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THE JEWISH JOURNEY WITHIN





DID JESUS BELIEVE HIMSELF TO BE G-D?


What follows is the logical outcome of the scenario if we were to take the Christian perspective on the life of Jesus. Do I think Jesus thought he was G-d? Absolutely not. However, Christians do and they use the Tanach as a proof text. Therefore, using our Jewish Bible I have set out the argument that in order for Christians to be able to make such a claim for their god then they must mis-appropriate the Jewish texts. Read and enjoy.


Within scholarship it is a well known fact and forgone conclusion that Paul (Sha'ul) not Jesus (Y'shua) is the author and creator of the religion of Christianity. However, this is not the reason for this posting. I wish to address a few statements that the Christian writers claim Jesus made that, within the context of which he said them, would reveal volumes as to what he thought of himself and of whom he thought himself to actually be. [Please remember that throughout this entire writing these are the beliefs of Christianity and not necessarily those of a Jew named Jesus].

Before I do this I must contrast it by stating two of the most basic of Jewish teachings as they are found in the foundation of all three major religions that have come from the Middle East: (Judaism, Christianity and Islam). The Torah (first 5 books of Moshe) are that foundation stone. If you reject these then you have no foundation as a Jew, Christian or Muslim because all three stand on this foundation. That is why if you only read the prophets and writings (Nu'vim and k'tuvim), the Christian Bible (New Testament) and Koran (Q'ruan) without first knowing and understanding the teachings of the Torah (on which all 3 stand) then you will wander off into the desert of fanaticism and unsound doctrinal understanding.

In the Torah we find two statments: "Shema Yisra'el Adonai Eloheynu Adonai Echad," and, "G-d is not a man, as such it is not His nature to lie; nor is He the son of man, therefore, it is not His practice to change His mind: if He said it He will do it; if He spoke it then He will make it so."

There has been so much already written within Jewish scholarship about the Shema and its true meaning that I need not elaborate here. However, I do wish to comment about the contextual Hebrew meaning of the second statement which can be found in Numbers 23:19. This verse is in the present perfect tense which means several things: One, Moshe is speaking very literally. He states quite matter-of-factly that G-d is not a man nor is He the (not a) son of man. Second, since it is in the present perfect tense it also means that G-d revealed a great mystery to Moshe (and to us through him) that up until that time was not known to mankind. Which is this: G-d is not a man, has never been a man, and will never be a man or son of man. There are then, four things we can conclude from this statement:

1. G-d is not a human being (a man).
2. G-d is not the child of a human being (son of man).
3. Human beings (man) have the capacity to lie, G-d does not.
4. A child of a human being (son of man) makes it a habit to change his mind and his plans, G-d does not make this His practice.

This naturally leads to these conclusions concerning Jesus (a human being, son of man):

1. Jesus was a man and therefore probably lied at least once in his life.
2. He claimed himself to be the son of man so, more than likely, he went back on his word or plans at least once (in fact we have a case in the gospels where Jesus lied, or at least misled, his own blood brothers by telling them he wasn't going to Jerusalem and then after they had left he went up anyway).

One of the basic tenets of the Christian religion is that Jesus is both fully G-d and fully man, and that he was so while in human flesh. We know that Paul (as stated earlier, the actual creator of what we know as the Christian religion) made statements to such effect throughout his writings but the question of importance is, did Jesus believe himself to be G-d in the flesh? And, as Jews who follow Torah, then we know that if he did, then this will automatically disqualify him as a great man or Messiah and place him in the ranks of liar, deceiver of the people, breaker of Torah or fanatical madman.

Jesus, if you believe the Christian interpretation, made it perfectly clear to the listeners of his day that he believed himself to be G-d. In fact, it was when he started publically declaring himself to be G-d that he started losing his credibility with the comman people. Up until that time most of his problems arose from the religious and political leadership because they were aware of what he was implying in his parables. But, when he began proclaiming publically what he was really about and whom he thought himself to be (namely the G-d of Israel) then even his support among the grassroots began slipping away.

