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POSTED
14 JANUARY, 2011
Skewing the
Basic Facts of Scripture
by
J.K. McKee
editor@tnnonline.net
reproduced from the McHuey Blog
14 January, 2008
I was recently talking to a Messianic friend of mine who had
just attended church over a week ago while visiting relatives
out of town. This church is fairly large, with several Sunday
services that serve well over a thousand in attendance. The
service lasts one hour. There are some announcements, some
praise songs, and then the pastor puts his Bible down on a
barstool and speaks off-the-cuff for twenty minutes. Everything
he says, as far as I was told, was spoken spontaneously.
Last week, this pastor apparently was speaking on the encounter
of Yeshua with the teachers in the Temple complex (Luke
2:41-42). This is certainly a familiar scene for many of us, as
Joseph and Mary’s family had visited Jerusalem to celebrate the
Passover, and on their way back to Galilee they notice that
Yeshua is not with their traveling party. They have to turn
around and go back to Jerusalem to find Him.
The pastor, trying to make a joke I assume, flippantly declared
how concerned Mary must have been for the young Jesus—only
twelve—being in the Temple. She would have been ranting at
Joseph and haggling him, no different than any Twenty-First
Century American housewife, at why he let Him get away.
As it was reported to me, why would Jesus want to have been in
the Temple, anyway? Surely he was too young at the age of twelve
to have been there. The pastor said that Mary would have asked
Joseph, “Why couldn’t you have let Him wait until He was 16?!”
Upon hearing this, my Messianic friend did not know what to do.
Did this pastor really not prepare his sermon for Sunday? Or did
he really not understand First Century Judean Jewish culture?
For us as Messianics, this is an easy one. The ages of twelve to
thirteen were the time when Jewish boys would traditionally be
bar mitzvahed
and acknowledged as responsible members of the community
(although probably without much
of the ceremony that is attached to it today).
Even the venerable NIV
Study Bible—surely a resource this pastor has in his
library—recognizes this:
“At age 12 boys began preparing to take their places in the
religious community the following year.”[1]
Yeshua’s words to Mary, “Why is it that you were looking for Me?
Did you not know that I had to be in My Father’s
house?” (Luke
2:49) were entirely appropriate. Our Lord was being properly
prepared for His future adult ministry, already developing a
reputation with the Jerusalem Rabbis. Yet, as the pastor
paraphrased Him, “Mother, didn’t you know I would be in church?”
It can be pretty easy to criticize Christian pastors for making
errors like these—even though many pastors would in fact,
prepare their sermons in advance. This pastor, however, did not
prepare his
sermon. But what
happens when similar errors are seen in the Messianic community?
I was also recently handed a newsletter from a major Messianic
organization. The lead article in this newsletter spoke on some
of the significance of
Chanukah for us as the Messianic community. In the
article, its author spoke about the parallels that exist between
the story of the Maccabees and the Last Days. Then appeared this
paragraph:
“The days were very similar to those described by Timothy.
However, by Timothy’s time the days of Antiochus Epiphanes were
long past and Israel was now under Roman rule. Timothy was
writing about the last days, days that we have not yet seen…”[2]
When I read this paragraph, I honestly did not know what to do.
Part of me wanted to laugh, part of me wanted to scream, and
part of me wanted to clean my glasses to check that I had read
this properly. A very
glaring error had been made.
There was no passage of Scripture referenced to in this article
regarding the Last Days, but I am assuming that it is 2 Timothy
3:1-5:
“But realize this, that in the last days difficult times will
come. For men will be lovers of self, lovers of money, boastful,
arrogant, revilers, disobedient to parents, ungrateful, unholy,
unloving, irreconcilable, malicious gossips, without
self-control, brutal, haters of good, treacherous, reckless,
conceited, lovers of pleasure rather than lovers of God, holding
to a form of godliness, although they have denied its power;
avoid such men as these.”
But what was the problem with what was said? It is very clear
for anyone who has read either 1 or 2 Timothy:
“Timothy was writing…”
I have a feeling that the author of this Messianic article
failed to read 2 Timothy 1:1-2:
“Paul, an apostle of Messiah Yeshua by the will of God,
according to the promise of life in Messiah Yeshua, To Timothy,
my beloved son: Grace, mercy
and peace from God
the Father and Messiah Yeshua our Lord.”
Or for that same matter, 1 Timothy 1:1-2:
“Paul, an apostle of Messiah Yeshua according to the commandment
of God our Savior, and of Messiah Yeshua,
who is our hope,
To Timothy, my
true child in the
faith: Grace, mercy and
peace from God the Father and Messiah Yeshua our Lord.”
One does not have to go very far to see what the problem is;
the Apostle Paul
is author of 1&2 Timothy. Certainly, there are liberal
theologians who believe that the Pastoral Epistles of 1&2
Timothy and Titus are all Deutero-Pauline, meaning that Paul did
not write them. But I have never heard about Timothy writing to
himself. I sincerely hope that the reference to “Timothy was
writing…” was just an omission on the part of the Messianic
writer, and this mistake just did not get caught in time among
proofreaders in his office.
In all candor, though, these are the kinds of mistakes that we
would expect second graders in Sunday School to make—not grown
men who lead Messianic organizations.
Some people may wonder at times why our ministry is a stickler
when it comes to details. Well, if a Jewish person were in
attendance at the church, hearing that the young Yeshua in the
Temple complex at twelve was a bad thing, he or she would think
that the pastor did not know what he was talking about as it was
clearly connected to His
bar mitzvah. It could seriously turn the person off to
hearing the gospel! At the same time, passing on an inaccurate
statement about Timothy writing the letters that Paul actually
wrote to him, does not exactly help Messianic credibility,
either.
Are you concerned about the basic facts of Scripture? I hope so!
If you are, then remember that Outreach Israel Ministries and
TNN Online are always in the process of producing new, cutting
edge educational materials (including commentaries) that can
help you in your distinct Messianic walk. I would highly
recommend that if you have not done so already, you purchase a
copy of our
Survey
of the Apostolic Scriptures for the Practical Messianic
study, including an MP3 audio CD with lectures. Be informed
about the discussions that have been going on for decades in the
realm of Biblical composition. Do not get caught unaware when
skewed facts are passed along, be they by a Christian pastor or
even a Messianic leader.
J.K. McKee
(B.A., University of Oklahoma; M.A., Asbury
Theological Seminary) is the editor of TNN
Online (www.tnnonline.net) and is a Messianic
apologist.
He is a 2009 recipient of the Zondervan Biblical
Languages Award for Greek.
He
is author of
numerous books, dealing with a wide range of
topics that are important for today’s
Messianic Believers. He has also written many articles on
theological issues,
and is presently focusing his attention on Messianic commentaries
of various books of the Bible.
NOTES
[1]
Kenneth L. Barker, ed., et. al., NIV Study Bible
(Grand Rapids: Zondervan, 2002), 1572.
[2]
Scott Diffenderfer. “Lessons from
Hanukkah”
Messianic Israel Alliance Herald
December 2007, p 2.
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