Christian Post
 
Koshering Jesus More: An Evangelical Review of Shmuley Boteach's 'Kosher  
Jesus'

 
 





 
By _Dr. Paul de  Vries_ 
(http://www.christianpost.com/author/dr-paul-de-vries/)  , CP Guest Columnist
March 23,  2012


 
"Please remember that Jesus is a Jew," I said to my Jewish  colleagues at 
our Jewish-Evangelical Roundtable in late December 2011. Then, to  the 
Christian participants, I said, "Please remember that without Hanukkah,  there 
would have been no Christmas." For the next three weeks we Jews  and Christians 
demonstrated together in front of the Iraqi UN Embassy — and met  with the 
Ambassador twice—on behalf of Assyrian Christians and other religious  
minorities. 
My colleague Howard Teich, a practicing attorney and noted Jewish leader, 
is  an essential, catalytic leader in our Jewish-Evangelical meetings and 
activities  together. We disagree and learn respectfully from each other, and 
that's the joy  and adventure of our dialogue. In our paired essays we are 
taking our dialogue  public. I maintain that we can kosher Jesus even more 
than either he or  Rabbi Boteach do. 
The Jewish-Evangelical Roundtable was initiated about 30 months ago after I 
 had some engaging conversations with Rabbi Joseph Potasnik, executive 
director  of the New York Board of Rabbis. Quickly we decided that the 
conversations were  so valuable that we ought to involve other rabbis and 
evangelical 
leaders. We  now meet bi-monthly for breakfast and single-topic discussions 
at Calvary  Baptist Church or Fifth Avenue Synagogue. 
For me, reading the book Kosher Jesus by the articulate Rabbi  Shmuley 
Boteach was the next step in Jewish-Evangelical Christian engagement —  not 
just 
for our Roundtable, but for promoting Judeo-Christian values and  culture 
to America and the world. And as Rabbi Boteach himself notes at the end  of 
his book, "the hyphen between Jewish and Christian values is Jesus  himself." 
As an Evangelical Christian, I am the type of reader that Boteach 
explicitly  references most often in his book. Like most Evangelical 
Christians, I 
have  always thought of Jesus as kosher — as a theologically Orthodox,  
law-keeping Jew. He asserted that he would not tolerate a change in the Law, 
and  
he based legal exceptions on Hebrew Scripture, as Boteach does. In addition, 
77%  of the Bible that we Christians carry is the Hebrew Scriptures, and 
another 17%  consists of books of the New Testament written by Jews. Only Luke 
 and Acts, the remaining 6%, were written by a Gentile, Dr. Luke. Besides, 
we are  always conscious of the fact that the stories recorded throughout 
the Bible  occurred either in or near the Jewish homeland of Israel. And, by 
the way, we  know that "holy land tours" do not take people to Missouri, 
Mozambique or  Mongolia!
 
