A few weeks ago I received an email from a Jewish man who had hard questions about what Christians believe. His questions were excellent. His inquiries about Christianity boiled down to three questions.
I’ve listed his questions here without changing his wording:
What I can never fathom is how you can honor and accept the ‘teachings’ of one called Paul—an apostate and traitor to his people—to be the truth.• Is this Paul who wrote 13/27 books of the Greek New Testament any more authoritative than the great Hebrew prophets such as Jeremiah or Amos?
• Are we to assume that G-d changed His Mind regarding His People and the Torah, and simply informed one solitary man about a new dispensation 100 years after the death of the man from Galilee?
• When Hashem [“The Name”] gave us the Torah, there were millions of witnesses to this earth-shaking event. It has become part of our collective spiritual DNA. How can a ‘new revelation’ be given with no witnesses to one individual who wrote in Greek things that are anathema and inimical to Jewish belief?
To me, these questions all boil down to one: Is Jesus the Messiah?
Here is my open-letter answer. Would you have answered differently?
(Note: I’ve changed his name to Jacob in order to keep his identity confidential.)
Jacob, I completely agree with you that God did not change His mind.
All of these promises God has remembered and honored. Rather than change His mind, instead, God has kept His promises.
Saul of Tarsus completely stood in your position. In fact, he so vigorously disagreed with Christianity’s premise that Yeshua was the Messiah that Saul persecuted Christians and had them arrested. What’s more, he stood in full agreement when a Christian named Stephen was stoned.
I’ve always found it amazing that the followers of Yeshua all fled and forsook him when he was arrested. And yet, for some reason, these same frightened men would go on to witness that Yeshua had been resurrected. What’s more, they would all willingly die a martyr’s death—something completely unlikely if what they had been proclaiming was a lie. They were convinced the resurrection was true and were willing to die for that.
Jacob, I’m not able to convince you through reason—and that’s perfectly fine.
Many, many times in the Hebrew Scriptures, the Lord fulfilled His Word in ways the Jews never expected—and in fact, rejected—but then came to understand.
But logic only goes so far, and when all the questions have been answered, the only step left to take is to believe—or to reject. Faith and belief have always been the sole basis of a Jew’s righteousness before God.
This was true:
Really, Christians don’t see the Hebrew Scriptures as obsolete—nor does the New Testament replace them.
We see one continuous story of promises made and fulfilled by a God who loves us and who provided one who would pay for our sins and come again one day to reign as King from Jerusalem.
Tell me what you think: So, tell me—how would you have answered Jacob’s questions? To leave a comment, just click here.