The following statements made by Jesus (in Hebrew and Aramaic), when taken out of context, don't seem so harmful, but when taken in the context of the times, places and events that surround his words we can see plainly that they were catch-phrases for the Person of G-d. The people knew exactly what he was saying and realized that this mere human being had stepped far beyond sound teaching and the Law of G-d as expressed in Torah:

Jesus said: "I am the way, the truth and the life, no man comes to the Father but by me." (John 14:6)

As Jews and (this includes Muslims as well) we know that only G-d is The Way, only G-d is The Truth, and only G-d is The Life, for all life emanates from G-d. Therefore, Jesus was (in his human state) declaring that he and he alone is G-d. This is a direct violation of the very first of the Ten Commandmants and a contradiction to G-d's statement found in Numbers 23:19.

Jesus said: "I am the resurrection and the life. He who believes in me, though he die, he shall live." (John 11:25)

Again, in a public setting, the grave site and shiva at the death of an old friend named Lazarus, Jesus states that he, not G-d, "is the resurrection and the life. He who believes in me (not G-d), though he die, he shall live." So we see here too, for his Jewish audience, who understood the meaning clearly, he is declaring from his mere human flesh that he is G-d.

One of the most cryptic statements (in English) but easily understood by his first Century audience was "I and my Father are one." (John 10:30, and throughout the gospels). Most Western mindsets have an unclear idea about what this means. That is why, in Christian writings down through the ages so many different thoughts and ideas have arisen as to what Jesus really meant by it.
However, to the Jew it has always been understood. The phrase "I and my Father are one" is a play on the words of the Shema found in Deuteronomy 6:4 "Hear, O Israel: The L-rd our G-d, the L-rd is One." Jesus was saying unequivocally that G-d and he were one and the same person.
If it wasn't plain enough, he stated right before this statement that he gives his followers eternal life and they shall never perish. Only G-d, most Sovereign can give "eternal life" because it is only His to give, for only He possesses eternal life. So, once again Jesus, in his human state, breaks the commandment by declaring that he, a mortal man, is G-d.

Just two more comments from Jesus about his supposed diety and then I will stop beating this dead horse (no pun intended):

In John Chapter 8 starting in verse 48 Jesus is having a discussion with some folks. Someone in the crowd wise to what Jesus is really saying basically accuses Jesus of lying. The old Jewish idiom of Abraham's seed and the Deceiver's seed is used by them both. Finally, Jesus shouts back at them, "Most assuredly, I say to you, before Abraham was, I AM." (John 8:58)
At that point it was all down hill for Jesus. His grassroots following responded by picking up stones to stone him to death. Jesus was able to run and hide away from them.
Of course, John embellishes the story and takes poetic license by having Jesus mysteriously pass through the midst of the crowd slipping past them unharmed. Truth be told, Jesus ran like hell.
The more important point however is this: Here before his faithful, in a heated moment, he blurts out that he is G-d by identifying himself with the most holy Name. What is the Torah requirement for one who dare do such an abomination? Death by stoning. It would appear that the crowd were certainly far more Law abiding Jews than this blasphemer.

Finally, at the Festival of Lights (also called Chanukah) Jesus is speaking to a crowd saying, "I am the light of the world. He who follows me shall not walk in darkness, but have the light of life." (John 8:12)

The lights of Chanukah are related to the Menorah in the Holy Place of the Temple. It is the only source of light in the Holy Place and is representative of G-d's revelation, G-d's light (G-d Himself). In the Temple G-d's representative presence was found in two places HaKodesh and Kodesh HaKodeshim (the Holy Place and the Holy of Holies). In the Holy Place the Menorah was visible to the cohanim, while in the Holy of Holies the Shekinah was present to no person except the Cohen HaGadol once a year on Yom Kippur.
Why is this important? Because when Jesus took this holiday to say what he said, he was telling all people, and especially the religious leadership, in no uncertain terms that he is that light that we attribute as coming from G-d and that he is therefore, G-d.