 
We Evangelical Christians know our historic dependence on Jews and Israel — 
 and this knowledge helps to explain our leadership and devotion to saving 
Jewish  lives at tremendous risk during the Holocaust and our current 
commitment both to  religious liberty and the security of Israel. We cannot 
express enough gratitude  for the spiritual and cultural heritage into which we 
are grafted. 
Moreover, when the Gospel (the unique story of Jesus' life, death and  
resurrection for the sake of all people) is introduced in the Bible, very  
intentionally the first recipients are Jews. We Evangelical Christians are  
constantly reminded of our debt to the Jewish Scriptures and our roots in the  
Jewish world. In particular, the centrality of a kosher, Jewish Jesus who  
frequently cited the Hebrew Scriptures is abundantly clear. Paul and the other  
apostles persistently quote and honor a Jewish Jesus. 
In Boteach's significant efforts in this book to make Jesus more  kosher 
for the Jewish community, he embarks on several themes,  including that (1) 
Jews are not to blame for Jesus' death, that (2) historically  Jesus was not 
especially critical of Judaism and Jewish leaders of his time, and  that (3) 
there is no basis for claims of Jesus' divinity though Jesus is an  
exemplary human. With this koshering of the Gospel story by  rooting it in 
Orthodox 
Judaism, Boteach says it is again OK to honor and learn  from perhaps the 
most influential Jew in history. Jesus can be embraced as a  driving Jewish 
force for liberty, democracy and human rights. 
The evidence shows that Boteach is right on the first theme and only partly 
 right on the other two points. Nevertheless, his conclusion is right, that 
Jesus  remains a valuable resource for many good causes. 
First, blaming Jews for Jesus' death is patently absurd—and completely 
based  upon a hellish race-hatred. It was a fabricated excuse for envious, 
greedy  people to bear false witness in order to steal, in God's Name, Jewish 
property  and murder Jewish citizens--thus breaking at least five of the Ten 
Commandments  all at once. That a few Jewish and Roman people in a crowd at 
Jesus' trial asked  to be blamed for Jesus' crucifixion does not make either 
God or us blame either  them or their descendants. 
Clearly, corrupt priests were involved, too, as Boteach reports, and a  
brutal, oppressive empire wanted no hint of a threat from an articulate 
prophet.  However, in Jesus' own telling and in the interpretation given by the 
apostles,  Jesus chose to give his life for us and profoundly engineered events 
of Passion  Week so that he was killed right before Passover. Jesus' 
passion was not  passive. Jesus masterfully played all the religious and 
political 
factors  for his unique purposes — to be the ultimate Passover Lamb of God, 
and then to  conquer death and lead us forward. 
Second, Boteach claims that historically Jesus was not especially critical 
of  the Judaism and Jewish leaders of his time. Boteach tries to support 
this  conclusion by asserting the criticisms reported in the Gospel stories 
were  inserted by unnamed "editors" to justify an alleged anti-Semitic bias of 
early  Christians—and the parts that are pro-Jewish, he claims, were left in 
only  because these Christian "editors" were too clumsy to take them out.  
"Interpretation with a scissors," is what I call it when someone  
arbitrarily ignores or cuts out major portions of an interpreted text. The cut  
and 
paste method of Biblical interpretation is always disappointing and  sometimes 
dangerous. The resulting "paper-doll" of the historical text then  becomes 
more our own work than a worthy object of study. With these  "scissors" we 
can lose our ability to correct our self-deception  because we cut out 
anything that we disagree with. 
In other portions of Kosher Jesus, Boteach correctly recognizes that  many 
of the Jewish leaders of Jesus' time were corrupt puppets of the Roman  
Empire. Besides, compared with the earlier prophets in the Hebrew Scriptures,  
Jesus' criticism of Jewish leaders was not extraordinary. Boteach, Teich and 
I  all agree that many religious leaders of that time deserved strong 
criticism.  There were exemplary religious leaders, too — such as Joseph of 
Arimathea and  Nicodemus — as the New Testament records. As Howard Teich 
observes, 
"Jesus saw  wrongs and tried to right them — of the Jewish people and 
humanity and, yes, the  Roman rule of Israel." 
Third, Boteach maintains that there is no basis for claims of Jesus'  
divinity, although Jesus was an exemplary human. To achieve this, our cosmetic  
surgeon-rabbi enhances the kosher of Jesus by scissoring  out all the 
references to Jesus as deity—both in the Gospels and in  the apostles' 
writings. He 
skillfully magnifies the extraordinary, heroic, wise,  spiritual, devout 
humanity of Jesus. 
It would have also helped Boteach's project if he had made clear that Jesus 
 was a big disappointment to nearly everyone. Zealots were  disappointed in 
him because Jesus believed that even successful radical  political reform 
