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Steve
Katz on the Messiah Jewish
and Christian Views Compared Has
the Messiah come? How will we know if
it happens? And what will it mean to
our lives? In his final visit this
year, Professor Steve Katz of Boston University helped us to understand the
very different answers to these questions given by Judaism and
Christianity. And as we came to
understand these crucial differences, we gained insight about relationships
between ourselves and Christians--as two religions, as two different groups of
people, and as individuals. Perspectives on many
aspects of religious life are very different in Judaism and Christianity, as
Katz shared with us earlier this year.
Previously, we reported on Katz’ teaching that the two religions share a
piece of history but are based on very different concepts. In summary, he said that Judaism has its
unique and distinctive ideas of covenant, Torah, and tshuvah. Men and women sin, but can do repentance,
and God responds to that. Christianity,
on the other hand, has a different
conception of covenant and Torah and it emphasizes original sin and human
depravity; in the face of which, God’s power requires that we throw ourselves
on the mercy of God. Different Expectations In the realm of the Messiah
we also have key differences. In order
to figure out whether or not the messiah has come, we need to know what we
expect the messiah to be. Because the
Jewish and Christian notions of this are so different, based on the concepts at
the heart of each theology and world view;
it is possible for us to pray for the messianic era to begin, while the
church confirms that it has already begun. Broadly speaking, there is
no doubt that messianism is an essential idea in the Bible and in Judaism
generally. In some sense, it is an
answer to the problems of human existence.
The Biblical authors were aware that creation is imperfect and there are
theological conundrums: How can God be
just when there is evil? How can the
righteous suffer? In addition, we have
the deep question about the future of our lives and the future of our
planet. What will happen in the end of
time? Does life have a meaning or is it absurd? Is it random? Will we
disappear into nothingness or is there something more significant going on in
the world and the cosmic order? To solve many of these
problems, the Bible in its late phase and certainly the rabbis felt they had to
talk more about this world as we know it.
They started to speculate about the world to come and the afterlife and
the messianic future. To better understand this,
we need to make a few distinctions. Messianism VS Salvation The first and most
important, which is really repurcussive, is that Judaism very sharply
distinguishes between messianism and salvation. In the Jewish tradition, there is a specific conception of
messianism, but the messianic era is not about personal salvation in the sense
of saving you from sin. Opening the
gates to the afterlife and making it possible to have eternal reward is not the idea of the messianic function. On Yom Kippur, we repeat
the words of Rabbi Akiba in the Gemorah
“Before whom, Israel, do you atone?
Before your father in heaven.”
That is to say that salvation in history, the future of men and women in
the world above, has to do with their relationship with the Almighty. The messiah has no role. On the Christian side, it
is exactly the collapse of that distinction, the collapse of that disparity,
that is definitive. For the church,
messianism is defined largely in terms of opening the gates of heaven; of Jesus
as the new Adam, who expiates for original sin. His blood makes salvation possible and therefore the whole
messianic drama is redefined. Secondly, there is a
crucial connection between the way that Judaism and Christianity define the
human condition. This comes from
Judaism’s understanding that people are majestic. Because all people are created in the image of God, they can do
things God finds worthy; they can keep
the mitzvot. Judaism’s anthropology
doesn’t require a messianic person to lift us out of the muck, who will do for
us what we can’t do ourselves. It does
not say that we are impotent, powerless and that the Torah only reveals our
weakness. It does not require messianic
salvation as does Christianity. Also, in Judaism, when we
talk about the world to come, it is not about messianism. In Christianity, messianism and the world to
come are combined. The messiah will
play a role in opening the gates of heaven and in the future second coming. Jewish Messianism Here is what Jewish
messianism involves: First, there is the welfare
of the Jewish people. Second, through the Jewish
people there is benefit to all mankind.
We see this already in the blessing to Abraham: Those who bless you will be blessed, and
those who curse you will be cursed. In
other words, the Jewish people will benefit, but everyone else will as well. Third (and very important),
Jewish messianism and Christian messianism always involve the land of
Israel. That issue is very much front
and center today. The reuniting of
Jerusalem in 1967 set off waves of messianic enthusiasm. People went to settle on the west bank as a
messianic act.
