Save "Judaism and Messiah, Session 5"
Judaism and Messiah, Session 5
In evaluating the rabbinic evidence, it is important to keep in mind several things:
  1. messianic themes represent only a small fraction of rabbinic literature, and much of the messianic material is concentrated in one lengthy passage (b. Sanh. 96b-99a)
  2. all of these statements are from non-legal material (aggadah), in which multiple traditions are often cited for the purpose of edification and even entertainment, with no interest in producing a single authoritative opinion
  3. while the expectation of a future redemption and belief in a resurrection of the dead and final accounting are fundamental principles of the rabbinic worldview, most rabbinic literature focuses on sanctifying this world by studying and keeping the commandments and repenting for sin by deeds of mercy and piety.
Finally, in no Jewish sources of antiquity - biblical texts, Dead Sea Scrolls, Apocrypha and Pseudepigrapha, Josephus, rabbinic writings - is the messianic figure ever either identified with God or worshipped.
"Messianic Movements," by David B. Levenson. The Jewish Annotated New Testament. Oxford University Press: 2011, pg. 535.
(א) וּבָעֵ֣ת הַהִיא֩ יַעֲמֹ֨ד מִֽיכָאֵ֜ל הַשַּׂ֣ר הַגָּד֗וֹל הָעֹמֵד֮ עַל־בְּנֵ֣י עַמֶּךָ֒ וְהָיְתָה֙ עֵ֣ת צָרָ֔ה אֲשֶׁ֤ר לֹֽא־נִהְיְתָה֙ מִֽהְי֣וֹת גּ֔וֹי עַ֖ד הָעֵ֣ת הַהִ֑יא וּבָעֵ֤ת הַהִיא֙ יִמָּלֵ֣ט עַמְּךָ֔ כָּל־הַנִּמְצָ֖א כָּת֥וּב בַּסֵּֽפֶר׃ (ב) וְרַבִּ֕ים מִיְּשֵׁנֵ֥י אַדְמַת־עָפָ֖ר יָקִ֑יצוּ אֵ֚לֶּה לְחַיֵּ֣י עוֹלָ֔ם וְאֵ֥לֶּה לַחֲרָפ֖וֹת לְדִרְא֥וֹן עוֹלָֽם׃ (ס) (ג) וְהַ֨מַּשְׂכִּלִ֔ים יַזְהִ֖רוּ כְּזֹ֣הַר הָרָקִ֑יעַ וּמַצְדִּיקֵי֙ הָֽרַבִּ֔ים כַּכּוֹכָבִ֖ים לְעוֹלָ֥ם וָעֶֽד׃ (פ)
(1) “At that time, the great prince, Michael, who stands beside the sons of your people, will appear. It will be a time of trouble, the like of which has never been since the nation came into being. At that time, your people will be rescued, all who are found inscribed in the book. (2) Many of those that sleep in the dust of the earth will awake, some to eternal life, others to reproaches, to everlasting abhorrence. (3) And the knowledgeable will be radiant like the bright expanse of sky, and those who lead the many to righteousness will be like the stars forever and ever.
"Why do we call Jesus the Messiah?" U.S. Catholic (Vol. 82, No. 12, pages 34–37), December 2017. https://uscatholic.org/articles/201712/why-do-we-call-jesus-the-messiah/
When did people start to understand the future messiah to be the Son of God?
That’s bound up with the fact that the king was traditionally thought to be some kind of divine figure.
One of the classic texts for that is Psalm 2. It talks about all the nations that are rising up against the Lord and his anointed, or his messiah. The psalm says, “You are my son. Today, I have begotten you. Ask of me, and I will make the nations your heritage.”
This shows the idea that the king was the Son of God. If you’re the Son of God, that makes you divine in some sense.
Jesus gets called the Son of Man in the New Testament. Where does this term come into the discussion of the Messiah?
The term Son of Man is a horse of a completely different color.
First of all, the expression Son of Man simply means human being. In Hebrew, “son of” means the member of a class. In the book of Ezekiel, Ezekiel is repeatedly addressed as “Son of Man,” and it just means human being.
This changes in the Book of Daniel’s apocalyptic visions. Apocalyptic visions are very colorful, highly symbolic visions that are found in Daniel and again in the Book of Revelation. There were also probably older apocalyptic visions in the Books of Enoch, which aren’t part of our canon but are in the canon of the Ethiopian church.
One of the features of apocalyptic symbolism is that things are typically depicted as something other than what they actually are. In the case of Daniel, he sees four beasts coming up out of the sea. Then he sees “one like a Son of Man coming on the clouds of heaven.”
Later he finds out that the four beasts represent four kings that arise on the earth, and that the beasts then aren’t actually beasts, they’re kings or kingdoms. The human figure that he sees coming with the clouds isn’t a human figure either.
Who is it?