was secondary to spiritual awakening for individuals and  communities. He 
believed that spiritual awakening was the secure grounding for  quality and 
sustained political reform, as we have discovered in America's  historic 
awakenings. Moreover, the Pharisees were disappointed in  him because while 
Jesus 
still believed that the Law, the Torah, is our best  guide and teacher, he 
also taught that the Torah never replaced vibrant  relationship with the 
living Lord God. The Sadducees were  disappointed because he believed in 
objective, measurable supernatural  engagement that affects our lives now and 
into 
eternity. Finally, the  Disciples were often deeply disappointed, too — for 
many reasons  as they honestly record in the Gospels. In the similar ways, 
Jesus today often  disappoints Republicans and Democrats, capitalists and 
socialists, collectivists  and libertarians. However huge our expectant 
messianic boxes, Jesus violates the  walls, for he is greater and more 
embracing 
than any human ideology or  expectation. Thank God. 
However, it is his persistent resistance to the divinity of Jesus —  
resistance by Boteach and many of his predecessors—that is the main  
disappointment with Boteach's inspiring Kosher Jesus. Skip over the  doctrinal 
disputes — 
after all I am a professional philosopher and my colleague  Howard Teich is 
a practicing attorney — and notice that in the Hebrew Scriptures  which are 
Boteach's interpretive context for Jesus, there are numerous  encounters 
with a divine-human. For example, just before the "battle" for  Jericho, 
Joshua met the human-looking Captain of the Lord's army, and Joshua  worshipped 
him (Joshua 5). Later, Ezekiel was commissioned by a Being, a human  who 
shined with the glory of God. This Being told him to say, "Thus says the  
Lord," 
whenever Ezekiel taught what this Being gave him (Ezekiel 2). Was  this the 
Lord as human? In Daniel 7, an extraordinary Human is seen  with God (the 
Ancient of Days), and God gives to this Human all the power over  all 
peoples, all nations, all languages — for "a kingdom that will not end."  Is 
this 
the Lord, even as human? And who was the special "Human"  in the furnace 
(Daniel 3)? Is the divine-human gap really  unbridgeable? Isaiah prophesies 
that 
a human baby would be also  "mighty God, everlasting Father" (Isaiah 9). 
What does that  mean? So, the Hebrew Scriptures allow a human form within the 
divine —  and the divine uniquely in a human. 
The Torah, in the first five Hebrew books, agrees — because it was there  
first. Abram repeatedly encountered God in human form, as in Genesis 12, 15, 
17  and 18 — and he responded by treating this human as God himself. God has 
enough  of human presence that he hand-writes the Decalogue on stones, 
twice, and  double-sided! In addition, the special "angel" bearing the Lord's 
Name within,  speaking with God's authority, guided Moses (Exodus 23). If a 
divine-human were  so offensive, why not scissor out these numerous passages,  
too? 
More positively, with these and other precedents in the Hebrew Scripture 
that  Jews and Christians share, why not see Jesus as part of—the epitome of —
 this  splendid, documented role of a divine-human? Forget divisive 
doctrines; ignore  confounding creeds. What about this life, this example, this 
Jesus, so immersed  in the world of his Hebrew Scriptures and culture? The 
"divine-human" may have  been a pagan Greek idea (earliest 1000 BCE) — but 
before the Greek myths it was  Moses' (1300 BCE) idea, and earlier Abraham's 
(2000 BCE) idea and God's idea  (before time). 
Even more elemental, the divine-human should be no real surprise, since all 
 humans are the Image of God already from the beginning (Genesis 1). The 
very  definition of human is to be shaped matter with God's Spirit breathed 
inside  (Genesis 2). If the divine-human gap seems unbridgeable, is that more 
because of  the influence of modernity and Darwinism focusing us on the 
origins of our  matter — rather than on what matters even more? Do we all too 
easily ignore the  Spirit's presence within? Perhaps the exemplar, the real 
divine-human  Jesus, can spark a timely revaluation of ourselves. Are we more 
than fleshly  matter? Can the real kosher Jesus help us matter more? 
Today, I am grateful that Jesus is back in the discussion; that Jews and  
Christians are talking again about this singular, towering figure; that one  
extraordinary life can motivate Jews, Christians and others to stand up for  
non-violence, defend religious liberty and other basic divinely-given 
rights,  and pursue the best that we are made to be; and that the exemplary 
Jesus 
can be  kosher, again. 
Thank you, Rabbi Boteach, for introducing the vibrant, kosher Jesus once 
more  — and thank you, Howard Teich, for drawing me into this renewed 
conversation  about Jesus. Perhaps he is the bridge for revitalizing and 
strengthening the  much needed Judeo-Christian culture, community, 
collaborations and  
commitments.

-- 
Centroids: The Center of the Radical Centrist Community 
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