Even in the United States,
there is a Christian in Texas who is growing red heifers for use in the purification ritual which will have to
be reintroduced. In fact, leading up to
Y2K, there was the fear of messianic cultists, who might blow up the mosques,
or do other dramatic acts to force the end of the premessianic world. There are also forces and
ideas which are always in place and they define the broad parameters of the
biblical idea and of the rabbinic idea:
Passover Related Concepts The most important of these
messianic elements is the Passover. In
the Bible, there are no dates except for Passover. Everything else is dated from that. Passover is the definitive event and Moses is the definitive hero. So it is not surprising that messianism in
one sense is always drawing on the idea of the Mosaic paradigm and the
Exodus. There are traditions in
rabbinic literature that the messiah is Moses returned; or that the messiah will marry the daughter
of Moses, who is usually named Rachel or Rebekah, and who lives over the mythical river Savat Yon. Also, in the first half of
the seder, we were slaves in Egypt and we tell the story. In the second half, we become dramatic
messianists. The cup of Elijah is
messianic, followed by messianic songs and ending with Had Gadya, which is
messianic. God conquers the Angel of
Death. That’s messianism. In addition, Isaiah and
Jeremiah are specific in their redemption, in that it is like the redemption
from Egypt. In all these cases, Moses
does not redeem you from sin. Moses
brings you out of servitude. And he
doesn’t open the gates of heaven. Rather,
he brings you into the land of Israel. The Solomonic Davidic Model The second crucial fact is
what we call the Solomonic Davidic model.
In the Bible, God doesn’t want a king, but Israel insists. God gives in and David becomes the model of
what a king should be. David also
confirms that the line of kings be Davidic.
Noted Katz, that is very special.
So what does it mean to be Solomonic and Davidic? If you look at the term
messiah, moshiach, which means
annointed, it appears 38 or 39 times in the Bible (one instance isn’t
clear). Six of the references are to
the high priest, like Aaron. Once, it
refers to either the patriarchs or Israel collectively, once to Cyrus, king of
the Meads who allows the Jews to return to Israel in 538, and two references in
Daniel which are uncertain. This means
that 28 or 29 of the 38 or 39 references are to the kings of Israel. It’s not an accident that the crucifixion is
depicted with the notation King of the Jews.
There is a tradition of the messiah as king. What does this mean? What does it mean to be the
king of Israel? First, it does not
allow you to cut it off from the national element. The king of Israel is meant to be the exemplar of wisdom and
justice. When there is a good king, a
paragon of virtue, the state functions properly. When there is a bad king, such as Jeroboam, son of Solomon who
introduces idolatry, things go badly. When the king is
unfaithful, things go awry in the community.
And the king has to see to it that justice is done, not only
preached. In that sense, the king
becomes the prince of peace and justice.
The phrase that Jesus is the prince of peace is from a rabbinic phrase. What all this means is that
there is a very deep national, political and territorial aspect to Israel‘s
notions of the messiah. There is also a
very heavy emphasis on Solomon. We talk about the messiah
as the son of David. Solomon was the
son of David. But why is Solomon the
model? First, he is the wisest of
men. Tradition said he could speak to
the animals and he knew the language of nature. There were stories such as the two mothers arguing over the
baby. Even though Solomon had great
weaknesses, it was a time of peace.
Solomon built the Temple, and extended the boundaries of the land; and
he was seen as wise and just. Other Biblical Sources There are two other
biblical references that are relevant.
These are not crucial for Judaism, but are crucial for Christianity. The first is chapter 53 of
Isaiah, the suffering servant passage.
If you don’t examine it carefully, it appears to be the prediction of a
messiah who was killed for the sake of others and who saves the world--the
suffering servant. This is the most
important passage for the church. The Jewish interpretation
of this passage, on the other hand, does not interpret it messianically. Generally, the suffering servant is seen to
be the people of Israel. It is also not
interpreted vicariously, in the sense of saving others. A second reference is the
tradition connected to the book of Daniel.