Later on in the Book of Daniel, that figure is identified as the archangel Michael, who is called the prince of Israel. So the “one like a Son of Man” in the Book of Daniel is, first of all, the archangel Michael.
Daniel’s vision draws on very old mythological symbolism that we can trace back to the Canaanites. Those very old texts talk about a figure who rides on the clouds as well: Baal. Baal receives the kingdom from a high god with a white beard, named El.
In most of the Hebrew Bible, the figure who rides on the clouds is Yahweh, the God of Israel. But here in Daniel, it’s someone else. Presumably Yahweh, the God of Israel, is the God called in Daniel, Chapter 7 “the Ancient of Days, the hair of his head is like white wool.”
In this case, then, this figure coming on the clouds of Heaven is one who receives the kingdom from Yahweh, as Baal received it from El.
The text goes on to say that the kingdom is given, first of all, to the holy ones of the Most High, and then to the people of the holy ones of the Most High. If the Most High is Yahweh, then the holy ones of the Most High are pretty certainly angels. The people of the holy ones of the Most High, I think, are the Jewish people.
The one like a Son of Man here, then, is the leader of the angelic host: Michael.To make this more complicated, though, this figure was also interpreted from a fairly early time as the Messiah.
When did these two ideas—the Son of Man and the Son of God—come together?
People were trying to combine two traditions: the typical belief in a Davidic messiah who would restore the political Kingdom of David and the idea that deliverance would come from heaven.
Increasingly, these two traditions are put together. 4 Ezra, Chapter 12, for example, talks about a figure who both comes from heaven and is a descendent of David. This figure will both restore the Jewish kingdom on earth and some kind of heavenly kingdom after the resurrection.
How is Jesus portrayed in scripture as the fulfillment of these messianic ideas?
Now, it seems clear from the gospels that Jesus did not go around referring to himself as the Messiah.
Mark, Chapter 8 is a good illustration of this: “Jesus asked his disciples, ‘Who do you say that I am?’ They answered him ‘John the Baptist’ and others ‘Elijah’ and still others ‘One of the prophets.’ . . . Peter answered him, ‘You are the Messiah.’ He sternly ordered them to not tell anyone about him.”
Now, this is what’s called the messianic secret. The followers of Jesus became convinced at some point that he was the Messiah. It was something of an embarrassment that he didn’t go round saying he was the Messiah.
Jesus also said the kingdom of God is at hand. If you go around long enough saying that, we get the impression that you’re going to do something about it.
The standard expectation of the Davidic messiah was that the Messiah was supposed to be a warrior. He was supposed to be somebody who would smash heads and drive out the Romans. The standard messianic texts were passages like Isaiah, Chapter 11, which talks about the Messiah killing: “With the breath of his lips he will slay the wicked.”
These texts about a figure who would smash heads are not the texts that are initially lifted up in the New Testament. Instead, the gospels show Jesus working miracles, raising the dead, even telling parables. He’s much more like a prophet, like Elijah, than the traditional idea of a messiah.
But in fact, prophets were sometimes said to be anointed. There’s at least one text in the Dead Sea Scrolls that talks about a messiah who will do miracles, including raising the dead.
Jesus’ triumphant entry into Jerusalem on Palm Sunday was meant to remind people of Zacharias, Chapter 9: “Behold your king comes to you, humble and riding on an ass.” According to the gospels, his followers got excited and started shouting, “Hosanna to the Son of David.”
This, basically, is what got Jesus crucified: The Romans took him to be a messianic pretender, or someone who claimed to be restoring the kingdom of the Jews.
That is why they nailed to the cross Jesus of Nazareth, king of the Jews. Now, this wasn’t the kind of messiah that most people would have recognized as such.
Why, then, did people believe Jesus was the Messiah?
What they concluded was, yes, he is the Messiah, but not the kind of messiah that everybody was expecting. Jesus is a messiah who has to die first and then come back.
When Bar Kokhba, a messianic pretender 100 years after Jesus who led a revolt against Rome, got killed, that was the end of him. People believed he was the Messiah before he was killed. Once he was killed, that cleared up that question.
But in the case of Jesus, his followers believed he was risen from the dead. They looked through the scriptures to find another kind of messiah—one who wasn’t the political ruler.
Now, people in the New Testament times were not interpreting the Old Testament the way I’m interpreting it. They were not looking for historical context. As far as they were concerned, all of these texts were prophecies, and they were all written for their benefit. What they do then systemically in the New Testament is apply anything that could possibly be taken as a messianic prophecy to Jesus.
The glaring example was Daniel, Chapter 7, with its description of the Son of Man. For Jesus to be the Son of Man, he had to die: The Son of Man was supposed to come on the clouds of heaven, not be walking around in Galilee.
Now let me emphasize this: While the Son of Man originally meant a human figure, this term does not emphasize the humanity of Jesus. It’s naming him as a powerful heavenly figure. It presupposes that he was raised from the dead and ascended into heaven.
