian Scriptures (New Testament), there are two books that
are specifically designed to deal with the issues of Jewish Messianic
believers, that of Hebrews and James. This seminar focuses on the issues
of the first century church, the Jerusalem Council, and application
of the content of the two letters by Jewish people who believe in Jesus
today. The challenges are remarkably the same as now. This seminar was
originally designed in Jerusalem, and used to help the small groups
of believers that have been formed in Israel. It is being offered for
the first time in North America!
The 10 Main Messianic
Questions Addressed: The Letter to the Hebrews (1.5 hours)
The letter to the
Hebrews is unique, because we are not sure of the author, and in fact,
we only know that the recipients are Jews, and are probably living in
Italy at the time they received the letter. To understand the letter
to the Hebrews, you must read the letter from start to end with an early
Jewish believer in mind. With careful observation, you can pick out
the underlying problems in the community that gave the writer a cause
to write this letter:
1. It appears to
be written to a group that began with great enthusiasm, but was now
experiencing a "falling away" from the faith in Messiah.
2. The followers of Jesus appear to feel pressure as outcasts among
their countrymen, and they faced mounting pressure to reconsider the
claims of Messianism and return to the fold of non-Messianic Jews.
3. A number of them began to feel the record concerning Jesus did
not stand up to the questions posed by learned rabbis.
4. Some of the respected leaders were wavering or perhaps defecting
from the group.
5. The demoralized group was lacking direction and needed correction,
instruction and gentle rebuke.
The content of the
letter appears to address ten specific questions that Messianic Jews
were asking in the first century. You will be amazed at how little these
questions have changed over the centuries.
The Messianic Lifestyle
Addressed: The Epistle of James (1.5 hours)
James, the half brother
of Jesus, addressed the early congregations of Messianic followers with
13 strikingly practical lifestyle applications. Each application was
put in the form of a test that a believer needed to face in order to
claim to be a part of the body of Messiah. The issues included - "Facing
the test" of:
1. Enduring Faith
(1:1-12)
2. The Straying Mind (1:13-18)
3. True Hearing (1:19-27)
4. Prejudice (2:1-13)
5. Indifference (2:14-26)
6. Tongue Control (3:1-12)
7. Living Truth (3:13-18)
8. Personal Conflicts (4:1-6)
9. Submission (4:7-17)
10. Success (5:1-6)
11. Waiting (5:7-12)
12. Distance from God (5:13-18)
13. Straying Believers (5:19-20)
The Issue of the Torah
Lifestyle: Should I Keep the Law? (1.5 hours)
One of the issues
that keep pulling at the Messianic community is that of the Torah observance.
What does God intend for a Jewish believer today? Should I forsake Sabbath?
What about the "for all your generations" passages of the
Torah? Can I marry a non-Jew? Am I any different than a Gentile in today's
economy? These issues will be explored particularly from the Book of
Acts and the Epistles of Paul.
Toward a Theology
of Messianism: Romans 9-11 (1.5 hours)
Understanding the
Corporate Salvation of the Gospel
The Gospel that Gentile believers present in many churches is incomplete.
It speaks of individual eternal salvation, but misses the point of the
New Covenant, to fulfill God's original promise to the children of Israel.
The "blood covenant" of Abraham will be examined, as well
as the "New Covenant" (another blood covenant). Replacement
theologians will find this session very hard to swallow, but the promise
of God to Abraham has yet to be fulfilled. God is busy doing that right
now!