This does not play in Jewish tradition messianically, although it does
play a role mystically. In Christianity
it plays a role both messianically and mystically. The book of Daniel is an
odd book. It is the most famous example
in the Bible of a book attributed to someone who didn’t write it. Daniel didn’t write the book. It is written in the second century,
although the tradition is that it is of the fifth century. Daniel is a Jew who lives
at the court of the king of Persia.
People don’t like him. He won’t
eat with them. They throw him in the
lions’ den. In this book, there is
enormous energy of a visionary kind. In
Daniel 7-13, there is a reference: “One
like a son of man will come.” In
Christianity, that is thought to be Jesus.
In Jewish tradition, it is thought to be an angel, Michael (who is
suggested in a later passage) or the people of Israel collectively. There is a reference to the word messiah in
Daniel, but it’s a reference to the high priest or king, not a messianic
figure. So we have four
elements. In the Jewish tradition,
two--the Moses/Exodus and the Solomonic/Davidic, are the main ones. The bible makes a great deal of David. Samuel makes him king. His line is referred to as the eternal line
of kingship, bringing peace and security, defeating enemies and with a
tradition that he will come back. There are several strange
notions related to this in different biblical stories. There is the story of Lot’s daughters, who
each have a child by their father after Sodom and Gemorrah are destroyed. One is the father of the Amorites and one
the Moabites, which result in the
injunction not to marry Moabites. There
is the story of Tamar. When she gives
birth, one of her twins puts their hand out first, then retreats, confusing the
birth order. There is the story of Ruth,
the forbidden Moabite woman, who marries Boaz, reuniting the two lines of
Lot. These are three stories of sexual
impropriety, three stories of younger women chasing older men. Yet each story is about salvation. In another story we hear that Satan is
always on guard against the Messiah. Katz noted that all this
material is both remarkable and unfinished.
About half the messianic writings talk about a messianic figure; about
half a messianic time. In different
references, we find different attributes of the messianic era as well. The Role of the Rabbis Judaism is the creation of
the rabbis, not the Bible, Katz said, pointing out that their context is after
70 C.E. in a time of desolation and exile.
What they want to do with the messianic idea is something like Jeremiah
and Ezekial did after the destruction of the first Temple; that is, to create a
situation in which Israel does not give up hope, does not think life is random,
does not think there is no divine providence, does not think there is no
punishment or reward. They interpret
the destruction and the exile as the fulfillment of the covenant, not its
breaking. The curses are the negative
part of the covenant, but the covenant is still in operation. That means there are also promises and
redemption. All Israel needs to do is
do Tshuvah. So Israel goes into exile
“like an olive being squeezed to give the best oil.” The rabbis didn’t sit down
and write a systematic book called the Messiah. Rather, they discussed the idea incidentally in places where it
seemed to fit what they were talking about.
Katz noted that rabbinic literature is a long literature, covering a
long time span. We tend to lump it all
together, but it begins before the destruction of the Temple and then is
codified in the Mishnah and certain Midrashim which were completed about 200
CE. From about 200 to 550 is the period
of the Gemorrah. Together they comprise
the Talmud. That constitutes five or six centuries of material. Although it may seem easy for us to lump
this time period together it is as long as the time from the beginning of the
Renaissance until today. If we actually divide
rabbinic literature by time period, we find relatively little about the Messiah
until 200. For example, the Pirke Avot
talks about the future in terms of the King of Kings redeeming Israel. That’s a fundamental text and there is no
mention of the Messiah. The medieval tradition,
on the other hand, is very rich in messianic notions. One of the cental features
of the concept is the restorative notion, the idea of the return to
paradise. It is as though we want to
overturn human history and return to the beginning of time. Maimonides writes in this tradition, as he
writes of restoring the kings. A second idea is more
future oriented. The future will be
different from the past as the future will be a time of perfect behavior. A third concept is not
about the past or the future, but is apocalyptic. It is about some kind of dramatic intervention that will bring
destruction and catastrophe. This
concept makes very sharp distinctions between sin and purity, between the
children of light and darkness, and includes the notion of war between good and
evil. These dramatic ideas are
connected with the end of time and are very powerful. We see them in the Dead Sea Scrolls and in the legal writings of
the church. With these explanations,
Katz ended his series for this year.
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