November 1993
Dear Co-laborer,
I closed the last issue on eschatology noting that
the Patristics were anti-Semitic. It
is amazing that men the Jewish apostles discipled so quickly turned on the Jews,
especially since Jesus was a Jew. Let's
analyze this strange phenomenon. Although
it may be somewhat technical, it is fascinating and filled with application for
today.
In the early life of the Church, most of the conflict
existed between Jews. Gentiles had
not yet entered the picture. In one
sense, the conflict was endemic to the ministry of Jesus; He constantly called
into question the Jews' commitment to God.
All of the gospels record this antipathy between Jesus and Judaism,
culminating in the cross.
So too in Acts, the conflict was primarily between
Jewish Christians and Judaism. As
most of Israel had rejected the teachings of their Messiah, so too they rejected
His followers. As Jesus said, "Remember
the word that I said unto you, The servant is not greater than his lord. If they
have persecuted me, they will also persecute you; if they have kept my saying,
they will keep yours also" (John 15:20).
The last recorded
conflict in Acts is Paul's arrest in Jerusalem and his subsequent appeal to
Caesar.
The apostolic Church was almost exclusively Jewish,
especially in the pre-missionary days of Paul.
Christians naturally saw themselves as the "true Israel," the
faithful of God. If Jesus was
indeed Messiah, then His followers were the true people of God.
Wasn't it true that the elect of the Old Testament were always a remnant?
Why would it be any different in the early Church?
The unbelieving Jews were apostate because they rejected God's Anointed.
Granted, they believed in a future for Israel in
fulfillment of the Old Testament promises.
This is clear from their question to Jesus at the Ascension, "Wilt thou at this time restore again the kingdom to Israel?"
(Acts 1:6). Nevertheless,
they were the remnant, the true Israel.
For this reason, when the disciples began their
ministry after Pentecost, they reasoned that it was necessary for Gentile
converts to enter the household of faith via Judaism.
Jesus and the twelve never had an argument against Judaism as a religion,
but rather the hypocrisy of Israel's religious leaders.
The followers of Christ believed in His imminent
return. It never occurred to them
that almost two-thousand years would lapse between His first and second coming.
In a relatively short period of time Jesus would return, establish His
kingdom, and at that time the Gentiles would be included in God's program.
This is what the Old Testament led the Jews to expect.[1]
Meanwhile, Gentiles were welcome via Judaism.
"The problem of the mission to the Gentiles had not yet presented
itself in Jerusalem. The mission of the Twelve focused on the Jews and proselytes;
they have not begun even to consider evangelizing the Gentiles yet.
As far as the tradition of Jesus is concerned, the apostles can continue
to entrust them to God's care until the peoples' pilgrimage to Zion at the end
time."[2]
When Cornelius came to Christ in Acts 10, Peter
anticipated that he would be converted in the same manner as Gentiles in the Old
Testament; Cornelius would be circumcised and embrace the rites of Judaism.
It required a "sheet let down from heaven" to persuade Peter
otherwise. This in turn prepared
Peter for the Jerusalem Council in Acts 15.
Acts 15 opens with, "And
certain men which came down from Judaea taught the brethren, and said, Except ye
be circumcised after the manner of Moses, ye cannot be saved" (Acts 15:1). The
"brethren" of this verse were Jewish Christians who believed that
Gentile converts had to come to faith via Judaism.
This verse is not saying that they believed circumcision saved, for all
Christians believe that salvation is through faith in Christ alone.
By way of example, Paul says in I Cor 6:9-10:
"Know ye not that the unrighteous
shall not inherit the kingdom of God? Be not deceived: neither fornicators, nor
idolaters, nor adulterers, nor effeminate, nor abusers of themselves with
mankind, 10
Nor thieves, nor covetous, nor drunkards, nor revilers, nor extortioners,
shall inherit the kingdom of God." Paul
is not saying that you must stop these acts and clean up your life in order to
come to Christ for salvation. Rather
he is arguing that people properly related to Christ do not do these things.
So too in Acts 15:1, the Jews were merely arguing that circumcision must
accompany salvation, much like we believe regarding baptism.
Paul Johnson begins his account of A History of
Christianity with an analysis of the Jerusalem Council in AD 49.
Of the two accounts, in Acts 15 and Galatians 2-3, the latter reflects
the view of the person most responsible for delivering Christianity from
"becoming another Jewish sect."
"For Luke, the Jerusalem Council is an ecclesiastical incident.
For Paul, it is part of the greatest struggle ever waged. What lies behind it (is an)...unresolved question.
Had Jesus Christ founded a new religion, the true one at last?