None of these implications were lost to the Jews of his day (they eventually even became clear to the Romans and they saw the political threat so they - not the Jews - had him killed by crucifixtion). Neither should these implications of Jesus be lost on us Jews today. Jesus did believe himself to be G-d. That is why Jesus has been, is, and will sternly be rejected by Jews who know their Bible.
If we remain faithful to the one true G-d, the G-d of Abraham, Isaac, and Jacob who separated us out from the nations to be His beloved son, his nation of royal priests, his light to the Gentiles, then we have no choice but to reject Jesus as a false god and pretender to the Messianic throne of David.









"The State of Israel will be based on freedom, justice and peace as envisaged by the prophets of Israel; it will ensure complete equality of social and political rights to all its inhabitants irrespective of religion, race or sex..."
- Israel's Declaration of Independence 14 May 1948 / 5 Iyyar 5708 -

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PIRKE AVOT
The Sayings Of Our Fathers

Pirke Avot 2:7


There was a time when Hillel saw a human skull bobbing in the river and he said:

"There is a lesson to be learned from this floating skull: Our deeds mold our destiny. Heaven and earth are in our own hands.

You see, Because this one drowned others he too was drowned by another. In turn those who drowned him will also be drowned.

In other words, we reap that which we sow."










Special thanks to Aish HaTorah for these beautiful pictures - the Kotel.

Thinking of the Tabernacle internally (or its internal, personal and spiritual significance) is, I believe, what keeps the whole concept of the Beit HaMikdosh alive in Judaism.

Afterall, the physical literal Temple in Yerushalayim and pre-Temple (Mishkhan) has been down (not up) for most of the life of Judaism. Therefore, for me anyway, it must be internal and alive within or it looses its deeper personal meaning.

The outer Court I see as my own body or world-conscieousness (the Outer Man); that which comes into contact with the "corrupt" outside world and is in constant need of "purification."
It is what makes me aware of the three dimensional world in which I dwell.

The Inner Court or self-conscieousness (HaKodesh) is that which composes the will, emotion and intellect and must be "set-apart" as a cohen; for it is here that I act as a bridge between the world of creation and the Creator (may Its Name be blessed forever), and am aware of me [my thoughts and self as separate from others].

Finally, the Kodesh HaKodeshim (the Holiest of Holies) is the True-Self, that which is created in the image and likeness of HaShem.The unseen self that cannot be seen by the common.

It is from here that the very essence and life of eternity {Sh'khinah} is the spark of the individual and where the self communes (communicates) with the Eyn Sof on a level not known, seen, comprehended or appreciated by the Outer and Inner Man.


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The 13 Principles Of Faith

I Believe With Perfect Faith

...that G-d is the Creator and Ruler of all things, and that He alone has made, does make, and will make all things.

...that the Creator is a Unity and that there is no unity in any manner like His, and that He alone is our G-d; He was, He is, and He will be.

...that the Creator is not a body and He has no physical attributes and He has no form whatsoever.

...that the Creator is first and last.

...that to the Creator and to Him alone, it is right to pray, and that it is not right to pray to any being besides Him.

...that all the words of the prophets are true.

...that all the prophecy of Moshe Rabbenu, was true, and that he was the chief of the prophets, both of those that preceded and of those that followed him.

...that the whole Torah, now in our possession, is the same that was given to Moshe Rabbenu.

...that this Torah will not be changed, and that there will never be any other Torah from the Creator.

...that the Creator knows every deed of the children of men, and all their thoughts, as it is said, "He has fashioned every heart, He understands what each does."

...that the Creator rewards those that keep His commandments, and punishes those that transgress His commandments.

...in the coming of Moshiach, and, though he tarry, I await him every day, that he will come.

...that there will be a resurrection of the dead at the time when it shall please the Creator, blessed be His Name, and exalted be the remembrance of Him forever and to all eternity.




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"As for me and my house, we choose to serve Adonai Eloheynu."






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