In the Book of Acts, before Stephen is stoned, he says that he has a vision in which he saw the heavens opened, and the Son of Man standing at the right hand of God. This vision combines imagery from Daniel 7 and Psalm 110, both of which I mentioned earlier.
This happened with other texts as well. You have a text in the Book of Hosea that says, “Out of Egypt, I have called my son.” In the Book of Hosea, the son is Israel. It means, “I brought Israel out of Egypt.”
If you now look at it, and you say, “But God’s son is the Messiah, and the Messiah is Jesus,” well, Jesus must have been in Egypt, and we didn’t know about it. You get the story of the flight into Egypt, which gets into only one out of four gospels.
This is the way the beliefs about Jesus get formulated. An awful lot of it is based on the assumption that all Old Testament prophecy was being fulfilled.
(יב) כִּ֣י ׀ יִמְלְא֣וּ יָמֶ֗יךָ וְשָֽׁכַבְתָּ֙ אֶת־אֲבֹתֶ֔יךָ וַהֲקִימֹתִ֤י אֶֽת־זַרְעֲךָ֙ אַחֲרֶ֔יךָ אֲשֶׁ֥ר יֵצֵ֖א מִמֵּעֶ֑יךָ וַהֲכִינֹתִ֖י אֶת־מַמְלַכְתּֽוֹ׃ (יג) ה֥וּא יִבְנֶה־בַּ֖יִת לִשְׁמִ֑י וְכֹנַנְתִּ֛י אֶת־כִּסֵּ֥א מַמְלַכְתּ֖וֹ עַד־עוֹלָֽם׃ (יד) אֲנִי֙ אֶהְיֶה־לּ֣וֹ לְאָ֔ב וְה֖וּא יִהְיֶה־לִּ֣י לְבֵ֑ן אֲשֶׁר֙ בְּהַ֣עֲוֺת֔וֹ וְהֹֽכַחְתִּיו֙ בְּשֵׁ֣בֶט אֲנָשִׁ֔ים וּבְנִגְעֵ֖י בְּנֵ֥י אָדָֽם׃ (טו) וְחַסְדִּ֖י לֹא־יָס֣וּר מִמֶּ֑נּוּ כַּאֲשֶׁ֤ר הֲסִרֹ֙תִי֙ מֵעִ֣ם שָׁא֔וּל אֲשֶׁ֥ר הֲסִרֹ֖תִי מִלְּפָנֶֽיךָ׃ (טז) וְנֶאְמַ֨ן בֵּיתְךָ֧ וּמַֽמְלַכְתְּךָ֛ עַד־עוֹלָ֖ם לְפָנֶ֑יךָ כִּֽסְאֲךָ֔ יִהְיֶ֥ה נָכ֖וֹן עַד־עוֹלָֽם׃ (יז) כְּכֹל֙ הַדְּבָרִ֣ים הָאֵ֔לֶּה וּכְכֹ֖ל הַחִזָּי֣וֹן הַזֶּ֑ה כֵּ֛ן דִּבֶּ֥ר נָתָ֖ן אֶל־דָּוִֽד׃ (ס)
(12) When your days are done and you lie with your fathers, I will raise up your offspring after you, one of your own issue, and I will establish his kingship. (13) He shall build a house for My name, and I will establish his royal throne forever. (14) I will be a father to him, and he shall be a son to Me. When he does wrong, I will chastise him with the rod of men and the affliction of mortals; (15) but I will never withdraw My favor from him as I withdrew it from Saul, whom I removed to make room for you. (16) Your house and your kingship shall ever be secure before you; your throne shall be established forever.” (17) Nathan spoke to David in accordance with all these words and all this prophecy.
מעשה ששלחו לחוני המעגל וכו': ת"ר פעם אחת יצא רוב אדר ולא ירדו גשמים שלחו לחוני המעגל התפלל וירדו גשמים התפלל ולא ירדו גשמים עג עוגה ועמד בתוכה כדרך שעשה חבקוק הנביא שנאמר (חבקוק ב, א) על משמרתי אעמדה ואתיצבה על מצור וגו'
§ The mishna taught: An incident occurred in which the people sent a message to Ḥoni HaMe’aggel. This event is related in greater detail in the following baraita. The Sages taught: Once, most of the month of Adar had passed but rain had still not fallen. They sent this message to Ḥoni HaMe’aggel: Pray, and rain will fall. He prayed, but no rain fell. He drew a circle in the dust and stood inside it, in the manner that the prophet Habakkuk did, as it is stated: “And I will stand upon my watch and set myself upon the tower, and I will look out to see what He will say to me, and what I shall answer when I am reproved” (Habakkuk 2:1). This verse is taken to mean that Habakkuk fashioned a kind of prison for himself where he sat.