Or, to put it another way, was he God or man?
If Paul is vindicated, Christianity is born.
If he is overruled, the teachings of Jesus become nothing more than the
hallmarks of a Jewish sect, doomed to be submerged in the mainstream of an
ancient creed" (p. 5).
"What the apostles were preaching was a form of Jewish revivalism. It had
strong apocalyptic overtones - very much part of the Jewish tradition - and it
used the resurrection event to prove and heighten the urgency of the message....
Their Judaic instincts were
still powerful and conservative. They
were oriented wholly to
Temple-worship.... The inference is that the leaders of the movement in
Jerusalem were much closer to
Judaism than Jesus, and indeed had been all along....
The gospel of John says that the earliest disciples came from the circle
of the Baptist, and this at a time when Jesus' early, simple teaching was
strongly reflective of the Baptist's..." (pp. 32-33).
"It is thus misleading to speak of an 'apostolic age', and equally misleading to speak of a primitive Pentecostal Church and faith.
The last point is important,
because it implies Jesus left a norm, in terms of doctrine, message, and
organization, from which the Church
subsequently departed. There was
never a norm.... The impression we get is that the Jerusalem Church was
unstable, and had a tendency to drift back into Judaism completely. Indeed, it was not really a separate Church at all, but part
of the Jewish cult" (p. 33).[3]
It is hard to over emphasize the impact Paul had on
the direction the Church took. Paul,
the "Hebrew of the Hebrews; as touching the law, a Pharisee,"[4]
argued adamantly that it wasn't necessary for Gentile converts to practice the
Old Testament rites. Christ
appeared to Paul on the Damascus road as "the end of the law for everyone
who has faith,"[5]
and free association between Jew and Gentile in Christ was demanded.
Paul prevailed at the Jerusalem Council, but in the
process dealt a death blow to Jewish evangelism.
It was one thing for Judaism to reckon with another sect giving
allegiance to Jesus; it was quite another to teach that Christianity had
superseded Judaism as the people of God.
"This is...also supported by explicit statements from Jewish sources
which have been collected by Professor Kilpatrick who quotes, as the most
informative piece of evidence, the Birkathha-Minim composed by Samuel the Small
at Jamnia c. AD 85.
In its earliest form it reads: 'for the excommunicate let there be no
hope and the arrogant government do thou swiftly uproot in our days; and may the
Christians and heretics suddenly be
laid low and not be inscribed with the righteous.
Blessed art thou, O Lord, who humbles the arrogant.'
The insertion in the liturgy henceforth made it impossible for
Christians of Jewish descent to attend the synagogue, as undoubtedly some
of them had done up to that time, and the breach was made absolute before AD 100
by sending out of letters from Palestine to all synagogues informing them of the
necessity of excluding Christians from their assemblies....A Jew had to be
either a Christian or a Jew; he could not be both at the same time."[6]
Two threads, running in different directions, wove
together to produce an anti-Semitic Church:
First was the conviction of the followers of Christ that He was Messiah
and they, therefore, were the true people of God. As the in the Old Testament the true Israel always
encompassed a small minority of the nation, so also in the days of the Twelve.
Second was the inclusion of the Gentiles into the
Church and Paul's insistence that they need not practice the Law.
From this time on, Jewish Christians became a struggling minority, and as
the liturgy of Birkathha-Minim indicated, Jews encouraged "the arrogant
government (to) do thou swiftly uproot in our days; and may the Christians and
heretics suddenly be laid low..."
It was natural, therefore, that the Church became
anti-Jewish and excluded them from any eschatological hope.
As we stand back and look at this from the objective advantage of almost
two-thousand years, it is easy to see how their cultural meiliu influenced their
theology. In all probability they
never perceived it happening.
This provides a warning to us regarding our culture's
ability to shape and distort our understanding of Biblical truth.
We are best served by challenging everything the world teaches in light
of Scripture. It will not entirely
eliminate culture's influence, but it will be a mitigating factor.
Grateful for so great a salvation,
[1]Note
Isaiah 11, esp. v. 10, and other related passages out of the OT prophets.
[2]Stuhlmacher,
Peter, The Approach, Style, and
Consequences of Primitive Christian Mission, Part two of a Dialogue at Trail West, Buena Vista, Colorado with Young Life in the spring of 1980,
translated by Michael Douglas and William Lee, p. 8.
[3]Johnson,
Paul, A History of Christianity, Atheneum, New York, 1980.
[4]Phil
3:5
[5]Rom
10:4
[6]Barnard, L.W., Studies in The Apostolic Fathers and Their Background, Basis Blackwell, Oxford, 1966, pp. 52-53.