Tuesday, 6 January 2026

Keeping Torah isn't "Becoming Jewish"

When Gentile Heritage Keep Torah: Why It’s Not “Becoming Jewish” but Returning to the God of Israel

For centuries, Christians have wrestled with a deceptively simple question:
Should Gentile believers keep the Torah?

Most people assume the answer is obvious — “No, that’s Jewish stuff.”
But that assumption rests on a modern misunderstanding: the idea that Torah commandments are ethnic markers rather than God’s revelation of a godly life.

Once you clear away that confusion, the whole picture changes.

The Real Problem: Commandments Became Ethnic Markers

Circumcision, kosher laws, Sabbath, and festivals are not cultural badges.
They are commandments — divine instructions given to shape a holy people.

But over time, these commandments took on a second function:

  • They became boundary markers separating Jews from Gentiles
  • They became identity signals in a hostile world
  • They became ethnic shorthand for “who belongs”

This sociological layer eventually overshadowed the commandments’ original purpose.

So when modern observers see Gentile believers keeping Torah, they instinctively think:

“They’re trying to be Jews.”

But that reaction reveals more about our categories than about Scripture.

Torah Observance Doesn’t Make You a Jew — Faith Does

This is the heart of the matter.

If Torah observance made someone Jewish, then:

  • Abraham wasn’t a Jew
  • Ruth wasn’t a Jew
  • Rahab wasn’t a Jew
  • The mixed multitude at Sinai weren’t Jews

Yet Scripture calls them all part of Israel.

Why?

Because Jewish identity begins with faithful allegiance to the God of Abraham, Isaac, and Jacob, not with ethnicity or ritual performance.

As one rabbi put it to me:

“Can you call yourself a Jew if you do not love the Lord your God with all your heart, mind, and strength?”

This is the essence of the Shema.
This is the essence of Abraham’s story.
This is the essence of Hebrews 11.

Faith creates identity.
Obedience expresses it.

Paul’s Actual Concern: Gatekeeping, Not Torah-Keeping

Paul never says:

  • “Gentiles must not keep Torah.”
  • “Torah is abolished.”
  • “Commandments don’t matter.”

He says the opposite:

  • “The Torah is holy, righteous, and good.”
  • “We establish the Torah through faith.”
  • “Keeping God’s commandments is what matters.”

Paul’s fight is not against Torah.
It’s against using Torah as a membership test.

He opposes circumcision for Gentiles as a requirement for belonging, not as a way of life for those who already belong.

He dismantles ethnic gatekeeping, not God’s commandments.

Acts 15: The Most Misunderstood Chapter in the New Testament

Most Christians read Acts 15 as:

“Gentiles only need four rules.”

But James adds a crucial line:

“For Moses is read in the synagogues every Sabbath.”

This means:

  • Gentile believers would be in synagogue
  • They would hear Torah weekly
  • They would learn how to live a godly life
  • The four prohibitions were entry-level, not the whole expectation

The Jerusalem elders weren’t restricting Gentile discipleship.
They were starting it.

So why did they keep differentiating between "Jews" and "Gentiles"?

In Acts, the Apostles recognized a practical distinction between Jews with ethnic heritage and Gentile converts. 

Gentiles, though spiritually grafted into Israel, could not be assumed to know Torah theology or practice; they needed instruction from scratch. 

For convenience, the early church often still called them “Gentiles,” creating classificational confusion given Gentiles’ historic exclusion. 

Paul pushed against this confusion—“neither Jew nor Greek… you are all one” (Galatians 3:28)—without fully redefining “what makes a Jew,” leaving practical categories in use.

So Should Gentile Believers Keep Torah?

Here’s the answer that fits the Torah, the prophets, Jesus, Paul, and Acts 15:

Gentile believers should not keep Torah to become Jews.
They should keep Torah because they belong to the God of Israel.

Not as:

  • ethnic performance
  • cultural assimilation
  • salvation by works

But as:

  • covenant faithfulness
  • obedience
  • discipleship
  • love for God
  • alignment with His revealed way of life

They’re not trying to “become Jews.”
They’re living as members of Israel’s family, grafted in by faith.

They’re not trying to earn salvation.
They’re trying not to be lawless.

They’re not adopting identity markers.
They’re honouring commandments.

The Punchline

The confusion comes from assuming Torah = Jewish ethnicity.

But Scripture teaches:

Torah = God’s revelation of a godly life.

And Scripture teaches:

Faith = the doorway into Israel’s family.

So when Gentile believers embrace Torah, they’re not crossing ethnic lines.  
They’re stepping into the life God revealed for His people.

Not to become Jews.
But because they already became Jews by faith and belong to Israel’s God.

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