Saturday, 23 August 2014

Brad Young: Jesus, the Jewish Theologian

Dr Brad H. Young

"In an internationally recognised university, a world-renown New Testament scholar remarked to his students, "The first thing you must do to be a good Christian is to kill the Jew inside of you."  One of the students raised her hand to respond to his statement with a question. The learned professor listened as she asked him, "Do you mean Jesus?"  Jesus the Jewish Theologian, page xxi.

"Theologians have read the gospels as Christian literature, written by the church and for the church. When Jesus is viewed among the Gentiles, the significance of Jewish culture and custom is minimized, or forgotten altogether. But when Jesus is viewed as a Jew, within the context of First Century Judaism, an entirely different portrait emerges." Jesus the Jewish Theologian, page xxii.

"As Christians we tend to view Paul as the Church's first theologian. I have become convinced that this approach is theology at its worst. Christianity begins with Jesus."  Jesus the Jewish Theologian, page xxxiii.

"Many Jews have died because of Christian views of Judaism. Not only have Christians wrongly persecuted the Jewish people because of our erroneous beliefs about Jews and Judaism,  but we have robbed ourselves of a treasured heritage which would have been the source of great spiritual enrichment. By rejecting Judaism, the church has missed Jesus. The major problem with Christianity today is a failure to appreciate the life and teachings of Jesus."  Jesus the Jewish Theologian, page 261.

I suppose we will never miss what we have never known or had to begin with.

Brad Young is a Professor of Biblical Literature in Judeao Christian Studies at the Graduate Department of Oral Roberts University. He is also founder and President of the Gospel Research Foundation, Inc.



2 comments:

Anonymous said...

Could you mention this to the Presbyterian Church?!

Kublai7777 said...

Unfortunately it can take generations for a natural conservativism to be overcome. People don't like change, because it's painful. Lots of risk averse people who don't have the time to research it for themselves will wait for a critical mass of experts to lead the way. Until that critical mass is achieved, there won't be an en masse paradigm shift.