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The surprising response to my ‘Rabbi Jesus’ post

IESVS·NAZARENVS·REX·IVDÆORVM (Jesus Nazarenus, rex Judæorum) English translation: "Jesus Nazarene, King of the Jews"(Photo: Leo Reynolds/Flickr)

On August 22, on the spur of the moment, I posted this on 𝕏 and on Facebook:

A friendly reminder:

Jesus was a rabbi, not a reverend.

He was a Jew, not a Christian.

His name was Yeshua and His mother's name was Miriam.

He was called Christ because it was the Greek way of saying Messiah.

He is the Savior of the world because He is Israel's Messiah.

To my surprise, while the post received 1.1 thousand likes on Facebook, where I have 587 thousand followers, it received 2.8 thousand likes on 𝕏, where I have only 61 thousand followers. Why so much interest in such a simple, matter-of-fact post?

As of this writing, the post has been viewed more than 202 thousand times on 𝕏 (which is a lot for one of my posts there). It has also received more than 880 comments, quite a few of them taking issue with the post or feeling the need to clarify it. What’s so controversial about what I wrote?

Jesus, along with John the Immerser (aka John the Baptist), were both called “rabbi” in the New Testament, while the concept of “reverend” only came into use many centuries later (perhaps beginning in the 15th century). 

As for Jesus being a Jew not a Christian, again, that is a simple matter of historical fact and common-sense logic. That’s because the New Testament teaches that Jesus was born King of the Jews and died King of the Jews, whereas the word “Christian” was only coined more than a decade after the Lord’s death and resurrection.

As for His original name, along with that of His mother, again, these are simple, historical facts, as both Jesus and Mary are the product of Hebrew names being transmitted into Greek, then into Latin, then, eventually, into English. This is hardly rocket science.

As for the word Christ, from the Greek christos, meaning anointed, it is a translation of the Hebrew word mashiach, also meaning anointed, from which we get Messiah. But “Christ” was not the Lord’s last name. It was the Greek way of calling Jesus the Messiah.

Of course, as basic as all this is, it is still jarring for some people to hear, as many think of Jesus in exclusively Christian terms to the exclusion of His Jewish roots.

To do so is not just factually inaccurate. It also presents a misleading spiritual picture, raising the obvious question: If Jesus is now so disconnected from His origins and roots, why is He returning to Jerusalem? Why not return to Rome (or Constantinople, or Moscow, or the Bible Belt in the USA)?

To take this one step further, does it jar you to hear the names of the apostles in a way that would be closer to how their names sounded in Yeshua’s day? Let’s find out!

As rendered in the Jewish New Testament (now part of the Complete Jewish Bible): “These are the names of the twelve emissaries: First, Shim‘on, called Kefa, and Andrew his brother, Ya‘akov Ben-Zavdai and Yochanan his brother, Philip and Bar-Talmai, T’oma and Mattityahu the tax-collector, Ya‘akov Bar-Halfai and Taddai, Shim‘on the Zealot, and Y’hudah from K’riot, who betrayed him.”

If this makes you uncomfortable at all, you should ask yourself why. It might reveal some hidden and unhealthy spiritual baggage.

Getting back to my post, though, it seems that a lot of people had a problem with the last line, which stated, “He is the Savior of the world because He is Israel's Messiah,” with some commenters adding extensive commentary or clarification or correction.

But why did they find it necessary to do so? What’s so controversial about these words?

During His earthly ministry, Jesus said that He had come only to the lost sheep of the house of Israel, sending out His disciples on that same exclusive mission (see Matthew 15:24; 10:5-6). And before His birth, the angel Gabriel explained that He would save His people from their sins (Matthew 1:21).

After His resurrection, He pointed His disciples to prophecies about Him written in the Hebrew Scriptures and asked them, “Did not the Messiah [Greek, “Christ”] have to suffer these things and then enter his glory?” (Luke 24:26)

Yet because the mission of Israel’s Messiah included being a light to the nations (see, e.g., Isaiah 11:1-10; 42:1-7), Jesus is not only the Jewish Messiah but also the Savior of the world, and the Great Commission is to all the nations (Matthew 28:18-20).

Put another way, if Jesus failed to be the promised Messiah of Israel, He would be the Savior of no one. Hence my statement, “He is the Savior of the world because He is Israel's Messiah.” And it is as both the Savior of the world and the Messiah of Israel that Jesus-Yeshua will return one day, setting up His kingdom in Jerusalem.

That’s also why, according to the book of Revelation, the eternal city in which we will dwell with God on earth is called “the New Jerusalem” (see Revelation 21:1-4). And that’s why the twelve gates of the city will bear the names of the twelve tribes of Israel, while the twelve foundation stones will bear the names of the twelve (all Jewish) apostles (see Revelation 21:9-14).

And in this eternal, glorious city, all those who have been redeemed by the blood of Jesus, both Gentile and Jew, will live side by side as equals, without distinction of caste or class. We are all one in Him!

But let’s not forget our Savior’s history and roots, especially after centuries of Christian leaders portraying Him as a fair-eyed, European Gentile and, today, Muslims portraying Him as a Palestinian liberationist.

Let us recover the biblical, Jewish roots of the faith. This will only deepen and enhance our relationship with our heavenly Father, also known as the God of Abraham, Isaac, and Jacob.

I hope this doesn’t trouble you.

Michael L. Brown is the founder and president of AskDrBrown Ministries and of FIRE School of Ministry, and host of the daily, nationally, syndicated talk radio show, The Line of Fire.

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